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  2. 9 November 2018. On 9 November 1918 Kaiser Wilhelm II fled from Germany to the Netherlands. The Dutch government has always claimed that it was caught unawares by this. Based on new source material Beatrice de Graaf, Professor of the History of International Relations, asserts that Queen Wilhelmina played a much more active role in the Kaiser ...

  3. Dec 5, 2020 · After the German defeat in World War I, Emperor Wilhelm II sought and got asylum in the neutral Netherlands. On 15 May 1920, he settled in Huis Doorn (House Doorn) near Utrecht, an estate with a lavishly furnished country house, where he would live with his family until his death in 1941.

  4. To answer why he fled to The Netherlands: Family ties Shortest route to safety The Netherlands being neutral in the war. Close to Germany in case of a reinstution of the German Monarchie. Dutch-German royal/nobility relation history. Sources: Personal diary of Kaiser Wilhelm Sigurd von Ilseman(Adjudant des Kaiser) memoires

  5. From the German army headquarters in Spa (Belgium), to the Dutch border, a distance of about thirty to forty miles was all that the Kaiser had to negotiate, much if not all of it controlled by disciplined German troops already.

    • Kaiser Wilhelm II During The Last Months of WW I
    • Kaiser Wilhelm II and His Political Asylum in The Netherlands
    • Wilhelm II and His Fight For His Assets After WW I
    • Sources

    Wilhelm II was born on 27 January 1859 in Berlin as the son of Frederick Wilhelm of Prussia (the future German Emperor and King of Prussia Frederick III) and Victoria, Princess Royal and the eldest daughter of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. After his father, Frederick III, had died of Laryngeal cancer after only ...

    After news of his involuntary abdication had reached Wilhelm II at his headquarters in Spa (Belgium), he decided to leave for the neutral Netherlands on the night of 9th to 10th November 1918. But things did not go so smoothly. Before the Dutch government allowed the abdicated Wilhelm II to enter the Netherlands, he was forced to spend 24 hours at ...

    As mentioned, Wilhelm had been abdicated and had fled into the neural Netherlands. But there was one big problem he had to sort out before he could even think of planning his return to Germany. Most of his belongings (including his family`s wealth, castles, art, and vast estates) were in Germany, the same country he had to flee from. So getting his...

    John van der Kiste: Wilhelm II. Germany`s last Emperor (Sutton 1999). Jacco Pekelder, Joep Schenk, Cornelis van der Bas: Der Kaiser und das Dritte Reich. Die Hohenzollern zwischen Restauration und Nationalsozialismus (Göttingen 2021).

  6. January 26, 1859. Berlin, Prussia (now Germany) June 4, 1941. Doorn, The Netherlands. Kaiser (emperor) of Germany. F or thirty years, from 1888 to 1918, Wilhelm II led Germany as its kaiser, or emperor, until he was forced to abdicate (resign from the throne) and go into exile after Germany's defeat in World War I.

  7. Deserted by his own military High Command, Wilhelm abdicated in 1918 and fled to the Netherlands, ending 400 years of the Hohenzollern dynasty. Thanking the Dutch government for granting him asylum in the Netherlands, Wilhelm sent this telegram to Queen Wilhemina of the Netherlands on November 11, 1918:

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