Maximilian von Castrop

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'Castrop' redirects here. For other uses, see Castrop (disambiguation).

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Maximilian von Castrop (796 UC (487 IC / 3596 CE))
Gender: Male
Affiliation: Galactic Empire
Status: Deceased (murder)
Died: 796 UC (487 IC / 3596 CE)
Father: Eugen von Castrop
Played by: Hori Hideyuki

Maximilian von Castrop (Japanese: マクシミリアン・フォン・カストロプ) was an Imperial noble who ruled the planet Castrop. He is notable for having rebelled against the Empire in 796 UC (487 IC / 3596 CE).

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Family life

Maximilian von Castrop was born into the noble family of his father, Eugen von Castrop. The elder Castrop had served as Minister of Finance under Kaiser Friedrich IV, and had accumulated substantial wealth via the funnelling of Imperial funds into his own coffers. In addition to their monetary resources, the Castrop family held dominion over the Castrop Starzone, and, most importantly, the planet Castrop. (LOGH: 'The Castrop Rebellion')

Rebellion

Upon the elder Castrop's death, the Galactic Empire sought the return of the money he had stolen; however, the younger Castrop defied these orders.

Castrop witnesses the destruction of the Artemis Necklace

In an effort to fortify the family's territory against Imperial attempts to physically reclaim his treasure, Castrop purchased and implemented an Artemis Necklace system from Fezzan. These artificial satellites were the same as those which protected the Alliance capital, Heinessen, and were claimed to be impenetrable. Indeed, Castrop's Necklace handily repelled an attempt by an Imperial fleet of 3,000 under Admiral Schmude to take the planet in the early months of 796 UC (487 IC / 3596 CE).

Following Schmude's failure and demise, the newly promoted Fleet Admiral Reinhard von Lohengramm was tasked with completing the job, and he dispatched Rear Admiral Siegfried Kircheis, with a fleet of 2,000, in his stead.

Castrop openly mocked the small size of this fleet. However, Kircheis had a plan to destroy the Artemis Necklace: He ordered engineering ships to be launched towards the planet, just out of range of the defence system's weapons, and expel Seffle particles in the direction of the individual satellites. Once a sufficient concentration was achieved, Kircheis ordered his ships to move forwards — inducing the satellites to fire and, in turn, igniting the Seffle particles and destroying the Necklace system. This caught Castrop by surprise as directional Seffle particle generators were a new technology that had not been used in battle before. (LOGH: 'The Castrop Rebellion')

Death

Castrop's death

The planet then defenceless, Kircheis advised Castrop to surrender. However, Castrop believed this to be a trap, and instead sought to place the blame on his subjects and take refuge on Fezzan. When his retainer pointed out that this would be unlikely to succeed, Castrop ordered him to incinerate himself, hoping to deceive the Empire into believing the body was Castrop's own.

However, realising that the end was in sight and that their own lives may be spared, Castrop's subordinates turned against him. The elder retainer, followed by five others, stabbed him through the chest, killing him. Following his death, the planet was immediately turned over to the Empire. (LOGH: 'The Castrop Rebellion')

Relationships

Castrop was a cruel ruler who regularly abused those around him. During his revolt against the Empire, he routinely struck his retainers, often for no reason. He treated his female subordinates as objects, and scorned those who tried to help him. After Franz von Mariendorf, an advisor and friend to the family, had warned him against defying the Empire, Castrop had him detained. He later sought to take Mariendorf hostage in a bid to escape to Fezzan, but this plan was not realised. (LOGH: 'The Castrop Rebellion')

Appendices

Appearances

Name variations

Manga appearance

Apocrypha

Manga

Castrop's appearance in Volume 3 of the manga represents a somewhat different characterisation from the anime. Physically, he is more fit and has much longer hair; additionally, his style of dress is more regal (no-one is shown wearing togas). His behaviour towards women is more explicitly violent — his female subjects are kept almost nude and in chains. His fate is also different: Rather than being stabbed by his subordinates before the Imperial soldiers land, Kircheis's ships fire missiles into Castrop's compound. He is then shot from behind by Franz von Mariendorf.

Novel

Instead of relying on the Artemis Necklace as depicted in the anime, Castrop in the novels (Volume 1, Chapter 6) personally led a private fleet against the Imperial fleets sent to suppress his rebellion.

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