People

William III

William III, William of Orange, became king after the Glorious Revolution of 1688. He ruled with Mary II, accepted the Bill of Rights and led coalitions against Louis XIV.

Born
1650 CE
Died
1702 CE
Role
King of England, Scotland and Ireland

King of England, Scotland and Ireland (1650–1702)

Portrait of William III in late 17th-century royal attire
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Profile details

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Also known as
William of Orange, William the Deliverer
Facts

William III timeline facts

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1650
Born into conflict

William of Orange was born in The Hague eight days after his father's death, inheriting a contested dynastic role inside a Dutch Republic threatened by larger powers.

1688
The invitation and invasion

Invited by English Protestant leaders alarmed by James II's policies, William landed at Torbay in November 1688 with a force larger than the Spanish Armada.

1690s
Domestic difficulties

William's English reign was marked by political friction, the Glencoe massacre in Scotland, and the constant tension between his European priorities and English domestic concerns.

Post-1702
The constitutional king

William III's legacy lies in the 1689 settlement, the Bank of England, the national debt and Britain's emergence as a parliamentary war state.

Life Journey

Orange, revolution, and the making of constitutional war power

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1650

Born into conflict

William of Orange was born in The Hague eight days after his father's death, inheriting a contested dynastic role inside a Dutch Republic threatened by larger powers.

1672

Stadtholder of the Netherlands

When France invaded the Netherlands in 1672 and the republic nearly collapsed, William was made Stadtholder and became the symbol of Dutch resistance.

1677

Marriage to Mary

His marriage to the English princess Mary Stuart gave him a dynastic stake in England's succession and an eventual basis for his invitation to intervene there.

1688

The invitation and invasion

Invited by English Protestant leaders alarmed by James II's policies, William landed at Torbay in November 1688 with a force larger than the Spanish Armada.

1689

Settlement of 1689

William and Mary accepted the 1689 constitutional settlement, including the Bill of Rights, which limited royal power and strengthened Parliament.

1689–1697

War of the Grand Alliance

William led England and a European coalition in a major war against Louis XIV, which was his primary reason for wanting the English throne and his main preoccupation as king.

1690s

Domestic difficulties

William's English reign was marked by political friction, the Glencoe massacre in Scotland, and the constant tension between his European priorities and English domestic concerns.

1700–1702

Spanish succession crisis

William spent his final years constructing the alliance that would contest Louis XIV's attempt to unite the French and Spanish crowns, dying before the war he had built began.

Post-1702

The constitutional king

William III's legacy lies in the 1689 settlement, the Bank of England, the national debt and Britain's emergence as a parliamentary war state.

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British Monarchs lineage
Lineage42 rulers
British Monarchs
1066 CE–present

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Content note

This profile is written for educational use and connects to related Stories of History pages. Illustrations are original artistic interpretations.

References

Sources & Further Reading

Reliable reference works, archives and reading paths connected to this profile.

Further reading

  1. Encyclopaedia Britannica, Search results for William III,” accessed June 2026.Open source
  2. WorldCat, Books and library holdings for William III,” accessed June 2026.Open source

Primary sources

  1. Library of Congress, Search results for William III,” accessed June 2026.Open source

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