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      • A lax wartime leader, Wilhelm left virtually all decision-making regarding strategy and organisation of the war effort to the German Army 's Great General Staff. By August 1916, this broad delegation of power gave rise to a de facto military dictatorship that dominated the country's policies for the rest of the conflict.
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  2. William II at the Battle of Waterloo, by Nicaise de Keyser, 1846. He entered the British Army, and in 1811, as a 19-year-old aide-de-camp in the headquarters of Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington, was allowed to observe several of Wellington's campaigns of the Peninsular War.

  3. World War II occurred in four distinct phases in the Netherlands: September 1939 to May 1940: After the war broke out, the Netherlands declared neutrality. The country was subsequently invaded and occupied.

  4. As Allied troops approached, Dutch railway workers staged a strike, and the Germans responded by cutting off all food and fuel shipments into the Netherlands. The combination of the two, through starvation, disease, and the cold, led to the death of 30,000.

    • Allies-Minor Member Nation or Possession
    • 34 Kingdom of the Netherlands
    • 10 May 1940
    • 8,729,000
  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Wilhelm_IIWilhelm II - Wikipedia

    However, Wilhelm II stopped any invasion of the Netherlands. Early War. On 1 August 1914 (Saturday), Wilhelm II made a war speech in front of a great crowd. On Monday, he motored back to Berlin from Potsdam and issued an imperial order to convene the Reichstag the next day. On 19 August 1914, Wilhelm II predicted that Germany will win the war.

  6. William II ( Dutch: Willem Frederik George Lodewijk; English: William Frederick George Louis; 6 December 1792 – 17 March 1849) was King of the Netherlands, Grand Duke of Luxembourg, and Duke of Limburg.

  7. William II was emperor of Germany and king of Prussia from 1888 until his forced abdication in 1918. In the crucial years before World War I, William II was the most powerful and most controversial figure in Europe.

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