Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
King Willem-Alexander prepares to enter the Koninklijke Schouwburg with Queen Maxima and Princess Amalia moments before delivering his annual address on the budget. 20 Sept. 2022
King Willem-Alexander prepares to enter the Koninklijke Schouwburg with Queen Maxima and Princess Amalia moments before delivering his annual address on the budget. 20 Sept. 2022 - Credit: Martijn Beekman / Ministry of Finance / Flickr / Used with Permission - License: All Rights Reserved
Politics
Willem-Alexander
slavery
abolition of slavery
colonialism
colonial history
Dutch Royal House
Leiden University
Gert Oostindie
Esther Captain
Kathleen Ferrier
International Relations
human rights
diversity
inclusion
Henk te Velde
Royal Dutch Historical Society
Royal Institute for Language Leiden University
Tuesday, 6 December 2022 - 18:13

Share this article:

Dutch king commissions study into Royal House's role in colonial history

King Willem-Alexander is commissioning an independent study into the role of the royal family in the colonial history of the Netherlands. The research will take three years and will cover the period from the late sixteenth century through the postcolonial era and into the present, announced the government's communications office, RVD.

The research will be carried out by Leiden University and with supervision by a committee led by Gert Oostindie, emeritus professor of Colonial and Postcolonial History. In 2006 he published a book about "the special relationship between the house of Oranje-Nassau and the colonies. The book is titled De Parels en De Kroon, which translates to The Pearls and The Crown. When the research is completed in 2026, the findings will be published, according to the RVD.

"In-depth knowledge of the past is essential to be able to understand historical facts and developments and to face their impact on people and communities as clearly and honestly as possible," said King Willem-Alexander about the study into his family history. "I think it is important that this knowledge also becomes available with regard to the role of the House of Oranje-Nassau in colonial history. This should be done on the basis of thorough, critical and independent research, which I have commissioned."

In addition to committee chair Oostindie, the Esther Captain was named to the committee. She is a historian and senior researcher at the Royal Institute for Language, Land and Ethnology in Leiden. They will be joined by Kathleen Ferrier, expert in the field of international relations, human rights, diversity and inclusion, and Henk te Velde, professor of Dutch history and chair of the Royal Dutch Historical Society.

The committee will be responsible for selecting and appointing the researchers who will participate in the investigation.

Reporting by ANP

More like this

Image
The White House, Washington, U.S.
Dutch publication forced to remove diversity chapter over Trump's anti-DEI policy
Image
Standup comedian and entrepreneur Rashi Agarwal in 2025
Why Rashi Agarwal says your "lazy" racism is the least interesting thing about her
Image
Historical building in Leiden city center, Netherlands
Leiden apologizes for its role in the Netherlands' history of enslavement
Image
Dutch royals speaking to the descendants of enslaved people during their state visit to Suriname, 1 December 2025
Enslaved people's descendants accept Dutch King's apology in Suriname
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Ajax agree €27M deal to sell Sean Steur to Newcastle
  • Former Hendrik-Ido-Ambacht mayor gets 1 year in prison for child pornography
  • Pro-Palestinian protester who defaced Amsterdam's National Monument avoids punishment
  • Few rush hour issues tonight: Bruno Mars in Amsterdam, Alanis Morissette in The Hague
  • Two men given life sentences for 7 robberies that left one dead and two injured

Top stories

  • Netherlands recruited 29 top scientist leaving U.S. under Trump
  • Police shoot armed man on Rotterdam street
  • Rotterdam train traffic back to normal after week-long outage
  • New-build home sales in Netherlands fall 19% as market cools
  • At least 8 illegal designer drug sites back online via a foreign domain

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content