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1-16 of 16
- How do the Dutch people live? Hidden cameras filmed the crowds on the beach, during carnival time, skating on the ice plains...
- Two people in trouble experience tragedies during the wedding of prince Willem-Alexander and princess Máxima.
- Documentary maker Eveline van Dijck follows Loek en Anke van den Boog, who started third world aid organization Net4kids.
- Jim is searching for Maria.
- Napoleon Bonaparte continues his journey through Holland and visits Haarlem and Amsterdam. He has made his brother Lodewijk the king of Holland, but a year before his visit to Holland, Napoleon removes Lodewijk from the throne.
- In the fourteenth century, Europe has to face a terrible plague. The Church states it's a punishment from God. Meanwhile, the printing press contributes to the development of critical citizens that take on the Church, like the Anabaptists.
- The Dutch Republic becomes a world power in the seventeenth century. Not only thanks to the typical commercial spirit, but also through robbery and war. A small elite gets rich by exploiting others in the black pages of this Golden Age.
- The House of Orange seems to have been forgotten in the Netherlands for a long time when, thanks to their international contacts, they returned to the highest position ever in the Netherlands in 1813. With King William I on the throne.
- The power of the Orange kings crumbled in the nineteenth century. A new constitution gives parliament more power at the expense of the king. Much to the frustration of King William III, who did everything he could to turn the tide.
- The Orange-Nassau family consists of only two members. If Juliana does not produce offspring, the dynasty will cease to exist. The relief is great when a marriage partner is found in the person of Bernhard zur Lippe Biesterfeld.
- The Oranje-Nassau family has become an integral part of the Netherlands. For centuries they have played a significant role in our history, right at the centre of power, in good times and in bad. Will they continue to colour our future?
- Lodewijk Napoleon gave the Netherlands its identity and set up many important institutions. Hans Goedkoop examines the ambitions plans and silent departure of the Netherlands' first king.
- The Netherlands under the reign of King Willem I was a period of investments but also of financial troubles. Hans Goedkoop discovers how one rich and influential widow, Johanna Borski, kept the country from going bankrupt.