This Article Contains Spoilers -
WARNING: This article contains major spoilers. If you do not wish to know vital information on plot / character elements in a story, you may not wish to read beyond this warning: We hold no responsibility for any negative effects these facts may have on your enjoyment of said media should you continue. That is all. |
“ | I was away for a few years and I came back to a world in ruins. Death, destruction, chaos, the endless fighting—it was like the Heterodyne Boys had never existed. Things were worse than ever. So I stopped it. And I did it my way this time. No more negotiating. No more promises. No more second chances. And I did it alone. Because I had to. And it worked. | „ |
~ Klaus Wulfenbach explaining his rise to power (Vol. 3 p. 98). |
“ | I can be ruthless, but I try to be fair. What will it be? | „ |
~ Klaus Wulfenbach to Agatha (Vol. 6 p. 111). |
Baron Klaus Wulfenbach is a major antagonist in the print-and-web comic series Girl Genius by Phil & Kaja Foglio. As the reluctant tyrant of Europa, the Baron's main goal is to maintain peace and stability across his empire dubbed the Pax Transylvania. His empire is summed up in the motto of "Don't make me come over there" - he will tolerate many things, but anything that may destabilize the empire will be crushed.
Although he has good intentions, Klaus is a paranoid ruler who is deeply suspicious of Agatha Heterodyne, the main hero of the comic and the daughter of Bill Heterodyne and Lucrezia Mongfish. His fear of what a Heterodyne heir and daughter of a villainess may imply leads him to clash with Agatha and attempt to keep her contained. His desire to prevent the mere possibility of collapse causes him to find more and more drastic measures to stop Agatha.
After the Siege of Mechanicsburg, the Baron has been trapped frozen in time as his empire started to break apart into warring states. His reign is remembered by the people of Europa as a "lost golden age of antiquity".
Biography[]
Early Life and Adventures[]
There is little information on Klaus' earliest years. Official statements from the Foglios outside of the comic reveal that he's a construct (artificial human), reassembled by his parents from three (presumably dead) Wulfenbach brothers. When Klaus grew up, he went to university with Tarsus Beetle as a classmate. He also became best friends with the brothers Bill and Barry Heterodyne.
Klaus traveled with Bill and Barry, as well as their Construct allies Punch and Judy, in heroic adventures across Europa and the world; they killed monsters, stopped evil Sparks, and generally worked to stop the chaotic state of war Europa found itself in. Roughly 40 years before the comic started, he visited England and supposedly had an affair with Queen Albia.
For a time he also fell in love with a young lady named Lucrezia Mongfish, one of the daughters of his arch-enemy Dr. Lucifer Mongfish. Unfortunately for him, Lucrezia was already engaged to be married to Bill Heterodyne. Also unfortunately for him, though Lucrezia publically claimed to renoucne her father's evil ways, her heart said otherwise. One night she poisoned Klaus and shipped his unconcious body off to a faraway land.
Though the location of this faraway land is not stated in the comic itself, thanks to hints in-comic and various official statements by the Foglios in interviews it's an open secret that the country was known as Skifander. Adopting the name of "Chump" (it means something different in Skiff than it does in English), he want on adventures with Queen Zantabraxus and presumably fell in love with her to become the father of Zeetha. It is also in Skifander that he became the father of his son Gilgamesh ("Gil"); he had to escape from the country with his son in order to save Gil's life.
Ruler of Europa[]
Klaus returned from his exile three years after he was poisoned. In that time, Europa was made a wasteland by the conflict called "The Other War". Even the Wulfenbach family home was destroyed, so he had nowhere to return to. In his own words, "death, destruction, chaos - the endless fighting - it was like the Heterodyne Boys had never existed" (Vol. 3 p. 097).
In response, he took it upon himself to fix everything. But he was going to do it his way, not the way of the Heterodyne Brothers. The Baron Wulfenbach gathered armies under his command and began a campaign to conquer Europa. Out of war, he planned to bring peace - "and it worked" (Vol. 3 p. 098). Under the Baron's rule, Europa entered an era of peace known as the Pax Transylvania that it had never seen in centuries.
During his time as de facto dictator, Klaus made a number of decisions that went against established rules. For starters, Constructs aren't allowed to inherit titles, so simply holding the title "Baron" is a bold move on his part. Not only that but he refused to be given an official title as ruler like "King" or "Emperor"; as a result many nobles refused to play along with his rule. Nonetheless he was a fairly tolerant ruler, with his only real rule being "Don't make me come over there" (i.e. "don't do anything that would threaten the peace I established"). But to those who break this rule he is very harsh; when dealing with rebellious Sparks for instance he developed a method called "brain coring" that effectively lobotomizes their brains so that they no longer have the Spark. He also made decisions regarding what remained of the Heterodyne estate, such as turning the destroyed Castle Heterodyne into a prison. He also made a deal with the Corps of Jägermonsters that they would serve his empire until the Heterodynes returned. In the place of his destroyed home castle, the Baron built a giant airship called the Castle Wulfenbach to serve as his headquarters.
Klaus meets Agatha[]
The first time Baron Klaus Wulfenbach appears in the comic itself is very early on (in early Volume 1). He is first seen visiting the town of Beetleburg to inspect it for any unusual activity. When visiting the town university, one of the students able to meet him is a young lady named Agatha Clay (or, unknown to either herself or the Baron at the time, Agatha Heterodyne), the adopted child of Punch and Judy (under the disguises of Adam and Lilith). The visit to the university goes wrong as a Hive Engine of Slaver Waps is discovered and the professor Dr. Beetle is killed in a freak accident. Agatha leaves the university and winds up lost in a warehouse. She passes out from exhaustion, while the the Baron and his son find a strange clank they try to find the origins of. They find Agatha passed out, and take her to their airship to get more information about what happened in the town.
Agatha wakes up (in Volume 2) on the Baron's giant airship, the Castle Wulfenbach. The reason she is being held there is because the Baron is worried that either she may be in danger, be herself a source of danger, or both. On the airship Agatha becomes romantically involved with the Baron's son Gilgamesh ("Gil") Wulfenbach. However this romance is interrupted when the Hive Engine taken from Beetleburg is opened and the Baron orders sections of the ship to be evacuated. While escaping to safety, Agatha bumps into her adoptive parents Punch and Judy, who came on the airship to help Agatha escape back home. On their way to escape they bump into the Baron himself; he and the two constructs have a conversation that reveals that Agatha is the daughter of Bill Heterodyne and Lucrezia Mongfish. Klaus claims that the daughter of such a union is too dangerous to be left free and demands that she be handed over to him; Punch and Judy fight back against his troops and are seriously wounded in doing so, telling Agatha to escape. Agatha listens and escapes from Castle Wulfenbach.
After the incident, the Baron ordered his troops to begin searching for Agatha to return her alive and unharmed. However, his forces don't actually find her. During the search the Baron hears various reports from his commanders that make him suspect that Agatha may actually be The Other.
The next time he meets Agatha (in Volume 6) is when investigating the town of Sturmhalten. Except it's not actually Agatha that he meets, but rather Lucrezia Mongfish possessing her. Lucrezia/Agatha tells the Baron who she really is, infects him with a Slaver Wasp, and puts on Agatha's lost locket. However the locket actually returns control of the body to Agatha last-moment by surprise. Ignorant of this fact and believing she is still under Lucrezia's control, the Baron orders Agatha and her comrades killed. This results in a battle where Klaus is seriously wounded and Agatha escapes at the last moment.
Mechanicsburg[]
The Baron Wulfenbach is hospitalized (in Volume 7) after the battle at Sturmhalten, being sent to the hospital in Mechanicsburg. Caring for him is Dr. Sun, all the while guarded by his soldiers and visited by his son Gil. The Baron isn't sure if Agatha is in control of her body at the moment or Lucrezia, but he's convinced that either way, she is still too much of a danger to be left running around.
Given that Klaus made plenty of enemies in his time, it's unsurprising that once he was hospitalized, countless petty nobles sent assassins to the hospital to kill him. Gil and his bodyguards were able to fight off the assassins but there are plenty of close calls. In the meantime, the Baron insists on being able to get up from the hospital bed and see his troops personally, to which Dr. Sun strongly disagrees. Much to the doctor's fury and protest, Klaus uses a mobile robot-suit that allows him to walk around while still technically being in the hospital bed. Dr. Sun finds a way to get him back in anyways. Much later (in Volume 11), Dr. Sun with the help of Princess Anevka "managed to calm him [Klaus] down" (Vol. 11 p. 90, c.f. p. 86) - except that unknown the doctor, "Anevka" is actually Clank-Lucrezia who is controlling the Baron with a Slaver Wasp. The Baron realizes what is going on and tries to quietly warn his son Gil about the situation.
All of this is happening while Agatha Heterodyne is in Mechanicsburg as well, only she's in the Castle trying to repair it. News of a new Heterodyne spreads across Europa in the meantime, and many noble houses send their troops to fight for their various different agendas. This leads to the Siege of Mechanicsburg, a brutal multi-sided battle that destroys much of the city. The siege leads to the hospital being destroyed with artillery, and many speculate that Baron Wulfenbach was injured (Vol. 11 p. 091) or killed (ibid. p. 106, p. 145, etc.) in the attack. However news gets out that the Baron survived (Vol. 12 p. 043), and soon he is up again and commanding his forces.
Agatha manages to reclaim the castle, which causes the Jägermonsters to leave the Baron and join her. During the battle authority over Wulfenbach armies is caught in a three-way tug-of-war; first there is the Baron Klaus himself, who believes Agatha is "more a child of the Mongfish family than a Heterodyne" (Vol. 12 p. 068) and wants to take her captive while razing the city. Secondly there is his son Gil, given authority to command in the Baron's absence, who wants to help Agatha defend the city. Lastly there is Clank-Lucrezia who is using her power over Klaus to destroy what he built to combat The Other. The Baron reportedly gave orders (ibid. p. 086), all but stated to really be the work of Lucrezia, to destroy the Vespiary Squad (who hunt down and kill Slaver Waps) and their Wasp Eater weasels. However the group tasked with doing it was very under-prepared, suggesting that he may be resisting Lucrezia enough to make her attacks weaker. The internal division in the army gets so bad that the defenders notice his army is completely disorganized, which is very unlike the Baron to do (ibid. 138). He then moved all of the empire's armed forces to Mechanicsburg to lay a more intense siege against the city.
Taking his son Gil captive, the Baron gave him two choices; either Agatha is killed and the castle razed along with the city, or Gil submits to his will and Agatha is merely captured instead of killed. Gil submits, and he undergoes a form of mind-control Klaus describes as "less elegant than Lucrezia's" (Vol. 13 p. 034). The Wulfenbach armed forces as well as his main airship are ordered to retreat from Mechanicsburg (in Volume 13), which makes Agatha and friends think the battle is over. However the Baron has one final move to make; as Agatha is in a cathedral, a drop-pod carrying Klaus falls from the sky right in the middle of Mechanicsburg, with a device called a "Take-Five Bomb" that can freeze time around a certain area. Prince Martellus realizes what is going on, and Agatha is dragged through a portal at the exact moment that Klaus activates his Take-Five Bomb. This causes what is known as the "timeskip", as Agatha has skipped two years in the future and Mechanicsburg (with the Baron still in it) is frozen in time.
Post-Timeskip[]
After the timeskip, the original Baron Klaus Wulfenbach was trapped in Mechanicsburg frozen in time. His empire was handed over to his son Gilgamesh, who proved not as capable as his father. As far as the people of Europa were concerned, the reign of Klaus was a "lost golden age of antiquity" (Vol. 13 p. 125). However Klaus continued to work in a different form; the brainwashing he inflicted on Gil was a copy of Klaus' personality placed in Gil's mind.
Gil[]
The Klaus-in-Gil overlay works similarly to Lucrezia Mongfish's copies, however it is a weaker form of it as Gil still controls his own body the majority of the time, and Klaus only takes control when he sees something that worries him.
Klaus-in-Gil has shown up a few times, the first time (in Volume 13) being when Gil got a message from Agatha. He showed up again (in Volume 15) when Lucrezia/Agatha took control of her daughter's body at the St. Szpac Depot Fortress. Since the building was under Corbettite protection, the two were not allowed to harm each other, so instead they discussed their pasts. The discussion got heated when Lucrezia suggested Klaus destroy his son's personality; he responed by attacking her before the fight was broken up. The last place Klaus-in-Gil is seen is in England (in Volumes 19 and early 20), speaking with Queen Albia when he learns about Lucrezia's past. Later (in early Volume 20), under order from Queen Albia, the Klaus copy is removed from Gil's mind via the Exorcism Engine.
Appearance[]
Both physically and otherwise, Klaus is an imposing man. He is clearly very tall, broad-shouldered, and physically fit. This could be due to being a Construct made from three brothers or simply from frequent physical activity, though it's likely both. Based on the few references to years given, Klaus would be somewhere roughly around 50 to 60 years old during the events of the comic. He has a silver-ish hair (sometimes white and sometimes light blue-ish, likely because of different colorists) and a rugged face with a firm jaw.
Personality[]
Klaus Wulfenbach has always been something of a "morally grey" character, from the time of the Heterodyne Boys up to his most recent appearances. He has always valued order more than he valued law, meaning he's cared more about keeping things functional than about following established customs. This can be seen in how he didn't crown himself king or emperor but instead maintained order through sheer use of force. Even as he appears to cross moral lines, Klaus is shown to consistently value things like peace, order, and (even when not apparent) family.
As his primary concern is keeping peace, the cause of his antagonism is his paranoia, particularly his fear of The Other returning. As Klaus sees himself as the upholder of order, he sees Agatha as the child of a Heterodyne and a Mongfish to be a threat to peace. While this fear comes from a desire to protect Europa's citizens, it also consumes Klaus over the course of the comic and drives him to do things he normally wouldn't want to do.
Oddly enough, the Baron doesn't actually like ruling over Europa. He said that "politics always annoyed me" and "it's like running a kindergarten", while his true joy in life is "these rare moments of research" (Vol. 3 p. 007). Although he typically comes across as stern and humorless, Klaus is shown to have a relaxed side sometimes. For example, when told about his depiction in some of the "Heterodyne stories" (Vol. 2 p. 061), he is actually amused by them. His affair with Lucrezia, as well as implied ones with Albia and Zantabraxus, shows he was something of a player in his youth even if that's not seen in him today. Gil notes that he's particularly fond of waffles (Vol. 9 p. 077).
Powers and Abilities[]
The Baron has many abilities, both as a Spark and from normal training.
- The Spark - Like any other Spark, Klaus has a superhuman level of intelligence. While Sparks typically have a distinct field of knowledge, the Baron has somewhat of a more abstract focus; the Spark itself. His time as dictator has allowed him to study other Sparks, their behavior, and their works. He can just look at a machine or other invention and usually be able to figure out who made it. He also often expands on the works of others. We should note that his Spark is less obvious, as he is far less impulsive than other Sparks tend to be, but given his inventions it's less likely that his Spark is weak as it is under control.
- Physical ability - Klaus is shown to be very physically able, likely from both being a Construct and from being physically active his adventures. Even when hospitalized he is in good enough shape to escape from containment multiple times, and to survive an artillery strike. Given the time he spent in Skifander it's also likely he received ancient-style training as a warrior.
Gallery[]
Trivia[]
- Gil has noted several interesting facts about his father. For example, he really loves waffles (Vol. 9 p. 077). He also worked to make both himself and Gil immune to any disease and poison by inoculating (or sometimes straight-up infecting) himself and his son with every disease or poison known to man (ibid.), to the point that they're probably immune to almost everything. At one point, the Baron wrote a monograph on how to communicate in the workplace; Gil notes that seven different popes all ordered it burned (Vol. 8 p. 015).
- Kaja Foglio stated that she came up with the name "Wulfenbach" from The Castle of Wolfenbach by Eliza Parsons, which she heard about in the Jane Austen novel Northanger Abbey (namely, a list of novels in Chapter 6).
- In real-world European feudal titles, a baron is actually very low on the hierarchy, and in most countries baronies are smaller than counties. The amount of land commanded ruled by a baron is usually the land they can see from the top of their castle. Then again, Castle Wulfenbach can fly, so technically Klaus can see all of his land from his castle.
- The information that Klaus is a construct was revealed in the Girl Genius Yahoo! Group by Kaja Foglio, in a post on the 2nd of September 2002 (link, archive). It was later confirmed in a Reddit /r/IAmA/ interview by both Phil and Kaja on the 30th of May 2013 (link), where they elaborated on how he was made from three brothers revived by their/his parents.
- The information that Klaus went to Skifander was revealed by Phil Foglio in an interview on the podcast 'TGT Webcomics' in episode #37 (audio link, archived), around the 11:29 to 12:20 mark. Similarly, the information that he's "Chump", father of Zeetha, came to light around August 21, 2010 when GITP forum user "datalaughing" posted a sketch he got from Phil (reposted in the "Klaus Defence League" LiveJournal group); he requested a sketch of "Chump" and received a portrait looking just like Klaus.
External Links[]
- Baron Klaus Wulfenbach on the Girl Genius Wiki
- Baron Klaus Wulfenbach on the Heroes Wiki
- Baron Klaus Wulfenbach on the Magnificent Baddie Wiki
Footnotes[]
- ↑ This is in reference to the making of "Klaus/Gil". However the official novelization Agatha H. and the Siege of Mechanicsburg depicts Lucrezia/Anevka as twisting Klaus' hand (most likely via the Slaver wasp) to carry out the brainwashing on Gil. So Klaus wasn't fully culpable, or at least not in the novel adaptation.
[]
Villains | ||
Forces of the Other Knights of Jove & affiliates Wulfenbach Empire Misc. |