Princess Mary, the widow of William II …

Years: 1660 - 1660
September

Princess Mary, the widow of William II of Orange, has made great advances since August 1660, persuading Zeeland and Friesland to come out in favor of promising a future stadtholdership for her nine-year-old son, Prince William III.

Sir George Downing, reappointed as English ambassador in The Hague, had also represented the Commonwealth since 1657 but had turned to the new regime in time.

No friend of the Dutch, he immediately interferes in Dutch internal affairs, where possible, by fanning the Orangist sentiment and undermining Johann de Witt, the Grand Pensionary of Holland.

The Act of Exclusion is not recognized by the other provinces, and even Holland has begun to have second thoughts.

Leiden and Haarlem have proposed that the Prince be designated stadtholder, his father’s title, in the future.

De Witt deflects this with some difficulty, at the same time making financial concessions to William's mother, promising to pay for his education as "Child of State."

To further mollify her (in hopes of her influencing her brother Charles II of England in favor of the Dutch), the Act of Exclusion is formally revoked in September, 1660 (the Commonwealth having expired as a state, this can be excused as not being a breach of treaty).

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