A.
- Administration, the new one, and its members, [129].
- Adeler, major von, [56].
- Adultery, on the law of, [237], [250].
- Ahrenfeld, major von, a favourite of the guards, [74].
- Army, changes in the, [55].
- "Atticus," his libellous attacks on the British ministry, [172];
- his condemnation of Caroline Matilda and Struensee, [172], [173];
- his scandalous charges, [175].
B.
- Bang, lawyer in the exchequer court, engaged against the queen, [213];
- his indictment and recapitulation of charges, [214]-[229];
- selected for defending Brandt, [255].
- Berger, professor, his attendance on the king, [59];
- his arrest, [112];
- his treatment in prison, and his examination before the privy council, [201].
- Bering, Magnus (see Beringskjold).
- Beringskjold, von, joins in a conspiracy against Struensee, [84]-[102];
- his position and character, [90];
- his baptismal name, ib.;
- his rewards, [125];
- his punishment, [142].
- Bernstorff, count von, his opposition to count Rantzau, [345].
- Biälke, von, marshal of the court, [16], [139].
- Body guard, its dismissal justified, [307].
- Braëm, Conferenz-rath, sends anonymous admonitory letters to Brandt, [3], [17];
- one of the judges for the trial of Struensee, [179];
- his threats and abuse, ib.
- Brandt, count, anonymous warning letter sent to, [3];
- his levities, [15], [16];
- receives a second anonymous letter, [17];
- his letter of complaint to Struensee, [27];
- Struensee's letter to, [34];
- his treacherous proposals for arresting Struensee, [47]-[49];
- his duty to find the king amusement, [60];
- exposed to his Majesty's mad freaks, [61];
- his personal conflict with the king, [62];
- appointed master of the wardrobe, [63];
- his arrest, [109];
- his wretched cell, [110];
- cruelly treated in prison, [148];
- his conduct, [150];
- his curiosity about matters of gallantry, [182], note;
- his examination before the privy council of state, [184];
- his character, [185];
- his apparent conversion, ib.;
- was he a hypocrite? [186];
- Dr. Hee's character of him, [187];
- the Fiscal General's statements respecting, [261], [262];
- account of his fight with the king, [278].
- Bruhn, the queen's maid, [218], [219].
- Budget, the, [349].
- Bülow, baron von, [15], [53], [97], [123];
- expelled the kingdom, [143];
- his opinion of Struensee's confession, [181].
- Bute, earl of, libellous attack on, [173], [174].
C.
- Cabinet, business of the departments under the king's supervision, according to Struensee's statement, [346] et seq.;
- plan of conducting the business, [353];
- its orders emanated from the king, [355].
- Caroline Matilda, the ladies of her court, and her court amusements, [64], [65];
- conspiracy against, [84]-[104]; her arrest, [113];
- her firmness and desperate courage, [114], [115];
- variations in the accounts of her arrest, and the different authorities, [116], note;
- committed to the fortress of Kronborg, [117];
- her profound grief and despair, [117], [118];
- her harsh treatment, [118];
- her miserable apartments at Kronborg, [119] et note;
- persecution and arrests of her friends and adherents, [141] et seq.;
- her two maids of honour expatriated, [143];
- sensation caused in England by her arrest, [158] et seq.;
- her defence, [162];
- vigorous appeal by Junius on behalf of, [171];
- attacks on, and defence of, [175];
- her treatment fiendish and cruel, [177];
- her trial, [203] et seq.;
- her suite composed of spies and gaolers, [203];
- her letters to Sir R. Keith, [205];
- letter to the king, [206];
- commission appointed to examine her, [207];
- her fatal confession, [211];
- Lawyer Bang's indictment of, [213] et seq.;
- his recapitulation of charges and accusations against her, and prayer for a divorce, [214]-[229];
- her advocate Uldall, [231];
- and his defence, [233]-[250];
- appeal to the king in her favour, [251];
- the sentence passed upon her, [254].
- Carstenskjold, major von, [56];
- his rewards, [126].
- Charles, prince of Hesse, his account of Caroline Matilda's arrest, [116] note.
- Chemnitz, the preacher, insults the imprisoned queen, [203], [204].
- Christian VII., his insane amusement, [59], [60];
- his pugnacious propensities, [60]-[62];
- surprised by the conspirators, who compel him to
- sign orders for the arrest of Struensee and others, [103], [104];
- the conspiracy having succeeded, he makes his appearance in state, drawn by eight white horses, [120];
- a helpless tool in the hands of the new government, [128];
- his pretended indictment of the queen, and suit for a divorce, [213]-[229];
- had no idea of the value of money, [319];
- his cabinet regulations, and the general rules laid down by him, [346] et seq.
- Christiansborg palace, commission of inquisition sit daily for the trial of state prisoners, [152].
- Christianity, beneficial effects of, [199].
- Clergy, their bitterness against the fallen ministry, [130].
- Coffee-house scandal, [161].
- Commission of Inquisition, appointed to try the state prisoners, [151], [152].
- Commission, general, appointed as a supreme court to try the cause of the king against the queen, and pass sentence, [212];
- members of the court, ib.;
- appoint lawyer Bang to undertake the king's cause, and Uldall, of the supreme council, the cause of the queen, [213].
- Conspiracy, secretly brooding, [81];
- leaders found in the higher circles, [84];
- their names, ib.;
- forged document employed, [85];
- preparations of the conspirators, [98] et seq.;
- the conspirators surprise the king in his bed, [102];
- compel him to sign orders for arresting Struensee and others, [103], [104];
- completely successful, the principal officers of state having been arrested and imprisoned, [119].
- Copenhagen, dissatisfaction of the people at, [8] et seq. (see Denmark, and Struensee).
- Council of State, Struensee's abolition of the, [282].
- Court, amusements of the, [64], [65], [83], [136], [137];
- great changes at, [138];
- rules to be observed at, [350], [351].
- Court parties, Struensee's notices of, [333].
- Crown Prince, Struensee's treatment of the, [279].
D.
- D'Alembert's admiration of Voltaire, [200].
- De Flaux's account of Caroline Matilda's apartments at Kronborg, [119].
- Denmark, alarming preparations against insurrection, [67];
- public dissatisfaction, [68];
- meeting of the royal guards, [73];
- behaviour of the citizens, [75];
- a formidable conspiracy against Struensee and his government, which terminates with the arrest and imprisonment of the queen, [84], [107], [120];
- tumultuous proceedings, [121], [122];
- the new administration, [129];
- public thanks offered in all the churches, [130];
- police regulations for preventing mobs and street riots, [140];
- violent persecutions and punishments, [148];
- the Lex Regia, [155], [156];
- state trials of the queen, Struensee, and others, [178] et seq.;
- sentence passed upon the queen, [254];
- state of the kingdom, [257];
- and of parties, [341], [342];
- general dissatisfaction in, [344].
- Dieden, baron, the Danish envoy at St. James's, [168].
- Dockyard men, of Copenhagen, their complaints, [11], [12].
- Doctrinaire school, Struensee's state paper on the, [34]-[47].
- Düval, captain C., [141].