Frederikke Louise Stolberg, also known as Luise Gramm (August 21, 1746–November 29, 1824) was a Danish
saloniste,
playwright
A playwright or dramatist is a person who writes plays.
Etymology
The word "play" is from Middle English pleye, from Old English plæġ, pleġa, plæġa ("play, exercise; sport, game; drama, applause"). The word "wright" is an archaic English ...
and
letter writer. She is contributed with a certain degree of political influence upon various power holders in the policy of
Denmark and
Germany; she participated in the 1784 coup in Denmark. Her preserved correspondence is regarded as a valuable historic source about the courtiers of the Danish royal court of her time.
Life
She was born to count
Christian Ditlev Reventlow
Christian Detlev, Count von Reventlow (1671–1738) was a Danish military leader and diplomat.
Biography
He was the son of Conrad, Count Reventlow, chancellor of Denmark and his first wife Anna Margarethe Gabel (1651-1678). He was a brothe ...
(1710-1775) and Johanne Sophie Frederikke von Bothmer (1718-1754).
Court life
In 1761, she married the courtier nobleman
Christian Frederik von Gram (1737-1768).
The social position of her first spouse made her a participator in Danish Royal Court life. She was one of the few people
Queen Caroline Matilda befriended prior to the banishment of her favorite
Louise von Plessen
Louise Scheel von Plessen (''née'' Countess Louise von Berckentin; Vienna, 26 April 1725 – Celle, 14 September 1799) was a Danish lady-in-waiting and memoir writer. She wrote the memoirs of her time at the Danish court: ''Mémoires de la cour ...
. Reportedly, Gramm acted as a form of channel between the queen in her isolation with Louise von Plessen, and the other female courtiers: she informed the queen what the women of the court said about her, and then informed the women of the court what the queen said about them, which for a time gave her an influential position until her method was discovered.
[August Fjelstrup]
Damerne ved Karoline Mathildes Hof
1909. For a time, she and her spouse were regarded as important people because of her favor with the queen.
In 1768, she became a widow and retired for a year of mourning. When she returned, she lost her favor with the queen because of her dislike of the queen's circle of friends,
Elisabet von Eyben
Elisabet von Eyben (1745–1780), was a Danish courtier, lady in waiting to the queen consort of Denmark, Caroline Matilda of Great Britain, from 1766 until 1771. She was the queen's confidante in her love affair with Johann Friedrich Struensee bu ...
,
Anna Sofie Bülow
Anna Sofie von Bülow (1745-1787), was a Danish noble and courtier, known for her love life and unconventional life style, known in history as one of the Three Graces of the Danish royal court.
Life
She was the daughter of Christian Conrad Danne ...
,
Johanne Marie Malleville
Johanne Marie de Malleville (1750-1817), was a favorite of queen Caroline Matilda of Denmark.
Life
She was born to captain Emanuel Meyer and Johanne Mohlholm, and married captain Thomas de Malleville in 1763. After the queen had entered into a lo ...
and
Christine Sophie von Gähler
Christine Sophie von Gähler, Countess von der Goltz, née von ''Ahlefeldt'' (1745 – 18 July 1792) was a Danish noble and courtier, known for her love life and unconventional life style, known in history as one of the Three Graces of the Danish ...
, whom she considered immoral, and because of her refusal to participate in the queen's attempt to have the king's favorite
Conrad Holck
Frederik Vilhelm Conrad Holck (1745–1800) was a Danish nobleman and courtier.
Biography
Holck was the son of Major General Christian Christopher Holck til Orebygård (1698–1774) and Ermegaard Sophie Winterfeldt (1702–56). He was raised ...
(1745-1800) exiled.
She retired from court life in 1771.
Culture personality
In 1776, she remarried count
Cristian Günther Stolberg (1748-1821). In 1777, Stolberg became county governor of
Tremsbüttel in
Holstein.
Her second marriage was a love match; the couple married for mutual love and became very happy, though poor and childless. Until 1797, they lived in
Tremsbüttel in Holstein, where her spouse was a local administrator and where she hosted a salon described as a centre for the German-Danish cultural world. She corresponded with many of the leading figures within the literal and political world in Denmark and Germany, among them
Goethe. She also wrote a play, ''Emil'' (1782).
She was an advisor to her brothers, the politicians
Christian Ditlev Frederik Reventlow
Christian Ditlev Frederik, Count of Reventlow (11 March 1748 – 11 October 1827) was a Danish statesman and reformer, the son of Privy Councillor Christian Ditlev Reventlow (1710–1775) by his first wife, baroness Johanne Sophie Frederikke von B ...
and , and contributed in the preparations of the coup of 1784, which deposed the Danish regency and brought the Bernstorff-Reventlow-Schimmelmann party to power.
She is interred in
Horslunde Graveyard on
Lolland
Lolland (; formerly spelled ''Laaland'', literally "low land") is the fourth largest island of Denmark, with an area of . Located in the Baltic Sea, it is part of Region Sjælland (Region Zealand). As of 1 January 2022, it has 57,618 inhabitant ...
.
See also
*
Charlotte Schimmelman
Magdalene Charlotte Hedevig Schimmelmann (10 August 1757 – 2 December 1816) was a Danish noble woman and salonist.
Biography
Magdalene Charlotte Schubart was born at Fossum in Skien, Norway to Lieutenant Carl Rudolph Schubart (1714–59) ...
*
Ida Hedevig Moltke
Ida Hedevig von Moltke née von Buchwaldt (1744–1816) was a Danish countess of German origin and a letter writer.
Life
She was born to German nobleman Frederik von Buchwald and Henriette Emilie von Holstein and became the cousin of Amalie Sof ...
References
Dansk Kvindebiografisk LeksikonDanish)
{{DEFAULTSORT:Stolberg, Louise
1746 births
Danish salon-holders
Danish nobility
1824 deaths
18th-century Danish writers
19th-century Danish writers
Danish women writers
19th-century Danish women writers
18th-century Danish women writers
Reventlow
House of Stolberg