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In , he married his first cousin Mary, the elder daughter of his maternal uncle James, Duke of York , the younger brother and later successor of King Charles II. Many Protestants heralded William as a champion of their faith.
James's reign was unpopular with the Protestant majority in Britain, who feared a revival of Catholicism. Supported by a group of influential British political and religious leaders, William invaded England in what became known as the Glorious Revolution. In , he landed at the south-western English port of Brixham ; James was deposed shortly afterward. William's reputation as a staunch Protestant enabled him and his wife to take power. During the early years of his reign, William was occupied abroad with the Nine Years' War — , leaving Mary to govern Britain alone.
She died in In the Jacobites , a faction loyal to the deposed James, plotted unsuccessfully to assassinate William and restore James to the throne. William's lack of children and the death in of his nephew the Duke of Gloucester , the son of his sister-in-law Anne , threatened the Protestant succession. The danger was averted by placing William and Mary's cousins, the Protestant Hanoverians , in line to the throne after Anne with the Act of Settlement Eight days before William was born, his father died of smallpox ; thus, William was the sovereign Prince of Orange from the moment of his birth.
Mary wanted to name him Charles after her brother, but her mother-in-law insisted on giving him the name William Willem to bolster his prospects of becoming stadtholder. William's mother showed little personal interest in her son, sometimes being absent for years, and had always deliberately kept herself apart from Dutch society. The ideal education for William was described in Discours sur la nourriture de S. Monseigneur le Prince d'Orange , a short treatise, perhaps by one of William's tutors, Constantijn Huygens.