HOUSE REED

House Reed – Lords of the Neck, Keepers of Moat Cailin
🌿 Noble House · The Neck · Bannermen of Stark

House Reed

Lords of Greywater Watch, Masters of the Neck — the crannogmen who hold the key to the North, and guard secrets older than the Iron Throne itself.

📍 Greywater Watch, The Neck 🗓 Updated May 2025 🏚 Category: Northern Houses of Westeros 🦎 Sigil: Lizard-Lion on Grey-Green
Quick Answer

What is House Reed?

House Reed is a noble house of the North in Westeros, ruling over the mysterious Neck from their floating stronghold, Greywater Watch. Lords of the crannogmen — the small, secretive marsh-folk — House Reed serves as sworn bannermen to House Stark and controls the most strategically vital chokepoint in all of Westeros: the swampy land corridor and ruined fortress of Moat Cailin. Their sigil is a black lizard-lion on grey-green, and they are renowned for their secrecy, ancient knowledge of the marsh, and the most consequential secrets in the realm — held by Lord Howland Reed, the only living witness to what occurred at the Tower of Joy.

Moving Castle Location
Moat Cailin Strategic Hold
~50 Leagues Width of the Neck
Crannogmen Their People
0 Times Moat Cailin Taken from North

Keepers of the Neck, Lords of Greywater Watch

🌾

House Reed occupies one of the most singular positions in the political geography of Westeros. Neither wealthy nor numerous, they nonetheless command a power that the richest lords in the Reach or the Westerlands cannot buy: absolute dominion over the only land passage between the North and the rest of the continent.

The Neck — that narrow, waterlogged peninsula where the continent nearly pinches shut — is their domain. Hundreds of miles of treacherous bogs, floating islands, and mist-shrouded channels make any army’s passage through it a nightmare without crannogmen guides. And even if an invader navigates the marshes, they must reckon with Moat Cailin: an ancient ruined fortress whose three surviving towers command the causeway — the only dry road north — with such tactical perfection that twenty men once held it against a host of thousands.

To rule the Neck is to hold a lock on an entire kingdom. House Reed holds that lock. And they keep the key not through wealth or dragonfire or the force of massive armies, but through deep knowledge — of the marshes, of the old ways, and of secrets that could reshape the history of the Seven Kingdoms.

“The crannogmen live differently from other men — and they know things other men do not.”
— On the people of the Neck

Their seat, Greywater Watch, is itself a marvel — and a mystery. Built on a crannog, a man-made floating island of woven reeds and timber, it drifts slowly through the channels of the Neck. No envoy has ever successfully returned from it. No maester holds residence there. In the known world of Westeros, it is perhaps the only great house whose seat cannot be found on any fixed map. That deliberate unlocatability is itself a defense — as effective as any curtain wall.

The Reeds are bannermen to House Stark, and their loyalty runs as deep as the marshes themselves. Howland Reed fought beside Eddard Stark at the Tower of Joy in 283 AC, a moment whose consequences now ripple through the fate of every living character in Westeros.

The Sigil of House Reed · Greywater Watch · The Neck

The Neck — House Reed’s Domain

🗺
🏚

Reed Territory: The Neck, Moat Cailin & Greywater Watch

THE NORTH Winterfell · Stark Territory THE SOUTH The Riverlands · King’s Landing THE CAUSEWAY 🏚 Moat Cailin [Ancient Fortress] 🌿 Greywater Watch [Moving · Unfindable] 🐺 Winterfell 🐟 Riverrun Saltspear The Bite THE NECK Reed Domain Baratheon Seat Moving Seat WESTEROS · NORTHERN PASSAGE

Schematic map of House Reed territory in the Neck · Full interactive atlas at /maps/westeros/

House Reed: Key Members, Locations & Entities

🌿
🌿
Lord of Greywater Watch

Howland Reed

The lord of the crannogmen and Eddard Stark’s most trusted friend. Fought alongside Ned at the Tower of Joy. The only living person who witnessed Jon Snow’s birth — and knows the truth of his parentage. His deliberate absence from the narrative makes him the most consequential unseen character in the entire saga.

Explore Howland
🌱
Greenseer · Guide to Bran Stark

Jojen Reed

Howland’s son and a rare greenseer — one who sees through the eyes of ravens and trees in prophetic visions. Jojen recognized Bran Stark’s extraordinary gifts and devoted his life to guiding him north of the Wall. His death beyond the Wall, consumed in the defense of Bran, is one of the most quietly devastating moments in the series.

Explore Jojen
🏹
Warrior · Guardian of Bran

Meera Reed

Jojen’s older sister and Bran’s fierce, resourceful protector. Armed with a net, frog spear, and a survival instinct forged in the marshes of the Neck, Meera fights off wights, hunts in the frozen north, and carries Bran through impossible conditions. She is the crannogman ideal made flesh — small, skilled, and utterly lethal in her element.

Explore Meera
🏚
Seat of House Reed

Greywater Watch

The floating stronghold of House Reed — a castle built on a crannog that drifts through the channels of the Neck. No ravens can find it; no enemy can besiege what they cannot locate. A deliberate and elegant military solution born of crannogman ingenuity, Greywater Watch is as much concept as castle: the ultimate unfindable fortress.

Explore the Castle
🏰
Ancient Ruined Fortress · The Neck

Moat Cailin

The crumbling crown jewel of the Neck — three remaining towers of an ancient fortress that once had twenty. Even in ruin, its strategic position at the mouth of the causeway makes it effectively impenetrable from the south. No army invading the North by land has ever successfully taken it. Ramsay Bolton’s use of flayed hostages to surrender its Ironborn garrison is one of the series’ most chilling political moments.

Explore Moat Cailin
🌊
Geographic Bottleneck · Reed Territory

The Neck

The narrow marshy peninsula that connects the North to the rest of Westeros — less than fifty leagues wide at its narrowest point. Its bogs, quicksand, and lizard-lions make it deadly to outsiders; its crannogmen guides make it navigable only to allies. Whoever controls the Neck controls access to the North itself.

Explore the Neck
🐺
Liege Lord of House Reed

House Stark of Winterfell

House Reed’s liege lords and the great house they serve with absolute, millennia-deep loyalty. The bond between Reed and Stark is among the most unshakeable in the North — forged in the Age of Heroes and reaffirmed with every generation. When Winterfell’s lords fall, the Reeds shelter their heirs and hold their secrets.

Explore House Stark
🌲
The Three-Eyed Raven · Heir of Stark

Bran Stark

The young lord whom Jojen and Meera guided north of the Wall to complete his transformation into the Three-Eyed Raven. Bran’s journey — and the Reed siblings’ selfless sacrifice in service of it — ultimately shaped the entire resolution of the War of the Long Night and the political fate of all Westeros.

Explore Bran
🗼
The Secret That Changed Everything

Tower of Joy

A ruined tower in Dorne where Ned Stark, Howland Reed, and four others fought three members of the Kingsguard at the end of Robert’s Rebellion. Inside, Lyanna Stark died in childbirth — entrusting Ned with her newborn son Jon. Howland Reed is the only other survivor who knows the full truth of what happened there.

Explore the Tower

House Reed Power System: Four Dimensions of Authority

🏛

⚔ Political Zones

Feudal Allegiance
Bannermen of House Stark

Among the most loyal of all Northern bannermen, House Reed has served Winterfell since before the Age of Heroes. Their loyalty is not merely political — it is ancestral and almost spiritual in its depth.

Ruling Authority
Lords of the Neck

House Reed governs the entire Neck — a region so vast and hostile that it functions as a sovereign state for practical purposes. No other noble house or crown authority exercises meaningful control within it.

Diplomatic Power
Gatekeepers of the North

Any king wishing to march an army into or out of the North requires the implicit cooperation of House Reed. Their willingness — or refusal — to guide forces through the Neck can determine the outcome of wars they never directly fight.

🗺 Geographic Zones

Core Domain
The Neck

A vast swamp stretching between the Saltspear in the west and the Bite in the east. Its terrain — quicksand, bogs, shallow lakes, and tidal channels — is impassable to outsiders without crannogmen knowledge.

Fortress Control
Moat Cailin

The ancient ruin at the southern mouth of the causeway. Even roofless and crumbling, its remaining towers command the only dry road into the North so effectively that it has never fallen to a southern army.

The Moving Seat
Greywater Watch

The floating castle that defies conventional military logic. Its drifting location through the Neck’s channels makes it impossible to besiege, find on a map, or deliver ravens to — an architectural defense without walls.

🌿 Cultural Zones

Their People
The Crannogmen

Small, marsh-dwelling folk who live on floating villages and travel by punt. Expert hunters, froggers, and poisoners who know the bogs like no other. They are among the most ancient peoples of Westeros, retaining First Men customs long abandoned elsewhere.

Ancient Knowledge
The Old Ways

The crannogmen maintain traditions from the Age of Heroes. They worship the old gods, speak of the Children of the Forest with reverence rather than myth, and possess knowledge of greensight and warg-bonding that the Citadel has never catalogued.

Lore Significance
The Knight of the Laughing Tree

A famous mystery knight from the Tourney of Harrenhal in 281 AC — widely believed to be either Howland Reed himself or Lyanna Stark in disguise — whose identity connects directly to the events that triggered Robert’s Rebellion and Jon Snow’s birth.

🛡 Strategic Zones

Wartime Role
Guerrilla Masters

Crannogmen do not fight in open field. They fight in the bogs, using poison-tipped javelins, nets, and intimate knowledge of terrain to destroy armies far larger than their own. Any force attempting to push through the Neck faces attrition warfare at its most punishing.

Intelligence Value
Secret Keepers

Howland Reed holds the most consequential secret in Westeros: the true parentage of Jon Snow. His deliberate absence from court — and his refusal to send ravens — suggests an intentional strategy of political neutrality until the moment his knowledge is needed.

Prophetic Lineage
Greensight in the Blood

Jojen Reed’s rare gift of prophetic dreams suggests House Reed carries some trace of First Men or Children of the Forest blood — an inheritance of power that sets them apart from ordinary noble houses and connects them to the deepest magic in the known world.

House Reed Reference Table

📋
Person / Place Type Role / Position Known For Importance
Howland Reed Character Lord of Greywater Watch Witnessed Tower of Joy; holds Jon Snow’s secret; Ned Stark’s closest ally Highest — Most consequential absent character in the saga
Jojen Reed Character Greenseer; Bran’s Guide Prophetic dreams; guided Bran north of the Wall; died beyond the Wall Very High — Enabled Bran’s transformation into the Three-Eyed Raven
Meera Reed Character Warrior; Bran’s Protector Carried Bran from the cave; killed a White Walker’s wight; returned Bran to Winterfell Very High — Without Meera, Bran does not survive the journey
Greywater Watch Location Seat of House Reed Moving castle on a crannog; impossible to find or besiege; no maester High — Unique architectural and military concept in all of Westeros
Moat Cailin Location Ancient Fortress; Gateway to the North Never taken by southern army; held by 20 Ironborn under Bolton threat Highest — Controls the only land route into the North
The Neck Region Reed Domain; Continental Chokepoint Marshes, bogs, lizard-lions; impassable without crannogmen guides Highest — Geopolitically the most important chokepoint in Westeros
Tower of Joy Event/Location Site of Jon Snow’s birth Battle between Ned’s party and Targaryen Kingsguard; Lyanna’s death; Jon’s secret Highest — The single most consequential event in modern Westerosi history
Tourney of Harrenhal (281 AC) Event Historical Tournament Howland Reed mocked by squires; mystery knight appeared; chain of events leading to Rebellion Very High — Triggered the sequence of events culminating in Robert’s Rebellion

House Reed — Frequently Asked Questions

House Reed’s sigil is a black lizard-lion on grey-green — the lizard-lion being the fearsome crocodilian creature native to the marshes of the Neck. Their formal house words are not stated in either the books or show; however, their identity is bound up in secrecy, loyalty, and ancient knowledge of the bogs. “The Neck Remembers” has been proposed by fans as fitting their ethos.
Greywater Watch is located in the Neck — but its exact position cannot be mapped because it moves. It is built on a crannog, a man-made floating island of woven reeds and timber that drifts slowly through the channels and lakes of the marsh. No raven has ever reliably found it. No enemy has ever besieged it. It is described in ASOIAF as the most difficult seat in Westeros to locate, and no outsider has been known to visit and return with directions.
The crannogmen are the indigenous people of the Neck — small in stature, deeply secretive, and extraordinarily skilled in marsh survival. They live on floating villages, hunt with nets and frog spears, and use poison-tipped weapons with expert precision. They worship the old gods, maintain First Men traditions long lost elsewhere, and — unlike most of Westeros — have maintained genuine relationships with the Children of the Forest through their ancient practices and worship of sacred groves and weirwood trees.
Howland Reed is the only living person who knows the full truth of what happened at the Tower of Joy — specifically that Lyanna Stark gave birth to a son by Rhaegar Targaryen, and that Ned Stark took the child as his bastard to protect him from Robert Baratheon. That child is Jon Snow. Howland’s silence has preserved this secret for nearly twenty years, effectively holding the fate of the Iron Throne — and the entire political legitimacy of every current claimant — in his hands.
Moat Cailin plays a critical role in Season 4, when Ramsay Bolton is sent by his father Roose to reclaim it from the Ironborn garrison holding it after Theon Greyjoy’s capture of the North. The fortress had been held by just twenty Ironborn men — but its position was so strategically vital that Roose could not safely move his forces south (to King’s Landing for Joffrey’s wedding) or consolidate the North until it was his. Ramsay’s grim solution — promising the garrison safe passage and then flaying them — was a defining moment of his character.
The Knight of the Laughing Tree is a mystery knight who appeared at the Tourney of Harrenhal in 281 AC after three squires mocked and bullied a young crannogman — widely believed to be Howland Reed. The mystery knight defeated all three squires’ knights and demanded only that they teach their squires honor. The identity was never revealed; Aerys II Targaryen sent Rhaegar to unmask them but found only an abandoned shield. Most fan and in-world analysis points to either Howland Reed or Lyanna Stark in disguise — with significant implications for the events that followed.
Jojen and Meera guided Bran Stark, Hodor, and Summer beyond the Wall to find the Three-Eyed Raven in his cave. During the White Walkers’ assault on the cave — triggered when Bran warged into the past and inadvertently revealed their location — Jojen was stabbed by a wight and killed, and Meera fled carrying Bran with Hodor sacrificing himself to hold the door. Meera kept Bran alive through the frozen wastes until they were rescued by Benjen Stark. She ultimately returned Bran to Winterfell and then departed — her brother dead, her purpose complete — in one of the show’s most bittersweet farewells.
No. House Reed is a noble house and sworn bannermen of House Stark — not one of the Nine Great Houses of Westeros. In terms of wealth, military size, or political prestige, they are modest. However, their control over the Neck gives them strategic leverage that many Great Houses lack, and their intimate knowledge of ancient lore, greensight bloodlines, and realm-shaping secrets places them among the most consequential families in the entire history of Westeros.

Into the Bogs of the Known World

From Greywater Watch to the Wall, from the Tower of Joy to the heart of the Neck — every secret place and forgotten fortress mapped in cinematic detail.