Table of Contents

Ravonna Renslayer

Part 1: The Dossier: An At-a-Glance Summary

Part 2: Origin and Evolution

Publication History and Creation

Ravonna Renslayer made her debut in Avengers #23, published in December 1965. She was created by the legendary duo of writer Stan Lee and artist Don Heck during the creative zenith of the Silver Age of comics. Her introduction was a key component of Kang the Conqueror's first major multi-issue storyline, designed to add a new layer of depth and motivation to the time-traveling villain. Unlike many one-dimensional antagonists of the era, Kang was given a surprisingly humanizing goal: not just conquest, but winning the love of a woman who despised him. Ravonna's role was to be the moral and emotional anchor of the story, a noble figure whose defiance highlights Kang's tyranny but whose eventual fate reveals a flicker of his own humanity. Her sacrificial death in Avengers #24 was a shocking and impactful moment for its time, establishing a foundational tragedy that would influence Kang's character for decades. While she remained deceased in the comics for many years, her presence was a constant specter in Kang's stories. It wasn't until the 1980s and early 1990s that writers began to explore the possibility of her return, culminating in the 1992 storyline “The Terminatrix Objective,” which resurrected her not as a hero, but as a complex and formidable villain in her own right. This evolution transformed her from a tragic plot device into a major player in Marvel's cosmic and temporal landscape.

In-Universe Origin Story

The origin of Ravonna Renslayer is a tale told in two vastly different continuities. Her comic book history is one of futuristic royalty and cosmic games, while her MCU counterpart is a story of stolen identity and bureaucratic dogma.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

In the 40th century of Earth-616's timeline, Ravonna was the daughter of King Carelius, the ruler of the last non-conquered kingdom on Earth. This kingdom, whose name remains unrevealed, was a bastion of peace and technological advancement in an era otherwise dominated by the iron will of kang_the_conqueror. Kang, who had conquered his entire era, found himself bored and unfulfilled. His final challenge was this defiant kingdom, and more specifically, its fiercely independent princess, Ravonna. Kang arrived and issued an ultimatum: he would spare the kingdom if Ravonna would consent to be his bride. Captivated by her spirit and beauty, he believed she was the only one worthy to rule by his side. Ravonna, disgusted by his tyranny, vehemently refused. In response, Kang brought his futuristic armies to bear, but did not immediately destroy the kingdom, instead seeking to prove his worthiness to her through his power. He even brought the avengers to his time to demonstrate his superiority over Earth's mightiest heroes. During the conflict, one of Kang's own commanders, Baltag, saw Kang's hesitation as weakness and staged a mutiny. As Baltag fired a fatal blast from his weapon at a distracted Kang, Ravonna, having witnessed a glimmer of nobility in the conqueror's actions to save her kingdom, threw herself in front of the blast. She died in Kang's arms, professing that she had finally come to love him. Her death became Kang's greatest failure and obsession. He placed her body in stasis, spending centuries searching for a way to restore her life. His quest led him into a contest with the cosmic entity known as the grandmaster. Kang played a game against the Grandmaster with the Avengers and the Squadron Sinister as pawns. Though Kang lost the game, he was offered the choice between the power of life (to save Ravonna) or the power of death (to destroy the Avengers). In a moment of pure vengeance, he chose death, attempting to kill the heroes. The Grandmaster, however, revealed he had only given Kang the power of death, not the ability to use it on the Avengers. He then revived a still-loving Ravonna from the moment before her death and showed her Kang's selfish choice. Heartbroken and betrayed, Ravonna swore revenge. The Grandmaster sent her away, and this resurrected, vengeful Ravonna would eventually re-emerge as the master strategist known as the Terminatrix.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

The MCU origin of Ravonna Renslayer, as depicted in the Disney+ series `Loki`, is a complete departure from the comics. Here, she is not a princess from the future but a high-ranking and seemingly loyal Judge within the Time Variance Authority (TVA), an immense bureaucracy that exists outside of time and space. When first introduced, Judge Renslayer is a stern, by-the-book administrator, charged with overseeing the prosecution of “variants”—beings who have strayed from their predetermined path on the “Sacred Timeline.” She demonstrates a long-standing, albeit strained, professional friendship with TVA agent Mobius M. Mobius and is unyielding in her mission to preserve the timeline at any cost, under the supposed direction of the god-like Time-Keepers. However, the entire foundation of her existence is a lie. As Loki and his variant, Sylvie, uncover, all TVA employees are variants themselves, kidnapped from their original timelines and had their memories erased. Ravonna's original identity is revealed to be Rebecca Tourminet, a high school vice principal from Fremont, Ohio, in 2018. She was abducted and reprogrammed by the TVA's true founder, He Who Remains, a variant of Kang the Conqueror. Her loyalty to the TVA is absolute, even after learning the Time-Keepers are mindless androids. She believes that the singular Sacred Timeline, even if built on a lie, is the only thing preventing a catastrophic multiversal war between infinite variants of Kang. This belief drives her to become a primary antagonist, hunting Loki and Sylvie to protect the established order. By the end of `Loki` Season 1, with the Sacred Timeline shattered and He Who Remains dead, a disillusioned Ravonna abandons the TVA. Declaring she is in search of “free will,” she uses a TemPad to depart for an unknown destination, presumably to find the person truly responsible for her stolen life—a quest that puts her on a direct collision course with the Council of Kangs. Season 2 further revealed she was a key commander in He Who Remains' war against his variants, before having her own memory wiped to serve as a cog in his machine.

Part 3: Abilities, Equipment & Personality

Ravonna's capabilities differ significantly between her comic and cinematic incarnations, reflecting her vastly different roles as a futuristic warrior-queen versus a temporal bureaucrat.

Earth-616 (Prime Comic Universe)

As a native of the 40th century and a key figure in Kang's empire, Ravonna is a formidable individual even without inherent superpowers.

Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU)

MCU's Judge Renslayer is a different kind of threat, relying less on advanced armor and more on institutional power and psychological manipulation.

Part 4: Key Relationships & Network

Core Allies

Arch-Enemies

Affiliations

Part 5: Iconic Events & Storylines

The Kang Dynasty (Avengers #23-24, 1965)

This is Ravonna's foundational story. When Kang the Conqueror brings the Avengers to his 40th-century kingdom, it is to prove his might to Ravonna, the princess he wishes to make his queen. Her arc in these two issues is swift but powerful. She moves from defiant rejection of a tyrant to a grudging respect and, finally, to a declared love, just as she sacrifices her life to save him from a mutinous subordinate. This event establishes her as Kang's one true love and her death as his single greatest failure, a moment that would haunt and motivate him for millennia.

"The Terminatrix Objective" (Avengers Annual #21, Captain America Annual #11, Thor Annual #17, Fantastic Four Annual #25, 1992)

This crossover event marked Ravonna's dramatic return to the Marvel Universe. It is revealed that she was resurrected by the Grandmaster and has been plotting her revenge. Adopting the moniker Terminatrix, she executes a brilliant and complex plan. She manipulates multiple versions of Kang, forces Doctor Druid into her service, and orchestrates events to seize control of Kang's ultimate weapon. The storyline culminates in her seemingly killing Kang and taking his place as the master of Chronopolis. It was a landmark story that transformed Ravonna from a tragic footnote into a major cosmic villain, proving she was every bit the strategist and threat that Kang was.

Avengers Forever (1998-1999)

This critically acclaimed 12-issue maxiseries by Kurt Busiek and Carlos Pacheco delved deep into the convoluted history of Kang, Immortus, and the Avengers. While not solely a Ravonna story, her presence is a key part of the temporal tapestry. The series explores the nature of Kang's love for her as a driving force behind his evolution into Immortus and his war against the Time-Keepers. It retroactively adds layers to their relationship, showing how their bond is a fixed, pivotal point in the timeline that even cosmic beings struggle to alter.

Loki (TV Series, 2021-2023)

This series is Ravonna's definitive appearance in the MCU and serves as a complete re-imagining of her character. As Judge Renslayer, she is the face of the TVA's authority. Her arc across two seasons is one of gradual, horrifying discovery. She begins as a staunch defender of the Sacred Timeline, only to learn her gods are fake, her life is a lie, and her memories are stolen. Her journey sees her desperately clinging to the idea of a single, controlling purpose, even as the multiverse breaks open around her. Her conflict with Mobius, her hunt for Sylvie, and her final departure to find the “man in charge” redefine her for a new generation, setting her up as a key player in the MCU's Multiverse Saga.

Part 6: Variants and Alternative Versions

While Ravonna herself has fewer distinct multiversal “variants” in the comics compared to a character like Kang, her own transformations and alternate identities serve a similar narrative function.

See Also

Notes and Trivia

1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6) 7)

1)
Ravonna's name is often a point of debate for pronunciation. While not definitively stated in comics, the MCU series `Loki` established the pronunciation as “Rah-voh-na.” The surname Renslayer is pronounced as it is spelled.
2)
Her transformation from a damsel-in-distress archetype into the hyper-competent villain Terminatrix in the early 90s is reflective of a broader trend in comics at the time, which saw many female characters shed older, more passive roles for more agency and power.
3)
In the comics, Kang has placed multiple versions of Ravonna in stasis at different points in her timeline, obsessed with finding the “perfect” version who loved him before her fatal sacrifice. This has led to multiple Ravonnas existing simultaneously.
4)
The choice to make Ravonna a judge in the MCU is thematically rich. While Kang in the comics is a monarch, his MCU counterpart (He Who Remains) is the ultimate arbiter of fate. Casting Ravonna as a judge instead of a princess aligns her with this new thematic focus on law, order, and the philosophical debate between free will and determinism.
5)
Gugu Mbatha-Raw, who portrays Ravonna Renslayer in `Loki`, has stated in interviews that she was unaware of her character's deep comic book connection to Kang during the filming of Season 1, allowing her to build the character based on the script's focus on her role within the TVA.
6)
Key Reading/Viewing: First Appearance: Avengers #23 (1965). Death: Avengers #24 (1965). Return as Terminatrix: Avengers Annual #21 (1992). MCU Debut: Loki, Season 1, Episode 1 (2021).
7)
The relationship between Kang and Ravonna can be seen as a central pillar of the “Kang Cycle”—Kang's attempts to save her often lead to timeline disruptions that create the very conflicts the Avengers must stop, which in turn hardens Kang, in an endless causal loop.