Gieselfried

Gieselfried (ギーゼルフリート, Giizerufuriito) is the archduke of Ahrensbach, husband of Georgine and father of Detlinde.

Gieselfried's first wife was from Drewanchel.

His second wife was the little sister of Aub Werkestock.

During the civil war Gieselfried positioned his duchy on the side that would eventually win the conflict, putting him in direct confrontation with the former home of his second wife. Despite this, Ahrensbach was not spared from the purges that the victorious royal family and Klassenberg insisted on. Despite being married to an active ally and not directly implicated in any disloyal acts, Gieselfried's second wife was still executed, solely due to being the little sister of Aub Werkestock, a supporter of the first and later the fourth prince. Gieselfried was able to successfully negotiate with the king to spare her two sons under the condition that they would be demoted to archnobles and thus eliminated from the race for succession.

A short time after the purge, his only other son Wolfram died. With Detlinde being the only archduke candidate left, Gieselfried approached the duchies into which his daughters married to try to adopt his own grandchildren to gain more archduke candidates, but due to the mana shortage affecting the entire country, only Drewanchel agreed to allow the adoption of Letizia, the granddaughter of him and his first wife.

Around the time Rozemyne was adopted into Ehrenfest's archducal family, Gieselfried's first wife died and his former third wife Georgine was promoted to first wife.

He has several daughters of whom only the youngest, Detlinde remains unmarried.

Right now Gieselfried and Georgine are looking for a suitable husband for Detlinde. Since the successor has already been decided and they want to avoid strife within their duchy, they are looking for someone who lacks the ambition or standing to push Detlinde to try to take the title of successor away from Letizia. With his tarnished reputation and family ties to Ahrensbach, Wilfried appears to be a perfect candidate, but unfortunately he has recently been announced to be betrothed to Lady Rozemyne with the king's approval, dashing their hopes of arranging a marriage between the cousins. They start pondering the possibility of getting Ferdinand, who's talented but is infamous for staying in the temple, to marry Detlinde.