Accession After a long period of infirmity, Frederick V died on 14 January 1766, just 42 years old. At the death of his father, Christian immediately ascended the thrones of Denmark and Norway as their sixth
absolute monarch, a few weeks before his 17th birthday. Later the same day, Christian was proclaimed king from the balcony of
Christiansborg Palace. Christian's reign was marked by severe mental illness, which affected government decisions, and for most of his reign, Christian was only nominally king. His royal advisers changed depending on who won power struggles around the throne. Bored by the politics of being king, a few years after he acceded to the throne, Christian was given a 9-year-old slave boy called Moranti, with whom he could play games. The two would eventually become friends, and the king would spend much of his time with the young boy.
Marriage , the image has inscriptions in French Later the same year, the young king married his first cousin, the 15-year-old
Princess Caroline Matilda of Great Britain, in a dynastic marriage. They had been betrothed already in 1765. Her brother, King
George III of Great Britain, was anxious about the marriage but not aware that the bridegroom had a mental illness. They were married in a
proxy wedding ceremony on 1 October 1766 in the
Chapel Royal of
St James's Palace in London, with the Princess's brother,
Prince Edward, Duke of York and Albany, acting as the representative of the groom. After her arrival in Copenhagen, another wedding ceremony took place on 8 November 1766 in the
royal chapel at
Christiansborg Palace. Marriage celebrations and balls lasted for another month. On 1 May 1767, Christian VII and Caroline Matilda were
crowned King and Queen of Denmark and Norway in the royal chapel of Christiansborg Palace. and the Queen
Caroline Matilda after the birth. The marriage was unhappy, and after his marriage, the king abandoned himself to the worst excesses, especially sexual promiscuity. In 1767, he entered into a relationship with the courtesan
Støvlet-Cathrine. He ultimately sank into a condition of mental stupor. Symptoms during this time included
paranoia,
self-mutilation, and
hallucinations. The king showed little interest in the queen and only reluctantly visited her in her chambers. His trusted Swiss tutor,
Élie Salomon François Reverdil, had to step in, among other things, by writing love letters in the king's name, in an attempt to make the marriage result in a pregnancy and thus an heir to the throne. On 28 January 1768, Queen Caroline Mathilde gave birth at Christiansborg Palace to the royal couple's son and heir to the throne, the future
King Frederick VI.
Struensee by
Jens Juel. The progressive and radical thinker
Johann Friedrich Struensee, Christian's personal physician, became his advisor and steadily rose in power in the late 1760s to become the country's
de facto regent, introducing widespread progressive reforms. Struensee was a protégé of an
Enlightenment circle of aristocrats that had been rejected by the court in Copenhagen. He was a skilled physician, and having somewhat restored the king's health while visiting the
Schleswig-Holstein area, he gained the king's affection. He was retained as travelling physician (
Livmedikus hos Kong Christian VII) on 5 April 1768, and accompanied the entourage on the king's foreign tour to
Paris and
London via
Hannover from 6 May 1768 to 12 January 1769. He was given the title of State Councilor (
etatsråd) on 12 May 1768, barely a week after leaving Altona. The neglected and lonely Caroline Matilda entered into an affair with Struensee. From 1770 to 1772, Struensee was
de facto regent of the country and introduced progressive reforms that were signed into law by Christian VII. Struensee was deposed by a coup in 1772 after which the country was ruled by Christian's stepmother,
Juliane Marie of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, his half-brother
Frederick, and the Danish politician
Ove Høegh-Guldberg.
Divorce The king divorced Caroline Matilda in 1772 after they had produced two children: the future
King Frederick VI and
Princess Louise Auguste (the latter is believed to be the daughter of Struensee). Struensee, who had enacted many modernising and emancipating reforms, was arrested and executed the same year. Christian signed Struensee's arrest and execution warrant under pressure from his stepmother, Queen
Juliana Maria, who had led the movement to have the marriage ended. Caroline Matilda retained her title but not her children. She eventually left Denmark and passed her remaining days in exile at
Celle Castle in her brother's German territory, the
Electorate of Hanover. She died there of
scarlet fever on 10 May 1775 at the age of 23. ==Later life==