Creer son blason game of thrones
S1, Ep3. Jon begins his training with the Night's Watch; Ned confronts his past and future at King's Landing; Daenerys finds herself at odds with Viserys.
S1, Ep4. Eddard investigates Jon Arryn's murder. Jon befriends Samwell Tarly, a coward who has come to join the Night's Watch.
S1, Ep5. Catelyn has captured Tyrion and plans to bring him to her sister, Lysa Arryn, at the Vale, to be tried for his, supposed, crimes against Bran. Robert plans to have Daenerys killed, but Eddard refuses to be a part of it and quits. S1, Ep6. While recovering from his battle with Jaime, Eddard is forced to run the kingdom while Robert goes hunting.
Tyrion demands a trial by combat for his freedom. Viserys is losing his patience with Drogo. S1, Ep7. Robert has been injured while hunting and is dying. Jon and the others finally take their vows to the Night's Watch. A man, sent by Robert, is captured for trying to poison Daenerys.
Furious, Drogo vows to attack the Seven Kingdoms. S1, Ep8. The capital and largest city of the Seven Kingdoms. The ancestral stronghold of House Lannister. The ancestral seat of House Baratheon, and one of three major castles held by the former royal house. Starters Advanced Video Strategy. News Events Updates Strategy Media. Dec 20, Glorious Battle 3. Dec 17, Update Notice Their stronghold was a castle called the Dreadfort and the head of the house was the Lord of the Dreadfort.
House Bolton was infamous for its centuries-old practice of flaying their enemies alive, to the point that they used a flayed man as their House sigil.
The Boltons supposedly gave up this practice after bending the knee to House Stark, [2] and centuries later Lord Eddard Stark outlawed flaying in the North altogether, but the Boltons continued the practice.
House Bolton's heraldry consisted of a red flayed man upside-down on an x-shaped white cross over a field of black. Their house words were "Our Blades Are Sharp," though a common saying of members of the house was "A naked man has few secrets; a flayed man, none. House Bolton is infamous for its centuries-old practice of flaying their enemies alive, to the point that they use a flayed man as their House sigil.
The origins of House Bolton date back to at least the Age of Heroes , a savage age in which the houses of First Men waged war one upon the other. For centuries, the Red Kings of House Bolton resisted the efforts of the Stark Kings of Winter to unify the North under their rule, killing several Starks in the process, and, according to rumors, keeping their skins as trophies and even wearing them as cloaks.
During these centuries when the North was divided into a dozen or so smaller petty kingdoms, the Boltons and Starks were chief rivals for domination over all the others. House Bolton's kingdom covered a large portion of the lands east of Winterfell, centered around the Dreadfort itself. King Rogar Bolton bends the knee to the Starks of Winterfell. Eventually, the Boltons were defeated and bent the knee to House Stark, giving up their practice of flaying their prisoners as sign of their submission.
Nevertheless, they remained the second most powerful house of the North. House Bolton answers the summon of Robb Stark , acting Lord of Winterfell , when he calls the bannermen of House Stark to march south to demand the liberation of Ned Stark and answer the aggression of House Lannister against the Riverlands. The sigil of House Bolton is present during the feast Robb holds for his lords bannermen.
The forces of House Bolton remain with the main Northern host as it invades the Westerlands while a relief force led by the Greatjon liberates the seats of the Riverlords occupied by Lannister forces. After news of the fall of Winterfell to Theon Greyjoy reaches Robb's host, Lord Bolton sends word to his bastard son, Ramsay Snow , to raise a force to retake Winterfell.
When the Bolton force is a few days from Winterfell, Robb orders that any ironborn in Winterfell who surrenders will be allowed to return safely to the Iron Isles if they hand over Theon. The Bolton force lays siege to Winterfell, with Ramsay constantly sounding a warhorn to demoralize Theon's crew. As Robb expected, the ironborn turn on Theon and deliver him to Ramsay in exchange for safe passage out of the North.
Bolton men take Jaime Lannister and Brienne of Tarth prisoner. The Bolton forces march along with the rest of the Northern army all the way to the castle of Harrenhal in the Riverlands, only to find it empty, except for the bodies of Northern and Riverlands prisoners put to the sword. In the meantime Lord Bolton has also dispatched his "best hunters", led by Locke , to hunt down the fugitive Jaime Lannister , who had been liberated by Catelyn Stark in exchange for the freedom of her daughters, Arya and Sansa.
Bolton men garrisoned at Harrenhal. The Bolton host is left to hold Harrenhal after news of the death of Hoster Tully reach the ruined castle. Another letter also informs of the Sack of Winterfell and the disappearance of Bran and Rickon Stark , but puts the blame on Theon and his ironmen, claiming the Bolton host had reached Winterfell too late. A few Bolton men accompany Robb's host to Riverrun. In the Dreadfort, Theon is tortured by men wearing clothing similar to that of the raiders of House Greyjoy , who take one of his fingernails and use a foot press on him and demand to know why he took Winterfell.
Despite his answers, they keep torturing him. When the torturers leave, a man who claims to have been sent by Theon's sister Yara promises to release him when the castle sleeps.
Locke and his men capture the Kingslayer and Brienne after Jaime is identified by a peasant in exchange for a reward. House Bolton are revealed as turncoats when they assist House Frey in the massacre known as the Red Wedding. The Boltons and the Freys kill Robb Stark, Catelyn Stark and all of the northern lords assembled at the Twins for Edmure Tully 's wedding while their forces kill off their bannermen. The Boltons launch a campaign to retake The North from the invading ironborn but their army is stuck south of Moat Cailin , cutting them off from entering the North.
Ramsay raises a small army and marches to Moat Cailin, intending to use Theon to persuade the Ironborn to surrender the fortress. Theon successfully gets the Ironborn to surrender, promising them mercy and safe passage back to the Iron Islands.
However, upon being let into the castle, Bolton soldiers flay the Ironborn alive, and display their corpses in the courtyard of the fortress. With their army now in the North, Roose and Ramsay March to Winterfell and begin repairs on the ruined castle. Though the Boltons, in Roose's words, have become a Great House and are now situated at Winterfell, the death of Tywin Lannister by his own son Tyrion Lannister hands has left House Bolton's protection in a dire situation, since they no longer have enough men to hold the North should the bannermen of House Stark rise up against them, especially in response to Ramsay's atrocities.
The Boltons also face a new threat in the form of Stannis Baratheon , who is garrisoned at the Wall and is planning to retake the North from the Boltons and rally the North to his army for another chance to take the Iron Throne. In order to strengthen their position, Roose conspires with Petyr Baelish to have Ramsay marry Sansa, unaware that Baelish is apparently plotting the Boltons' downfall in revenge for the part they played in Catelyn's death.
Roose is prepared to wait out Stannis until his army breaks from the bitter cold, although Ramsay obtains his father's permission to attempt a daring nighttime sabotage mission, one that destroys much of Stannis's food supplies, siege weapons, and horses. During the Battle of Winterfell , Sansa escapes with the help of Theon. While Roose is pleased with Ramsay's battlefield command, he is more displeased that Sansa and Theon have escaped, severely jeopardizing their claim to the North.
Marrying Ramsay and Sansa was nothing short of rebellion against the Iron Throne, and without a Stark in Winterfell, the other houses are unlikely to rally behind the Boltons when the Iron Throne sends its armies after them. Ramsay's first attempt to recapture the pair fails due to the timely rescue of Sansa and Theon by Brienne of Tarth and her squire, Podrick Payne.
Roose dismisses this proposal as outrageous, stating that Northern houses would almost certainly rise up in revolt against the Boltons should they kill the Lord Commander of the Night's Watch.
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