The Khalasar

Month

April 2013

8 posts

Apr 22, 20136 notes
#asoiaf #asoiafan #game of thrones #grrm #george rr martin
Apr 18, 20132 notes
#asoiafan #asoiaf #game of thrones #grrm #george rr martin
Apr 14, 201328 notes
#asoiafan #asoiaf #game of thrones #house greyjoy #greyjoy #we do not sow
THIS IS A-W-E-S-O-M-E! I love this blog, it's just perfect :)

May the Seven bless you, good lady. Thank you.=D

Apr 14, 2013
Apr 14, 20136 notes
#asoiafan #mine
on the topic of how the direwolves are sketchy as fuck → whoistorule.tumblr.com

rhllor:

“A direwolf’s no pet. Get her a dog, she’ll be happier for it.”

I’ve been thinking about this for a while now, and it falls in line with that meta I saw ages ago that talked about how Ned’s childhood in the Eyrie resulted in his sense of morality and internal code being closer to the Arryns’ (“As High as Honour”) than the Starks’, and how our idea of “Starks = stupid honourable decision making” is not actually true past the last ~two generations. 

I think what the historic Starks (and the North in general) are really like is much closer to what we’ve seen from the few glimpses of Brandon and Lyanna; wilder, untamed, rougher. The Greatjon laughed as his fingers were bitten off. I don’t think that that was a throwaway moment. The north’s second-greatest house is House Bolton, you guys. Similarly, the religion of the Old Gods initially appears to the reader as quaint, antiquated, and almost endearing - oh, they still believe, that’s cute - but as the series progressed it became clear that the Old Gods are not just real, but terrifying as fuck.

And along that line, I think that the direwolves are connected in some way to the idea of the North of old, which is essentially brutal and inhuman. Whether or not they’re active agents of the Old Gods is highly debatable; I’d lean more to the idea that they are just a tangible representation of what the North really is, one that has been set up in the story since day one. One of my favourite aspects of the story is the ruthless subversion of all the ideas we form in the first book over the course of all the others, as well as the general fantasy tropes we go into the book with; one of those is the revelation that the Starks are not morally white. They are not blameless heroes. And we have the direwolves as living proof of that. We’ve had that since the beginning! In episode two Nymeria fucking jumps out of a bush to attack some kid who’s threatening Arya (and yeah, it was Joffrey, but still. Jesus fucking Christ.) As mentioned, Grey Wind bites a sympathetic character’s fingers off later on in the story. The wolf of the most southern Stark, Sansa, is killed right away. People who still think the wolves are just cute animal sidekicks are failing at basic reading comprehension, tbqh.

I guess all I have to say is that I don’t think Jeyne Westerling should be blamed for shying away from Grey Wind. From everything we’ve seen, this is a perfectly reasonable reaction.

Not to mention Nymeria is running wild through the Neck eating people on the regular. And Shaggydog is fucking terrifying from what we’ve seen and is now on an island of cannibals.  So.

Apr 14, 2013249 notes
#asoiaf #house stark #blog #game of thrones
On what it means to be a Stark → whoistorule.tumblr.com

whoistorule:

When we all think about classic “Stark” qualities, for most of us at least our minds go first to Ned Stark. Ned Stark is introduced to us as Lord Stark, the honorable and cold Warden of the North, the quintessential northman. But the truth is, we’ve all been tricked. Ned Stark doesn’t have the qualities of a true Stark, of the wild North; he was raised an Arryn.

In fact, Ned was raised by the most Arryn to ever Arryn, the foolishly noble Jon Arryn.  And in the end, even he was smarter than Ned.  He didn’t bring his evidence to the queen, just to his overprotective wife who thought he was going to steal her only child away.

Think about Ned, think about the qualities that define him.  He’s honorable and noble to a fault, to the point where he doesn’t care who he upsets so long as his conscience is clear.  He’s dignified, and he believes in looking a man in the eye before he kills them.  He believes in true knights and fairytale princesses, not terrifying monsters and Dothraki threats.  He holds a grudge against Jaime Lannister his entire life for the foolish arrogance of a 17 year old.  He loves and dotes on his children as much as he is able, but he was cold to Theon, making him neither a hostage nor a son, alienating him from the family.  

All that Honor doesn’t sound very Winter is Coming, does it?  No, Winter is Coming is not about preparing yourself for the cold ahead, it’s about the wild, frozen North coming alive again.  Ned’s words are High as Honor, and he’s the heart and soul of an Arryn.

Ned’s children all see him as a role model (with the exception of Rickon who’s too young) and this affects them all in different ways.

Take Robb and Jon for example.  For the two of them, Ned is the perfect role model but for the one stain on his honor; he fathered a bastard.  For Robb this manifests most strongly with his relationship with Jeyne.  He, like he perceives Ned to have, sleeps with a woman when he’s essentially married to someone back home.  However, unlike Ned he’s not going to let a bastard besmirch his honor, so he (in a fit of I am untouchable hubris) marries his mistake.  With Jon this manifests in his unwillingness to break the prescribed oath of the Night’s Watch - to bear no children.  As a bastard born of dishonor he makes it his ultimate duty to prove being born on then wrong side of the blanket doesn’t mean he’s dishonorable himself.  As living proof of Ned Stark’s dishonor he must be twice as honorable.  Neither Robb nor Jon is pure Arryn, Tully, or Stark; rather the two eldest Stark brothers are a mix.  Robb has the honor of an Arryn and a Tully and the recklessness of a Stark, but he is ultimately a king first and a nobleman second.  Jon on the other hand has the honor of an Arryn, the impulsiveness of a Stark, and eventually, as Stannis becomes his role model, the stubbornness of a Baratheon.

Sansa, on the other hand, is a perfect Arryn storybook princess from the start.  Of all the Stark children she believes the most strongly in goodness and in beauty.  She is the princess in the castle in the air, who creates walls out of stories, who has to defeat life’s monsters to reclaim her birthright.  There’s an intentional mirroring between Ned’s decision to tell Cersei about what he knows in the godswood and Sansa’s decision to tell Cersei about Ned’s plans to make them leave.  Sansa feels wicked telling Cersei, but she believes she’s doing the right thing.  She believes she’s honoring her promise to the Lannisters and her beloved betrothed when she reveals Ned’s plans to them.  And Sansa, like Ned, is the most easily misled by liars because she believes everyone is as honorable and good as they appear to be.

Arya, on the other hand, is pure Tully.  The things she cares most about are family (getting home to her family, to her brothers and her home), her duty as a Stark to right the wrongs of the world and deliver her own sense of justice upon people, and the honor of her family, her father, and herself.  Even outside Westeros, she holds on to her Tully values.  She models herself off of what she’s seen Ned do (kill deserters of the Night’s Watch), because its what’s expected of her; essentially she kills Dareon because he’s violated her Tully sensibilities.  He broke the code of the Night’s watch and it’s her family’s duty, on her honor as a Stark, to deliver to him the punishment of a deserter of the Night’s Watch.  Even her fight over Micah is because she feels like he’s her friend and she’s a duty to take care of him.  For all her wildness, she feels entitled to certain treatment and certain duty in return because she’s Arya of House Stark.  (Look how she treated Harwin when she ran into him.  Despite the rapidly deteriorating morality of Westeros, he’s supposed to be sworn to her first.  It’s reminiscent of how Catelyn treats the Freys.)

If you’re looking for your true Stark, the child you’re looking for is Bran.  Listen to the tales of Brandon and Lyanna.  They were real Starks, raised in the North by real Starks, and they’re wild straight through.  Bran is the intense old wild magic of the North, he is the godswood and the direwolves.  He was abandoned and so he has very little regard for others and his own consequences (see: Brandon and Lyanna) and is incredibly single minded and reckless to the bone. His fall kills the Arryn in him and out of his magic and abandonment, the Stark is born.  When the Starks say Winter is Coming, they’re talking about Bran and his terrifying old wild magic.

As for Rickon, well, his role model is Osha, so what do you think?  Rickon is wildling to the bone.

Apr 14, 20131,743 notes
#asoiaf #house stark #blog #game of thrones
Apr 7, 201335 notes
#sansa stark #asoiaf #asoiafan #game of thrones

March 2013

8 posts

bams-boleyn:

the roses are dead

lyanna is too

Mar 30, 201331 notes
#asoiaf #lyanna stark #game of thrones #a song of ice and fire
I only opened my tumblr account 2 hours ago and I've spent the entire time reading your blog, i love it! I could only ever follow you for the rest of my life and still be satisfied. #itisknown

This is so flattering, you have no idea. My day—my summer!—is made. Glad to be of service.=)

Mar 30, 20131 note
Hey, sorry to bother you! I just wanted to ask you how you create links on your blogs. For example, you have "THE WHITE BOOK." How did you make that? Btw, awesome blog :)

Thanks!=D And I’m sorry it’s taken me so long to reply. That’s just basic HTML tagging. Try this site: http://www.w3schools.com/html/html_links.asp

Mar 30, 2013
Mar 30, 20132 notes
#asoiafan #bastard #ramsay bolton
Mar 30, 201313 notes
#asoiafan #bastard #jon snow
Mar 29, 20131,776 notes
#asoiaf #house stark #ned stark #catelyn stark #jon snow #fanart for the gods #it is known

queencersei:

roses are red

weddings are too

Mar 29, 20137,855 notes
#asoiaf
Mar 29, 201368 notes
#guess who's back #asoiaf

December 2012

1 post

Dec 24, 201236 notes
#that's actually a painful christmas card to look at if you think about it #but whos counting #merry christmas #asoiaf #stark #fanart for the gods

November 2012

4 posts

Nov 9, 201210 notes
#asoiafan #asoiaf #game of thrones #religion
It's my name day today.=) → bams-boleyn.tumblr.com

Now a maid of nine and ten.

Nov 7, 201218 notes
#asoiafan #mine
Nov 7, 20128,031 notes
#ned stark #Joffrey Baratheon #cersei lannister #jaime lannister #fanart for the gods
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