1 The new king sewed his own wetsuit
Willem-Alexander spent two years living in rainy Wales in the mid-1980s when he was a student at an international sixth-form college. His mum, Queen Beatrix, came to Atlantic College near Bridgend to drop her son off.Dutch TV crews were invited along to record the moment and were occasionally spotted afterwards lurking in bushes. The college, known as AC, is home to students from more than 90 countries. (There was a relatively big Dutch contingent; its slogan went: "If you're not Dutch, you're not much.") AC has a strong idealistic ethos, with an emphasis on international understanding; most students are on scholarships. The campus boasts a Harry Potter-style medieval castle, a jousting field, and sweeping views of the Bristol Channel. Students study the International Baccalaureate. The teenage prince joined AC's student-crewed RNLI lifeboat service, which was sometimes called out for rescues; you had to sew your own wetsuit. He was also a pretty decent squash player. A laidback figure, Willem had a reputation as a party-lover and a bit of a Romeo. He dated several female students from Latin America and nobody was very surprised when he later married an Argentinian woman.
2 The Dutch royal family costs more than the British one
For a supposedly low-key, Scandinavian-style bicycling monarchy, the Dutch royal family come pretty expensive. According to last year's annual study by Herman Matthijs, professor of administrative science and public finances at Ghent University, the House of Oranje-Nassau costs the country's taxpayers £31m a year. That's more than any other royal family in western Europe – including, for the first time, the House of Windsor, whose direct costs were reduced by 16% last year to around £29.7m.The overall bill for the Dutch monarchy is four times the cost of the Spanish royal family – and proportionately even dearer, because the Netherlands' population of 16.7 million is only a third the size of Spain's and a quarter the size of Britain's. The expenditure is divided between allowances paid to the monarch and the heir apparent (in 2010, Queen Beatrix, Prince Willem-Alexander and Princess MĆ”xima received €7.1m), expenses incurred in the performance of official duties (€27m), and other expenses related to the management of the royal house (€5.7m). The Dutch royal family is also very rich. In 2009, Forbes magazine estimated Queen Beatrix's wealth at $200m, noting reports that the Queen and her family had been hit by declines in real estate and equity investments but may also have lost up to $100m in Bernie Madoff's Ponzi scheme – although the royal house has consistently denied that allegation.
3 Willem has a reputation
King Willem-Alexander was a bit of a lad, earning himself the nickname Prins Pils (Lager Prince) for his student beer-drinking, and once drove his car into a ditch.
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