Caroline Matilda of Great Britain

Caroline Matilda of Great Britain
Portrait by Jens Juel, 1771
Queen consort of Denmark and Norway
Tenure8 November 1766 – April 1772
Coronation1 May 1767
Born(1751-07-22)22 July 1751 (New Style)[a]
Leicester House, London, England, Great Britain
Died10 May 1775(1775-05-10) (aged 23)
Celle, Holy Roman Empire
Burial13 May 1775
Stadtkirche St. Marien, Celle
Spouse
(m. 1766; div. 1772)
IssueFrederick VI of Denmark
Louise Augusta, Duchess of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Augustenburg
HouseHanover
FatherFrederick, Prince of Wales
MotherAugusta of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg
SignatureCaroline Matilda of Great Britain's signature

Caroline Matilda of Great Britain (Danish: Caroline Mathilde;[1] 22 July [O.S. 11 July] 1751[a] – 10 May 1775) was Queen of Denmark and Norway from 1766 to 1772 by marriage to King Christian VII.

The youngest and posthumous daughter of Frederick, Prince of Wales, by Princess Augusta of Saxe-Gotha, Caroline Matilda was raised in a secluded family atmosphere away from the royal court. At the age of fifteen, she was married to her first cousin, King Christian VII of Denmark and Norway, who suffered from a mental illness and was cold to his wife throughout the marriage. She had two children: the future Frederick VI and Louise Augusta; the latter's biological father may have been the German physician Johann Friedrich Struensee.

In 1769, Struensee entered the service of the Danish king; initially Caroline Matilda treated him coldly, but he quickly won the Queen's heart and they began a love affair. Struensee gained more and more power and instituted a series of reforms that Caroline Matilda supported. Struensee's reforms and his relationship with the Queen generated powerful enemies, who included Christian VII's stepmother Queen Dowager Juliana Maria and her son Prince Frederick. In 1772, Juliana Maria directed a plot to remove Struensee and the Queen from power. Struensee was executed and Caroline Matilda was divorced and banished to Celle, Electorate of Hanover, where she died at the age of twenty-three from scarlet fever in 1775.


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  1. ^ Weir 2011, p. 285.