I mean, it doesn’t make much sense, but I liked the Laura/Logan Generations comic. Haven’t read the rest yet.
Author: stevenattewell
This is something that I’ve wondered for a while. but didn’t know who to ask. Why, in the American Civil War and others like it, didn’t the soldiers wear helmets?
Because at the time, advances in firearms were ahead of advances in armor. Not until 1915 was the technology there to make a helmet that would stop a bullet.
The Tyrells were named by Aegon I as overlords of the Reach after all Gardeners died on the Field of Fire. This means that the Tyrells got their legitimacy as overlords of the Reach from the Targaryens, doesn’t it? Is this another possible explanation for their support of Aerys II during Robert’s Rebellion (as in: this guy secures our status, better support him)? After all, no one could know for sure that Robert would pardon them and confirm them in all lands and titles?
I guess? Doesn’t explain Mace’s actions at Storm’s End tho.
Master Steven would you forgive me if I reminded you that Henry II crowned his son Young Henry (rather than Richard not-the-Lionheart yet) his fellow monarch?
I forgive you. Minor detail.
A Theory About the Horn of Joramun
Based off a long conversation from Twitter, but I’ve started to have some ideas about the Horn of Joramun, one of the more significant objects in the series if assumptions are right that it will bring down the Wall.

The Horn is a curious object, because it seems to have a strong duality about it: it’s known as both the Horn of Winter and the Horn of Joramun, and it is supposed to have "woke giants from the earth” and it’s also supposed to have the power “bring this cold thing down.” And yet, even through Joramun was a King Beyond-the-Wall “in ancient days,” whom Jeor Mormont places as coming before the Horned Lord and the brothers Gendel and Gorne, and describes all of them as having “broke his strength on the Wall, or was broken by the power of Winterfell on the far side,” the Wall still stands.
Why did Joramun never use the Horn to bring down the Wall?
The answer, I think, lies in the other thing we know about Joramun – his involvement in the legend of the Night’s King (the real one, not the one from the show):
“He brought her back to the Nightfort and proclaimed her a queen and himself her king, and with strange sorceries he bound his Sworn Brothers to his will. For thirteen years they had ruled, Night’s King and his corpse queen, till finally the Stark of Winterfell and Joramun of the wildlings had joined to free the Watch from bondage. After his fall, when it was found he had been sacrificing to the Others, all records of Night’s King had been destroyed, his very name forbidden.”
This cooperation between a wildling King and a Stark of Winterfell is unprecedented, which further emphasizes that the Night’s King was an abomination (binding “his Sworn Brothers to his will” with “strange sorceries” should be a hint) rather than some sort of marriage alliance to cement an imagined Pact between White Walkers and humans (which theory constantly ignores that the wildlings have always been living north of the Wall). It certainly demonstrates that Joramun clearly viewed the White Walkers as an existential threat so great that it involved allying with one ancient enemy (the Starks) to free another ancient enemy (the Night’s Watch) from sorcerous bondage.
Here’s what I think happened: Joramun was an early King-beyond-the-Wall who “broke his strength” on the Wall and, looking for a solution to this strategic problem as so many KbtW did, turned to magic. Specifically, he created a horn which was imbued with the magic of giants, which could both wake them from their slumber (perhaps giants are prone to hibernation?) and bring down the Wall. On a sidenote, it’s possible that these two things are linked, if GRRM is a fan of Attack on Titan and has giants walled up inside the Wall whose awakening would shake it down from the foundations. (Just laying down a marker in advance of TWOW…)

Regardless of how the thing worked, Joramun was interrupted by the crisis of the Night’s King before he could bring down the Wall. And what he saw and experienced in fighting the Night’s King convinced him that the White Walkers were such an existential threat that the Wall had to remain to keep humanity protected, even if that meant his own people had to remain in exile. (Perhaps this lesson is why the Horned Lord had his maxim that “sorcery is a sword without a hilt. There is no safe way to grasp it.“) And so he had the Horn buried with him to keep it from ever being used.
To me, this version of events works on a number of levels: it reconciles both aspects of Joramun’s history, it explains why the Horn has never been used before, and it fits the “human heart at war with itself” model of GRRM’s writing, as Joramun is caught between his love for his people and his humanity
What do you make of the tidbit from the expanded Westerlands chapter that Gerold Lannister threw his weight & his gold behind Aegon V at the Great COuncil?
Rohanne’s influence, perhaps?
This might be a bit outside of your area of expertise, but do we ever get any indication of how wide the Blackwater Rush is, near King’s Landing? I’ve long thought it was odd that the city’s harbor is in the river as it is depicted.
Given that Stannis’ fleet is able to sail up up the Rush twenty ships abreast, and that medieval galleys were at least 4.45 meters in width, the Rush is more than 89 meters wide.
What do you think the rules for building inside Oldtown are? Like the buildings have to be made of stone, can only be so tall, have to meet fire safety, etc, etc.
I woud not be surprised if they follow a system of rules similar to those described in William Novak’s The People’s Welfare, which provides a very comprehensive survey of municipal regulation in the late 18th/early 19th century (so at the very end of the Early Modern period slash beginning of the Modern period).
RFTIT Tumblr Weeklyish Roundup
RFTIT Tumblr Weeklyish Roundup

Hello, everyone. Work continues on Dorne Part I, and you already know the rest of the game plan from last week. So let’s jump straight into the Tumblrs: Will we see folks of the pre-Ned generation in Dunk & Egg? North/South divisions in England and its impact in fantasy: Part I Part II Medieval financial scams. The Horn and Oldtown. How did horses get off ships? Followup on Parcel of Rogues, Part…
Just read that Henry II of England crowned his own son King but just as a title with little power. What reason would Henry II do this for?
1. Henry II had taken power after a long and grueling civil war. Crowning his son king before his own death was a way to emphasize that the Plantagenets were here to stay.
2. Henry II was notorious for playing mindgames with his kids. This was a way to give Richard just enough of what he wanted without giving him what he actually needed.