Cecilie Christine Schøller
Cecilie Christine Schøller, born Sidsel Kirstine Frølich was a Norwegian socialite, builder and businessperson.
She was born in Tønsberg to Johan Frederik Frølich and Hilleborg von Wettberg. Her father who was in the military had Prussian roots, while her mother had Danish and German origin. The family moved to Trondheim in 1740 when Johan Frederik Frølich became a general for the Nordenfjells area.
In 1742 she married the wealthy Stie Tønsberg Schøller. He became stiftamtmann in Trondheim and also a member of the Royal Norwegian Society of Sciences and Letters from 1766 to his death in 1769.
Cecilie Christine Schøller continued her husband´s business after his death, among them notable his saw mill. She inherited her parents´s house in 1771 and bought several of the neighbouring properties. She there built the largest wooden palace in Scandinavia, Stiftsgården in Trondheim, which has been the official royal residence in Trondheim since 1800. She was also a financier and benefactor of the Royal Norwegian Society of Sciences and Letter, and regarded as an important representative of the cultural golden age in Trondheim during the 18th century.
She moved permanently to Copenhagen in 1783 and died there in 1786. She is buried at Assistens Cemetery.
She was made Dame de L'union parfaite in 1769, and given the title geheimerådinne in 1776: this was the highest title ever given a non noble Norwegian woman, and the first time the title was given a woman at all in her own right.