Henrietta de Bretagne
Aliases: Henrietta · Queen of Bretagne · the Black Lily
- Race / Rank
- Human; reigning Queen of Bretagne
- Allegiance
- Kingdom of Bretagne; de facto ruler of the Frank Empire
- Symbol
- The black lily
- As a warrior
- 2nd-rank warrior, near sword-master; lance-cavalry commander on the warhorse "Crow's Feather"
- Specialty
- Cavalry tactics, battlefield charisma and political maneuvering
- Status
- Defeated at Le Havre, her hegemony broken; survives, later a mercenary in Sardinia
Description
**A queen forged by war (ch 125-133).** Henrietta de Bretagne rules the militarist peninsula kingdom of Bretagne, symbol of the black lily, home to the strongest knights and land army on the continent. A woman who clawed her way to the throne by bargaining with the nobles she needed and cutting down those who refused her, she took the field in person at barely nineteen — flame-red hair streaming, a smile on her lips, openly emotional in a way her court found magnetic. During the Eighth Crescent Alliance campaign she stood among the great heroes of the age, and there she met her mirror: the Habsburg princess Elisabeth. Two rulers each carrying a nation's fate became friends within a week, because each had finally found someone she could be honest with.
**The crime Dantalion forced on her (ch 133).** The Crescent campaign, the Black Death and a catastrophic famine drove the human armies to ruin. With her own ranks rotting between republican commoners and reactionary nobles, Henrietta chose to annihilate her own army at Bruno Plain rather than let the seed of revolution take root — knowingly slaughtering the very people a king is sworn to protect. She wept for her soldiers on the road home and swore an oath she never broke: that Dantalion, the man who had goaded her into this kin-killing, would one day pay. Yet for all that hatred she never feared him; he was a difficult opponent, not a nightmare — a confidence rooted in the fact that she would soon beat him outright.
**The Lily War — conqueror of Frankia (ch 187-207).** Invited into the Frank Empire by its puppet emperor Henri III against his own mother, Henrietta crossed the border with nine thousand and tore through the empire in twenty days. At Saint-Denis she crushed a force outnumbering her own, reading the enemy's hidden divisions to declare herself "four times stronger," then massing her cavalry in the centre in a tactical heresy that shattered the imperial line and killed Marshal Montmorency in the opening charge. She herself charged at the head on her black warhorse — a 2nd-rank warrior queen. The defeated commander she humiliated at Saint-Denis was, unknown to her then, Dantalion in disguise; learning that truth later gave her hard-won confidence its edge. In all but name she became the ruler of the Frankish Empire.
**Out-schemed (ch 198-207).** Henrietta won the battles and lost the war. Dantalion answered her not on the field but in the salon: he turned every other power against the dazzling debutante, pulling in Paimon's Liberation Alliance and the Batavia Republic, and tricked Emperor Henri into a massacre of the Parisiorum republicans that branded Henrietta's whole campaign as butchery. When Batavia intervened with impossible speed she alone diagnosed the truth — "there is a hand behind this" — but she could not see that the hand was a Demon Lord steering a human republic, the one variable no human could have known.
**The Puppet War and Le Havre (ch 275-301).** Allying secretly with the exiled Demon Lord Agares — who served her as guest-general — Henrietta met the Crescent army a second time, now masquerading as a Habsburg human army under the corpse-emperor Rudolf and led in truth by Laura de Farnese. She countered every move flawlessly: backing her army against a river to deny Laura the water-supply trick, raiding the demons' lines, even guessing the feint on Parisiorum. But the feint hid the real blow — Batavia's fleet seized her supply depot, severing her army. Run to ground at the port of Le Havre, hammered by ritual public burnings meant to break her nerve and betrayed from within when Agares (whom she had only offered the chance to flee or surrender beside her) revolted and was cut down by Daisy's sword. Her knight orders were annihilated; she signed the Le Havre Treaty, traded away Catherine de Medici, accepted a fourteen-year non-aggression pact, and watched her bid for the continent die — her hold on the crown reduced to a knife's edge.
**Mercenary of Sardinia (ch 414-415).** Years later Henrietta resurfaces as a sword-for-hire in the Second Chrysanthemum War, leading a Bretagne contingent into Piedmont — and there reveals the loyalty she commands. Rather than simply punish her saint Jacqueline Longwy for defying the great nobles, she took twenty lashes of the whip herself, sitting upright and never once screaming (her own skill rivals a sword-master's), to shield Longwy and her generals. Her soldiers, who revere her as a goddess made flesh, wept as a body; Sardinian rebels who watched defected to her in droves. It is the truest portrait of Henrietta de Bretagne: a queen whose people would die for her not from fear, but from love.
Personality
Henrietta is openly, warmly emotional — she laughs at an enemy emperor's love-letter, sulks when a battle bores her, and speaks to her one friend Elisabeth like a tipsy drinking companion rather than a sovereign. That candour is a weapon: it makes courtiers adore her and lets her disarm a tense war-council with a joke, then bind her generals tighter by refusing to suspect them of treason. Beneath it runs an iron core of chivalry. She is ruthless to nobles and rebels but genuinely tender toward the common people who simply believe the goddesses chose their king, and she never betrays a comrade — she offered even the traitor Agares the chance to flee or surrender at her side rather than quietly assassinate him for an easy peace. Her one ungovernable wound is guilt: ordered by circumstance to butcher her own army at Bruno, she carries the memory of her soldiers' screams and counts "king as the father of all his people" as a debt she can never repay. It is that same conscience that, years later, makes her take the whip in her saint's place.
Command & Prowess
Bretagne fields the strongest knights and land army on the continent, and Henrietta is their spearhead, not their figurehead. She is a 2nd-rank warrior whose endurance rivals a sword-master's — at the Sardinian trial she sat through twenty lashes without a single scream — and she leads cavalry charges in person from her black warhorse "Crow's Feather." Her genius is tactical and psychological: at Saint-Denis she counted an enemy's hidden divisions to call herself "four times stronger," then won by massing her horse in the centre against every textbook, and her aura-wielding knights and 5-to-8-metre lances were a waking nightmare even to veteran Demon Lords like Zepar. Off the field she is just as dangerous, fusing military skill with social mastery — yet her one blind spot is the salon war of slander and proxies, where Dantalion's hidden Demon-Lord backing handed him variables no human could account for.
Timeline
- Chapter 125
At nineteen, takes the field in person during the Eighth Crescent Alliance campaign and shines among the heroes of the age.
- Chapter 133
Befriends Princess Elisabeth; deliberately destroys her own army at Bruno Plain and swears vengeance on Dantalion for forcing the kin-killing.
- Chapter 187
Crosses into the Frank Empire with nine thousand at the invitation of Emperor Henri III, the saint Jacqueline Longwy at her side.
- Chapter 197
Smashes a larger Frank army by declaring herself "four times stronger" and massing cavalry in the centre; Marshal Montmorency falls in the first charge.
- Chapter 204
Battle of Saint-Denis: charges in person on "Crow's Feather" against the disguised Dantalion, hurling wave after wave of horse-archers and lancers.
- Chapter 199
After Batavia's sudden intervention, fabricates a "traitor" to provoke Henri III into massacring the Parisiorum republicans.
- Chapter 275
Allied with the exiled Demon Lord Agares, prepares for the rematch as Dantalion's Crescent army marches on Frankia.
- Chapter 286
Backs her army against the Marne to deny Laura the water-supply trick, then sees through the night feint on Parisiorum.
- Chapter 293
Realises too late the true target was her supply depot; Batavia's fleet has already seized it, dooming her army.
- Chapter 301
Cornered at Le Havre; Agares revolts rather than surrender and is killed by Daisy with the Sword of Bael, her knight orders annihilated.
- Chapter 304
Signs the Le Havre Treaty: surrenders Catherine de Medici, accepts a fourteen-year non-aggression pact, and loses her bid for the continent.
- Chapter 414
Resurfaces as a Bretagne mercenary commander in Sardinia and takes twenty lashes herself to shield the saint Longwy, deepening her army's devotion.
Relationships
- Dantalionnemesis
Forced her to massacre her own army at Bruno Plain; she swore eternal vengeance. She beat his disguised self at Saint-Denis but he out-schemed her in the salon and ground her to ruin at Le Havre.
- Laura de Farnesedestined liege, real-life conqueror
In the game's history Laura serves Henrietta as her Iron Chancellor; here Dantalion stole that future, and Laura instead ran the queen into the ground at Le Havre as enemy commander.
- Elisabeth von Habsburgdearest friend
Two rulers who recognised a fellow hero and became confidantes within a week; they coordinated against Dantalion by crystal orb, though Elisabeth feared him far more than Henrietta did.
- saint and childhood friend
Athena's saint and the symbol of Bretagne, Henrietta's playmate since childhood; the queen took twenty lashes herself to shield her during the Sardinian trial.
- Agaresguest-general, then traitor
The exiled 2nd-rank Demon Lord took asylum with her and served as guest-general; when she chose to surrender at Le Havre, he revolted against her rather than yield and was killed.
- puppet emperor / pawn
The Frank emperor invited her in against his own mother and opened his realm to her; she used his blunders to seize Frankia in all but name.
- captive bargaining chip
The Frankish dowager empress, handed over to Dantalion's side as the first clause of the Le Havre Treaty.