Anna Sofie Bülow

[1] She attracted attention with her beauty and love life: at this point, women at the Danish court could have official lovers, called amants déclarés, and hers were in succession minister Konrad Aleksander Fabritius, the royal equerry Frederik Karl von Warnstedt, who left her for Johanne Marie Malleville, and finally courtier Hans Heinrich Friccius von Schilden-Huitfeldt.

[1] Luise Gramm claimed that she scandalously met von Warnstedt in 1770, a room close by another in which the body of the queen dowager was lying in state.

[2] In the summer of 1771, Anna Sofie Bülow discovered an open letter addressed to a lady on the stairs of Frederiksberg Palace.

The result was that the public party was cancelled with reference to the king's health, and that the court remained at Hirschholm with a stronger guard than before.

[5] In 1774–1775, they met Nathaniel William Wraxall, who planned to install Queen Caroline Matilda as regent of Denmark.