Weekend Herald

Dutch royals get ready for a visit Down Under

Amid the splendour of a 16th- century Dutch palace, Herald reporter meets the King of the Netherland­s

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King Willem- Alexander was once known as “Prince Pils” ( after Pilsner lager) thanks to reports of his drunken exploits at Leiden University. Willem- Alexander can pilot jet planes, once skated a 200km contest on frozen canals and ran the New York marathon in 1992. Before becoming King, he chaired a UNadvisory panel on water and sanitation and was a member of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee. While other monarchs are crowned, Dutch kings and queens are “inaugurate­d” at a meeting of the Dutch Parliament, where they promise to serve and uphold the country’s constituti­on. Queen Maxima has faced criticism in the Netherland­s because of her father’s role as a Minister in Argentina’s dictatorsh­ip, when he served under General Jorge Rafael Videla during the country’s “Dirty War”. The Dutch royal family is known as the “House of Orange”, a name that comes from a medieval principali­ty in the south of France. There is nothing to stop Dutch monarchs abdicating when they want to step down, as did WillemAlex­ander’s mother, Queen Beatrix, her mother, Queen Juliana, and her mother, Queen Wilhelmina. already exits between them.

While it will be their first visit to New Zealand as King and Queen, Willem- Alexander and Maxima have been here before, in 2006.

During the sometimes lightheart­ed news conference, the suitclad Willem- Alexander said he had fond memories of the Abel Tasman National Park, the Southern Alps and Auckland.

He also spoke more seriously about the apparent trend towards political polarisati­on in Europe and in several other parts or the world. There was also the decision by Britain — a close ally on trade matters — to leave the European Union, and the problem Europe is facing in dealing with the influx of refugees from Africa and the Middle East.

The King also talked about the unity seen in the Netherland­s in the aftermath of the MH17 disaster, which claimed the lives of 298 people — most of them Dutch — when their plane was shot down by a missile in Ukrainian airspace and crashed in 2014.

Relations between the Netherland­s and Russia have taken a turn for the worse over the downing of the plane, and the families of the 139 Dutch people who lost their lives are still pushing for answers.

The venue for the news confer- ence, the Noordeinde Palace in The Hague, is one of the Dutch royal family's most lavish palaces and acts as King Willem- Alexander's official office.

It was built as a farmhouse in the 16th century and its original cellars can still be seen in the palace basement. The palace has a grand ballroom, with gold chandelier­s and marble walls, and an extensive art col- lection. The grounds were landscaped by Frederik Hendrik, the son of William of Orange.

The palace complex also includes the Royal Stables, and the gardens contain the Royal Archives.

The Netherland­s has been a constituti­onal monarchy since 1814, and Willem- Alexander was born as Crown Prince in 1967, in the Dutch city of Utrecht. Following the abdication of Queen Beatrix, Willem- Alexander became King in April 2013. He i s the Netherland­s’ first male monarch since the death of his great- greatgrand­father, King William III, in 1890.

Queen Maxima was born as Maxima Zorreguiet­a in Buenos Aires, Argentina. The couple married in 2002 and have three daughters.

Jamie Gray travelled to the Netherland­s courtesy of the Dutch Government.

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 ??  ?? Herald reporter Jamie Gray ( right) with King Willem- Alexander of the Netherland­s ( fourth from left) and other reporters at Noordeinde Palace in the Netherland­s. Left: King Willem- Alexander and his wife, Queen Maxima. Noordeinde Palace ( below), one...
Herald reporter Jamie Gray ( right) with King Willem- Alexander of the Netherland­s ( fourth from left) and other reporters at Noordeinde Palace in the Netherland­s. Left: King Willem- Alexander and his wife, Queen Maxima. Noordeinde Palace ( below), one...
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