I.
- Indigenate law of Denmark, [281].
J.
- Juell-Wind, J. K., one of the commissioners who sentenced Struensee, [61];
- and Count Brandt, [67].
- Juliana Maria, the dowager queen, her vengeance satiated in witnessing the execution of Counts Struensee and Brandt, [94], [95];
- her presents to the chaplains who attended the unhappy victims, [95], note;
- Suhm's account of her avenging spirit, [96];
- her unnatural feelings, [151];
- her heartless conduct after the death of Queen Matilda, [250];
- her absolute sway, [280], [281];
- her fury at the overthrow of the Guldberg ministry, and at the insulting treatment of her son by the crown prince, [287], [288];
- her power at an end, [289];
- driven into obscurity, [290].
K.
- Keith, colonel Sir R. M., his visits to the Queen of Denmark, [142];
- his active interference on the queen's behalf, [147];
- Lord Suffolk's letter to, ib.;
- his anecdote of the queen, [150];
- accompanies her to the chateau Göhrde, and then takes leave of her, [157];
- his letter to Lord Suffolk, [161];
- his interview with the queen, ib.
- Köller-Banner, one of the triumvirate in the government of Denmark, [262];
- his projects for remodelling the army, [265];
- his plans examined, and rejected, [266];
- his dissatisfaction, and dismissal, [267];
- appointed governor of the fortress of Rendburg, ib.;
- royal concessions made to him, [268];
- receives his discharge from the military service and retires to Altona, where he dies, [270].
- Kronsborg, anecdote of the fettered slave of, [155].
L.
- Lehzen, pastor, [245];
- his account of the queen's death, [247].
- Leyser, Dr. von, [245].
- Lex Regia, a law by which all government decrees, letters and documents, shall be signed by the king, [52].
- Lichtenstein, baron von, Mr. Wraxall's interviews with respecting the Queen of Denmark, [203], [204];
- communicates the king's views and intentions, [204] et seq.;
- Mr. Wraxall's satisfactory interview with.
- Louisa Augusta, princess, separated from her mother, [152].
M.
- McBride, captain, arrives at Copenhagen, [150];
- introduced to Caroline Matilda, [151].
- Magistracy, abolition of the, [41].
- Mantel, the queen's valet, [221].
- Mathias, British minister at Hamburg, [184], [186].
- Mattheson, Mr. Wraxall's letters to be addressed to, [199].
- Matthiesen, Jerome, Mr. Wraxall and several Danish nobility sup with, [178].
- Moranti, the negro boy, his evidence, [5].
- Mösting, von, minister of finances, [287].
- Munkholm, fortress of, [124];
- Colonel Falckenskjold sentenced to imprisonment for life there, ib.;
- history of his abode there, [125] et seq.;
- voyage to, [125], [126];
- description of the fort, [126];
- a monastery of Benedictines founded here by Canute the Great, ib. note;
- demoralised state of the soldiery, [128];
- Lieutenant-General von der Osten the commandant, ib.;
- officers of, [129];
- the garrison chaplain, [132];
- a fresh commandant of the fortress, Major Colin, [135];
- imprisonment of Beringskjold, the political foe of Falckenskjold, [278].
- Münter, Dr., peruses the sentence against Struensee with trembling, [73];
- his communications with Struensee, [73] et seq.;
- his opinions on Struensee's conduct, [79];
- his kindness to Struensee, [83];
- attends him to the scaffold, [90]-[3];
- rewards allotted to, [95] et note.