T.
- Tacitus, extract from his "Annals" applied to Struensee, [83], note.
- Theatre, fearful alarm caused by the crying of a child, [138], [139].
- Thott, colonel, appointed reporter for the two chanceries, [156].
- Treld, the town captain, [119].
- Tyge-Rothe, literary cynicism of, [135].
U.
- Uldall, lawyer, of the supreme court,
- appointed to defend the queen, [213];
- his consultation, [229];
- his defence of the queen, [233]-[250];
- omission in the defence, [250];
- selected for defence of Struensee, [255];
- his defence, [298]-[316];
- his lukewarmness, [316];
- the advocate Wiwet's reply to, [322].
V.
- Voltaire, D'Alembert's admiration of, [200].
W.
- Wales, princess dowager of, her illness, [160];
- her death, [164];
- her character, [164], [165].
- Walpole, Horace, his reflections on the successive mortifications of the royal family, [160];
- anecdote related by, [168], note.
- Warnstedt, chamberlain von, recalled to court, [59].
- Winslöw, the celebrated anatomist, [259], note.
- Winterfeldt, captain, [11], [14].
- Wiwet, Fiscal General, receives the king's orders to indict Struensee and Brandt, [255];
- his form of indictment, [256];
- his recapitulation of Struensee's life and character, [258] et seq.;
- his ungenerous insults, [259], note;
- his reply, lawyer Uldall, [322].
- Wraxall, Mr. N., his notices respecting the arrest of Caroline Matilda, [116], note.
Z.
- Zeeland dragoons, take the place of the disbanded guards, [56].