When Gustavus Adolphus landed in northern Germany with his army, intervening in the long-running Thirty Years’ War, the Free Imperial Cities regarded him with skepticism. How could these barbarians from a distant winter, who couldn’t even equip their cavalry with proper armor, defeat the Imperial army under the Habsburg banner?
Aurora’s Glory Design Notes
It was not until after the Battle of Breitenfeld that the independent city-states within the Holy Roman Empire realized the profound transformation that had taken place within the northern reinforcements. They began to rally around this king, even as his enemies began to learn from him…
  • Rumor had it that the new King of the North was an eccentric man. He disliked royal etiquette and rarely attended high-society gatherings. Instead, he preferred to spend his time in workshops with engineers and mathematicians, discussing obscure theories that would make ordinary people’s eyelids droop after a few sentences. Court attendants even attested to seeing the king disguised as an officer, sneaking into other countries to inspect their armies and arsenals, often putting himself in danger. Yet, he reveled in it. He was more like a general or a ranger than a king. However, only those closest to him knew that the king had long foreseen the dark clouds gathering over the Western world. A great war was coming, and as king, only by surpassing the times could he make the name of the Northern Kingdom resound throughout the world.

  • Primarily inspired by the attire of musketeers and military nobility during the Thirty Years’ War. The female attire is based on the sword training garb of Queen Christina, Gustavus’ daughter, while the male attire references historical depictions of Gustavus himself.
Northern Lion Attire Design Notes
As Gustavus Adolphus arrived at Lützen under a shroud of fog, Generalissimo Wallenstein and his 20,000 elite troops awaited. The King, eager to crush them before Imperial reinforcements arrived, charged into the thick fog with his royal guard…
  • Brigands, massacres, plunder, blood…
  • In the dark years of war, a hopeless night enveloped all, as if hell had returned to earth. People, numb and driven mad, slaughtered each other. It was then that the roar of the “Lion of the North” tore through the heavy darkness. His cannons drove back the demons disguised as men, his sharp blade severing their ignorance.
  • People remembered the prophecy: “The northern star heralds the arrival of the lion, who will bring light back to the world.” The king, from then on, was seen as a symbol of transcendence. All believed that the king, clad in the symbol of the morning star, forever charging at the forefront of his army, would lead the world out of the darkness, through the fog, and towards the future of their dreams.
  • Based on Gustavus’ image at the Battle of Lützen, emphasizing his title of “Warrior King.”
  • The cape on his back bears the imagery of the morning star, alluding to the prophecy of astrologers that Gustavus, as the Lion of the North, would become the savior of the West.
  • The lion-shaped helmet emphasizes his title, “Lion of the North.”
The fires of war intensify.
Witness the revolution in warfare on September 19th.