Frederick Nassau de Zuylestein

Frederick Nassau de Zuylestein

William Frederick of Nassau Zuylestein by Sir Peter Lely
Personal details
Born 1624
Nassau, The Netherlands Holy Roman Empire
Died October 1672
Woerden, The Netherlands, Holy Roman Empire
Spouse(s) Mary Killegrew
Children

William Nassau de Zuylestein, 1st Earl of Rochford

Hendrik van Nassau-Zuylestein

Frederick Nassau de Zuylestein (1624–1672) was an illegitimate son of Frederick Henry, Prince of Orange, by Margaretha Catharina Bruyns.

Life

Castle Zuylestein in 1650, later destroyed by bomb attack during The Second World War.

Frederick was born out of wedlock to Frederick Henry, Prince of Orange (1584 – 1647) and Margaretha Catharina Bruyns (1595–1625), in 1624.

On the 15th of March 1640, Frederick's father gave him Castle Zuylestein (also spelled Zuylenstein), situated about twenty miles east of the city of Utrecht; with it he also gave him the title Heer van Zuylestein and made him captain of infantry for the state.
In 1659, Frederick was made governor of the household of his nephew, William III of Orange. Through lobbying by Johan de Wit, William III became the state's ward in 1666, and Frederick was dismissed. His dismissal was because he was married to an Englishwoman and was under suspicion of pro-English leanings. In April 1672 (the rampjaar) he became general of the infantry and in August he became involved in the murders of Johan and Cornelis de Wit.

Marriage and children

On the 16th of October 1648, Frederick married Mary Killigrew (born 1627) in The Hague. She was a daughter of Sir William Killigrew (a favourite of Charles I and Charles II of England) and Mary Hill, of Honilay. She was a first cousin of Charles II's illegitimate daughter, the Countess of Yarmouth. She had moved to the Netherlands in February 1644, aged barely seventeen, as a maid of honour to Mary, princess royal of England and princess of Orange.

Frederick and Mary had two children:

Death

In October 1672 Frederick died near Woerden in a battle with the French known as the Battle of Kruipin.[1]

Half-siblings

Prince Frederick Henry and his wife Amalia of Solms-Braunfels with their three youngest daughters, portrayed by Gerard van Honthorst.

Frederick was an illegitimate son of Frederick Henry, Prince of Orange, born to him before he married. Frederick had nine legitimate half-siblings with whom he shared his father. Their mother was his father's wife Amalia of Solms-Braunfels.

Arms

Frederick used the arms below.

  1. ^ Rietstap, Johannes Baptist (1861). Armorial général, contenant la description des armoiries des familles nobles et patriciennes de l'Europe: précédé d'un dictionnaire des termes du blason. G.B. van Goor. p. 746. 

Literature

References

  1. Battle of Kruipin in the Canon of Utrecht


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