North

From A Wiki of Ice and Fire
Revision as of 12:51, 31 January 2015 by Lord Rupert Connington (talk | contribs) (Houses)
Jump to: navigation, search
Map (click to zoom)
The lands surrounding Winterfell and the kingsroad in Game of Thrones

The North[1] or the north[2] is one of the constituent regions of Westeros and was a sovereign nation ruled by Kings in the North before the War of Conquest. The region covers the entire area south of the Wall and north of the Neck.

The North has been ruled by House Stark for thousands of years from the castle known as Winterfell. Other notable houses of the region include Bolton, Karstark, Manderly, and Umber. Bastards of noble origin raised in the North are given the surname Snow.

Geography

The North is vast in size. It is the largest of the Seven Kingdoms' regions, nearly as large as the the other territories combined.[3] The region is sparsely populated, with vast wilderness, forests, pine-covered hills and snow-capped mountains, speckled with tiny villages and holdfasts. Its climate is cold and harsh in winter and occasionally it will snow in summer. The North has two major land barriers, the Wall to the north and the Neck to the south. The North is bound on each side by major seas, the Shivering Sea to the east and the Sunset Sea to the west.[4]

Winterfell, the ancestral seat of House Stark, is a large castle centrally located in the North. The vast wolfswood, the largest forest of the Seven Kingdoms, extends northwest to the Bay of Ice and Sea Dragon Point. Deepwood Motte, the seat of House Glover, and Ironrath, the seat of House Forrester, lie in the wolfswood. House Mormont rules Bear Island in the Bay of Ice. The northern mountains extend from the wolfswood to the Wall and are inhabited by northern mountain clans.[4]

South of the wolfswood is hilly terrain with several large lakes. Torrhen's Square, seat of House Tallhart, is located by the largest of these lakes. Farther west along the Sunset Sea is the Stony Shore, which contains fishing villages. Southeast of the Stony Shore and north of Blazewater Bay is the Rills, plains which are ruled by House Ryswell. East of the Rills and south of Winterfell are the barrowlands, hilly plains dotted with the barrows of the First Men. House Dustin rules the large town of Barrowton. There are unnamed rivers which flow south from Barrowton and near Torrhen's Square into the Saltspear, while another unnamed river divides the Stony Shore from the Rills.[4]

South of the barrowlands is the Neck, an isthmus forming the border with the riverlands to the south. A vast swamp and the source of the Green Fork, the Neck is home to the crannogmen; House Reed rules from the moving castle Greywater Watch.[5] The ruined castle of Moat Cailin, located on the causeway near the Fever River, controls access to the North from the Neck. It is here the Kings in the North held off southron invasions.[6]

A large peninsula is located west of the Neck and south of the Saltspear and Blazewater Bay. Flint's Finger, home of House Flint of Flint's Finger, is located on its northern shore, while Cape Kraken and and the Flint Cliffs are located along its western and southern shores, respectively. South of the peninsula are Ironman's Bay and the Iron Islands.[7]

East of the barrowlands is the White Knife, a major river of the North which has its source at Long Lake northeast of Winterfell. Castle Cerwyn, the seat of House Cerwyn, is located near a tributary south of Winterfell. The White Knife runs south to White Harbor, one of the major cities of the Seven Kingdoms and the main port of the North. Southeast of White Harbor is Oldcastle, the seat of House Locke, while farther east are Ramsgate and the Broken Branch, which has its source in the Sheepshead Hills northeast of White Harbor. Widow's Watch, the castle of House Flint of Widow's Watch, is built on an isolated peninsula east of Ramsgate in the Shivering Sea.[4] The Bite separates the southeastern North, much of which is influenced by House Manderly of White Harbor,[8] from the Vale of Arryn.

Hornwood, the seat of House Hornwood, is located north of White Harbor and south of the Dreadfort, the seat of House Bolton. The Dreadfort lies near the Weeping Water, which flows east to the Shivering Sea. Northeast of the Dreadfort are the forested lands of House Karstark. East of their castle, Karhold, are the Grey Cliffs.[4] Located in the Bay of Seals are several islands, including Skagos and uninhabited Skane. The largest, Skagos, is said to be inhabited by cannibals and unicorns and is only nominally controlled by the Starks of Winterfell.[9]

North of Winterfell and the Dreadfort and northwest of Karhold are the lands of House Umber, whose castle of Last Hearth is located in a forest. The Umbers control the Lonely Hills[10] and land along the Bay of Seals.[11] Beginning near Last Hearth, the Last River flows southeast between Karhold and the Dreadfort.[4]

The Wall is a colossal fortification that protects the North from threats beyond the Wall, such as wildlings. It is separated from the northern lands owing allegiance to Winterfell by the Gift, which are lands of the Night's Watch north of the Umbers' lands.

Winterfell and Moat Cailin are located along the kingsroad, which connects Castle Black at the Wall with the riverlands to the south.

People

Northmen are sometimes referred to as "wolves" because of the sigil of House Stark - art by Tiziano Baracchi. © Fantasy Flight Games

The northmen are nearly all descended from the First Men. They are known as a straight-forward, hardy, tough breed who hold the comforts of the south in disdain. Most of them still follow the old gods and their heart trees, and have little inclination for the new gods. There are a few houses who instead follow the Faith of the Seven, including House Manderly of White Harbor, House Whitehill, and House Wells.[12] Most knights of the North live in the region's southern lands.[13]

The constant cold and the iron grip of winter set apart the northerners from the people of the kingdoms south of the Neck. Their whole life rests on the fact that winter is coming and they have to prepare themselves in order to survive it. The North's terrain and climate do not easily yield the necessities of daily life. In such an environment there is no place for hollow courtesies, courtly rituals, nor fancy culture and tourneys. The northmen have long memories. A lord who does not seek his rightful vengeance threatens to have his own men turn on him.

Some of the northmen live in remote, distant areas where they act as little more than clans and tribes. These remote folk, such as the crannogmen, the northern mountain clans and the Skagosi, are still vassals of the Starks, however, and are allowed to maintain their own ways and traditions as long as they remain loyal to Winterfell.

Heraldry in the North is significantly simpler than that in the South, showing the lesser influence that chivalry has had there. Due to its religious aspect, most northmen refuse to take holy orders and thus cannot become knights, and there are some northern knights who still follow the old gods instead of the Seven.[8] Northmen hold the Night's Watch in high regard.

According to a semi-canon source from 2005,[14] the North can perhaps raise forty-five thousand soldiers, although it would take a long time to gather them from such a large region.

Seasons

The North is particularly badly affected during the long winters, with thousands of people killed and famine not an uncommon occurrence due to poor harvests before winter or the inability to raise crops during the longer winters that last for for years on end, outside of special "glass gardens" and castles built on or near hot springs, like Winterfell.

Once autumn is declared by the maesters, the lords of the North store away a part of the grain they have harvested. How much is a matter of choice; between one fifth and one fourth seems prudent, however. Additionally food is smoked, salted, and otherwise preserved ahead of winter. Coastal communities depend on fish, although even in winter ice fishing is common on the rivers and Long Lake. Poor harvests before winter will mean famine, however.

In winter, snows can fall forty feet deep. Rain falls cold and hard, and sometimes turns into hail that can send men running for cover and ruin crops. Even during summer, snowfalls are not unusual but tend to be brief and not particularly damaging to agriculture.

Commerce

As the North is largely uncultivated, there are few roads of import there. Most of the inland trade passes by either the kingsroad or the rivers. Trade items from the North include wool,[15] hides, and timber.[16] There are silversmiths at White Harbor.[17]

History

Dawn Age

The peoples of the North are nearly all descended from the First Men, who settled the land nearly 12,000 years ago. Little is known of that time, but cryptic runes carved in old stones and the barrows the First Men lived in can still be found in the barrowlands. Ancient forts of the First Men are scattered throughout the North, including a ringfort atop Seal Rock near White Harbor and ruins in Sea Dragon Point. The children of the forest also made weirwood circles.[18]

Kings of Winter

About 8,000 years ago, the Long Night occurred, when the Others invaded. The event defined and shaped the North, leading to the founding of the Wall, the order of the Night's Watch, the castle of Winterfell and the first Stark Kings of Winter. The Starks gradually defeated rival kings, such as the Barrow Kings to their south and the Red Kings to their east.[1]

When the Andals invaded Westeros, the Stark Kings of Winter resisted them successfully, stopping them at Moat Cailin and the eastern shores, the only kingdom in Westeros to do so.[19][20]

King Jon Stark founded the Wolf's Den at what is now White Harbor after driving out sea raiders.[8] His son, Rickard Stark, conquered the Neck from the Marsh King and married his daughter.[19] King Rodrik Stark is said to have won Bear Island from the ironborn in a wrestling match. Two thousand years ago the North warred with the Vale of Arryn after the Rape of the Three Sisters, with the Arryns eventually gaining control of the islands.[21]

For many centuries the Boltons were bitter rivals of the Starks of Winterfell. The practice of flaying their enemies gave the Boltons a sinister reputation. Approximately a thousand years ago, the Boltons finally swore fealty to the Kings in the North and agreed to abandon their practice of flaying their enemies.

A thousand years before the Conquest, the Manderlys were driven from the river Mander by House Gardener of the Reach and fled to the North, where they were welcomed by the Starks of Winterfell as their own bannermen.[22] The Manderlys received the Wolf's Den and developed White Harbor, one of the five cities of Westeros and the main northern port for commerce and naval transport. The Manderlys are the most prominent of the few northern noble houses to follow the Faith of the Seven instead of the old gods.

Targaryen Era

The Starks led the North to war during the War of Conquest. After the Field of Fire, however, King Torrhen Stark knelt to Aegon the Conqueror rather than face his dragons. The North was included in the Seven Kingdoms and owed allegiance to the Iron Throne of House Targaryen. The Stark Kings in the North became the Lords of Winterfell and Wardens of the North. Some northmen who refused to bend the knee fled into exile in Essos and formed the Company of the Rose.[23]

During the Dance of the Dragons, the Starks supported the blacks against the greens. Lord Roderick Dustin led two thousand northern soldiers, known as the Winter Wolves, during the war, while the Manderlys had knights from White Harbor also supported the claim of Rhaenyra Targaryen.[24] Lord Cregan Stark led a great host of northmen to King's Landing, where he briefly ruled as Hand for King Aegon III Targaryen during the Hour of the Wolf.[25]

Lord Dagon Greyjoy led the ironborn in raiding the North during the reign of King Aerys I Targaryen; Lord Beron Stark gathered swords to repel them.[26]

The people of the North must be vigilant against wildlings who manage to bypass the Wall. One King-beyond-the-Wall, Raymun Redbeard, was defeated by the Starks and Umbers at Long Lake.[27]

A century ago the Skagosi unsuccessfully rebelled against the Starks, costing the lives of the Lord of Winterfell and hundreds of his supporters.[9]

Robert's Rebellion

The northmen composed much of the rebel forces during Robert's Rebellion, also known as the War of the Usurper. After King Aerys II Targaryen caused the deaths of Lord Rickard Stark and his heir, Brandon Stark, their successor, Lord Eddard Stark, led armies alongside Lord Robert Baratheon, who was chosen king at war's end.

Recent Events

A Game of Thrones

King Robert Baratheon travels from King's Landing to Winterfell to offer the position of Hand of the King to his old friend, Lord Eddard Stark, which the Warden of the North reluctantly accepts.[28][29] When Eddard is later imprisoned in the Red Keep after the death of Robert, his heir, Robb Stark, calls the northern banners to Winterfell and marches south to rescue Eddard.[30] After hearing that King Joffrey Baratheon ordered the execution of Eddard, the assembled northern and river lords in Riverrun reject the sovereignty of the Iron Throne and proclaim Robb to be King in the North.[31]

A Clash of Kings

With Robb campaigning south of the Neck, his younger brother Bran remains as the Stark in Winterfell. Bran hosts various bannermen at Winterfell's harvest feast.[11][32] Ramsay Snow, the Bastard of Bolton, abducts the widowed Lady Donella Hornwood and claims the lands of the Hornwoods. After hearing that Ramsay starved Donella, the Manderlys skirmish with the Boltons.[5][33]

The Iron Islands also declare their independence from the Iron Throne.[34] With most of the northern soldiers fighting alongside Robb in the south,[35] King Balon Greyjoy claims the North and sends the ironborn to raid the Stony Shore and capture Deepwood Motte, Torrhen's Square, and Moat Cailin. Theon Greyjoy captures Winterfell,[36] but Ser Rodrik Stark assembles near two thousand men to retake the castle from the ironborn. Rodrik's loyalists are betrayed by Ramsay Snow and the Bolton garrison from the Dreadfort in a battle at Winterfell, however. The northern capital is then sacked by Ramsay and the Boltons.[37]

A Storm of Swords

Robb Stark, King in the North and King of the Trident, intends to march north from the riverlands to expel the ironborn.[38] However, he is betrayed and murdered at the Twins by his bannermen, Lords Walder Frey and Roose Bolton,[39] who have their forces slaughter most of the northmen in the south.[40] In return for his services to House Baratheon of King's Landing, Roose is named the new Warden of the North for the Iron Throne.[41]

King Stannis Baratheon sails from Dragonstone to the Wall to aid the Night's Watch in defeating the wildling army of Mance Rayder, King-beyond-the-Wall, in the Battle of Castle Black.[17]

A Feast for Crows

While south of the Neck, Roose attempts to consolidate control over the North.[42]

A Dance with Dragons

The Ryswells and Dustins defeat the ironborn at the Fever River,[16] while the Boltons recapture Moat Cailin and thereby allow Lord Roose Bolton to march north with his Frey allies.[43] [44] Roose has a tenuous grasp over the North, considering only the Ryswells and Dustins to be loyal allies because of marriage ties. The Cerwyns, Tallharts, Umbers, and Manderlys are reluctant supporters or are outright plotting against Roose.[45] Lord Wyman Manderly secretly tasks Davos Seaworth with bringing Rickon Stark back from Skagos.[8] Ramsay Bolton marries "Arya Stark", who is actually Jeyne Poole, at Winterfell in order to claim the ancient capital of the North.

Stannis gains the northern mountain clans for his cause and liberates Deepwood Moote for the Glovers,[18] although the Karstarks plan to betray him for Roose.[46] Stannis marches through the wolfswood to take Winterfell from Roose. His march is slowed, however, by strong blizzards which hamper the armies of both Stannis[47] and Roose.[48]

Houses

Arms unknown House Amber.
Arms unknown House Ashwood.
Arms unknown House Blackmyre.
House Blackwood.png House Blackwood of the Wolfswood.
Arms unknown House Boggs.
Arms unknown House Bole.
Bolton.png House Bolton of the Dreadfort.
Arms unknown House Branch.
House Burley.PNG House Burley.
House Cassel.PNG House Cassel.
House Cerwyn.PNG House Cerwyn of Cerwyn.
House Condon.PNG House Condon.
Arms unknown House Cray.
House Crowl.PNG House Crowl.
House Dustin.PNG House Dustin of Barrowton.
Fenn.png House Fenn.
Arms unknown House Fisher of the Stony Shore.
Arms unknown House Flint of Breakstone Hill.
House Flint of Flint's Finger.PNG House Flint of Flint's Finger.
Arms unknown House Flint of the mountains.
Flint Widows Watch.png House Flint of Widow's Watch.
Arms unknown House Forrester of Ironrath.
Arms unknown House Frost.
House Glover.PNG House Glover of Deepwood Motte.
Arms unknown House Greengood.
Arms unknown House Greenwood.
Arms unknown House Greystark of the Wolf's Den.
House Harclay.PNG House Harclay.
Arms unknown House Holt.
Arms unknown House Long.
House Hornwood.PNG House Hornwood of the Hornwood.
Ironsmith1.png House Ironsmith.
House Karstark.PNG House Karstark of Karhold.
Lake.png House Lake.
House Liddle.PNG House Liddle.
Lightfoot.png House Lightfoot.
House Locke.PNG House Locke of Oldcastle.
Magnar.png House Magnar of Kingshouse.
House Manderly.PNG House Manderly of White Harbor.
Marsh.png House Marsh.
Mollen.png House Mollen.
House Mormont.PNG House Mormont of Bear Island.
House Moss.PNG House Moss.
House Norrey.PNG House Norrey.
House Overton.PNG House Overton.
Arms unknown House Peat.
HousePoole.png House Poole.
Arms unknown House Quagg.
Arms unknown House Redbeard (at the Wall).
Reed coat of arms.png House Reed of Greywater Watch.
Arms unknown House Ryder of the Rills.
House Ryswell.PNG House Ryswell of the Rills.
House Slate.PNG House Slate of Blackpool.
Stane.png House Stane of Driftwood Hall.
House Stark.PNG House Stark of Winterfell.
House Stout.PNG House Stout of Goldgrass.
House Tallhart.PNG House Tallhart of Torrhen's Square.
HouseThenn.png House Thenn.
Arms unknown House Towers.
Umbercrest.png House Umber of the Last Hearth.
House Waterman.PNG House Waterman.
Wells.png House Wells.
Whitehill.png House Whitehill.
Arms unknown House Woodfoot of Bear Island.
Arms unknown House Woods.
Woolfield.png House Woolfield.
House Wull.PNG House Wull.

Quotes

In the south, the way they talk about my Seven Kingdoms, a man forgets that your part is as big as the other six combined.[3]

Robert Baratheon to Eddard Stark


The north is hard and cold, and has no mercy.[49]

Eddard Stark


The north remembers.[50]

Robb Stark


The north remembers, Lord Davos. The north remembers, and the mummer’s farce is almost done. [51]

Wyman Manderly to Davos Seaworth

References and Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 The World of Ice & Fire.
  2. A Game of Thrones, Chapter 1, Bran I.
  3. 3.0 3.1 A Game of Thrones, Chapter 4, Eddard I.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 The Lands of Ice and Fire.
  5. 5.0 5.1 A Clash of Kings, Chapter 28, Bran IV.
  6. A Game of Thrones, Chapter 55, Catelyn VIII.
  7. George R. R. Martin's A World of Ice and Fire, "Ironman's Bay" entry.
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 A Dance with Dragons, Chapter 29, Davos IV.
  9. 9.0 9.1 A Feast for Crows, Chapter 15, Samwell II.
  10. A Dance with Dragons, Chapter 17, Jon IV.
  11. 11.0 11.1 A Clash of Kings, Chapter 16, Bran II.
  12. A Song of Ice and Fire Campaign Guide
  13. So Spake Martin: The Drowned God and More, July 14, 1999
  14. A Game of Thrones RPG and Resource Book, Guardians of Order
  15. A Clash of Kings, Chapter 17, Tyrion IV.
  16. 16.0 16.1 A Dance with Dragons, Chapter 15, Davos II.
  17. 17.0 17.1 A Storm of Swords, Chapter 73, Jon X.
  18. 18.0 18.1 A Dance with Dragons, Chapter 26, The Wayward Bride.
  19. 19.0 19.1 A Game of Thrones, Chapter 66, Bran VII.
  20. The World of Ice & Fire, The Kings of Winter.
  21. A Dance with Dragons, Chapter 9, Davos I.
  22. The Sworn Sword.
  23. The World of Ice & Fire, The Quarrelsome Daughters: Myr, Lys, and Tyrosh.
  24. The Princess and the Queen.
  25. The World of Ice & Fire, Aegon III.
  26. The Mystery Knight.
  27. A Dance with Dragons, Chapter 7, Jon II.
  28. A Game of Thrones, Chapter 3, Daenerys I.
  29. A Game of Thrones, Chapter 6, Catelyn II.
  30. A Game of Thrones, Chapter 53, Bran VI.
  31. A Game of Thrones, Chapter 71, Catelyn XI.
  32. A Clash of Kings, Chapter 21, Bran III.
  33. A Clash of Kings, Chapter 35, Bran V.
  34. A Clash of Kings, Chapter 24, Theon II.
  35. A Clash of Kings, Chapter 11, Theon I.
  36. A Clash of Kings, Chapter 46, Bran VI.
  37. A Clash of Kings, Chapter 66, Theon VI.
  38. A Storm of Swords, Chapter 45, Catelyn V.
  39. A Storm of Swords, Chapter 51, Catelyn VII.
  40. A Storm of Swords, Chapter 52, Arya XI.
  41. A Storm of Swords, Chapter 72, Jaime IX.
  42. A Feast for Crows, Chapter 17, Cersei IV.
  43. A Dance with Dragons, Chapter 20, Reek II.
  44. A Dance with Dragons, Chapter 37, The Prince of Winterfell.
  45. A Dance with Dragons, Chapter 32, Reek III.
  46. A Dance with Dragons, Chapter 44, Jon IX.
  47. A Dance with Dragons, Chapter 62, The Sacrifice.
  48. A Dance with Dragons, Chapter 46, A Ghost in Winterfell.
  49. A Storm of Swords, Chapter 20, Catelyn III, p 226.
  50. A Storm of Swords, Chapter 20, Catelyn III, p 229.
  51. A Dance with Dragons, Chapter 29, Davos IV, pages 382-394.