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  • National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    DUKAS_184537389_NUR
    National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    Under the motto 'Rent down!', the housing movement, a coalition of tenant organizations, residents' groups, and activists, takes action to demand lower rents and find a solution to the shortage of affordable housing in Utrecht, on May 10, 2025. (Photo by Romy Arroyo Fernandez/NurPhoto)

     

  • National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    DUKAS_184537385_NUR
    National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    Under the motto 'Rent down!', the housing movement, a coalition of tenant organizations, residents' groups, and activists, takes action to demand lower rents and find a solution to the shortage of affordable housing in Utrecht, on May 10, 2025. (Photo by Romy Arroyo Fernandez/NurPhoto)

     

  • National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    DUKAS_184537381_NUR
    National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    Under the motto 'Rent down!', the housing movement, a coalition of tenant organizations, residents' groups, and activists, takes action to demand lower rents and find a solution to the shortage of affordable housing in Utrecht, on May 10, 2025. (Photo by Romy Arroyo Fernandez/NurPhoto)

     

  • National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    DUKAS_184537377_NUR
    National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    Under the motto 'Rent down!', the housing movement, a coalition of tenant organizations, residents' groups, and activists, takes action to demand lower rents and find a solution to the shortage of affordable housing in Utrecht, on May 10, 2025. (Photo by Romy Arroyo Fernandez/NurPhoto)

     

  • National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    DUKAS_184537373_NUR
    National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    Under the motto 'Rent down!', the housing movement, a coalition of tenant organizations, residents' groups, and activists, takes action to demand lower rents and find a solution to the shortage of affordable housing in Utrecht, on May 10, 2025. (Photo by Romy Arroyo Fernandez/NurPhoto)

     

  • National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    DUKAS_184537369_NUR
    National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    Under the motto 'Rent down!', the housing movement, a coalition of tenant organizations, residents' groups, and activists, takes action to demand lower rents and find a solution to the shortage of affordable housing in Utrecht, on May 10, 2025. (Photo by Romy Arroyo Fernandez/NurPhoto)

     

  • National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    DUKAS_184537321_NUR
    National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    Under the motto 'Rent down!', the housing movement, a coalition of tenant organizations, residents' groups, and activists, takes action to demand lower rents and find a solution to the shortage of affordable housing in Utrecht, on May 10, 2025. (Photo by Romy Arroyo Fernandez/NurPhoto)

     

  • National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    DUKAS_184537317_NUR
    National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    Under the motto 'Rent down!', the housing movement, a coalition of tenant organizations, residents' groups, and activists, takes action to demand lower rents and find a solution to the shortage of affordable housing in Utrecht, on May 10, 2025. (Photo by Romy Arroyo Fernandez/NurPhoto)

     

  • National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    DUKAS_184537313_NUR
    National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    Under the motto 'Rent down!', the housing movement, a coalition of tenant organizations, residents' groups, and activists, takes action to demand lower rents and find a solution to the shortage of affordable housing in Utrecht, on May 10, 2025. (Photo by Romy Arroyo Fernandez/NurPhoto)

     

  • National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    DUKAS_184537309_NUR
    National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    Under the motto 'Rent down!', the housing movement, a coalition of tenant organizations, residents' groups, and activists, takes action to demand lower rents and find a solution to the shortage of affordable housing in Utrecht, on May 10, 2025. (Photo by Romy Arroyo Fernandez/NurPhoto)

     

  • National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    DUKAS_184537305_NUR
    National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    Under the motto 'Rent down!', the housing movement, a coalition of tenant organizations, residents' groups, and activists, takes action to demand lower rents and find a solution to the shortage of affordable housing in Utrecht, on May 10, 2025. (Photo by Romy Arroyo Fernandez/NurPhoto)

     

  • National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    DUKAS_184537409_NUR
    National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    Under the motto 'Rent down!', the housing movement, a coalition of tenant organizations, residents' groups, and activists, takes action to demand lower rents and find a solution to the shortage of affordable housing in Utrecht, on May 10, 2025. (Photo by Romy Arroyo Fernandez/NurPhoto)

     

  • National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    DUKAS_184537405_NUR
    National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    Under the motto 'Rent down!', the housing movement, a coalition of tenant organizations, residents' groups, and activists, takes action to demand lower rents and find a solution to the shortage of affordable housing in Utrecht, on May 10, 2025. (Photo by Romy Arroyo Fernandez/NurPhoto)

     

  • National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    DUKAS_184537401_NUR
    National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    Under the motto 'Rent down!', the housing movement, a coalition of tenant organizations, residents' groups, and activists, takes action to demand lower rents and find a solution to the shortage of affordable housing in Utrecht, on May 10, 2025. (Photo by Romy Arroyo Fernandez/NurPhoto)

     

  • National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    DUKAS_184537397_NUR
    National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    Under the motto 'Rent down!', the housing movement, a coalition of tenant organizations, residents' groups, and activists, takes action to demand lower rents and find a solution to the shortage of affordable housing in Utrecht, on May 10, 2025. (Photo by Romy Arroyo Fernandez/NurPhoto)

     

  • National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    DUKAS_184537393_NUR
    National Housing Demonstration Held In Utrecht.
    Under the motto 'Rent down!', the housing movement, a coalition of tenant organizations, residents' groups, and activists, takes action to demand lower rents and find a solution to the shortage of affordable housing in Utrecht, on May 10, 2025. (Photo by Romy Arroyo Fernandez/NurPhoto)

     

  • Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019
    DUKAS_102413682_REX
    Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Robin Utrecht/REX (10213112at)
    Queen Maxima attends the Money & Behavior jubilee conference. The congress is organized on the occasion of the 40th anniversary of the National Institute for Budget Information (Nibud)
    Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019
    DUKAS_102413681_REX
    Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Robin Utrecht/REX (10213112l)
    Queen Maxima attends the Money & Behavior jubilee conference. The congress is organized on the occasion of the 40th anniversary of the National Institute for Budget Information (Nibud)
    Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019
    DUKAS_102413652_REX
    Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Robin Utrecht/REX (10213112r)
    Queen Maxima attends the Money & Behavior jubilee conference. The congress is organized on the occasion of the 40th anniversary of the National Institute for Budget Information (Nibud)
    Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019
    DUKAS_102413585_REX
    Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Robin Utrecht/REX (10213112o)
    Queen Maxima attends the Money & Behavior jubilee conference. The congress is organized on the occasion of the 40th anniversary of the National Institute for Budget Information (Nibud)
    Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019
    DUKAS_102413579_REX
    Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Robin Utrecht/REX (10213112g)
    Queen Maxima attends the Money & Behavior jubilee conference. The congress is organized on the occasion of the 40th anniversary of the National Institute for Budget Information (Nibud)
    Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019
    DUKAS_102413572_REX
    Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Robin Utrecht/REX (10213112k)
    Queen Maxima attends the Money & Behavior jubilee conference. The congress is organized on the occasion of the 40th anniversary of the National Institute for Budget Information (Nibud)
    Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019
    DUKAS_102413567_REX
    Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Robin Utrecht/REX (10213112b)
    Queen Maxima attends the Money & Behavior jubilee conference. The congress is organized on the occasion of the 40th anniversary of the National Institute for Budget Information (Nibud)
    Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019
    DUKAS_102413566_REX
    Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Robin Utrecht/REX (10213112c)
    Queen Maxima attends the Money & Behavior jubilee conference. The congress is organized on the occasion of the 40th anniversary of the National Institute for Budget Information (Nibud)
    Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019

    (c) Dukas

     

  • Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019
    DUKAS_102413534_REX
    Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Robin Utrecht/REX (10213112ap)
    Queen Maxima attends the Money & Behavior jubilee conference. The congress is organized on the occasion of the 40th anniversary of the National Institute for Budget Information (Nibud)
    Money and Behavior jubilee conference, Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Apr 2019

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Holland: Drei Menschen sterben bei Schüssen in Utrecht
    DUK10116365_009
    NEWS - Holland: Drei Menschen sterben bei Schüssen in Utrecht
    Rex Features Ltd. do not claim any Copyright or License of the attached image
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Shutterstock (10159111c)
    Gokman Tanis
    Shooting in Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Mar 2019
    Police release images of Gokman Tanis who is wanted in connection with the shooting

    (c) Dukas

     

  • NEWS - Holland: Drei Menschen sterben bei Schüssen in Utrecht
    DUK10116365_001
    NEWS - Holland: Drei Menschen sterben bei Schüssen in Utrecht
    Rex Features Ltd. do not claim any Copyright or License of the attached image
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Shutterstock (10159111d)
    Gokman Tanis
    Shooting in Utrecht, Netherlands - 18 Mar 2019
    Police release images of Gokman Tanis who is wanted in connection with the shooting

    (c) Dukas

     

  • PEOPLE - Die Royals: Die Bilder des Tages
    DUK10111276_026
    PEOPLE - Die Royals: Die Bilder des Tages
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by REX/Shutterstock (10034741b)
    King Willem-Alexander
    King Willem-Alexander opens 'Utrecht, Caravaggio and Europe' exhibition, Centraal Museum, Utrecht, Netherlands - 15 Dec 2018
    King Willem Alexander of the Netherlands opens the exhibition Utrecht, Caravaggio and Europe in the Centraal Museum Utrecht.

    (c) Dukas

     

  • FEATURE - Pix of the Day: Bilder des Tages
    DUK10110505_064
    FEATURE - Pix of the Day: Bilder des Tages
    Ein Hudson’s Bay Warenhaus im niederländischen Haarlem

    / 131218

    *** Hudson’s Bay store house, Haarlem, The Netherlands 13 Dec 2018 *** *** Local Caption *** 29075190

    (c) Dukas

     

  • People sitting outside Springhaver Theater in Utrecht, Netherlands.
    DUKAS_123966869_RHA
    People sitting outside Springhaver Theater in Utrecht, Netherlands.
    People sitting outside Springhaver Theater in Utrecht, North Holland, The Netherlands, Europe
    Simon Montgomery

     

  • The University Hall of Utrecht University in Dom Square, Utrecht, Netherlands.
    DUKAS_123966867_RHA
    The University Hall of Utrecht University in Dom Square, Utrecht, Netherlands.
    The University Hall of Utrecht University in Dom Square, Utrecht, North Holland, The Netherlands, Europe
    Simon Montgomery

     

  • Lange Nieuwstraat & St Catherine's Cathedral in Utrecht, Netherlands.
    DUKAS_123966863_RHA
    Lange Nieuwstraat & St Catherine's Cathedral in Utrecht, Netherlands.
    Lange Nieuwstraat and St. Catherine's Cathedral, Utrecht, North Holland, The Netherlands, Europe
    Simon Montgomery

     

  • FEATURE - Die Bilder der Woche
    DUK10067014_006
    FEATURE - Die Bilder der Woche
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Matt West/REX/Shutterstock (8970991ah)
    A France fan with a glass of beer
    France v Austria, UEFA Women's Euro 2017, Group C, Stadion Galgenwaard, Utrecht, the Netherlands - 22 July 2017


    (c) Dukas

     

  • Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    DUKAS_28001192_REX
    Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen North Downs Picture Agency / Rex Features (2102204y)
    A uniform being packed away.
    Kaisrer Wilhelm's Dutch Refuge Under Threat
    He lost a war, an empire, a crown and a country. Now, nearly a century after the beginning of the bloodbath his ambition spawned, the last Kaiser of Germany is poised to lose his final resting place in the country that offered him sanctuary.

    Holland is pulling the plug on House Doorn, the refuge for Kaiser Wilhelm II - known to a generation who fought the Great War as Kaiser Bill - as part of the general austerity cuts sweeping a Europe he tried so desperately to conquer. A unique shrine to his times, his ambition and, above all, to his overarching vanity, House Doorn and its ghosts are about to be mothballed for eternity for the sake of less than 200,000 pounds.

    That is the shortfall between what the mansion and its treasures takes in from paying visitors and what the Dutch state, pressed like most others in Europe, pays in annual grants to keep the time capsule of the Kaiser's life open. If it closes in the new year, as it must if no solution is found, this martial Downton Abbey will be shuttered and its truly priceless treasures - from ornate silverware and porcelain, to uniforms and photos, letters and medals that drape like flowers from behind glass frames - boxed and hidden from view for good.

    What makes House Doorn unique among historical sites is the fact that the clock stopped on June 4 1941 when he died and nothing has changed since. The bed he breathed his last on is still made up, adorned with the last bouquet of dried flowers from his son he ever received; the last cigar he never got to smoke still sits in the turret room, which he turned into a study, next to the correspondence he never got to finish. The dining table, complete with its graceful silver birds seemingly moving through a forest of cutlery...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/CKKYQVSHB

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    DUKAS_28001190_REX
    Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen North Downs Picture Agency / Rex Features (2102204v)
    A sword belonging to the Kaiser before it is pack away.
    Kaisrer Wilhelm's Dutch Refuge Under Threat
    He lost a war, an empire, a crown and a country. Now, nearly a century after the beginning of the bloodbath his ambition spawned, the last Kaiser of Germany is poised to lose his final resting place in the country that offered him sanctuary.

    Holland is pulling the plug on House Doorn, the refuge for Kaiser Wilhelm II - known to a generation who fought the Great War as Kaiser Bill - as part of the general austerity cuts sweeping a Europe he tried so desperately to conquer. A unique shrine to his times, his ambition and, above all, to his overarching vanity, House Doorn and its ghosts are about to be mothballed for eternity for the sake of less than 200,000 pounds.

    That is the shortfall between what the mansion and its treasures takes in from paying visitors and what the Dutch state, pressed like most others in Europe, pays in annual grants to keep the time capsule of the Kaiser's life open. If it closes in the new year, as it must if no solution is found, this martial Downton Abbey will be shuttered and its truly priceless treasures - from ornate silverware and porcelain, to uniforms and photos, letters and medals that drape like flowers from behind glass frames - boxed and hidden from view for good.

    What makes House Doorn unique among historical sites is the fact that the clock stopped on June 4 1941 when he died and nothing has changed since. The bed he breathed his last on is still made up, adorned with the last bouquet of dried flowers from his son he ever received; the last cigar he never got to smoke still sits in the turret room, which he turned into a study, next to the correspondence he never got to finish. The dining table, complete with its graceful silver birds seemingly moving ...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/CKKYQVSHB

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    DUKAS_28001188_REX
    Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen North Downs Picture Agency / Rex Features (2102204t)
    Bust of Kaiser Wilhelm II
    Kaisrer Wilhelm's Dutch Refuge Under Threat
    He lost a war, an empire, a crown and a country. Now, nearly a century after the beginning of the bloodbath his ambition spawned, the last Kaiser of Germany is poised to lose his final resting place in the country that offered him sanctuary.

    Holland is pulling the plug on House Doorn, the refuge for Kaiser Wilhelm II - known to a generation who fought the Great War as Kaiser Bill - as part of the general austerity cuts sweeping a Europe he tried so desperately to conquer. A unique shrine to his times, his ambition and, above all, to his overarching vanity, House Doorn and its ghosts are about to be mothballed for eternity for the sake of less than 200,000 pounds.

    That is the shortfall between what the mansion and its treasures takes in from paying visitors and what the Dutch state, pressed like most others in Europe, pays in annual grants to keep the time capsule of the Kaiser's life open. If it closes in the new year, as it must if no solution is found, this martial Downton Abbey will be shuttered and its truly priceless treasures - from ornate silverware and porcelain, to uniforms and photos, letters and medals that drape like flowers from behind glass frames - boxed and hidden from view for good.

    What makes House Doorn unique among historical sites is the fact that the clock stopped on June 4 1941 when he died and nothing has changed since. The bed he breathed his last on is still made up, adorned with the last bouquet of dried flowers from his son he ever received; the last cigar he never got to smoke still sits in the turret room, which he turned into a study, next to the correspondence he never got to finish. The dining table, complete with its graceful silver birds seemingly moving through a forest of cutlery an...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/CKKYQVSHB

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    DUKAS_28001187_REX
    Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen North Downs Picture Agency / Rex Features (2102204u)
    The headstones of his dogs with the mausoleum in the background.
    Kaisrer Wilhelm's Dutch Refuge Under Threat
    He lost a war, an empire, a crown and a country. Now, nearly a century after the beginning of the bloodbath his ambition spawned, the last Kaiser of Germany is poised to lose his final resting place in the country that offered him sanctuary.

    Holland is pulling the plug on House Doorn, the refuge for Kaiser Wilhelm II - known to a generation who fought the Great War as Kaiser Bill - as part of the general austerity cuts sweeping a Europe he tried so desperately to conquer. A unique shrine to his times, his ambition and, above all, to his overarching vanity, House Doorn and its ghosts are about to be mothballed for eternity for the sake of less than 200,000 pounds.

    That is the shortfall between what the mansion and its treasures takes in from paying visitors and what the Dutch state, pressed like most others in Europe, pays in annual grants to keep the time capsule of the Kaiser's life open. If it closes in the new year, as it must if no solution is found, this martial Downton Abbey will be shuttered and its truly priceless treasures - from ornate silverware and porcelain, to uniforms and photos, letters and medals that drape like flowers from behind glass frames - boxed and hidden from view for good.

    What makes House Doorn unique among historical sites is the fact that the clock stopped on June 4 1941 when he died and nothing has changed since. The bed he breathed his last on is still made up, adorned with the last bouquet of dried flowers from his son he ever received; the last cigar he never got to smoke still sits in the turret room, which he turned into a study, next to the correspondence he never got to finish. The dining table, complete with its graceful silver birds seemingl...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/CKKYQVSHB

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    DUKAS_28001186_REX
    Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen North Downs Picture Agency / Rex Features (2102204s)
    Museum Director Eymert-Jen Goossens with a bust of Kaiser Wilhelm II
    Kaisrer Wilhelm's Dutch Refuge Under Threat
    He lost a war, an empire, a crown and a country. Now, nearly a century after the beginning of the bloodbath his ambition spawned, the last Kaiser of Germany is poised to lose his final resting place in the country that offered him sanctuary.

    Holland is pulling the plug on House Doorn, the refuge for Kaiser Wilhelm II - known to a generation who fought the Great War as Kaiser Bill - as part of the general austerity cuts sweeping a Europe he tried so desperately to conquer. A unique shrine to his times, his ambition and, above all, to his overarching vanity, House Doorn and its ghosts are about to be mothballed for eternity for the sake of less than 200,000 pounds.

    That is the shortfall between what the mansion and its treasures takes in from paying visitors and what the Dutch state, pressed like most others in Europe, pays in annual grants to keep the time capsule of the Kaiser's life open. If it closes in the new year, as it must if no solution is found, this martial Downton Abbey will be shuttered and its truly priceless treasures - from ornate silverware and porcelain, to uniforms and photos, letters and medals that drape like flowers from behind glass frames - boxed and hidden from view for good.

    What makes House Doorn unique among historical sites is the fact that the clock stopped on June 4 1941 when he died and nothing has changed since. The bed he breathed his last on is still made up, adorned with the last bouquet of dried flowers from his son he ever received; the last cigar he never got to smoke still sits in the turret room, which he turned into a study, next to the correspondence he never got to finish. The dining table, complete with its graceful silver birds seem...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/CKKYQVSHB

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    DUKAS_28001182_REX
    Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen North Downs Picture Agency / Rex Features (2102204p)
    The Kaisers bedroom slippers.
    Kaisrer Wilhelm's Dutch Refuge Under Threat
    He lost a war, an empire, a crown and a country. Now, nearly a century after the beginning of the bloodbath his ambition spawned, the last Kaiser of Germany is poised to lose his final resting place in the country that offered him sanctuary.

    Holland is pulling the plug on House Doorn, the refuge for Kaiser Wilhelm II - known to a generation who fought the Great War as Kaiser Bill - as part of the general austerity cuts sweeping a Europe he tried so desperately to conquer. A unique shrine to his times, his ambition and, above all, to his overarching vanity, House Doorn and its ghosts are about to be mothballed for eternity for the sake of less than 200,000 pounds.

    That is the shortfall between what the mansion and its treasures takes in from paying visitors and what the Dutch state, pressed like most others in Europe, pays in annual grants to keep the time capsule of the Kaiser's life open. If it closes in the new year, as it must if no solution is found, this martial Downton Abbey will be shuttered and its truly priceless treasures - from ornate silverware and porcelain, to uniforms and photos, letters and medals that drape like flowers from behind glass frames - boxed and hidden from view for good.

    What makes House Doorn unique among historical sites is the fact that the clock stopped on June 4 1941 when he died and nothing has changed since. The bed he breathed his last on is still made up, adorned with the last bouquet of dried flowers from his son he ever received; the last cigar he never got to smoke still sits in the turret room, which he turned into a study, next to the correspondence he never got to finish. The dining table, complete with its graceful silver birds seemingly moving through a forest of cutler...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/CKKYQVSHB

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    DUKAS_28001179_REX
    Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen North Downs Picture Agency / Rex Features (2102204l)
    One of the Kaisers cigars on his writing desk.
    Kaisrer Wilhelm's Dutch Refuge Under Threat
    He lost a war, an empire, a crown and a country. Now, nearly a century after the beginning of the bloodbath his ambition spawned, the last Kaiser of Germany is poised to lose his final resting place in the country that offered him sanctuary.

    Holland is pulling the plug on House Doorn, the refuge for Kaiser Wilhelm II - known to a generation who fought the Great War as Kaiser Bill - as part of the general austerity cuts sweeping a Europe he tried so desperately to conquer. A unique shrine to his times, his ambition and, above all, to his overarching vanity, House Doorn and its ghosts are about to be mothballed for eternity for the sake of less than 200,000 pounds.

    That is the shortfall between what the mansion and its treasures takes in from paying visitors and what the Dutch state, pressed like most others in Europe, pays in annual grants to keep the time capsule of the Kaiser's life open. If it closes in the new year, as it must if no solution is found, this martial Downton Abbey will be shuttered and its truly priceless treasures - from ornate silverware and porcelain, to uniforms and photos, letters and medals that drape like flowers from behind glass frames - boxed and hidden from view for good.

    What makes House Doorn unique among historical sites is the fact that the clock stopped on June 4 1941 when he died and nothing has changed since. The bed he breathed his last on is still made up, adorned with the last bouquet of dried flowers from his son he ever received; the last cigar he never got to smoke still sits in the turret room, which he turned into a study, next to the correspondence he never got to finish. The dining table, complete with its graceful silver birds seemingly moving through a...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/CKKYQVSHB

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    DUKAS_28001174_REX
    Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Stichting Huis Doorn / Rex Features (2102204ar)
    Kaiser Wilhelm II in souwester. c1935
    Kaisrer Wilhelm's Dutch Refuge Under Threat
    He lost a war, an empire, a crown and a country. Now, nearly a century after the beginning of the bloodbath his ambition spawned, the last Kaiser of Germany is poised to lose his final resting place in the country that offered him sanctuary.

    Holland is pulling the plug on House Doorn, the refuge for Kaiser Wilhelm II - known to a generation who fought the Great War as Kaiser Bill - as part of the general austerity cuts sweeping a Europe he tried so desperately to conquer. A unique shrine to his times, his ambition and, above all, to his overarching vanity, House Doorn and its ghosts are about to be mothballed for eternity for the sake of less than 200,000 pounds.

    That is the shortfall between what the mansion and its treasures takes in from paying visitors and what the Dutch state, pressed like most others in Europe, pays in annual grants to keep the time capsule of the Kaiser's life open. If it closes in the new year, as it must if no solution is found, this martial Downton Abbey will be shuttered and its truly priceless treasures - from ornate silverware and porcelain, to uniforms and photos, letters and medals that drape like flowers from behind glass frames - boxed and hidden from view for good.

    What makes House Doorn unique among historical sites is the fact that the clock stopped on June 4 1941 when he died and nothing has changed since. The bed he breathed his last on is still made up, adorned with the last bouquet of dried flowers from his son he ever received; the last cigar he never got to smoke still sits in the turret room, which he turned into a study, next to the correspondence he never got to finish. The dining table, complete with its graceful silver birds seemingly moving through a forest of cutlery and cry...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/CKKYQVSHB

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    DUKAS_28001173_REX
    Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen North Downs Picture Agency / Rex Features (2102204g)
    Museum Director Eymert-Jan Goossens stacks ornaments that are to be packed away.
    Kaisrer Wilhelm's Dutch Refuge Under Threat
    He lost a war, an empire, a crown and a country. Now, nearly a century after the beginning of the bloodbath his ambition spawned, the last Kaiser of Germany is poised to lose his final resting place in the country that offered him sanctuary.

    Holland is pulling the plug on House Doorn, the refuge for Kaiser Wilhelm II - known to a generation who fought the Great War as Kaiser Bill - as part of the general austerity cuts sweeping a Europe he tried so desperately to conquer. A unique shrine to his times, his ambition and, above all, to his overarching vanity, House Doorn and its ghosts are about to be mothballed for eternity for the sake of less than 200,000 pounds.

    That is the shortfall between what the mansion and its treasures takes in from paying visitors and what the Dutch state, pressed like most others in Europe, pays in annual grants to keep the time capsule of the Kaiser's life open. If it closes in the new year, as it must if no solution is found, this martial Downton Abbey will be shuttered and its truly priceless treasures - from ornate silverware and porcelain, to uniforms and photos, letters and medals that drape like flowers from behind glass frames - boxed and hidden from view for good.

    What makes House Doorn unique among historical sites is the fact that the clock stopped on June 4 1941 when he died and nothing has changed since. The bed he breathed his last on is still made up, adorned with the last bouquet of dried flowers from his son he ever received; the last cigar he never got to smoke still sits in the turret room, which he turned into a study, next to the correspondence he never got to finish. The dining table, complete with its graceful silve...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/CKKYQVSHB

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    DUKAS_28001171_REX
    Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen North Downs Picture Agency / Rex Features (2102204e)
    Doorn House
    Kaisrer Wilhelm's Dutch Refuge Under Threat
    He lost a war, an empire, a crown and a country. Now, nearly a century after the beginning of the bloodbath his ambition spawned, the last Kaiser of Germany is poised to lose his final resting place in the country that offered him sanctuary.

    Holland is pulling the plug on House Doorn, the refuge for Kaiser Wilhelm II - known to a generation who fought the Great War as Kaiser Bill - as part of the general austerity cuts sweeping a Europe he tried so desperately to conquer. A unique shrine to his times, his ambition and, above all, to his overarching vanity, House Doorn and its ghosts are about to be mothballed for eternity for the sake of less than 200,000 pounds.

    That is the shortfall between what the mansion and its treasures takes in from paying visitors and what the Dutch state, pressed like most others in Europe, pays in annual grants to keep the time capsule of the Kaiser's life open. If it closes in the new year, as it must if no solution is found, this martial Downton Abbey will be shuttered and its truly priceless treasures - from ornate silverware and porcelain, to uniforms and photos, letters and medals that drape like flowers from behind glass frames - boxed and hidden from view for good.

    What makes House Doorn unique among historical sites is the fact that the clock stopped on June 4 1941 when he died and nothing has changed since. The bed he breathed his last on is still made up, adorned with the last bouquet of dried flowers from his son he ever received; the last cigar he never got to smoke still sits in the turret room, which he turned into a study, next to the correspondence he never got to finish. The dining table, complete with its graceful silver birds seemingly moving through a forest of cutlery and crystal, is ...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/CKKYQVSHB

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    DUKAS_28001169_REX
    Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen North Downs Picture Agency / Rex Features (2102204d)
    Museum Director Eymert-Jan Goossens covers a chair with a dust sheet
    Kaisrer Wilhelm's Dutch Refuge Under Threat
    He lost a war, an empire, a crown and a country. Now, nearly a century after the beginning of the bloodbath his ambition spawned, the last Kaiser of Germany is poised to lose his final resting place in the country that offered him sanctuary.

    Holland is pulling the plug on House Doorn, the refuge for Kaiser Wilhelm II - known to a generation who fought the Great War as Kaiser Bill - as part of the general austerity cuts sweeping a Europe he tried so desperately to conquer. A unique shrine to his times, his ambition and, above all, to his overarching vanity, House Doorn and its ghosts are about to be mothballed for eternity for the sake of less than 200,000 pounds.

    That is the shortfall between what the mansion and its treasures takes in from paying visitors and what the Dutch state, pressed like most others in Europe, pays in annual grants to keep the time capsule of the Kaiser's life open. If it closes in the new year, as it must if no solution is found, this martial Downton Abbey will be shuttered and its truly priceless treasures - from ornate silverware and porcelain, to uniforms and photos, letters and medals that drape like flowers from behind glass frames - boxed and hidden from view for good.

    What makes House Doorn unique among historical sites is the fact that the clock stopped on June 4 1941 when he died and nothing has changed since. The bed he breathed his last on is still made up, adorned with the last bouquet of dried flowers from his son he ever received; the last cigar he never got to smoke still sits in the turret room, which he turned into a study, next to the correspondence he never got to finish. The dining table, complete with its graceful silver birds seem...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/CKKYQVSHB

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    DUKAS_28001166_REX
    Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Stichting Huis Doorn / Rex Features (2102204aq)
    Kaiser Wilhelm II and Hermine taking tea in the Orangarie. c1933
    Kaisrer Wilhelm's Dutch Refuge Under Threat
    He lost a war, an empire, a crown and a country. Now, nearly a century after the beginning of the bloodbath his ambition spawned, the last Kaiser of Germany is poised to lose his final resting place in the country that offered him sanctuary.

    Holland is pulling the plug on House Doorn, the refuge for Kaiser Wilhelm II - known to a generation who fought the Great War as Kaiser Bill - as part of the general austerity cuts sweeping a Europe he tried so desperately to conquer. A unique shrine to his times, his ambition and, above all, to his overarching vanity, House Doorn and its ghosts are about to be mothballed for eternity for the sake of less than 200,000 pounds.

    That is the shortfall between what the mansion and its treasures takes in from paying visitors and what the Dutch state, pressed like most others in Europe, pays in annual grants to keep the time capsule of the Kaiser's life open. If it closes in the new year, as it must if no solution is found, this martial Downton Abbey will be shuttered and its truly priceless treasures - from ornate silverware and porcelain, to uniforms and photos, letters and medals that drape like flowers from behind glass frames - boxed and hidden from view for good.

    What makes House Doorn unique among historical sites is the fact that the clock stopped on June 4 1941 when he died and nothing has changed since. The bed he breathed his last on is still made up, adorned with the last bouquet of dried flowers from his son he ever received; the last cigar he never got to smoke still sits in the turret room, which he turned into a study, next to the correspondence he never got to finish. The dining table, complete with its graceful silver birds seemingly moving through ...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/CKKYQVSHB

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    DUKAS_28001165_REX
    Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Stichting Huis Doorn / Rex Features (2102204ap)
    Kaiser Wilhelm II with Hermione and children, Caroline, Princess of Schoenaich-Carolath; Henriette, Princess of Schoenaich-Carolath, Ferdinand, Prince of Schoenaich-Carolath, George William, Prince of Hesse-Darmstadt, Germany, Hans-Georg, Prince of Schoenaich-Carolath at Doorn House, c1923
    Kaisrer Wilhelm's Dutch Refuge Under Threat
    He lost a war, an empire, a crown and a country. Now, nearly a century after the beginning of the bloodbath his ambition spawned, the last Kaiser of Germany is poised to lose his final resting place in the country that offered him sanctuary.

    Holland is pulling the plug on House Doorn, the refuge for Kaiser Wilhelm II - known to a generation who fought the Great War as Kaiser Bill - as part of the general austerity cuts sweeping a Europe he tried so desperately to conquer. A unique shrine to his times, his ambition and, above all, to his overarching vanity, House Doorn and its ghosts are about to be mothballed for eternity for the sake of less than 200,000 pounds.

    That is the shortfall between what the mansion and its treasures takes in from paying visitors and what the Dutch state, pressed like most others in Europe, pays in annual grants to keep the time capsule of the Kaiser's life open. If it closes in the new year, as it must if no solution is found, this martial Downton Abbey will be shuttered and its truly priceless treasures - from ornate silverware and porcelain, to uniforms and photos, letters and medals that drape like flowers from behind glass frames - boxed and hidden from view for good.

    What makes House Doorn unique among historical sites is the fact that the clock stopped on June 4 1941 when he died and nothing has changed since. The bed he breathed his last on is still made up, adorned with the last bouquet of dried flowers from his son he ever received; the la...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/CKKYQVSHB

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    DUKAS_28001164_REX
    Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Stichting Huis Doorn / Rex Features (2102204am)
    Wilhelm II in the rosarium. c1928
    Kaisrer Wilhelm's Dutch Refuge Under Threat
    He lost a war, an empire, a crown and a country. Now, nearly a century after the beginning of the bloodbath his ambition spawned, the last Kaiser of Germany is poised to lose his final resting place in the country that offered him sanctuary.

    Holland is pulling the plug on House Doorn, the refuge for Kaiser Wilhelm II - known to a generation who fought the Great War as Kaiser Bill - as part of the general austerity cuts sweeping a Europe he tried so desperately to conquer. A unique shrine to his times, his ambition and, above all, to his overarching vanity, House Doorn and its ghosts are about to be mothballed for eternity for the sake of less than 200,000 pounds.

    That is the shortfall between what the mansion and its treasures takes in from paying visitors and what the Dutch state, pressed like most others in Europe, pays in annual grants to keep the time capsule of the Kaiser's life open. If it closes in the new year, as it must if no solution is found, this martial Downton Abbey will be shuttered and its truly priceless treasures - from ornate silverware and porcelain, to uniforms and photos, letters and medals that drape like flowers from behind glass frames - boxed and hidden from view for good.

    What makes House Doorn unique among historical sites is the fact that the clock stopped on June 4 1941 when he died and nothing has changed since. The bed he breathed his last on is still made up, adorned with the last bouquet of dried flowers from his son he ever received; the last cigar he never got to smoke still sits in the turret room, which he turned into a study, next to the correspondence he never got to finish. The dining table, complete with its graceful silver birds seemingly moving through a forest of cutlery and crystal...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/CKKYQVSHB

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    DUKAS_28001163_REX
    Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen North Downs Picture Agency / Rex Features (2102204al)
    Doorn House
    Kaisrer Wilhelm's Dutch Refuge Under Threat
    He lost a war, an empire, a crown and a country. Now, nearly a century after the beginning of the bloodbath his ambition spawned, the last Kaiser of Germany is poised to lose his final resting place in the country that offered him sanctuary.

    Holland is pulling the plug on House Doorn, the refuge for Kaiser Wilhelm II - known to a generation who fought the Great War as Kaiser Bill - as part of the general austerity cuts sweeping a Europe he tried so desperately to conquer. A unique shrine to his times, his ambition and, above all, to his overarching vanity, House Doorn and its ghosts are about to be mothballed for eternity for the sake of less than 200,000 pounds.

    That is the shortfall between what the mansion and its treasures takes in from paying visitors and what the Dutch state, pressed like most others in Europe, pays in annual grants to keep the time capsule of the Kaiser's life open. If it closes in the new year, as it must if no solution is found, this martial Downton Abbey will be shuttered and its truly priceless treasures - from ornate silverware and porcelain, to uniforms and photos, letters and medals that drape like flowers from behind glass frames - boxed and hidden from view for good.

    What makes House Doorn unique among historical sites is the fact that the clock stopped on June 4 1941 when he died and nothing has changed since. The bed he breathed his last on is still made up, adorned with the last bouquet of dried flowers from his son he ever received; the last cigar he never got to smoke still sits in the turret room, which he turned into a study, next to the correspondence he never got to finish. The dining table, complete with its graceful silver birds seemingly moving through a forest of cutlery and crystal, is...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/CKKYQVSHB

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    DUKAS_28001161_REX
    Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Stichting Huis Doorn / Rex Features (2102204ao)
    Kaiser Wilhelm II with his dog Arno. c1930
    Kaisrer Wilhelm's Dutch Refuge Under Threat
    He lost a war, an empire, a crown and a country. Now, nearly a century after the beginning of the bloodbath his ambition spawned, the last Kaiser of Germany is poised to lose his final resting place in the country that offered him sanctuary.

    Holland is pulling the plug on House Doorn, the refuge for Kaiser Wilhelm II - known to a generation who fought the Great War as Kaiser Bill - as part of the general austerity cuts sweeping a Europe he tried so desperately to conquer. A unique shrine to his times, his ambition and, above all, to his overarching vanity, House Doorn and its ghosts are about to be mothballed for eternity for the sake of less than 200,000 pounds.

    That is the shortfall between what the mansion and its treasures takes in from paying visitors and what the Dutch state, pressed like most others in Europe, pays in annual grants to keep the time capsule of the Kaiser's life open. If it closes in the new year, as it must if no solution is found, this martial Downton Abbey will be shuttered and its truly priceless treasures - from ornate silverware and porcelain, to uniforms and photos, letters and medals that drape like flowers from behind glass frames - boxed and hidden from view for good.

    What makes House Doorn unique among historical sites is the fact that the clock stopped on June 4 1941 when he died and nothing has changed since. The bed he breathed his last on is still made up, adorned with the last bouquet of dried flowers from his son he ever received; the last cigar he never got to smoke still sits in the turret room, which he turned into a study, next to the correspondence he never got to finish. The dining table, complete with its graceful silver birds seemingly moving through a forest of cutlery an...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/CKKYQVSHB

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    DUKAS_28001160_REX
    Doorn House, Utrecht, Netherlands - 28 Jan 2013
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Roger Allen North Downs Picture Agency / Rex Features (2102204ak)
    Doorn House
    Kaisrer Wilhelm's Dutch Refuge Under Threat
    He lost a war, an empire, a crown and a country. Now, nearly a century after the beginning of the bloodbath his ambition spawned, the last Kaiser of Germany is poised to lose his final resting place in the country that offered him sanctuary.

    Holland is pulling the plug on House Doorn, the refuge for Kaiser Wilhelm II - known to a generation who fought the Great War as Kaiser Bill - as part of the general austerity cuts sweeping a Europe he tried so desperately to conquer. A unique shrine to his times, his ambition and, above all, to his overarching vanity, House Doorn and its ghosts are about to be mothballed for eternity for the sake of less than 200,000 pounds.

    That is the shortfall between what the mansion and its treasures takes in from paying visitors and what the Dutch state, pressed like most others in Europe, pays in annual grants to keep the time capsule of the Kaiser's life open. If it closes in the new year, as it must if no solution is found, this martial Downton Abbey will be shuttered and its truly priceless treasures - from ornate silverware and porcelain, to uniforms and photos, letters and medals that drape like flowers from behind glass frames - boxed and hidden from view for good.

    What makes House Doorn unique among historical sites is the fact that the clock stopped on June 4 1941 when he died and nothing has changed since. The bed he breathed his last on is still made up, adorned with the last bouquet of dried flowers from his son he ever received; the last cigar he never got to smoke still sits in the turret room, which he turned into a study, next to the correspondence he never got to finish. The dining table, complete with its graceful silver birds seemingly moving through a forest of cutlery and crystal, is...
    For more information visit http://www.rexfeatures.com/stacklink/CKKYQVSHB

    DUKAS/REX

     

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