On 23 May 1802, the French First Republic and the Kingdom of Prussia concluded a treaty in which Fulda and some other areas were promised to the Prince of Orange as compensation for the loss of his domains in the Low Countries.[citation needed] Willem V refused at first, but later accepted the offer in favour for his son William Frederick to become the ruler of the new formed principality, plus five million gulden, in exchange for the renunciation of their hereditary stadtholderate in the abolished Dutch Republic.[2][3] On 22 October Prussian troops occupied the Princely Abbey of Fulda to secure the interests of the prince, and on 6 December, William Frederick held his entry in Fulda.[citation needed] The Prince-Bishopric was secularised and handed to him as a hereditary possession.[1] The Reichsdeputationshauptschluss resolution on 25 February 1803, legalized the redistribution of the territories. According to section 12 of this resolution the following areas were transferred to the rule of the new Prince of Nassau-Orange-Fulda:[a]
The areas were reorganised into the four divisions "Principality of Fulda", "Principality of Corvey", "County of Dortmund" and "Lordship of Weingarten". The arms of the principality included the coats of arms of these areas (with the inescutcheon being the arms of the Prince of Orange-Nassau).[citation needed]
After Napoleon defeated Prussia in the Battle of Jena–Auerstedt (14 October 1806), the Prince of Orange lost his remaining possessions (including the mediated ones).[citation needed] Fulda was occupied by French troops on 27 October 1806.[citation needed] William Frederick would subsequently enter Prussian and later Austrian military service to fight against Napoleon.[3]
^"Dem Fürsten von Nassau-Dillenburg, zur Entschädigung für die Statthalterschaft, und seine Domänen in Holland und Belgien: die Bisthümer Fulda und Corvey; die Reichsstadt Dortmund; die Abtey Weingarten, die Abteyen und Probsteyen Hofen, St. Gerold im Weingartischen, Bandern im Lichtensteinischen Gebiete, Dietkirchen im Nassauischen, so wie alle Kapitel, Abteyen, [514] Probsteyen und Klöster in den zugetheilten Landen; unter der Bedingung, den bestehenden, und schon früher von Frankreich anerkannten, Ansprüchen auf einige Erbschaften, welche im Laufe des letzten Jahrhunderts mit dem Nassau-Dillenburgischen Majorate vereiniget worden sind, Genüge zu thun."[4]
References
^ abcde"Fulda [stad, Duitsland] §1. Geschiedenis". Encarta Encyclopedie Winkler Prins (in Dutch). Microsoft Corporation/Het Spectrum. 2002.
^ abcde"Willem [Nederlanden] § Willem V". Encarta Encyclopedie Winkler Prins (in Dutch). Microsoft Corporation/Het Spectrum. 2002.
^ abcd"Willem [Nederland] § Willem I". Encarta Encyclopedie Winkler Prins (in Dutch). Microsoft Corporation/Het Spectrum. 2002.
^Hauptschluss der außerordentlichen Reichsdeputation vom 25. Februar 1803, § 12