Gotthold Müller
Frederik Gotthold Møller was a Danish officer and courtier, father to Othar Müller.
Background
Gotthold was a son of the parish priest in Fjellerup parish Thomas Høeg Christophersen Møller and Dorothea Kallager. The wealthy father left in 1798 and moved to Copenhagen, where he died in 1802.During the Napoleonic wars
The bustling and busy military life in the capital after 1801 left Gotthold wanting to be a soldier. When he was 13 he got into Frikorporalinstituttet, where he in 1810 departed as a second lieutenant in Prince Frederik Ferdinand's Dragoon regiment.The regiment was made in 1807 and didn't yet have a permanent garrison, but just stayed around the country, where Müller led an enjoyable, unbounded life, that soon continued beyond Zealand, without it leading to a serious fight. In December 1813 the regiment combined with the Kolding reserve corps, where Prince Charles of Hesse-Kassel took them down to Flensburg; but shortly after it had to march back to the army on Funen at the king's command. In 1814 the regiment went to Southern Jutland to protect Charles XIV with other troops. After a short stay in Zealand, the regiment marched out to occupy France, but was stopped already at Bremen and had to move the regiment back to Holstein. At the end of 1815, Gotthold got 5000 extra Danish troops, that occupied northern France until autumn in 1818. Before the home march back to Denmark, Gotthold married the daughter of Gen. Caspar Friedrich von Gähler, which got him in a high social position.