Information
Sebastian Kensington VIII
Legacy Name: Sebastian Kensington VIII
The
Owner: ChouChou
Age: 16 years, 2 months, 1 week
Born: January 11th, 2010
Adopted: 16 years, 2 months, 1 week ago
Adopted: January 11th, 2010
Statistics
- Level: 1
- Strength: 10
- Defense: 10
- Speed: 10
- Health: 10
- HP: 10/10
- Intelligence: 0
- Books Read: 0
- Food Eaten: 0
- Job: Unemployed
Character Name: Sebastian
Full Name: Sebastian Ambrosius Samuel Ulysses Kensington VIII
Nick Name(s): Sebass
Gender: Male
Age: 23
Birthday/year: November 14, 1800
Marital Status: Unmarried
Spouse: N/A
Hair: White, long and straight. Usually pulled back into a pony tail with a few small strands hanging loose.
Eyes: A medium blue.
Origin: Great Britain, known as the British territory
Language(s): English and conversational French
Blood Type: B
Height: 5’ 8â€
Weight/Body Structure/Physical Faults: 142 lbs/ Strong from work and boxing, but he’s not extraordinarily muscular. Just a little built/ Not particularly fast
Race/Species: Human
Parents/Elders/Guardians: A well-known merchant trader and his wife
Siblings: None
Friends/Allies: Kaiaku, other revolutionaries, Carrie, Casmier
Enemies: The Directory, traitors, Red Coats, loyalists
Beliefs/Religion: Anglican
Career/Past Careers: Works at his father’s shop as he works to bring down the Directory
Dreams/Life Goals: To live in a Great Britain free from French reign. Lives to bring down the Directory and restore the former constitutional monarchy
Hobbies: Reading, writing, boxing, giving speeches
Likes: The Encyclopedia, boxing, vegetables, clothes
Loves: Britain, reading, giving speeches
Dislikes: “Equality†bread, loyalists, Red Coats, young people
Loathes: The Directory, seeing the poor suffer, travel
Fears: The guillotine, the future, losing the fight for a free Britain
Strengths: Sebastian is very determined and once his mind is made, there’s no changing it. He is very intelligent and strategic, with a knack for making plans. He is loyal to his cause and would give up his life for it. He is an inspiring orator and works well with people. Sebastian is forever the optimist, and has an unfailing sense of humor even in the gravest situations. He is very empathetic to the people he seeks to free and sees them as his responsibility. Thus, he will go out of his way to assist the poor, whether it be through money or a hot meal.
Weakness: Sebastian can be head strong and is often unwilling to ask for help when he’s in over his head. He can come across as bossy and overconfident. Sebastian also has a sharp tongue and can be a little brazen in his speech. His confidence can lead him to underestimate his challenges. A life of underground revolution has left him suspicious of everyone, so he trusts very few people. His overactive empathy makes him very easy to manipulate, seeing as he’d sacrifice himself for just about anyone.
Natural Talents: Sebastian is most known for his God-given talent of speech and eloquence. His ability to whip a crowd into a patriotic frenzy has made him popular among the people and the revolutionaries, and gotten him in plenty of trouble with local authorities.
Supernatural Powers & Abilities: None.
Temperament: Sebastian is generally a pretty cool character. He very rarely gets angry, but when he does, he has a tendency to get cocky and a bit fool-hardy. When he’s feeling level-headed and normal though, he’s a very thoughtful, concerned person. He generally avoids fighting, but does engage in a brawl every once in a while, just for the fun of it. He thrives on the presence of other people and will always be found in the company of someone else, usually Kaiaku, whom he cares for deeply. He is also a shameless cynic.
Songs: Secret Crowds by Angles & Airwaves, Top of the World by All American Rejects. Call to Arms by Angels & Airwaves
Background: Son of a successful merchant trader, Sebastian has lived a life of comfort. Being the only child in his house, he was always given what he wanted and he enjoyed that very much. Since Sebastian’s father traded mostly to and from France, the Directory, once it took over after Napoleon’s fall, left his father’s business alone. Because of this, the young Sebastian never noticed the increasing poverty around him. He attended school until he was 18 years old, when he had a change of outlook. During one winter’s night, Sebastian got horribly lost in the winding backstreets of London. As he wondered through the city, he was given a first-hand look at the destitute situation of many of his countrymen. One man stopped him and asked if he was lost, which Sebastian denied. This struck up a conversation which opened the young man’s eyes to how others lived. Both he and the man he spoke with placed blame squarely on the shoulders of the Directory, whose regulated economy failed to fix the damage caused by Napoleon’s continental system. From then on, Sebastian spoke out against the Directory, and, with his skills in speaking, raised a sizable resistance. Not long after his life-changing encounter in the alleyways, Sebastian was running a message to a like-minded individual on the other part of London. On his way, he noticed a message tacked on the wooden door of a soldier’s station. It was a long-winded, but well-written and rather scathing critique of the Directory, its policies, and the people who implemented those laws on a local level. As he was reading this essay, he noticed a red-headed girl in rags walk up beside him. She kept looking between the letter and Sebastian, until she finally got his attention. When he asked the girl what she wanted, she explained that she, despite her impossibly young age of thirteen, had written that letter and wanted to know what he thought of it. Sebastian was admittedly dubious of her story, but told her that it was fantastically written and that he agreed with it on every point save for the nonsense about women’s rights. This brought a smile to the girl’s face when she explained that Sebastian’s rousing speech in the square the other week had inspired this essay. Sebastian was duly impressed and offered to give the girl a meal and a place to stay in exchange for an intellectual conversation over dinner and her name. She accepted, telling him she had no name but he was free to call her whatever he’d like. He did just that, calling her Katharina. After their night of discussion of Mary Wollstonecraft’s Vindication on the Rights of Women, Katharina never left, becoming Katharina Kurrings, or Kaiaku.
Full Name: Sebastian Ambrosius Samuel Ulysses Kensington VIII
Nick Name(s): Sebass
Gender: Male
Age: 23
Birthday/year: November 14, 1800
Marital Status: Unmarried
Spouse: N/A
Hair: White, long and straight. Usually pulled back into a pony tail with a few small strands hanging loose.
Eyes: A medium blue.
Origin: Great Britain, known as the British territory
Language(s): English and conversational French
Blood Type: B
Height: 5’ 8â€
Weight/Body Structure/Physical Faults: 142 lbs/ Strong from work and boxing, but he’s not extraordinarily muscular. Just a little built/ Not particularly fast
Race/Species: Human
Parents/Elders/Guardians: A well-known merchant trader and his wife
Siblings: None
Friends/Allies: Kaiaku, other revolutionaries, Carrie, Casmier
Enemies: The Directory, traitors, Red Coats, loyalists
Beliefs/Religion: Anglican
Career/Past Careers: Works at his father’s shop as he works to bring down the Directory
Dreams/Life Goals: To live in a Great Britain free from French reign. Lives to bring down the Directory and restore the former constitutional monarchy
Hobbies: Reading, writing, boxing, giving speeches
Likes: The Encyclopedia, boxing, vegetables, clothes
Loves: Britain, reading, giving speeches
Dislikes: “Equality†bread, loyalists, Red Coats, young people
Loathes: The Directory, seeing the poor suffer, travel
Fears: The guillotine, the future, losing the fight for a free Britain
Strengths: Sebastian is very determined and once his mind is made, there’s no changing it. He is very intelligent and strategic, with a knack for making plans. He is loyal to his cause and would give up his life for it. He is an inspiring orator and works well with people. Sebastian is forever the optimist, and has an unfailing sense of humor even in the gravest situations. He is very empathetic to the people he seeks to free and sees them as his responsibility. Thus, he will go out of his way to assist the poor, whether it be through money or a hot meal.
Weakness: Sebastian can be head strong and is often unwilling to ask for help when he’s in over his head. He can come across as bossy and overconfident. Sebastian also has a sharp tongue and can be a little brazen in his speech. His confidence can lead him to underestimate his challenges. A life of underground revolution has left him suspicious of everyone, so he trusts very few people. His overactive empathy makes him very easy to manipulate, seeing as he’d sacrifice himself for just about anyone.
Natural Talents: Sebastian is most known for his God-given talent of speech and eloquence. His ability to whip a crowd into a patriotic frenzy has made him popular among the people and the revolutionaries, and gotten him in plenty of trouble with local authorities.
Supernatural Powers & Abilities: None.
Temperament: Sebastian is generally a pretty cool character. He very rarely gets angry, but when he does, he has a tendency to get cocky and a bit fool-hardy. When he’s feeling level-headed and normal though, he’s a very thoughtful, concerned person. He generally avoids fighting, but does engage in a brawl every once in a while, just for the fun of it. He thrives on the presence of other people and will always be found in the company of someone else, usually Kaiaku, whom he cares for deeply. He is also a shameless cynic.
Songs: Secret Crowds by Angles & Airwaves, Top of the World by All American Rejects. Call to Arms by Angels & Airwaves
Background: Son of a successful merchant trader, Sebastian has lived a life of comfort. Being the only child in his house, he was always given what he wanted and he enjoyed that very much. Since Sebastian’s father traded mostly to and from France, the Directory, once it took over after Napoleon’s fall, left his father’s business alone. Because of this, the young Sebastian never noticed the increasing poverty around him. He attended school until he was 18 years old, when he had a change of outlook. During one winter’s night, Sebastian got horribly lost in the winding backstreets of London. As he wondered through the city, he was given a first-hand look at the destitute situation of many of his countrymen. One man stopped him and asked if he was lost, which Sebastian denied. This struck up a conversation which opened the young man’s eyes to how others lived. Both he and the man he spoke with placed blame squarely on the shoulders of the Directory, whose regulated economy failed to fix the damage caused by Napoleon’s continental system. From then on, Sebastian spoke out against the Directory, and, with his skills in speaking, raised a sizable resistance. Not long after his life-changing encounter in the alleyways, Sebastian was running a message to a like-minded individual on the other part of London. On his way, he noticed a message tacked on the wooden door of a soldier’s station. It was a long-winded, but well-written and rather scathing critique of the Directory, its policies, and the people who implemented those laws on a local level. As he was reading this essay, he noticed a red-headed girl in rags walk up beside him. She kept looking between the letter and Sebastian, until she finally got his attention. When he asked the girl what she wanted, she explained that she, despite her impossibly young age of thirteen, had written that letter and wanted to know what he thought of it. Sebastian was admittedly dubious of her story, but told her that it was fantastically written and that he agreed with it on every point save for the nonsense about women’s rights. This brought a smile to the girl’s face when she explained that Sebastian’s rousing speech in the square the other week had inspired this essay. Sebastian was duly impressed and offered to give the girl a meal and a place to stay in exchange for an intellectual conversation over dinner and her name. She accepted, telling him she had no name but he was free to call her whatever he’d like. He did just that, calling her Katharina. After their night of discussion of Mary Wollstonecraft’s Vindication on the Rights of Women, Katharina never left, becoming Katharina Kurrings, or Kaiaku.
"Royalty aren't the only one's with a sense of lineage."