The capital of the Netherlands is Amsterdam, even though the States-General and the government have both been situated in The Hague since 1584. Amsterdam is the capital by constitution and is recognized as such by the Dutch.
Amsterdam has been the seat of government for only a short period. From 1808 to 1810, during the Kingdom of Holland, Louis Bonaparte resided in Amsterdam and declared the city capital of his kingdom. The former town hall was made the Royal Palace.
In 1810 The Netherlands were annexed by the French Empire and King Louis was replaced by a French governor, who also resided in the Royal Palace in Amsterdam. In 1813 (the fall of the French Empire and the restoration of the old regime) the government and the States-General moved back to The Hague.
In 1815 however, this remark disappeared. Article 52 now simply mentioned Amsterdam as one of the cities where the King might be sworn in (it might also take place in a city of the Southern Netherlands - present Belgium).
The status of Amsterdam as capital remained unclear, even in the constitution of 1848 and after the constitutional changes of 1917, until the fully new constitution of 1983. In 1983 the phrase the city of Amsterdam was changed into the capital city Amsterdam. The explicit intention of this change was to make it explicit that Amsterdam indeed is the capital.
The deeper cause of this situation is the fact that before the Batavian Republic of 1795 the Netherlands were not a unitary state but a confederation, the United Provinces, that simply had no official capital at all as each province was, at least in theory, a sovereign state. People were thus used to being ruled from The Hague in fact while publicly acknowledging it as a mere residence only.
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"Capital of the Netherlands".
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