Wer datete Princess Marianne of the Netherlands?

Princess Marianne of the Netherlands

Princess Marianne of the Netherlands

Princess Marianne of the Netherlands, Princess of Orange-Nassau (Wilhelmina Frederika Louise Charlotte Marianne; 9 May 1810 – 29 May 1883) was the youngest child of King William I of the Netherlands and Princess Wilhelmine of Prussia.

Princess Marianne was a woman who thought and lived very unconventionally for her time because she had left her unfaithful husband Prince Albert of Prussia and had an illegitimate son (whom she openly recognized) with her partner Johannes van Rossum, with whom she also lived in a common-law marriage. She was banished from the Kingdom of Prussia.

An art collector and patron, she made her new residence, Schloss Reinhartshausen in Erbach, on the Rhine. Through her social commitment to the needy, especially in the Rheingau and Silesia, she gained sympathy among the population. The Johanneskirche in Erbach, which was founded by Marianne after the death of her 12-year-old illegitimate son, is linked to her fate. This church is an cultural monument and was the first Protestant church in the Rheingau.

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Johannes van Rossum

Johannes van Rossum

Johannes van Rossum (* 21. August 1809 in Den Haag; † 10. April 1873 auf Schloss Reinhartshausen in Erbach im Rheingau) war zunächst Kutscher im Dienst von Marianne von Oranien-Nassau, später ihr Lebensgefährte und Kabinettssekretär. Sein Lebenslauf wurde vom Schicksal Mariannes entscheidend geprägt, der er über 25 Jahre als engster Vertrauter zur Seite stand. Außerdem war er der Vater ihres unehelichen Sohnes Johann Wilhelm von Reinhartshausen (1849–1861), anlässlich dessen frühen Todes Marianne die Johanneskirche in Erbach stiftete, heute ein Stadtteil von Eltville am Rhein.

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