At the death of Christian VI on 6 August 1746, her husband ascended the throne as King Frederick V, and Louise became
Queen of Denmark and
Norway at the age of 21. The new king and queen then moved the short distance from the Prince's Mansion across the Frederiksholm's Canal into the large Christiansborg Palace. The ceremonies of the accession to the throne were concluded as the new king and queen were solemnly
anointed in the chapel of
Frederiksborg Palace on 4 September the following year. , 1745 (
Rosenborg Castle) What Louise and her husband on a small scale had begun at
Charlottenborg Palace and the Prince's Mansion, they now continued at a larger scale at
Christiansborg. Indeed, Frederick V's accession to the throne brought about a great change in life at the Danish court, which now became far more festive and acquired a more easy-going tone than under Louise's strictly religious parents-in-law. Almost as a sign of the new times, the heavy iron chains that had previously surrounded Christiansborg to keep the people at distance disappeared, court life regained its luster, and the palace's halls and salons once again became the setting for balls and social gatherings. Queen Louise was very popular in Denmark, The Dano-Norwegian writer
Ludvig Holberg thus wrote in one of his
epistles: Interested in music, dance and theatre, she arranged in 1747 for the Italian
opera company of
Pietro Mingotti to be invited to Copenhagen, where they performed
opera and
ballet for the court at
Charlottenborg Palace until 1750. Its members included the
composer Christoph Willibald Gluck, who stayed with the Danish court from 1748 to 1749. At the occasion of the Queen's birth of an heir to the throne,
Crown Prince Christian, he composed the opera
La Contesa dei Numi ("The Contention of the Gods"), in which the
Olympian Gods gather at the banks of the
Great Belt and discuss who in particular should protect the new prince. It was first performed on 12 March 1749 at Charlottenborg on the occasion of the Queen's first church service after the birth. In 1748, the
French theatrical troupe Du Londel Troupe under the leadership of
Jeanne Du Londel was invited for
dramatic performances to Copenhagen, where they performed until 1753, and also performed in
Oslo in Norway during the king's stay there in 1749. In 1751, Queen Louise unsuccessfully opposed the planned dynastic marriage between her daughter, the five-year-old
Princess Sophie Magdalene, and the
heir apparent to the Swedish throne,
Crown Prince Gustav, the later King Gustav III. She feared that her daughter would not be treated well by the queen of Sweden,
Louisa Ulrika. Queen Louisa Ulrika was known for her anti-Danish views and for being opposed to the match, and it was known that she was the real ruler at the Swedish court. Reportedly, Louise also disliked arranged marriages because of her own experience. == Early death ==