13 November 2012

Before you begin: a brief history

HEY! Read this entry FIRST. This is the one you read BEFORE THE VERY FIRST EPISODE to get you started on your journey through your world of Game of Thrones.

“Game of Thrones” the TV show is based on a series of books called A Song of Ice and Fire, written by George R. R. Martin. As I am writing this, in 2012, there are presently 5 books published out of a (currently) planned 7. The first book in the Song of Ice and Fire series is titled “A Game of Thrones”, which was first published in 1996.

The story takes place in a fantasy world where seasons last many years and are of inconsistent lengths. When we begin, it is toward the end of a particularly long summer, which many people believe foretells an especially long and harsh winter. Most of the action takes place on Westeros: a very long and narrow continent that stretches north to south. Across the Narrow Sea, off the southeast coast of Westeros, is the large and sprawling continent of Essos, which is very sparsely populated, aside from a handful of independent city-states known as the Free Cities, all located on or near the Narrow Sea.

At the north border of Westeros lies the Wall: a gigantic man-made structure of ice and stone, towering 700 feet high and spanning a massive 300 miles from west coast to east coast. Built several millennia ago, the Wall stands as a defense barrier between Westeros and the harsh, frozen, and largely unmapped region of the far north. The Wall is manned and maintained by men of the Night’s Watch, an extra-political military order known for their staunch sense of honor and lack of sartorial creativity (they wear only black).


These guys, for example, would fit right in on the Wall.

The Seven Kingdoms of Westeros are presided over by the King on the Iron Throne, who rules from the capital city of King’s Landing, a city with a population of approximately half a million. For nearly 300 years, the ruling family in Westeros was House Targaryen; the first Targaryen actually rode dragons to conquer and unite the majority of Westeros. (Since then, the population of dragons in the world slowly dwindled - though no one is entirely sure why - until they became extinct some 150 years ago.)

The last of these ruling Targaryens was King Aerys II, who became known as the Mad King. To end his reign of tyranny – and the Targaryen dynasty – the combined armies of Robert Baratheon, Eddard “Ned” Stark, and Jon Arryn rose up against him in a two-year war that is now known as Robert’s Rebellion. I’ll get into details later, but the important bits I’ll leave to a young character who explains it succinctly in one episode: the king’s heir Rhaegar abducted Lyanna Stark (Ned’s sister and Robert's betrothed), so Ned and Robert went to war to win her back; they won but she died anyway.

So Robert Baratheon defeated and slew Rhaegar Targaryen on the banks of the River Trident. Mad King Aerys was slain by one of his closest guards: Jaime Lannister, who thenceforth earned the rather appropriate nickname “Kingslayer.” Robert, who had the best claim to the throne, became king, married Jaime Lannister’s twin sister Cersei, and has ruled the Seven Kingdoms for the last 17 years.

Since that time King Robert and Queen Cersei remained together in King’s Landing, and the queen bore the king three beautiful blonde children. Ned returned from the fighting to his family home in Winterfell and brought with him a bastard son, much to the surprise and contempt of his young wife Catelyn. (Though bastardy is somewhat common in Westeros, especially in times of war, it is not common for someone of noble birth like Eddard Stark to officially recognize a bastard child, much less raise one in their household alongside trueborn children.) Jon Arryn, who served as foster and guardian of Robert and Ned when they were younger, married Catelyn’s younger sister Lysa, and also remained in King’s Landing. Jon accepted a very powerful and honorable position on the King’s Council, called the Hand of the King, who is the king’s most trusted advisor and chief administrator.


Not this kind of administrator.

Though the kingdom has been at peace since Robert took the throne, there are still dissenters. The most prominent of these are King Aerys’s youngest two remaining children, called Viserys and Daenerys, who were mere babes at the time of Robert’s Rebellion, or, as they put it, War of the Usurper. They are the last Targaryens. With help they escaped across the Narrow Sea to the Free Cities and grew up harboring an intense hatred towards the Usurper. Viserys, now in his early twenties, is hatching a plan to return to the Seven Kingdoms and take back the throne he feels is rightfully his.

All right! So there’s your basic set-up. Still with me? It’s okay, reread it if you have to. These names will instantly make more sense in your head once you see the faces attached to them. In the first season, we will primarily follow the Stark family and their household: Eddard, or Ned, Lord of Winterfell and Warden of the North; his wife Cat and their five children; his bastard son; his brash and impulsive ward (more on him later); the Royal Family and their retainers; and (eventually) the scheming members of the King’s Council. In Westeros there is no post office as we’d typically imagine; instead, citizens send messages across vast distances via ravens – think of modern day homing pigeons – and the story is set in motion when the Starks receive a troubling raven from King’s Landing.

A quick final word about the religions of Westeros, as you will hear many references to the “old gods and the new.” The old gods of the north are worshipped in places called godswoods, the prominent figure of which is usually a giant white tree called a weirwood, or sometimes “heart tree” after the shape and color of its leaves. There is a godswood in most castles throughout the Seven Kingdoms, though primarily in the north. (See if you can spot the weirwood in the early establishing shot of Winterfell.) The more dominant religion throughout Westeros is the Faith of the Seven, symbolized by a seven-pointed star and representing one god who has seven faces. They are worshipped in seven-sided buildings called septs, and members of the clergy are called septons (male) and septas (female). I wish they all had seven-sided hair or something, but I guess that’s where the numbering stops. Anyway. There are also a number of smaller faiths, and I’ll mention them as they come up.

Okay, off you go. Go start your journey into the world of Game of Thrones. As I mentioned before, this will all start making a lot of sense when you can match names with faces. That is the biggest hurdle, after all, and I’ll be here to guide you. So go watch the first episode, titled “Winter Is Coming” and then come back here. Afterwards you will no longer be able to say you’ve never seen it! See you in an hour. Welcome to the club; you’ll have a great time. :)



Don't have a way to watch it? You can buy the DVDs online; the cheapest you will find is probably via amazon.