The order of the banished Queen




caroline mathilde
(public domain)

Caroline Mathilda of Great Britain was born in 1751 as the daughter of Frederick, Prince of Wales and Princess Augusta of Saxe-Gotha. She never knew her father as he died three months before her birth. At the age of fifteen, she left for Denmark in order to marry her first cousin, Christian VII of Denmark. She and Christian had two children, the future Frederick VI and Louise Auguste. However, her daughter was very likely to have been fathered by Johann Struensee, who was the royal physician caring for her mentally ill husband.

Caroline Mathilda’s affair with Struensee had begun around spring 1770, and while the King was unstable, Struensee ruled through him for a period of time. He issued approximately 1069 cabinet orders during this time. On the occasion of the King’s birthday on 29 January 1771, Caroline Mathilda founded the Mathildeordenen or the Order of Mathilde. It was awarded to members of the royal house and the close circle around them. Eleven of the twelve recipients were decorated on the days itself, the twelfth, Louise von Plessen, was still in exile.

Recipients
  1. Caroline Matilda of Great Britain
  2. Christian VII of Denmark
  3. Juliana Maria of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel
  4. Frederick, Hereditary Prince of Denmark
  5. Johann Friedrich Struensee
  6. Peter Elias von Gähler
  7. Christine Sophie von Gähler
  8. Schack Carl greve Rantzau–Ascheberg
  9. Caroline Schimmelmann
  10. Amalie Sophie Holstein
  11. Enevold Brandt
  12. Louise von Plessen

The badge consisted of Caroline Mathilda’s monogram, surrounded by a ring. It featured 23 precious stones and nine beads. It had a rose-coloured ribbon with three silver stripes. The men carried it around the neck and the women on the chest. King Christian VII and Struensee also had an order ring. The Mathildenordenen did not survive its creator’s downfall, and it was never used again.

Caroline Mathilda’s affair was found out in 1772, and while Struensee went to the block, Caroline Mathilda was mercifully exiled to her brother’s lands in Hanover. She died suddenly of scarlet fever at Celle on 10 May 1775 at the age of 23.






About Moniek Bloks 2699 Articles
My name is Moniek and I am from the Netherlands. I began this website in 2013 because I wanted to share these women's amazing stories.

2 Comments

    • Despite her alleged paternity, she was treated as a Princess of Denmark and she married Frederick Christian II, Duke of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Augustenburg and they have descendants today 🙂

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