Difference between revisions of "Godswood"

From A Wiki of Ice and Fire
Jump to: navigation, search
m ('old gods' is not a proper noun - see talk:Old Gods)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
[[File:Godswood Noth by Kim Pope.jpg|thumb|350px|Godswood. Art By Kim Pope, for the HBO [[Game of Thrones|TV adaptation]]]]
 
[[File:Godswood Noth by Kim Pope.jpg|thumb|350px|Godswood. Art By Kim Pope, for the HBO [[Game of Thrones|TV adaptation]]]]
 
The '''godswood''' is usually a small wooded area enclosed by the castle walls throughout the Seven Kingdoms. It is primarily used as a place of worship by those who carry on the traditions of the [[First Men]] and pray to the [[old gods]]. However in those places that believe in the [[Faith of the Seven]], it is little more than a private wooded area of solitude.<ref>[[A Game of Thrones]], [[A Game of Thrones-Chapter 2|Chapter 2]], Catelyn</ref> When the [[First Men]] took up the Old Faith, they created godswoods, groves within their castles and villages where
 
The '''godswood''' is usually a small wooded area enclosed by the castle walls throughout the Seven Kingdoms. It is primarily used as a place of worship by those who carry on the traditions of the [[First Men]] and pray to the [[old gods]]. However in those places that believe in the [[Faith of the Seven]], it is little more than a private wooded area of solitude.<ref>[[A Game of Thrones]], [[A Game of Thrones-Chapter 2|Chapter 2]], Catelyn</ref> When the [[First Men]] took up the Old Faith, they created godswoods, groves within their castles and villages where
a single [[Weirwood]] known as a heart-tree, was planted so the gods could be worshiped. In southern castles such as the [[Red Keep]] the heart-tree is not a weirwood but a common tree such as an oak.
+
a single [[Weirwood]] known as a heart-tree, was planted so the gods could be worshiped. In some southern castles such as the [[Red Keep]] the heart-tree is not a weirwood but a common tree such as an oak.
  
 
The Godswood at [[Winterfell]] is a dark, primal place of 3 acres of old forest untouched for 10,000 years. It smells of moist earth and decay, consisting of stubborn sentential trees armored in gray-green leaves of might oaks crowded close together with a dense canopy overhead. In the center is a small dark cold pool with an ancient [[Weirwood]] with bark white as bone, and dark red leaves with a long and melancholy face carved in the bark, its deep-cut eyes red with dried sap. [[Eddard Stark]] calls the tree the [[Heart tree]]. A thousand years of humus covers the earth.{{Ref|aGoT|2}}
 
The Godswood at [[Winterfell]] is a dark, primal place of 3 acres of old forest untouched for 10,000 years. It smells of moist earth and decay, consisting of stubborn sentential trees armored in gray-green leaves of might oaks crowded close together with a dense canopy overhead. In the center is a small dark cold pool with an ancient [[Weirwood]] with bark white as bone, and dark red leaves with a long and melancholy face carved in the bark, its deep-cut eyes red with dried sap. [[Eddard Stark]] calls the tree the [[Heart tree]]. A thousand years of humus covers the earth.{{Ref|aGoT|2}}

Revision as of 21:54, 7 August 2013

Godswood. Art By Kim Pope, for the HBO TV adaptation

The godswood is usually a small wooded area enclosed by the castle walls throughout the Seven Kingdoms. It is primarily used as a place of worship by those who carry on the traditions of the First Men and pray to the old gods. However in those places that believe in the Faith of the Seven, it is little more than a private wooded area of solitude.[1] When the First Men took up the Old Faith, they created godswoods, groves within their castles and villages where a single Weirwood known as a heart-tree, was planted so the gods could be worshiped. In some southern castles such as the Red Keep the heart-tree is not a weirwood but a common tree such as an oak.

The Godswood at Winterfell is a dark, primal place of 3 acres of old forest untouched for 10,000 years. It smells of moist earth and decay, consisting of stubborn sentential trees armored in gray-green leaves of might oaks crowded close together with a dense canopy overhead. In the center is a small dark cold pool with an ancient Weirwood with bark white as bone, and dark red leaves with a long and melancholy face carved in the bark, its deep-cut eyes red with dried sap. Eddard Stark calls the tree the Heart tree. A thousand years of humus covers the earth.[2]

In the south the Wierwoods had been cut down or burned years ago except on the Isle of Faces. In the north every castle had a Wierwood Heart tree with a face.[2]

References and Notes