"Heaven cannot brook two suns, nor Fódlan three masters." NameAdelaide von Hresvelg
AgeSeventeen Born the 14th of Guardian Moon
Country of OriginThe Adrestrian Empire
Social StandingCrown Princess
CrestCrest of Seiros
Adelaide's crest bestows her allies with supernatural prowess and vigor, significantly increasing their combative abilities, while weighing down those who oppose her in equal measure.
Starting ClassLord
Weapon of ChoiceSword
StrengthsSwords, Authority
WeaknessesBow, Flying
PersonalityAdelaide is, first and foremost, a very bold young woman. She fearlessly embraces challenge and risk with an unmatched confidence in her abilities. This self-assurance follows her into all endeavors she commits herself to, a self-assurance that roots itself deeply in her faith in the Goddess. Victory, to her, is a simple matter of faith and perseverance. If she is to fail at a task, then she needs to merely learn from her mistakes and correct course. The confidence she radiates lends her a certain magnetism, and that magnetism is compounded by the wit inherent to her speech. To say she is outgoing would be an understatement: Adelaide makes it a point to leave those with whom she speaks feeling better about themselves than when she first found them. At least, those she wishes to endear with her charms. Woe be to those who would earn her ire, for the venom on her tongue is sure to be as potent as her honeyed words.
The concept of excellence is something inherently important to Adelaide. She strives for excellence in all that she does and expects the same of those around her. Her belief is that conflict—though so often seen as negative and brutish—is the crucible through which greatness is forged. As such, she is a great fan of competition and games, understanding that only by facing challenges levied by one's peers can a person grow to be the greater of those very peers. Fittingly, her work ethic borders on the overzealous, and it is a rare sight to see her indulging in things that do not bring her even a half-step closer to the grandiose destiny she has formed the core of her life around.
HistoryThe firstborn daughter of a lesser branch of the esteemed Hresvelg family, for much of young Adelaide's life, she found herself caught in a strange cross-section of Imperial life. Her lineage separated from the main branch nearly one hundred years ago, when the eldest son of Emperor Ludolf II, Adelbert von Hresvelg, was passed over for the crown in favor of his younger brother, the future Emperor Henrik I. Both brothers had been blessed by the Goddess to bear the Crest of Seiros, as all Emperors before them had done. Despite his ambition and valor, Adelbert's crest proved weaker than that of his younger brother and was thus rewarded not with dominion over all of Adrestia, but instead with a suitable bride of the Bergliez family, with which to carry on his lineage. It was often said that Adelbert seethed over the loss of his birthright, and his dark moods were known to haunt the halls of the Imperial Palace throughout the reign of his brother. However heavy the weight of the loss was, however, it did not stop Adelbert from being fruitful. He fathered seven children with his wife over the years, of whom the youngest of which happened to be Adelaide's mother, Matilda.
Perhaps to punish him for his hubris, of the seven children that bore his name, only Matilda had inherited the Crest which marked the Hresvelg family as the rightful rulers of Adrestia. And like Adelbert, her Crest was marred by its potency, a minor blessing unfit to contest the main line. It was enough to secure her continued use of the Imperial name, however, and in the waning years of her uncle's reign, Matilda married a young officer of the Imperial Guard to whom she had grown close. Adelaide, named for her grandfather, was born shortly thereafter. An auspicious birth indeed, as would later be discovered when the Bishopric of Enbarr put their Hanneman machine to use on the newborn girl. For the first time since their divergence from the main Imperial line, her family had produced a full-blooded Crest of Seiros.
Such news might have been even more welcome in the earlier days of their existence. However, the reigning Emperor, Anselm VI, had few issues of succession. His own eldest had been blessed much the same as Adelaide, and the succession was unlikely to be challenged. Her grandfather, himself nearing the end of his life, used what favor he still held in the Imperial court to arrange a match between the prize of his lineage and the main line: when she came of age, Adelaide would be wed to Engel von Hresvelg, her second cousin and the future Emperor of Adrestia, such that the future of both branches would be all the brighter for their union.
Such a legacy loomed heavy over Adelaide as she grew. It was all but assured that she would one day sit at the head of the mightiest Empire Fódlan had ever known, albeit at the side of her husband as a consort to the throne. It would not do for a consort of the Hresvelg line to be anything less than perfect, however, and so from her earliest days, Adelaide was drilled in all matters of noble endeavor. She trained in the yard with her knightly father in the mornings, practicing sword and lance and horse, reading history and philosophy in the afternoons, and learning courtesy and kindness at her mother's knee in the nights. It was a difficult regime, one that some might have been forgiven for coming to despise. Not Adelaide, however. Even as a child, she met the challenges with eagerness and vigor. One day, she would wed an Emperor, after all. It would not do for her to be a simple page in her husband's history book. She would be just as exalted as he.
But the fates had something else in mind for dear Adelaide. She was just a girl of six when whispers of plague in the far-flung provinces of the Empire began circulating the court. By the time she was ten, it had managed to reach as far as the capital, and once it made its way into the palace itself, not even the Emperor's children were spared. One, then two, then three and four. The disease had taken four of the seven scions of Emperor Anselm, and not long after the youngest took their final breath, Adelaide's intended could handle no more grief and took his own life before their match could be officiated. She had been a girl of thirteen at the time, and with much of her future seeming to fade away with the dying embers of the Empire she had sought to one day preside over, for the first time in her life, the incessant drive to do more seemed to fade.
It was shortly after falling into such doldrums that her fate took another turn. She had been fortunate enough to avoid the plague until that point, in part due to the diligence of her father and his kinsmen. But shortly after her fourteenth birthday, despair turned to delirium, as fever and chills brought her low and confined her to a sickbed that had become the deathbed for so many of her relatives. It was in the throes of this terrible suffering that perhaps the single most pivotal moment of her life took place. It was during this time that she was graced by the warmth of the Goddess.
Though she could scarcely awaken long enough to see the face of her mother, the face of Sothis was as clear to her as the summer skies. The Goddess spoke to her and showed her things she could only have imagined in her wildest dreams: a proud and unified Fódlan. A prosperous continent, free from the nightmares of plague and infighting and treachery all. A Fódlan that thrived under the banner of Adrestia, as it had been in the time of Lycaon I. And it was no great Emperor of the future that brought such a glorious thing to life, but instead Adelaide herself. It was not some sweet dream, but a vision of what was to come. A destiny that needed to be fulfilled. The plague which had ravaged her would not take her life, Adelaide understood. It could not. For the Goddess had chosen her to bring Adrestia—and by extension, all of Fódlan—into a new golden age.
Some days after such reverent visions, Adelaide's fever suddenly broke, and she rose from her bed to the desperate relief of her mother and father. A relief that swiftly turned to exasperation, as the young girl immediately requested she be brought to her remaining tutors. A grand destiny awaited her, after all, and she only had so many years to prepare for it to unfold.
Any doubts about the validity of her visions were put to rest in the days following her recovery. When it was made clear that she suffered no lasting consequences from her foray with death itself, an order from the Imperial throne itself came down. With the death of Crown Prince Engel, his betrothed would assume his place as heir to the Empire, officially adopted into the mainline as the true born daughter of the House Hresvelg. Since she was old enough to want anything at all, she had thrown herself selflessly into the pursuit of greatness in the name of the throne. A throne that would be hers by the end of the decade. The years that followed were much as the ones that preceded them, with Adelaide throwing herself into her studies with a renewed zeal that few could hope to match.
In acknowledgment of her inheritance, an invitation to the officer's academy at Garreg Mach arrived in the wake of Adelaide's seventeenth birthday. A focal point for many of the future leaders of Fódlan, Adelaide was eager to accept. Where better could a woman who meant to rule the continent spend the waning years of her youth? There, she could learn from the very best minds the Church could offer, win the favor of her future vassals, and perhaps most importantly, determine who would be the greatest threats to the divinely ordained fate that lay ahead of her. In the name of the Goddess, she embarked just in time for the beginning of the school year.
Trivia- Standing at just over five feet eight inches tall, Adelaide is rather tall for a woman of Adrestian stock. Her height has a tendency to be exaggerated by the regal bearing with which she carries herself.
- Adelaide's favorite food is Hasenpfeffer, or Pickled Rabbit Stew, to the less cultured members of Fódlan's nobility. She has a soft spot for most all foods steeped in vinegar, however.
- Despite being trained in most weapons, Adelaide has always favored the sword for its heroic connotations, believing it to be the weapon of Heroes and Kings alike. She is intensely interested in swordplay, and has been schooled in multiple Adrestian fencing styles.
- Contrary to her hawkish tendencies, Adelaide is a lover of the arts. Song and dance, in particular, have always been passions of hers, and she believes that any noble worth their title should be well-versed in classic ballroom dancing.