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The Vampire Diaries Wiki

Baron von Swartzschild was a character of The Vampire Diaries novel series. He was the father of Katherine von Swartzschild.

Early History[]

After taking his daughter to the Salvatore Boarding House to comfort her, he hoped that she would marry one of the Salvatore Brothers. He was very upset at the illness of his daughter, so to make her feel better, he took her to Florence. Baron and Conte di Salvatore were friends, and Giuseppe's kindness is shown when he cares for the Baron's daughter during his absence due to his position in the European nobility.

Eventually, both men look at the possibility of a marriage between Stefan and Katherine, but Damon returns, causing problems with the brothers. Katherine decides to fake her death and solve the problems between the brothers, but in the end, the opposite happens, and the two kill each other. Baron is not mentioned in the following books, but he knew of the "death" of his daughter by her former servant.

Appearance[]

His appearance was never stated or revealed.

Personality[]

According to Katherine, he worried about his daughter and her wellbeing greatly.

TV Counterpart[]

Father Petrova

Mr. Petrova

In the television adaption, Katherine's father is not explicitly named, but goes by the name Mr. Petrova. Mr. Petrova was portrayed to be a wealthy Bulgarian landowner living during the 15th century with his family and servants.

As Katherine's father, he was more rigid, cruel and cold, because she had a child out of wedlock. As a result of this, Mr. Petrova exiled his own daughter — an action that would eventually lead to the death of the entire Petrova Family at the hands of Niklaus Mikaelson only a year later. In Fifty Shades of Grayson, it was revealed that Katherine was a witch of the Traveler subculture stemming from her father.


Name[]

  • Swartzchild is derived from the two German words, Swartz and schild, and means "black sign" or "black shield".
    • Swartz is derived from the low German word "schwarz", which means "black" or "swarthy".
    • schild comes from the Middle High German/Middle Dutch word "Schild", which means "shield".

See also[]

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