Difference between revisions of "Unwin Peake"

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==History==
 
==History==
 
===The Dance of the Dragons===
 
===The Dance of the Dragons===
:{{main|Dance of the Dragons}}
+
Unwin supported the [[greens]] during the [[House Targaryen|Targaryen]] civil war known as the [[Dance of the Dragons]]. He marched forth with a thousand men{{Ref|tpatq}}{{Ref|FAB|Under the Regents - War and Peace and Cattle Shows}} and joined Lord [[Ormund Hightower]]'s great host, which slowly marched towards [[King's Landing]]. After the [[First Battle of Tumbleton]], Unwin was one of the men who attempted to claim leadership over the host following Hightower's death, and quarreled with the other would-be successors. At a war council, he stabbed Lord [[Owain Bourney]] through the eye with his dagger, declaring him a turncloak.{{ref|fab|The Dying of the Dragons - Rhaenyra Triumphant}} Unwin wanted to wait at the [[Tumbleton|sacked town]] in hopes of reinforcement from Lord [[Borros Baratheon]]. Upon learning of the [[Moon of the Three Kings|unrest]] in King's Landing, Unwin wished to march on the capital immediately, but Ser [[Hobert Hightower]] counseled caution, and [[Hugh Hammer]] and [[Ulf White]] refused to join any attack. When the host learned of the death of Prince [[Aemond Targaryen]], Unwin advocated for declaring Prince [[Daeron Targaryen (son of Viserys I)|Daeron Targaryen]] to be the new [[Prince of Dragonstone]]. Together with Ser Hobert, Unwin called together eleven other lords and landed knights, with whom they formed the [[Caltrops]]. At a secret war council, the Caltrops plotted to kill the [[Two Betrayers]].{{Ref|TPATQ}}{{Ref|fab|The Dying of the Dragons - Rhaenyra Overthrown}}
Lord Unwin supported the [[greens]] during the [[House Targaryen|Targaryen]] civil war known as the [[Dance of the Dragons]]. He joined Lord [[Ormund Hightower]]'s great host, which marched from [[Oldtown]] toward [[King's Landing]]. After the [[First Battle of Tumbleton]], Unwin wanted to wait at the [[Tumbleton|sacked town]] in hopes of reinforcement from Lord [[Borros Baratheon]]. Unwin advocated for declaring Prince [[Daeron Targaryen (son of Viserys I)|Daeron Targaryen]] to be the new [[Prince of Dragonstone]] after hearing of the death of Prince [[Aemond Targaryen]]. He was a leader of the [[Caltrops]], thirteen nobles who plotted to kill the disrespectful [[Two Betrayers]].{{Ref|TPATQ}}
 
  
Lord Peake's tent was burned by [[Seasmoke]] during the [[Second Battle of Tumbleton]], but he survived the battle. When Unwin asked [[Ulf White]] his intentions after the battle, Ulf replied that he would take the [[Iron Throne]] after the greens captured King's Landing. However, Ulf died drinking [[poison]]ed [[wine]] with Unwin's commander, Ser [[Hobert Hightower]]. Lord Peake offered one thousand [[Currency|golden dragons]] to any knight of noble birth who could claim the surviving [[dragon]], [[Silverwing]], but none succeeded. Seeing that the greens' army was disappearing through desertion, Unwin, the new commander, decided to abandon the campaign toward King's Landing and retreat from Tumbleton.{{Ref|TPATQ}}
+
Lord Peake's tent was burned by [[Seasmoke]] during the [[Second Battle of Tumbleton]]. Unwin was one of the four Caltrops to survive the battle. He asked Ulf White about his intentions after the battle, to which Ulf replied that he would take the [[Iron Throne]] after the greens captured King's Landing. As planned by the Caltrops, Ulf died shortly later, after drinking [[poison]]ed [[wine]] with Ser Hobert Hightower. Unwin offered one thousand [[Currency|golden dragons]] to any knight of noble birth who could claim the Ulf's [[dragon]], [[Silverwing]], but none succeeded. Seeing that his army was disappearing through desertion, Unwin decided to abandon the campaign toward King's Landing and retreat from Tumbleton.{{Ref|TPATQ}}{{Ref|fab|The Dying of the Dragons - Rhaenyra Overthrown}}
  
 
===The Regency of Aegon III===
 
===The Regency of Aegon III===
:{{main|Regency of Aegon III}}
+
When the original council of King [[Aegon III Targaryen]]'s [[regent]]s was formed in {{Date|133}}, Unwin was not offered a place amongst them. According to Septon [[Eustace (Dance of the Dragons)|Eustace]], Unwin was angered by his exclusion.{{Ref|fab|Under the Regents - The Hooded Hand}} Following the death of Lord [[Corlys Velaryon]] in {{Date|132}}, the other regents offered the empty seat to Unwin, who accepted.{{Ref|fab|Under the Regents - The Hooded Hand}} After the death of [[Hand of the King]] [[Tyland Lannister]] in {{Date|133}}, Unwin was one of the three regents who remained in [[King's Landing]], besides the ailing Lord [[Manfryd Mooton]] and [[Grand Maester]] [[Munkun]]. Unwin insisted that the other regents, who had departed the capital before Lannister's death, had given up their place on the council by doing so. Supported by Munkun, Unwin undid all of King Aegon III's appointments, as the king had not consulted his regents in making them. Unwin instead selected his own people for the vacant offices, and named himself as [[Hand of the King]] and [[Lord Protector of the Realm]].{{Ref|FAB|Under the Regents - War and Peace and Cattle Shows}}
During the [[regency of Aegon III]], Lord Unwin became a [[regent]] after the death of Lord [[Corlys Velaryon]] in {{Date|132}}. After the [[Winter Fever]] struck the realm on the third day of {{Date|133}}, Lord Peake became [[Hand of the King]] after the death of his [[Tyland Lannister|predecessor]], also being named [[Protector of the Realm]]. Peake would rule the realm in all but name and he kept acquiring more and more power, endeavoring to weaken his foes by any means at hand. Unwin appointed his kin and men to hold many high offices in order to cement his power.{{Ref|FAB|Under the Regents - War and Peace and Cattle Shows}}
 
  
He began by undoing the king's appointments of Ser [[Robert Darklyn]] and Ser [[Robin Massey]] to the [[Kingsguard]] and instead gave white cloaks to his own nephew Ser [[Amaury Peake]] and his [[bastard]] half brother Ser [[Mervyn Flowers]] and named Ser [[Marston Waters]] as the new [[Lord Commander of the Kingsguard]]. Ser [[Gareth Long]] who had served as [[master-at-arms]] at [[Starpike]] was named the new master-at-arms to the [[Red Keep]] to train King Aegon for [[knight]]hood and later under Ser Gareths suggestion, Lord Unwin made [[Gaemon Palehair]] the king's whipping boy. Lord Unwin appointed Ser [[Lucas Leygood]] as [[Commander of the City Watch]] and bestowed five hundred [[City Watch of King's Landing|gold cloaks]] on his own men. His widowed aunt [[Clarice Osgrey]] was placed in charge of Queen [[Jaehaera Targaryen]]'s household. Lord [[George Graceford]] and Ser [[Victor Risley]] (both [[Caltrops]]) were appointed to the offices of [[Lord Confessor]] and [[King's Justice]], respectively. He even went so far as to dismiss [[Septon]] [[Eustace]] and brought in Septon [[Bernard]], who was descended from his house. Finally Lord Peake, surrounded himself with ten [[sellswords]] who he lavished gold on to make them completely loyal only to him. His personal guard soon became known as the [[Fingers (guards)|"Fingers"]] and were under the command of [[Tessario|Tessario the Tiger]], who [[court fool]] [[Mushroom]] mocked as Tessario the Thumb.{{Ref|FAB|Under the Regents - War and Peace and Cattle Shows}}
+
Many of the appointments Unwin made concerned his own family members, or close friends. He gave a white cloak to his nephew, Ser [[Amaury Peake]], and his [[bastard]] half-brother, Ser [[Mervyn Flowers]], named Ser [[Gareth Long]], the former [[master-at-arms]] at [[Starpike]], as the new master-at-arms to the [[Red Keep]], appointed Ser [[Lucas Leygood]] as [[Commander of the City Watch]], placed his widowed aunt, [[Clarice Osgrey]], in charge of Queen [[Jaehaera Targaryen]]'s household. Lord [[George Graceford]] and Ser [[Victor Risley]], two [[Caltrops]], were appointed to the offices of [[Lord Confessor]] and [[King's Justice]], respectively. [[Septon]] [[Eustace (Dance of the Dragons)|Eustace]] was dismissed and replaced by Septon [[Bernard]], who was descended from [[House Peake]]. In addition, Unwin surrounded himself with a personal guard made up of ten [[sellswords]], who soon became known as the [[Fingers (guards)|"Fingers"]].{{Ref|FAB|Under the Regents - War and Peace and Cattle Shows}} By {{Date|133}}, he had taken possession of the [[Valyrian steel]] swords [[Orphan-Maker]].{{Ref|FAB|Under the Regents - War and Peace and Cattle Shows}}
  
Feeling his position now secure Lord Peake was determined to demonstrate his strength to the realm and on the [[Feast Day of Our Father Above]] in {{Date|133}} he came before the court wielding the [[Valyrian steel]] [[longsword]] [[Orphan-Maker]], and had the crowded dungeons of the Red Keep emptied and all the offenders punished publicly depending on their crimes. Thieves lost a hand, rapists were [[Eunuch|gelded]], murderers hanged. The former [[Grand Maester]] [[Orwyle]] was the last to be executed that day, beheaded by Ser Victor Risley.{{Ref|FAB|Under the Regents - War and Peace and Cattle Shows}}
+
Unwin wished to demonstrate his strength and rectitude during his time as Hand. He had the crowded dungeons of the Red Keep emptied and all the offenders punished publicly on the [[Feast Day of Our Father Above]] in {{Date|133}}.{{Ref|FAB|Under the Regents - War and Peace and Cattle Shows}} By mid-year, Unwin's hold on power was firm. Intent on demonstrating the power of the [[Iron Throne]], Unwin sent forth his uncle, Ser [[Gedmund Peake]], with the [[royal fleet]] to end the pirate kingdom of [[Racallio Ryndoon]] and establish a presence upon [[Bloodstone]] in the [[Stepstones]], so as to restore trade. However, as the royal fleet was not large enough to accomplish this, Unwin sent forth a [[raven]] to [[Driftmark]], commanding Lord [[Alyn Velaryon]] to join his forces to Ser Gedmund's. However, while Ser Gedmund delayed on [[Tarth]], Lord Alyn defied orders and sailed to the Stepstones with his own fleet, crushing the [[Braavosi]] fleet at Bloodstone. This left Unwin furious, as Racallio's forces were unharmed, while the attack on the Braavosi forces could easily lead to a war with [[Braavos]] itself. Although he publicly rewarded Alyn for his actions, Unwin instructed King Aegon III to sent forth Velaryon to the [[westerlands]] to deal with [[Dalton Greyjoy]], hoping that Alyn would either suffer severe losses on the perilous journey, or would free the westerlands from the [[ironborn]]. Meanwhile, he sent Lord Manfryd Mooton to Braavos, to negotiate a truce and prevent war.{{Ref|FAB|Under the Regents - War and Peace and Cattle Shows}}
  
Next he had his uncle, Ser [[Gedmund Peake]] take command of the [[royal fleet]] to secure the [[Stepstones]] and sent a [[raven]] commanding Lord [[Alyn Velaryon]] to join his forces with Ser Gedmund. Lord Alyn however took matters into his own hands, while Ser Gedmund delayed on [[Tarth]], Alyn took his own fleet and crushed the [[Braavosi]] fleet at [[Bloodstone]]. Lord Unwin developed a rivalry with Alyn and sent him to deal with the threat of Lord [[Dalton Greyjoy]], hoping Alyn would be killed in the process, the situation however resolved itself when Lord Dalton was murdered by a [[Tess|woman]] he had taken captive as a [[salt wife]].{{Ref|FAB|Under the Regents - War and Peace and Cattle Shows}}
+
In {{Date|133}}, Queen [[Jaehaera Targaryen]] died, apparently having committed suicide. It was rumored, however, that she had been murdered. Archmaester [[Gyldayn]] considers Unwin as the only possible candidate for having ordered Jaehaera's death, if indeed she had been murdered, and suggests [[Mervyn Flowers]], the Kingsguard knights guarding Jaehaera's door the night of her death, or one of the [[Fingers (guards)|Fingers]] as the possible killers. According to Gyldayn, Unwin's motive would have been the succession of the Iron Throne, as Aegon III was not like to father an heir on the queen, leaving only the potential son Aegon III's half-sister [[Baela Targaryen]] was expecting with her husband, Alyn Velaryon.{{Ref|FAB|Under the Regents - War and Peace and Cattle Shows}}
  
Lord Unwin attempted to [[Marriage|wed]] his daughter to King [[Aegon III Targaryen]] after the apparent suicide of Queen Jaehaera Targaryen. Ser Mervyn Flowers of the Kingsguard, was standing guard at the door to Jaehaera's chambers on the occurrence of her death. It was variously suggested that Jaehaera had been murdered by him or that Ser Mervyn had merely stood aside to allow Tessario the Tiger to do the deed.{{Ref|FAB|Under the Regents - War and Peace and Cattle Shows}}
+
Seven days after Jaehaera's death, Unwin declared that Aegon would wed [[Myrielle Peake]], Unwin's own daughter. Many [[lord]]s disapproved of the match and voiced their criticism. Lord [[Cregan Stark]] suggested the [[north]] would look on the match with disfavor, Lord [[Kermit Tully]] called it presumptuous, Lord [[Benjicot Blackwood]] questioned the haste of the match, and Grand Maester [[Munkun]]'s support began to waver, acknowledging that the match would be seen as advancing [[House Peake|Peake]] interests rather than being for the good of the [[Seven Kingdoms|realm]]. Several highborn ladies wrote to the crown, proposing their own relatives as Aegon's bride (or themselves, in some cases). Due to pressure from the lords and ladies of the realm, Peake instead announced a [[Maiden's Day Cattle Show|ball]] in [[King's Landing]] where the king himself would be able to choose his own bride.{{Ref|FAB|Under the Regents - War and Peace and Cattle Shows}}
 
 
Whichever occurred, after the death of Queen Jaehaera, a betrothal was planned between the king and [[Myrielle Peake]]. Many [[lord]]s disapproved of Peake trying to forward the match so soon after the suspicious death of the queen. Lord [[Cregan Stark]] suggested the [[north]] would look on the match with disfavor, Lord [[Kermit Tully]] called it presumptuous, and Grand Maester [[Munkun]]'s support began to waver, acknowledging that the match would be seen as advancing [[House Peake|Peake]] interests rather than being for the good of the [[Seven Kingdoms|realm]]. Several highborn ladies wrote to the crown, proposing their own relatives as Aegon's bride (or themselves, in some cases). Due to pressure from the lords and ladies of the realm, Peake instead announced a [[Maiden's Day Cattle Show|ball]] in [[King's Landing]] where the king himself would be able to choose his own bride.{{Ref|FAB|Under the Regents - War and Peace and Cattle Shows}}
 
  
 
Lord Peake restricted the ball to [[maiden]]s of [[nobility]] under the age of thirty to limit the attendance, but more than one thousand young women from throughout [[Westeros]] and even [[Essos]] came to King's Landing in hopes of marrying the king. Many women were injured or scandalized before the ball, and lords spoke of the "[[Maiden's Day curse]]". Many of these events were likely engineered by Lord Peake, who hoped to have his daughter be queen.{{Ref|FAB|Under the Regents - War and Peace and Cattle Shows}}
 
Lord Peake restricted the ball to [[maiden]]s of [[nobility]] under the age of thirty to limit the attendance, but more than one thousand young women from throughout [[Westeros]] and even [[Essos]] came to King's Landing in hopes of marrying the king. Many women were injured or scandalized before the ball, and lords spoke of the "[[Maiden's Day curse]]". Many of these events were likely engineered by Lord Peake, who hoped to have his daughter be queen.{{Ref|FAB|Under the Regents - War and Peace and Cattle Shows}}

Revision as of 22:45, 16 March 2019

House Peake.svg
Unwin Peake
House Peake.svg
Titles
Allegiances
Culture Reachmen
Born In or before 99 AC[4]
Spouse 3 wives[3]
Issue
Books

Unwin Peake was the Lord of Starpike, Dunstonbury, Whitegrove, and head of House Peake during the Dance of the Dragons.[1] He later served as Lord Regent, Protector of the Realm and Hand of the King during the regency of King Aegon III Targaryen.[5][3]

Character

Unwin was proud, brusque, hard, ambitious and cunning.[3]

History

The Dance of the Dragons

Unwin supported the greens during the Targaryen civil war known as the Dance of the Dragons. He marched forth with a thousand men[1][3] and joined Lord Ormund Hightower's great host, which slowly marched towards King's Landing. After the First Battle of Tumbleton, Unwin was one of the men who attempted to claim leadership over the host following Hightower's death, and quarreled with the other would-be successors. At a war council, he stabbed Lord Owain Bourney through the eye with his dagger, declaring him a turncloak.[6] Unwin wanted to wait at the sacked town in hopes of reinforcement from Lord Borros Baratheon. Upon learning of the unrest in King's Landing, Unwin wished to march on the capital immediately, but Ser Hobert Hightower counseled caution, and Hugh Hammer and Ulf White refused to join any attack. When the host learned of the death of Prince Aemond Targaryen, Unwin advocated for declaring Prince Daeron Targaryen to be the new Prince of Dragonstone. Together with Ser Hobert, Unwin called together eleven other lords and landed knights, with whom they formed the Caltrops. At a secret war council, the Caltrops plotted to kill the Two Betrayers.[1][7]

Lord Peake's tent was burned by Seasmoke during the Second Battle of Tumbleton. Unwin was one of the four Caltrops to survive the battle. He asked Ulf White about his intentions after the battle, to which Ulf replied that he would take the Iron Throne after the greens captured King's Landing. As planned by the Caltrops, Ulf died shortly later, after drinking poisoned wine with Ser Hobert Hightower. Unwin offered one thousand golden dragons to any knight of noble birth who could claim the Ulf's dragon, Silverwing, but none succeeded. Seeing that his army was disappearing through desertion, Unwin decided to abandon the campaign toward King's Landing and retreat from Tumbleton.[1][7]

The Regency of Aegon III

When the original council of King Aegon III Targaryen's regents was formed in 133 AC, Unwin was not offered a place amongst them. According to Septon Eustace, Unwin was angered by his exclusion.[2] Following the death of Lord Corlys Velaryon in 132 AC, the other regents offered the empty seat to Unwin, who accepted.[2] After the death of Hand of the King Tyland Lannister in 133 AC, Unwin was one of the three regents who remained in King's Landing, besides the ailing Lord Manfryd Mooton and Grand Maester Munkun. Unwin insisted that the other regents, who had departed the capital before Lannister's death, had given up their place on the council by doing so. Supported by Munkun, Unwin undid all of King Aegon III's appointments, as the king had not consulted his regents in making them. Unwin instead selected his own people for the vacant offices, and named himself as Hand of the King and Lord Protector of the Realm.[3]

Many of the appointments Unwin made concerned his own family members, or close friends. He gave a white cloak to his nephew, Ser Amaury Peake, and his bastard half-brother, Ser Mervyn Flowers, named Ser Gareth Long, the former master-at-arms at Starpike, as the new master-at-arms to the Red Keep, appointed Ser Lucas Leygood as Commander of the City Watch, placed his widowed aunt, Clarice Osgrey, in charge of Queen Jaehaera Targaryen's household. Lord George Graceford and Ser Victor Risley, two Caltrops, were appointed to the offices of Lord Confessor and King's Justice, respectively. Septon Eustace was dismissed and replaced by Septon Bernard, who was descended from House Peake. In addition, Unwin surrounded himself with a personal guard made up of ten sellswords, who soon became known as the "Fingers".[3] By 133 AC, he had taken possession of the Valyrian steel swords Orphan-Maker.[3]

Unwin wished to demonstrate his strength and rectitude during his time as Hand. He had the crowded dungeons of the Red Keep emptied and all the offenders punished publicly on the Feast Day of Our Father Above in 133 AC.[3] By mid-year, Unwin's hold on power was firm. Intent on demonstrating the power of the Iron Throne, Unwin sent forth his uncle, Ser Gedmund Peake, with the royal fleet to end the pirate kingdom of Racallio Ryndoon and establish a presence upon Bloodstone in the Stepstones, so as to restore trade. However, as the royal fleet was not large enough to accomplish this, Unwin sent forth a raven to Driftmark, commanding Lord Alyn Velaryon to join his forces to Ser Gedmund's. However, while Ser Gedmund delayed on Tarth, Lord Alyn defied orders and sailed to the Stepstones with his own fleet, crushing the Braavosi fleet at Bloodstone. This left Unwin furious, as Racallio's forces were unharmed, while the attack on the Braavosi forces could easily lead to a war with Braavos itself. Although he publicly rewarded Alyn for his actions, Unwin instructed King Aegon III to sent forth Velaryon to the westerlands to deal with Dalton Greyjoy, hoping that Alyn would either suffer severe losses on the perilous journey, or would free the westerlands from the ironborn. Meanwhile, he sent Lord Manfryd Mooton to Braavos, to negotiate a truce and prevent war.[3]

In 133 AC, Queen Jaehaera Targaryen died, apparently having committed suicide. It was rumored, however, that she had been murdered. Archmaester Gyldayn considers Unwin as the only possible candidate for having ordered Jaehaera's death, if indeed she had been murdered, and suggests Mervyn Flowers, the Kingsguard knights guarding Jaehaera's door the night of her death, or one of the Fingers as the possible killers. According to Gyldayn, Unwin's motive would have been the succession of the Iron Throne, as Aegon III was not like to father an heir on the queen, leaving only the potential son Aegon III's half-sister Baela Targaryen was expecting with her husband, Alyn Velaryon.[3]

Seven days after Jaehaera's death, Unwin declared that Aegon would wed Myrielle Peake, Unwin's own daughter. Many lords disapproved of the match and voiced their criticism. Lord Cregan Stark suggested the north would look on the match with disfavor, Lord Kermit Tully called it presumptuous, Lord Benjicot Blackwood questioned the haste of the match, and Grand Maester Munkun's support began to waver, acknowledging that the match would be seen as advancing Peake interests rather than being for the good of the realm. Several highborn ladies wrote to the crown, proposing their own relatives as Aegon's bride (or themselves, in some cases). Due to pressure from the lords and ladies of the realm, Peake instead announced a ball in King's Landing where the king himself would be able to choose his own bride.[3]

Lord Peake restricted the ball to maidens of nobility under the age of thirty to limit the attendance, but more than one thousand young women from throughout Westeros and even Essos came to King's Landing in hopes of marrying the king. Many women were injured or scandalized before the ball, and lords spoke of the "Maiden's Day curse". Many of these events were likely engineered by Lord Peake, who hoped to have his daughter be queen.[3]

Unwin had his daughter, Myrielle arrive at court a fortnight before the ball, and Unwin made sure that she spent as much time as possible with the king. Aegon and Myrielle dined together half a dozen times and it seemed like the king was fonder of Myrielle than he ever was of Jaehaera. When the day of the ball finally arrived, each maid was presented before the king. King Aegon quickly grew bored and his growing disinterest as hours passed only benefited Lord Peake further. When only a few maidens remained, Lady Baela Targaryen and Lady Rhaena Targaryen suddenly arrived with their kinswoman Daenaera Velaryon. Afterwards, the king summoned his cupbearer, Gaemon Palehair, who announced that the king would marry Lady Daenaera. His plans foiled by the twins, Lord Peake developed a special hatred for Baela and Rhaena. According to Mushroom, Unwin was paranoid and convinced that the pregnant Baela was plotting to kill the king if she had a boy and said as much to Ser Marston Waters once.[8][3]

Unwin threatened to resign his position. Lord Peake's threat was accepted by his co-regents and in 134 AC he resigned. Although he left King's Landing, all of Lord Unwin's appointments kept their posts after his departure.[5][3]

Later Life

In 135 AC there was a conspiracy against House Rogare in King's Landing. It was claimed that the Rogare's were plotting to assassinate King Aegon in order for Prince Viserys who was married to Lady Larra Rogare to ascend the Iron Throne, this eventually led to the secret siege within the Red Keep. When the plot unraveled and the conspirators were arrested, many suspected Lord Unwin was the mastermind behind it, for all the conspirators were men and women he had named to positions of power when he was Hand of the King. Although it was never conclusively proven, few doubt Lord Unwin was involved.[9]

Family

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Son
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Daughter
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Son
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Unknown
woman
 
 
 
 
 
Lord Peake
 
Unknown
wife
 
Gedmund
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Mervyn
Flowers
 
Unwin
 
Unknown
three wives
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Son
 
Bernard
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Titus
 
Myrielle
 
Daughter
 
Unknown
husband
 
Two
daughters
 
Two sons
 
Amaury
 
 


References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 The Princess and the Queen.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Fire & Blood, Under the Regents - The Hooded Hand.
  3. 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 3.11 3.12 3.13 3.14 3.15 3.16 3.17 3.18 3.19 Fire & Blood, Under the Regents - War and Peace and Cattle Shows.
  4. See the Unwin Peake calculation.
  5. 5.0 5.1 The World of Ice & Fire, Aegon III.
  6. Fire & Blood, The Dying of the Dragons - Rhaenyra Triumphant.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Fire & Blood, The Dying of the Dragons - Rhaenyra Overthrown.
  8. Fire & Blood, Under the Regents - The Voyage of Alyn Oakenfist.
  9. Fire & Blood, The Lysene Spring and the End of Regency.