Upon turning 18, the princess of Orange will become a Dame in the Order of the Golden Lion of Nassau (
see this page on koninklijkhuis.nl (in Dutch)).
Note that sons are knights from birth but in 1984 then Queen Beatrix arranged with grand duke Jean that daughters would also be included in the order (which made sense from her perspective as in the Netherlands sons would no longer be higher in the line of succession than their older sister(s) - but made less sense for Luxembourg as they restricted their succession to males (roughly) until 2009; so I guess this was the compromise).
She will also become a Dame Grand Cross in the Order of the Netherlands Lion, just like her father on his 18th birthday and her grandmother on hers.
Her younger sisters will also get both decorations upon turning 18, so, they are not limited to the direct heir. However, while Amalia's spouse will be made knight grand cross of the order of the Netherlands Lion on his wedding day; their husbands will not automatically receive the order of the Netherlands Lion (princess Laurentien is still waiting - Pieter van Vollenhoven only got it the day before he turned 65). Let's say that he truly earned (unlike the many heads of states and their spouses who receive it for just visiting the Netherlands for a few days).
So her CV will be updated in december.
(I see that
Dame is used but officially she will be
Knight grand-cross).
Her Royal Highness
Princess Catharina-Amalia Beatrix Carmen Victoria
Princess of Orange, Princess of the Netherlands, Princess of Orange-Nassau
Knight grand-cross in the Order of the Lion of the Netherlands (2021)
Knight grand-cross in the Order of the Golden Lion of the House Nassau (2021)
Investiture Medal King Willem-Alexander (2013)
She seems to be in LA at the moment.
But I don't expect festivities. It is very likely that the Netherlands will go in some form of lockdown for 3 weeks... So, not a time for large royal parties.
Yes, it is most unlikely there will be anything other than the official entrance of The Princess of Orange into the
Raad van State, assembled in the former city palace of King Willem II.
But even that will be doubtful s a new lock-down is nearing...
Entrance into the Raad van State
Her Royal Highness the Princess of Orange will be introduced into the
Raad van State (est. 1531) on Wednesday afternoon, December 8th, 2021 by His Majesty The King, President of the
Raad van State. Her Majesty Queen Máxima will also be present.
This extraordinary meeting will take place in the ballroom of the former palace at the Kneuterdijk in The Hague. The Princess of Orange, The King and the Vice-President of the
Raad van State, Mr Thom de Graaf, will give short speeches during the extraordinary meeting.
Member of the Council of State and the Advisory Division
Article 74 of the Constitution stipulates that the Princess of Orange, as intended successor to the throne, is a 'member by right' from her eighteenth birthday, i.e. on 7 December 2021, and therefore has a seat in the
Raad van State and in the Advisory Division.
The intended successor to the throne can thus prepare for her future task as Queen by, among other things, gaining the necessary knowledge of legislation and constitutional law.
Ceremonial function
The Constitution stipulates that The King is President of the
Raad van State. This is a ceremonial function, because the day-to-day management rests with the Vice-President. The Princess of Orange will soon be allowed to participate in meetings of the Advisory Division. In practice they have no substantive involvement. They also have no voting rights.
Extraordinary meeting
Due to the renovation of the
Binnenhof (Inner Court), the extraordinary meeting will be held on December 8th in the former palace at the Kneuterdijk and not in the Full Council Chamber of the
Raad van State at the
Binnenhof. To mark the occasion, at the invitation of the
Raad van State, the Princess of Orange will subsequently plant a
Koningslinde (King's Lime, Kaiser Linden) in the French garden of the former palace at the Kneuterdijk.
Raad van State
The
Raad van State (Council of State) is a High Council of State and has seventy state councillors. The Council is an independent advisor to the government and parliament on legislation and governance and is the highest general administrative court in the Netherlands. These tasks are performed by two separate departments: the Advisory Division and the Administrative Jurisdiction Division.