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* WeddingFinale: In the light novels, [[spoiler: the epilogue of ''Ever After'' ends the series with a brief description of Violet and Gilbert's wedding. A few short stories published afterward show glimpses of their married life.]]
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Moving up from the trivia page.

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* CastingGag:
** As with her previous roles in ''Manga/AttackOnTitan'' and ''VideoGame/NierAutomata'', Creator/YuiIshikawa once again voices an emotionally stunted female character with a gory past who has to wrestle with her inner feelings.
** For at least one episode, Creator/StephanieSheh takes the role of the PoliticallyActivePrincess for the eleventh time after [[Anime/MobileSuitGundamUnicorn participating in the events of the Laplace Conflict]] and [[Anime/MobileSuitGundamNarrative the Phenex Hunt]], [[VideoGame/OdinSphere stopping Armageddon]], [[Anime/LagrangeTheFlowerOfRinne helping deal with the La Grania and De Metrio conflicts]], [[Anime/CodeGeass fighting against Brittania for freedom]], [[Anime/MobileSuitGundamSeed ending the First Alliance-PLANT War]], [[Anime/MobileSuitGundamSeedDestiny as well as the second]], [[Manga/SailorMoon fighting against the Dark Kingdom]], [[Manga/MagiLabyrinthOfMagic defending Magnostadt]], and later [[VideoGame/TalesOfTheAbyss stopping the Malkuth and Kimlasca Wars.]] Not to mention, is once again [[VideoGame/CastleVaniaPortraitOfRuin voicing a brunette named Charlotte.]]
** Creator/AyakoKawasumi [[Manga/MaidSama once again]] voices a DelicateAndSickly mother.
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Spell My Name With An S has been cut/disambiguated.


* SpellMyNameWithAnS: Despite Gilbert's brother's name being pronounced as "Dietfried" ("Dietofuriido"), the subtitles in more than one language of the anime on Netflix write his name as "Diethard", ''which is an entirely different name'', while some fan translations actually use the name "Dietfried".
** Official translations refer to Violet's job as "Auto Memory Doll" but the official English dub, as well as the fansubs & the fan translator for the light novels use the plural "Auto Memories Doll." Then there's inconsistencies as well as to whether there's a hyphen or not after "Auto."
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* DepthOfField: In the anime, most of the scenes where Violet is reminiscing or being introspective are laden with blur effects and large depths of field. They are used to create a vibe of alienation either from other human beings or from her traumatic past.
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This isn't really an example. Almighty Janitor is for characters who are very badass/overpowered compared to their completely low rank. Hodgins is the head of a company and in the army held a fairly high rank as well. Compared to that, his badassery is fairly low. While this IS a very cool moment in and of itself, it doesn't make him a fit for the trope.


* AlmightyJanitor: A slightly downplayed example with Claudia Hodgins. He is just the president of a Postal Service (and a former soldier); but in Chapter 13, [[spoiler:where he goes through all the legal procedures required for buying a privately-owned train station and sends his employees to blow it up, all within a time-frame of fewer than 2 hours]]. Apparently, he still has enough influence in Leidenschaftlich to speed up the procedure, which could normally take days. Bonus points for getting it done ''in the middle of the night'', when everyone else ought to be asleep.
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* DarkerAndEdgier: For Creator/KyotoAnimation, even more so than ''LightNovel/BeyondTheBoundary''. After about a decade of light-hearted anime works, ''Violet Evergarden'' presents a much more cynical story that deals with human cruelty front and center.

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* DarkerAndEdgier: For Creator/KyotoAnimation, even more so than ''LightNovel/BeyondTheBoundary''.''Literature/BeyondTheBoundary''. After about a decade of light-hearted anime works, ''Violet Evergarden'' presents a much more cynical story that deals with human cruelty front and center.
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Asskicking Equals Authority has been renamed.


* AsskickingEqualsAuthority: Gilbert is only put in charge of Leidenschaftlich's Army' Special Offense Force because he's the only person Violet obeys. Violet herself is the only member of said Special Offense Force, who gets away with questioning Gilbert's strategies and suggesting different ones, all of which revolve around her killing every single enemy soldier by herself before the rest of the SOF arrives.

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* AsskickingEqualsAuthority: AsskickingLeadsToLeadership: Gilbert is only put in charge of Leidenschaftlich's Army' Army's Special Offense Force because he's the only person Violet obeys. Violet herself is the only member of said Special Offense Force, who gets away with questioning Gilbert's strategies and suggesting different ones, all of which revolve around her killing every single enemy soldier by herself before the rest of the SOF arrives.

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An Axe To Grind is no longer a trope


* AnAxeToGrind: In chapters 3 and 6 of the light novel, and then one more time in the final chapter of the Gaiden volume, Violet wields a custom-built axe named "Witchcraft" which Major Gilbert Bougainvillea had made for her, which is bigger than her body. It doesn't appear in the anime.



* LighterAndSofter: The animated adaptation is much more reserved when it comes to violence and cynicism than the light novel. For instance, where [[EyeScream Gilbert's eye is described as being ''ripped out'' in the Light Novel, he merely gets shot in the eye in the anime]]. Additionally, in the light novel, Violet practically single-handedly takes out the entire enemy army stationed in the cathedral in Intense using [[AnAxeToGrind Witchcraft]], with quite detailed descriptions of how the enemy soldiers are mutilated and their limbs crushed by the giant axe, while the anime merely shows Squad 1 charge into Intense with rifles.

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* LighterAndSofter: The animated adaptation is much more reserved when it comes to violence and cynicism than the light novel. For instance, where [[EyeScream Gilbert's eye is described as being ''ripped out'' in the Light Novel, he merely gets shot in the eye in the anime]]. Additionally, in the light novel, Violet practically single-handedly takes out the entire enemy army stationed in the cathedral in Intense using [[AnAxeToGrind Witchcraft]], Witchcraft, with quite detailed descriptions of how the enemy soldiers are mutilated and their limbs crushed by the giant axe, while the anime merely shows Squad 1 charge into Intense with rifles.
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[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ve.png]]
[[caption-width-right:350:''For the people who don't understand 'love'.'']]

->''"Pleased to make your acquaintance. I rush anywhere my customers desire. I am from the Auto-Memory Dolls service, Violet Evergarden."''

It is the end of a brutal war that has engulfed the continent of Telsis. As the people and nations of the land attempt to recover and rebuild, a girl who has known nothing but death and violence begins a new life at the CH Postal Company in the grand city of Leiden, capital of Leidenschaftlich.

What few know is that this beautiful young lady, Violet Evergarden, was formerly known as the [[RedBaron "Battle Maiden of Leidenschaftlich,"]] who served with distinction in a special operations unit under Major Gilbert Bougainvillea's command in Leidenschaftlich's Army. In the final battle of the war, Violet loses both her arms and her Major, and after recovering from her injuries, is taken under the care of former army officer Claudia Hodgins, the founder of CH Postal. In addition to fielding regular mail services, CH Postal also employs Auto-Memory Dolls, skilled typists who ghostwrite letters for the illiterate and for those who seek help expressing their feelings through words.

Having lost all meaning in her life, and seeking a new purpose for herself and her now-mechanical arms in a now-peaceful country, Violet joins the Auto-Memory Doll team, where she will learn to rediscover her lost emotions and understand the meaning behind the Major's final words to her: "I love you."

''Violet Evergarden'' is a Japanese light novel series by Kana Akatsuki, illustrated by Akiko Takase, and first published under the KA Esuma Bunko imprint in December 2015. It was adapted into a 14-episode animated TV series by Creator/KyotoAnimation, with the first episode premiering on January 10, 2018 in Japan, and on January 11, 2018 worldwide through Creator/{{Netflix}}. It was directed by Taichi Ishidate, with Reiko Yoshida serving as series composer, Takase returning as character designer and chief animation director, and Haruka Fujita as series director.

The novels consist of the following:

* Volume 1 (December 25, 2015)
* Volume 2 (December 26, 2016)
* Gaiden Volume (March 23, 2018)
* "Ever After" Final Volume (March 27, 2020)
* "Last Letter" Collected Sidestories Volume[[note]]Was only available for a limited time via direct order from [[https://kyoanishop.com/shopdetail/000000002461/works_VE_books/page1/recommend/ KyoAni's online bookstore]] for delivery in January 2022[[/note]]

An original video animation episode was released in July 2018, followed by a spin-off film entitled ''"Eternity and the Auto Memory Doll"'' in September 2019. Another anime film was initially scheduled for a January 2020 premiere, but was then moved to April 24, 2020, on account of the July 18, 2019 fire at [=KyoAni=]'s 1st Studio building. The rise of [[UsefulNotes/CoronavirusDisease2019Pandemic the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic]] postponed the movie again, but it finally got released in Japanese theaters on September 18, 2020. It received an international Netflix release on October 13, 2021, the same day its Blu-ray was released in Japan.

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!!''Violet Evergarden'' provides example of:

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:A - H]]
* ActionGirl: The title character is shown [[BadassAdorable brawling with soldiers twice her height]] like it was a day job in a flashback.
** This is shown in the novel as well, in Chapters 3, 6, 13, and Gaiden Chapter 6, where she defeats countless armed soldiers, usually either unarmed or with an oversized axe, despite said soldiers carrying rifles.
* AdaptationExpansion: The anime expands on Violet's early days of working in CH Postal and her interaction with its workers that aren't found in the two main novel volumes: Episodes 2 to 4 are almost entirely all anime-original content.
** The OVA episode covering Violet's job with opera songstress Irma Felice is anime-original.
** The second half of the ''Eternity and the Auto-Memory Doll'' movie, which follows Taylor Bartlett's journey to become a postman and find her big sister again, is all anime-original. The movie actually inserts a very clear break at the halfway mark, indicating it has finished adapting the light novel chapter and is now entering a wholly anime-original storyline after that.
* AdaptedOut: Many chapters were cut from the anime, such as the prisoner client Edward Jones (Chapter 5), the detour when Violet and Benedict get stranded at a small village thanks to his bike breaking down (Chapter 9), and the Utopia cult (Chapter 10). There is also material that the anime partially adapted but didn't go all the way, namely Violet's early gory encounters with the Leidenschaftlich military (Chapters 6-7). The final 2 chapters of the novel (12 and 13) were quite different from the anime (as they contain [[spoiler: the actual [[EarnYourHappyEnding ending]]]] of the novel instead of TheStinger shown in the final episode).
** As for the Gaiden Volume, the first chapter featuring Princess Charlotte was faithfully adapted as Episode 5, while Chapter 2 was also fairly accurately depicted in the ''Eternity and the Auto Memory Doll'' movie. However, the remaining 4 chapters of the Gaiden were never animated, as it would be impossible to do so according to the anime's take on the story [[spoiler: since these chapters take place after Violet and Gilbert have reunited during the train hijacking incident and indirectly feature their romantic relationship as a background element in all 4 chapters.]]
** The contents of the "Ever After" finale volume have nothing to do with the 2020 movie.
* AgeGapRomance:
** Episode 5 of the anime featured the PerfectlyArrangedMarriage between Princess Charlotte (14) and Prince Damien (24). To put in context: Charlotte was 10 when she [[https://imgur.com/a/8tZWx8Q first met Damien]]. She was struck by his genuine care [[BeneathTheMask for her feelings as a person instead of a potential bride]] and decided that she would marry him out of all the royal suitors presented before her.
** Violet and Gilbert clearly had feelings for each other when they were in the military. This was back when she was about 12 and he was in his late twenties.
* AlmightyJanitor: A slightly downplayed example with Claudia Hodgins. He is just the president of a Postal Service (and a former soldier); but in Chapter 13, [[spoiler:where he goes through all the legal procedures required for buying a privately-owned train station and sends his employees to blow it up, all within a time-frame of fewer than 2 hours]]. Apparently, he still has enough influence in Leidenschaftlich to speed up the procedure, which could normally take days. Bonus points for getting it done ''in the middle of the night'', when everyone else ought to be asleep.
* AnachronicOrder: The light novels and booklets are essentially a series of shorts that jump around a lot in the timeline, with the proper chronological order found [[https://dennou-translations.tumblr.com/post/167266851054/violet-evergarden-chronological-index here]]. Averted with the anime continuity which sticks to a straightforward timeline by release order (with the exception of the OVA which takes place between Episodes 4 & 5, and the first half of the ''Eternity & the Auto Memory Doll'' movie which takes place between Episodes 6 & 7[[note]]Violet mentions the stars she saw at the Shahar Observatory which was the job in Episode 6, and her behavior when Major Gilbert is obliquely brought up is much more consistent with how she acts before she learns he is dead in Episode 7[[/note]]).
* ArmsDealer: Volume 2 opens with a flashback of one of Gilbert and Violet's first missions to eliminate a Leidenschaftlich arms dealer and his entire retinue. The antagonist of the final chapter of the Gaiden volume, Salvatore Rinaudo, also spent part of his wartime career selling weapons on the side, even to Leidenschaftlich's enemies in the Northern Alliance.
* ArtificialLimbs: Violet lost both of her arms during the war, and by the time she woke up in the hospital, she already got replacements made in adamant silver. She has trouble writing with them, so she settles for typewriting, although in the Light Novel, she does write with a pen and ink on some occasions where bringing a typewriter is impractical.
* AscendedExtra: In the anime, Violet herself becomes this, compared to the Light Novels, where she is a supporting character in all chapters except 8 and 13. This is due to the anime centering primarily around Violet, rather than her clients, although Episodes 5, 7, and 10 did focus more on her clients.
* AsskickingEqualsAuthority: Gilbert is only put in charge of Leidenschaftlich's Army' Special Offense Force because he's the only person Violet obeys. Violet herself is the only member of said Special Offense Force, who gets away with questioning Gilbert's strategies and suggesting different ones, all of which revolve around her killing every single enemy soldier by herself before the rest of the SOF arrives.
* AttemptedRape: [[spoiler:After Violet was found on a deserted island as a child by Dietfried and his men, Dietfried's soldiers tried to rape her, but she killed them all but Dietfried. In the night before the battle at Intense, she sleeps in Gilbert's room because she's been killing so many soldiers ''on her own side'' because they keep intruding into her private room and trying to molest her while she sleeps. One wants to question exactly what the recruiting standards for Leidenschaftlich's military are like, but then this is the same military that men like [[AxCrazy Edward Jones]] and [[SociopathicSoldier Salvatore Rinaudo]] fought for.]]
* AwesomeButImpractical: "Witchcraft," an axe that's big enough and sturdy enough to double as a shield against bullets, with a chain weapon in the handle that seems to be remote-controlled somehow is awesome. The fact that it is described as having a handle as thick as Violet's waist makes it practically impossible to wield even remotely decently (not that this stops Violet from kicking ass with it). And then there's the fact that it's made entirely of solid metal, which makes it so heavy that only Violet has the strength to carry it.
* AnAxeToGrind: In chapters 3 and 6 of the light novel, and then one more time in the final chapter of the Gaiden volume, Violet wields a custom-built axe named "Witchcraft" which Major Gilbert Bougainvillea had made for her, which is bigger than her body. It doesn't appear in the anime.
* BabiesEverAfter: Ann Magnolia has a daughter in the timeskip that's displayed in the conclusion of her focus arc. Princess Charlotte also mentions that she is pregnant with Damian Flugel's child in ''The Queen and the Auto Memories Doll''.
* BadassNormal: CH Postal Service in Chapter 13 of the novel. Within a span of two hours, [[spoiler:CH Postal manages to go through all the legal procedures required to expropriate a privately-owned train station, hire everyone in the village said station was located in, completely destroy the train station and railroad, and launch a rescue operation spearheaded by Benedict, all because Violet, the most requested Auto-Memories Doll in Telesis, happened to be onboard a train that had been hijacked by Northern soldiers. It does help that many of the employees are former soldiers and orphans, who were conscripted during the war, and left to work for Hodgins because he offered them a, to them, better job]].
* BaitAndSwitchLesbians: Promotional materials for the first movie feature Violet and Isabelle in rather intimate poses. They ''do'' get very close in movie, which even includes them [[spoiler:sleeping in the same bed, and it all culminates in a spectacularly animated ballroom dance that just brims with romantic overtones]]. Alas, after Violet leaves Isabelle to her graduation the movie switches gears to Isabelle's life story (with her even [[spoiler:getting married off to some noble]]), and the two never meet again.
* BaitTheDog: Isidor seems a bit more agreeable than his bloodthirsty comrades in the extremist faction at first, bowing out of a confrontation with Violet and generally coming across as the general's NobleTopEnforcer. When he appears next, [[SpeakIllOfTheDead he insults a sympathetic dead soldier's memory]] and indulges in some EvilGloating before trying to kill off Violet and Dietfried with a PsychoticSmirk.
* BigDamnHeroes: Violet is this in Chapter 10 of the light novel, when she whirls in out of nowhere to save Lux Sibyl from being sacrificed by the Utopia cult. And then in Chapter 13 [[spoiler: Colonel Gilbert Bougainvillea saves Violet from the train hijackers by paradropping onto the train]].
* BilingualBonus:
** There are a couple [[GratuitousGerman German words]] used for political entities. Prominently: ''Leidenschaftlich'', the name of the country, means ''passionate'', but due to a quirk in etymological developments its capital, ''Leiden'', translates to ''suffering''. Other countries like Drossel and Flugel are similarly named.[[note]]In this case ''thrush'' and ''wing'', both relating to birds respectively.[[/note]]
** The town where Gilbert buys Violet the emerald brooch is called "Mächtig", which is German for "mighty".
* BloodierAndGorier: In comparison to many of Kyoto Animation's works, the anime isn't afraid to get brutal when it comes to war, caking many characters with blood and even drawing pools of blood just to emphasize how horrific the conditions are.
* BodyHorror: The Light Novel makes a lot of effort, when it comes to detailed, vivid descriptions of practically everything. This includes how people have their skulls crushed by Witchcraft, the injuries Violet suffers during the war, how Violet's arms ''fall off while she's trying to save Gilbert'', and how Gilbert has his eye ''ripped out''.
* BookEnds: The first episode has ""I love you" and Auto Memory Dolls" as the title. The last episode places the "I love you" at the end of the title, then trades the word "Dolls" for just "Doll."
* BreakTheCutie: Violet does ''not'' have it easy. In Episode 9 of the anime, [[spoiler:she is so broken that ''she attempts to commit suicide''.]]
* CallBack: Episode 9 in the anime is full of those. [[spoiler:Every single character from the anime whom Violet has helped in the past up to that point shows up again.]]
* CastFullOfPrettyBoys: In the anime, many of the male characters are rather good-looking. This can, of course, be due to the show generally having really good graphics. In the novel, Leon, Benedict and Gilbert are all described as being good-looking guys.
* CastOfSnowflakes: Shown in many of the episodes in the anime.
** In episode 3, all of the 10 Auto-Memory Doll aspirants have completely unique character designs, even though the episode only really focuses on Violet and Luculia. The guests in episode 4 also have unique designs and outfits. This becomes even more impressive in episode 6, where ''80 Auto-Memory Dolls appear simultaneously'', all looking completely different from each other.
** Episode 8 has a scene where Gilbert and Violet are walking through Mächtig at night, with only the light from street lamps to navigate by. Every single citizen who appears looks completely different from the rest, and to top it all off, the lighting makes it all look even ''more'' impressive.
* TheCatchPhraseCatchesOn: An in-universe variation; "Auto Memory Doll" is a small mechanical doll that types out messages, an invention of Prof. Orland made for his blind novelist wife that became the basis for typewriters in Violet's world. This term eventually turns into a 'symbol' of amanuensis industry in general. Nothing about android robots as Oscar found out the hard way in the novel.
** Violet's introductory speech quickly ends up becoming Violet's standard greeting whenever she meets anyone, as displayed in Chapter 9.
-->'''Violet''': "Pleased to make your acquaintance. I rush anywhere my customers desire. I am from the Auto-Memory Doll service, Violet Evergarden... I apologize for this mistake. I always end up saying my introductory speech. It is an occupational hazard."
* CentralTheme:
** The importance of communicating things clearly to the people around you.
** Everyone has scars, and it's important to move on.
* ChekhovsGun: A case of this being a literal gun. In Gaiden Volume Chapter 3, Hodgins lectures Violet about her carrying too many weapons while riding on Benedict's motorcycle, and asks if she's been buying more weapons with her salary. She answers yes and goes on to mention that she just recently bought a precision rifle. The conversation moves on and the subject is dropped as Violet and Benedict depart for their next job. [[spoiler: Near the end of the chapter, Violet did indeed bring said rifle with her on the job against Hodgins' advice, and she uses it to be Benedict's "backup firepower" as she snipes the pistols out of the hands of the gangsters chasing after Benedict as he confronts his past.]]
* ChildSoldier: Violet served in the military ever since she was a child and knows next to nothing about being anything but a weapon. Most of the child soldiers returns from the war trying to reintegrate into civilian life but failing.
** Ale in chapter 3, "The Soldier and the Auto-Memory Doll," is described as being under 10 years old, but volunteers as a soldier because his family will be generously compensated for it.
* CloseOnTitle: Title cards for most of the episodes are shown either before or after the end credits.
* ClothingDamage: In Chapter 13, Violet's dress gets more and more damaged as the battle goes on. And again in Gaiden Chapter 6, where despite not really getting injured while fighting Salvatore Postal Company, the new cute outfit she had bought [[spoiler: for her date with Gilbert]] is in ragged tatters by the end of the day.
* ComingOfAgeStory: The main premise of Episode 5 / Gaiden Chapter 2 is Princess Charlotte's emotional journey as the wedding arranged by her kingdom closes in. She starts out a RoyalBrat, but with Violet's support, she gains the dignity and patience of a queen and the strength to say goodbye to her OldRetainer, Alberta.
* ContinuityNod: Several are given, both in the anime and the light novel, such as Luculia and a few other minor characters from episode 3 showing up in Justitia in episode 6 and catching up with Violet.
** Chapter 5 has Chaser mention Violet being the basis for the protagonist in Oscar's latest play.
** Chapter 10 ends with Lux being saved from Utopia and offered a job at CH Postal. In all subsequent appearances, she is working as Hodgins' personal secretary.
** Chapter 13 starts and ends with mentioning Oscar and Leon, describing what they're up to.
** Gaiden Chapter 2 mentions that the person who recommended Violet to be Isabella York's etiquette tutor was Alberta, Princess Charlotte's handmaiden.
** ''Ever After'' Chapter 1 spans a time period covering Violet's very first job as an Auto-Memories Doll to nearly two years later, ending shortly after the final chapter of the Gaiden Volume. As such, it is loaded with ContinuityPorn referencing the majority of the jobs Violet took throughout her career.
** ''Ever After'' Chapter 3 [[LemonyNarrator jokingly mentions]] that Violet, Benedict, and Cattleya are tough enough to "physically crush other postal companies." The three of them did exactly that against Salvatore Postal in the Gaiden volume's finale.
** ''Ever After'' Chapter 4 ends with [[spoiler: Colonel Gilbert Bougainvillea]] taking the "Femme Fatale" train back to Leiden from the North. This is the same train that was hijacked in the end of Volume 2.
** ''Ever After'' Chapter 5 shows that Violet's latest job working for a composer in the city of Alfine was recommended by a certain novelist. Said novelist then appears in the chapter to play a major role in the story, and it's Oscar Webster. Also in that same chapter, [[spoiler: she manages to confess that one of her greatest wishes is to show Gilbert all the sights and places she has been to working as a Doll, essentially recapping all her major work requests throughout the series.]]
** In the OVA episode, it turns out Violet was assigned as the Auto-Memory Doll for Irma Felice's request because of a recommendation from Rhodanthe, the instructor for the Auto-Memory Doll training course in Episode 3.
** In the 2020 movie, Erica is now working for the playwright Oscar as his assistant.
* ConstructedWorld: Taking place on Telsis, a continent with numerous nations that is essentially divided up into four main power blocs: the North, South, East, and West. The Great War that occurred saw almost every nation on Telsis consolidating into one of two factions, the Northern Alliance or the Southern League, with the East allying with the North and the West with the South.
* CorporateWarfare: The final chapter of the Gaiden Volume concerns a rival postal company, the Salvatore Postal Company, attacking CH Postal using an artillery cannon and taking Hodgins and Lux as hostages, as well as [[PoliceAreUseless bribing the city's military police to not take any action]]. Violet, Benedict, and Cattleya go into action to rescue them and organize a counter-attack by deploying CH Postal's own combat assets (mostly consisting of FormerRegimePersonnel) to strike back against Salvatore's branch offices throughout Leiden. CH Postal has a surprisingly large amount of weapons at its disposal.
* DarkerAndEdgier: For Creator/KyotoAnimation, even more so than ''LightNovel/BeyondTheBoundary''. After about a decade of light-hearted anime works, ''Violet Evergarden'' presents a much more cynical story that deals with human cruelty front and center.
* DeliberateValuesDissonance: Given that the setting is in is somewhere around the early 20th century, this is inevitable. Child soldiers, heavy-handed [[{{Realpolitik}} political]] [[MyCountryRightOrWrong decisions]], arranged marriage at a young age (with the age gap between the couple at that) for example...
* DespairEventHorizon: Violet briefly crosses this in episode 9. Her HeroicBSOD eventually leads to her [[spoiler:attempting to commit suicide]]. [[spoiler:She gets better, after receiving her first letter ever]].
* DeadlyDistantFinale: In the anime, [[spoiler: the 2020 movie's FramingDevice over 50 years in the future is a strong indicator that almost everyone we knew from the main story has long passed on. The movie even opens with the aftermath of the funeral of Ann Magnolia as her daughter, son-in-law, and granddaughter try to come to terms with her passing.]]
* DistantFinale: For the light novel continuity, the ''Gilbert Bougainvillea and the Fleeting Dream'' short story serves as this, as it [[spoiler: takes place years later when he and Violet are a married couple, and he finds reassurance from her that she will always be by his side after he had a [[TitleDrop fleeting dream]] where she was lost to him forever.]]
* DoItYourselfThemeTune: The ending theme is sung by Erica's voice actress, Creator/MinoriChihara.
* DrivenToSuicide: [[spoiler:Violet, in episode 9. After a nightmare in which Gilbert says the exact same lines that Dietfried said to her in episode 5, she attempts to choke herself to death.]]
* EarnYourHappyEnding: After all the suffering and emotional trauma of the War and its aftermath, [[spoiler: Violet and Gilbert finally [[HappilyMarried get married]]]] in the finale of ''Ever After.''
* FantasyConflictCounterpart: The War is obviously one for The First World War, lasting for four years and embroiling many countries into it in two distinct sides. The weaponry used in battle include British Lee-Enfields and German G98s, along with the distinctive Luger P08 and 1911 pistols. Uniforms worn by the troopers bear noticeable resemblances to those used by British and German forces. The war's murky reasons and grey-on-grey morality are very much inspired by the horrors of the Great War.
* FateDrivesUsTogether: In ''Violet Evergarden - IF'', even in another universe where she is known as Leidenschaftlich's Undine, was kept in Dietfried's custody, and is far closer to him than in the canon story, [[spoiler: Dietfried can still tell at the end that she is developing feelings for his brother Gilbert, cementing that Violet and Gilbert will always be drawn to each other no matter what.]]
* FloralThemeNaming: Most of the characters incorporate a flowering plant in their name somehow -- ''Violet'' Evergarden, Gilbert ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bougainvillea Bougainvillea]]'', ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cattleya Cattleya]]'' Baudelaire, ''Iris'' Cannary, ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erica Erica]]'' Brown, Ann ''Magnolia'', Leon ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephanotis Stephanotis]]''.
* FourTemperamentEnsemble: The Dolls: Violet is eclectic, Luculia is phlegmatic, Erica is melancholic, Cattleya is sanguine and Iris is choleric.
* {{Ghostwriter}}: The job of Auto-Memory Doll service is to put client's thoughts into a letter, effecticely writing messages under client's name. The titular protagonist, learns about human emotions as a member of said service.
* GrandFinale: The ''Ever After'' volume and the 2020 movie both act as this for their respective continuities of the story.
* GreatOffscreenWar: The four-year war on the Telsis continent in the past that divided it into the North and South, which the nation of Leidenschaftlich took part in.
** Episode 8 in the anime shows a few flashbacks to the war. Chapter 6 and 7 in the novel both take place during the war, with Chapter 6 being from Gilbert receiving Violet until he says "I love you" and Chapter 7 being Gilbert's life flashing before his eyes.
* HeroicBSOD: [[spoiler:Violet goes through one in episode 9, after revisiting Intense, where she last saw the Major. She gets better, though.]]
* HighTurnoverRate: ''Ever After'' Chapter 3 mentions that Hodgins has staffing problems with CH Postal as most of the young men hired to work as postmen tend to quit quickly, largely due to CH Postal expanding quickly and having to hire as much help as possible in a short time.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: I - N]]
* ICallItVera: In the light novel, Violet owns a huge, custom-built battle-axe that's bigger than her own body, which the Major gave to her, named "Witchcraft".
* InMediasRes: The novel version starts with Violet, already a famous Auto Memory Doll, taking jobs from the client. We don't learn about her origins until the final chapter of the first volume.
** ''Ever After'' Chapter 2 begins with Dietfried slowly regaining consciousness from a bad head injury, with Violet watching over him while surrounded by panicked civilians. After he awakens and exchanges harsh words with her, the narration then jumps back in time a few minutes to explain how they ended up in this situation.
* InnocentFanserviceGirl: Violet, because she has NoSocialSkills. When she is given a work uniform to wear she immediately begins stripping down, right in front of a (very flustered) boy.
** In the light novel's first Chapter, Oscar walks in on Violet while she is completely naked, and the only person who appears to be bothered by it is Oscar himself. Possibly because she reminded him of his deceased daughter, who would have been the same age as Violet, and looked very similar, had she still lived.
* InnocentlyInsensitive:
** Violet herself, who is adept in military duties but knows next to nil about civilian life. When meeting the Evergarden family for the first time, Violet proclaims to their face that she doesn't know what a 'family' is and doesn't need one. This causes problems on the job, ranging from her bluntness being off-putting to some of her co-workers, to taking a client's words at face value and writing her response to a love letter as negative and materialistic instead of coy.
** To some extent, Benedict, Hodgins' old friend with an uncaring demeanor who works at CH as a mailman. For example, when Hodgins slowly informs Violet that the Evergarden family is willing to be her guarantor but changed their minds about letting Violet live with them...
-->'''Benedict''': "That part hit a snag, huh."\\
'''Hodgins''': ''*Kicks Benedict's shin*'' "Come on, I was trying to break it to her gently!"\\
'''Benedict''': "Why should I care?"
** Iris' mother. She simply couldn't understand why Iris was upset over her inviting a number of boys to Iris' birthday party as a means to get Iris to marry one of them and settle down in their village. She also didn't understand why Iris was uncomfortable with one particular boy who Iris specifically asked her not to invite (but her mother did so anyway). Iris later reveals to Violet that [[spoiler: Iris had confessed to said boy who turned her down, which is why she left for the city.]]
* KickingAssInAllHerFinery: Violet. Apparently, [[spoiler:dropping into the middle of an active battlefield to visit a client, while wearing her typical fancy outfit, is ''not'' out of the question. The same goes for fighting off a group of train hijackers, not knowing that the Army is already planning their own rescue operation.]] Kicking ass and wearing pretty dresses are ''not'' mutually exclusive.
* LighterAndSofter: The animated adaptation is much more reserved when it comes to violence and cynicism than the light novel. For instance, where [[EyeScream Gilbert's eye is described as being ''ripped out'' in the Light Novel, he merely gets shot in the eye in the anime]]. Additionally, in the light novel, Violet practically single-handedly takes out the entire enemy army stationed in the cathedral in Intense using [[AnAxeToGrind Witchcraft]], with quite detailed descriptions of how the enemy soldiers are mutilated and their limbs crushed by the giant axe, while the anime merely shows Squad 1 charge into Intense with rifles.
* LikeRealityUnlessNoted: The world of ''Violet Evergarden'' is set in an early 20th century European-like setting with a bit of CultureChopSuey and minor {{Steampunk}} thrown in. In addition, as per the anime, the climate and plant life of a good part of the setting hearken more to southeastern Asia, rather than typical Europe.
* LimitedWardrobe: Everyone. Violet is the character who goes through most outfits in the anime, but after becoming an Auto-Memory Doll she only wears her iconic white dress and Prussian blue jacket. The only other characters seen wearing more than one outfit are Hodgins and Iris, both of whom are shown wearing two different outfits, and both only on one occasion. This becomes slightly jarring in episode 6, where Luculia and two other unnamed extras from episode 3 appear wearing the exact same outfits as they wore in episode 3.
* LineOfSightName: In the anime, Gilbert names Violet after a flower growing just outside the training area, unlike the novel, where he names her after a flower goddess.
* MementoMacGuffin: Violet's emerald brooch, gifted to her by Gilbert. It went missing during her stay in a hospital.
** In the Light Novel, she says that she worries about losing it if she wears it in battle, so the Major tells her to just wear it during their time off. After the battle in Intense many things went missing, including most of Violet's belongings (since practically everything she owned was actually property of Leidenschaftlich's Army, save for a few dresses, the Brooch and Witchcraft). As a result, the brooch ended up on the black market after the war, and Hodgins bought it for Violet out of his own pocket.
** The brooch becomes this again in Chapter 13. During the battle against the leader of the hijackers Violet loses the brooch (which had already been hinted could happen if she wore it in battle back in Chapter 6). She quickly manages to recover it, though. When [[spoiler:the Major comes to rescue her, he finds out that the girl who didn't care about material things at all during the war held on to the brooch for all those years]].
* MentorsNewHope: Taylor Bartlett for Benedict in ''Eternity and the Auto Memories Doll''. The trope is PlayedWith, as Benedict is not the archetypal OldMaster, but Taylor is so passionate about delivering mail that he rediscovers his passion for the job he had grown bored with by training her in postman work.
* NarrativeFiligree: A large chunk of the Light Novel consist of nothing but descriptions of the scenery and various characters, which really doesn't contribute to the story, aside from creating vivid images of the scenes and characters in the reader's mind.
* NeverFoundTheBody: Subverted in the anime, where the Major was last seen heavily wounded in an area that was bombed immediately afterwards, and his dogtags were found nearby. The fact that his body was never found causes Violet to insist that he's not really dead, but it's implied she's just in denial and he never shows up again. However, it is played straight in the Light Novel, where he did in fact survive. [[spoiler:Ultimately played straight in the anime too. Because Gilbert was found without his dogtags, therefore no identification on him, he was brought to a hospital run by a convent and spent a bit of time wandering from there.]]
* NonIndicativeName: Chapter 13 tells us that law enforcement in Leidenschaftlich is conducted by military police, which, despite the name, actually are a completely separate entity from the military.
** The "Gaiden" Volume actually has 2/3 of its content (4 out of 6 chapters) take place after the end of Volume 2 in neat chronological order, making one wonder why it's referred to as a "gaiden" (sidestory) volume instead of just plain Volume 3.
* NoSocialSkills: Violet lived her entire life as a ChildSoldier, and thus has no knowledge at all about how to live in society when there is no war going on.
* NotSoDifferentRemark: Twice between Violet and Leon:
** He finds Violet's passion for depicting people's emotion through written letters similar to his own for deciphering old manuscripts about astronomical research.
** Violet even comments on how they both have "Unfriendly faces".
[[/folder]]

[[folder:O - Z]]
* OrphanedEtymology: The CH Postal staff drink Darjeeling tea in ''Ever After'' Chapter 3, despite the fact that there is no [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darjeeling Darjeeling]] in the world of ''Violet Evergarden.''
* PerfectlyArrangedMarriage: The focus of episode 5, between Princess Charlotte and Prince Damien of allied nations. While it's played straight as the royals get to know each other better and look forward to the marriage, it is also exploited -- their correspondence (actually initially written by Dolls at first) is published, making the public believe in the strength of their union and the alliance.
* PragmaticAdaptation: Some events in the anime adaptation happen in a different order or are changed compared to the books.
** In the anime, Hodgins gives Violet the plushies in the carriage on their way to the Evergarden mansion, but in the novel, he gives her the plushies in the hospital, right after she wakes up from her coma. Similarly, in the books, Violet works with Oscar, the playwright, in chapter 1 and works with Leon Stephanotis, the astronomer from Justitia, in chapter 4, yet in the anime, those two "stories" are episodes 7 and 6 respectively.
** In the anime, both Gilbert and Violet make it to the top of the tower in Intense, where Gilbert launches the signal flare. In the book, Violet is ordered to abandon Gilbert on the stairs, surrounded by enemies, and runs to the ceiling to fire the signal flare herself. The manner in which Gilbert loses his eye is also slightly less brutal in the anime (instead of having it ripped out like in the book, he is merely shot in the eye in the anime).
* PreAsskickingOneLiner: In Chapter 10 of the Light Novel: ''"Challengers, come forward. I, Violet Evergarden, shall take you on."''
* ProtagonistTitle:
** The series is named after its eponymous protagonist. Ironically enough in the Light Novel, Violet is only a protagonist in 2 chapters, 8 and 13. In both of these, she shares the spotlight with other characters as well, such as Claudia Hodgins, the employees at CH Postal Service, [[spoiler:and Major/Colonel Gilbert Bougainvillea]]. In every other chapter, Violet is only a supporting character.
** Many chapters in the Light Novel also feature this to a lesser extent, such as chapters 1-5 and 9-10 using the formula "The (something) and the Auto-Memory Doll", chapter 6's "The Major and the Automated Assassination Doll", chapter 7's "The Major and his everything" and chapter 8's "The Doll and her everything". The first referring to whom the chapter primarily focuses on, and "the Auto-Memory Doll" referring to Violet.
** Played perfectly straight with Chapter 13's title: "Violet Evergarden".
* RealPlaceBackground: Locations from the German towns of Nuremberg, Mannheim, Frankfurt and Cochem are used throughout the show, and the CH Postal Company building is modeled after the Museum of Kyoto in Kyoto's Nakagyo ward. The town of Leiden as shown in-series does not bear any resemblance to its real-life Dutch namesake though, much to the disappointment of fans traveling there.
* SecondaryCharacterTitle: The first 4 chapters in Volume 1 don't focus on Violet at all, giving the clients more attention, while Violet works as a secondary character. Violet only becomes the protagonist for real in Chapter 5.
* SeriousBusiness: Writing letters, to the point where the correspondence between two royals arranged to be married is displayed for the awed public to discuss, letter by letter.
* SceneryDissonance: Employed as a way to convey grieving and the feeling of having lost life's meaning. The eponymous protagonist has just recovered from a very traumatic battle where she lost her arms and her beloved superior. When she awakes, the war has come to an end and both the landscapes surrounding her and the town she now lives in are too idyllic and peaceful for an ex-soldier who was never allowed to experience any feelings and is deep in mourning. The trope is {{subverted}} as she heals.
* SchizoTech: The technological level of this world is about that of early 20th century Europe, but they have prosthetic technology going beyond anything our 21st century has to offer (e.g. Violet's "adamant silver" arms).
* SkilledButNaive: This was Violet's initial problem with writing letters. She was the only one in her class to attain perfect scores in grammar and vocabulary, as well as having excellent typing skills, but she lacked the social skills to accurately decipher a person's true feelings and express them properly in a letter.
* SpellMyNameWithAnS: Despite Gilbert's brother's name being pronounced as "Dietfried" ("Dietofuriido"), the subtitles in more than one language of the anime on Netflix write his name as "Diethard", ''which is an entirely different name'', while some fan translations actually use the name "Dietfried".
** Official translations refer to Violet's job as "Auto Memory Doll" but the official English dub, as well as the fansubs & the fan translator for the light novels use the plural "Auto Memories Doll." Then there's inconsistencies as well as to whether there's a hyphen or not after "Auto."
* TechnologyMarchesOn: An in-universe example. In the 2020 movie, telephones are becoming more and more widespread and a new huge radio tower is being built in Leiden, and the CH Postal staff mournfully lament that this probably means that Auto-Memory Dolls are going to soon become obsolete when technology will allow people to instantly talk to each other instead of sending letters.
* TitleDrop: With the exception of Episodes 1[[labelnote:Title]]""I Love You" and Auto Memory Dolls"[[/labelnote]], 7[[labelnote:Title]]"" "" (seriously, it is the episode's title)[[/labelnote]], 8, 12,[[labelnote:Note]]Both are untitled episodes[[/labelnote]] and 13 [[labelnote:Title]]"Auto Memory Doll and "I Love You""[[/labelnote]], all titles are dropped at the end of each episode.
* TitleDropChapter: Episode 9, [[spoiler: considering it is the point where Violet finally recovers from her HeroicBSOD]].
%%* TraintopBattle: Happens in Episode 12.
* WantedASonInstead: Claudia's GenderBlenderName is the result of his mother hoping for a daughter, and apparently being very insistent in the throes of labor.
* WarIsHell: The war is never shown to be anything but a pointless source of destruction, grief, and loss. Neither Violet nor any other soldiers desire or receive any glory or admiration for their roles or show any pride in their wartime deeds. The reasons behind the war and the question of who could be said to have "won" are never elaborated upon and ultimately don't matter.
* WeaponTombstone: In Episode 11, [[spoiler:Violet buries Aidan and uses his rifle as a grave marker.]]
* WhatIsThisThingYouCallLove: One of Violet's driving questions and what ultimately convinces her to join the Auto Memory Dolls service.
* WholeEpisodeFlashback: Gaiden Chapter 5 is basically one long flashback recounting Hodgins and Gilbert's time at the Leidenschaftlich Army academy. [[spoiler: It turns out to actually be a FramingDevice of Hodgins telling the story of how he met Gilbert to a bedridden Violet who's sick with a fever.]]
* WriteWhoYouKnow: InUniverse, Oscar Webster bases the protagonist of his latest production on [[spoiler:his late daughter. Completing the play is his last hurdle in overcoming his grief.]] This is also the same in the OVA episode with Irma Felice, who bases the heroine of her latest opera on herself. [[spoiler: Like Oscar, this is also because she is a grieving woman trying to come to terms with the loss of her fiancé in the war, and performing the opera is her last obstacle to letting go of him.]]
[[/folder]]

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