Game of Thrones Lore
The Complete Guide to the History, Magic, Religions & Prophecies of the Known World โ From the Dawn Age to the Long Night
The lore of Game of Thrones spans over 12,000 years of in-world history, beginning with the Dawn Age and the arrival of the First Men, through the Long Night and the building of The Wall, the rise and fall of the Valyrian Freehold, Aegon’s Conquest, and finally the events of the series. The world is governed by multiple competing magic systems โ dragonfire, greensight, glamours, and necromancy โ and at least five distinct religions, each with genuine supernatural power.
The Ages of the Known World
Twelve thousand years of history that shaped the world Jon Snow, Daenerys, and the Great Houses were born into.
The Known World was first inhabited by the Children of the Forest โ small, ancient beings with greensight and the ability to carve faces into weirwood trees. When the First Men crossed the land bridge from Essos (the Arm of Dorne, later shattered by the Children), thousands of years of conflict followed. The war ended in the Pact of the Isle of Faces โ the First Men agreed to stop cutting down weirwoods; the Children ceded open land. The two peoples lived in fragile coexistence for 2,000 years.
A winter that lasted an entire generation descended on the world. During this darkness, the White Walkers โ creatures of ice and ancient magic created by the Children of the Forest from a captured First Man โ emerged from the far north and began killing everything in their path. The dead rose to serve them. Humanity nearly ended. A figure known as the Last Hero sought out the Children of the Forest, and the combined forces of men drove the White Walkers back. Bran the Builder โ founder of House Stark โ raised The Wall using ancient magic to prevent their return.
The centuries following the Long Night produced legendary figures โ Garth Greenhand, Lann the Clever (ancestor of the Lannisters), Durran Godsgrief (builder of Storm’s End), and others who became mythologized into founding legends for every noble house. Then came the Andals from Essos โ a new people who brought iron, horses, and the Faith of the Seven. They conquered the south of Westeros, smashed the weirwood groves, and slaughtered the Children of the Forest. Only the North, behind the Neck, resisted โ the crannog men of House Reed held the causeway.
Far to the east on the Valyrian Peninsula, the Valyrian Freehold rose to become the greatest civilization in the Known World. Forty families of dragonlords โ including House Targaryen โ bonded with dragons and used them to build an empire that eventually dominated all of Essos and sent colonies westward. Valyrian steel, the Old Valyrian language, and dragon-bonding defined their culture. At their height, the Freehold’s dragonlords were the closest thing to gods the world had ever seen.
In a single cataclysmic event, the Doom of Valyria destroyed everything. The Fourteen Fires โ a ring of volcanoes on the Valyrian peninsula โ erupted simultaneously, shattering the land, boiling the sea, and killing every dragonlord and almost every dragon alive. The cause is still debated: a natural geological catastrophe, a magical experiment gone wrong, or deliberate sabotage. Twelve years prior, the Targaryen dragonlord Daenys the Dreamer had a prophetic vision of the Doom and convinced her father to relocate House Targaryen to Dragonstone off the coast of Westeros. They were the only dragonlord family to survive.
Aegon I Targaryen landed at the mouth of the Blackwater Rush with his two sister-wives โ Visenya and Rhaenys โ and their three dragons: Balerion the Black Dread (the largest dragon ever recorded), Meraxes, and Vhagar. Two years later, six of the seven kingdoms had bent the knee โ either persuaded or burned into submission at the Field of Fire, where 4,000 men burned alive in a single battle. Only Dorne resisted, through guerrilla warfare and the deaths of both Rhaenys and Meraxes. Aegon founded King’s Landing, forged the Iron Throne from the swords of his defeated enemies, and ruled for 37 years.
When Rhaegar Targaryen rode off with Lyanna Stark (actually a secret elopement, though perceived as abduction), and the Mad King Aerys II burned her father and brother alive when they came to demand her return, Robert Baratheon raised a rebellion. The key houses โ Stark, Baratheon, Arryn, and Tully โ defeated the Targaryen loyalists at the Battle of the Trident, where Robert killed Rhaegar. The Mad King was then killed by his own Kingsguard member, Jaime Lannister โ earning him the permanent name “Kingslayer.” Daenerys was born on Dragonstone during a storm the same night the castle fell. Jon Snow was born in secret at the Tower of Joy in Dorne moments before Lyanna died.
The Five Religions of the Known World
Unlike most fantasy worlds, every religion in Game of Thrones demonstrably works โ each produces real supernatural results.
Brought to Westeros by the Andals, the Faith worships a single god with seven aspects โ the Father, the Mother, the Warrior, the Maiden, the Crone, the Smith, and the Stranger (death). Septs replace godswoods in the south. The Faith Militant โ the religion’s armed wing โ was disbanded by Aegon I and re-armed under Cersei Lannister in Season 5, leading to her imprisonment and wildfire revenge in Season 6.
- The High Sparrow โ resurgent leader who imprisoned Cersei and Margaery
- The Great Sept of Baelor โ destroyed by Cersei’s wildfire, S6
- The Faith Militant โ armed religious enforcers, the Sparrows
- Dominant in โ King’s Landing, The Reach, the Vale, Riverlands
The Lord of Light religion centers on the eternal war between R’hllor (fire, life, light) and the Great Other (ice, death, darkness). Its priests and priestesses โ Red Priests โ are capable of genuine miracles: resurrection from death, shadow-binding, fire visions, and magical flames that burn without fuel. Melisandre brings this religion to Westeros through Stannis Baratheon, and later resurrects Jon Snow at Castle Black.
- Melisandre โ Red Priestess; resurrected Jon Snow; burned Shireen
- Thoros of Myr โ resurrected Beric Dondarrion six times
- Kinvara โ High Priestess of Volantis; supporter of Daenerys
- Magic confirmed โ resurrection, shadow babies, fire vision
The oldest religion in Westeros โ predating the Andals and the Faith of the Seven by thousands of years. The Old Gods have no fixed form, no priests, and no holy texts. Worship occurs at godswoods โ groves containing a weirwood tree with a carved face. The faces are carved by the Children of the Forest, who can see through all weirwood trees simultaneously. The Three-Eyed Raven (ultimately Bran Stark) embodies the full potential of this power: greensight reaching across all history simultaneously.
- Practiced in โ The North (all of it); some beyond the Wall
- Weirwood network โ all face-carved trees are connected
- Greenseers โ rare individuals who see through the network
- Bran Stark โ the most powerful greenseer in living history
Two additional belief systems shape key characters. The Drowned God of the Ironborn teaches that what is dead may never die โ the sea gives, the sea takes, and the Ironborn make offerings by drowning priests in actual seawater and reviving them (sometimes unsuccessfully). The Many-Faced God of the Faceless Men of Braavos is death itself โ worshipped by trained assassins who use glamours and identity-shifting. Arya Stark trains with them in Braavos for two seasons.
- Ironborn saying โ “What is dead may never die, but rises harder and stronger”
- Faceless Men โ assassins serving death as the one true god
- The House of Black and White โ their temple in Braavos
- Arya Stark โ trains as a Faceless assassin, S5โS6
Key Prophecies of the Known World
In Westeros and Essos, prophecies are not metaphors โ they have a documented history of literal fulfillment, centuries apart.
The central prophecy of the Lord of Light religion โ predicting the rebirth of the legendary hero who forged Lightbringer and ended the Long Night. Both Jon Snow and Daenerys Targaryen are primary candidates.
Maggy the Frog’s prophecy to young Cersei โ that she would be strangled by “the little brother.” Cersei assumed Tyrion. The series ended with Jaime (also a younger twin) crushing Cersei beneath rubble, technically fulfilling the spirit if not the letter.
The Dothraki prophecy proclaimed over Daenerys’s unborn child Rhaego โ the son of Khal Drogo. Rhaego was stillborn after Mirri Maz Duur’s blood magic, but the prophecy may have been redirected to Daenerys herself, who united multiple khalasars.
The Targaryen greenseer Daenys the Dreamer foresaw the Doom of Valyria and convinced her father Aenar Targaryen to relocate House Targaryen to Dragonstone 12 years before the eruption. The most literal prophetic fulfillment in Targaryen history.
A legend so old it may be myth โ a Lord Commander who gave his soul and his seed to a woman with blue eyes and pale skin beyond the Wall, declared himself Night’s King, and was destroyed by the King of Winter working with the Free Folk. His identity is unknown but rumored Stark.
A prophecy from Rhaegar Targaryen himself โ that three Targaryens must bond with three dragons to fulfill destiny. Rhaegar believed himself to be one. Jon Snow’s reveal as Aegon Targaryen, combined with Daenerys and her three dragons, appeared to fulfill the structural requirement โ but two of three dragons died before the finale.
Legendary Artifacts of the Known World
The weapons, materials, and objects that shaped history โ and the only things proven to kill White Walkers.
A Valyrian steel sword with a white direwolf pommel, given to Jon Snow by Jeor Mormont. One of fewer than 300 Valyrian steel weapons in the world.
Current Owner: Jon Snow / Aegon TargaryenThe dagger used in the attempt on Bran’s life in S1, eventually passed to Arya Stark โ who used it to kill the Night King in S8E3. Its Valyrian steel was essential to the kill.
Final Use: Arya Stark โ Night KingTywin Lannister had Ned Stark’s great sword Ice melted down and reforged into two Valyrian steel swords. Oathkeeper was given to Brienne; Widow’s Wail to Joffrey, later Jaime.
Oathkeeper: Brienne ยท Widow’s Wail: Jaime โ BronnNatural obsidian formed by volcanic activity. One of only two materials proven to kill White Walkers and their wights. Dragonstone sits atop a massive dragonglass deposit, discovered and mined by Jon Snow’s forces in S7.
Mined at Dragonstone ยท Distributed for the Long NightAegon the Conqueror’s dragon, described as large enough to swallow an auroch whole, with wings that could blot out the sun. Balerion lived for 200 years and was the last dragon alive who remembered Valyria.
Deceased โ Died of old age during Jaehaerys I’s reignNamed for Khal Drogo, Rhaegar Targaryen, and Viserys Targaryen. Rhaegal was killed by Euron’s scorpion bolts in S8. Viserion was killed by the Night King and reanimated as an ice dragon. Drogon survived and flew east with Daenerys’s body after the finale.
Drogon: Alive ยท Rhaegal: Dead S8 ยท Viserion: Killed/Destroyed S8Forged from the swords of Aegon’s defeated enemies, melted together by Balerion’s dragonfire. Aegon designed it to be uncomfortable โ a king should not sit easy. Destroyed by Drogon after Daenerys’s death in S8E6.
Destroyed โ S8E6 by DrogonThe ancestral Valyrian steel greatsword of House Tarly, taken by Samwell Tarly from his abusive father Randyll when he and Gilly fled Horn Hill in Season 6. Sam carries it throughout the final seasons.
Current Owner: Samwell TarlyKnown Valyrian Steel Weapons in Westeros
| Weapon | Type | House / Origin | Known Users | Current Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Longclaw | Bastard sword | House Mormont | Jeor Mormont โ Jon Snow | With Jon Snow (beyond the Wall) |
| Oathkeeper | Longsword (ยฝ of Ice) | Reforged from Stark’s Ice | Jaime Lannister โ Brienne of Tarth | With Brienne of Tarth |
| Widow’s Wail | Longsword (ยฝ of Ice) | Reforged from Stark’s Ice | Joffrey โ Jaime โ Bronn | Fate uncertain |
| Heartsbane | Greatsword | House Tarly | Samwell Tarly | With Samwell Tarly |
| Catspaw Dagger | Dagger | Unknown origin | Littlefinger โ Bran โ Arya | Used to kill Night King; fate after S8 unknown |
| Ice (original) | Greatsword | House Stark (ancestral) | Ned Stark โ Tywin (reforged) | Destroyed โ reforged into Oathkeeper + Widow’s Wail |
Game of Thrones Lore FAQs
The most-searched lore questions from the series โ answered in full, with book context where relevant.
What is the Long Night in Game of Thrones?
What was the Doom of Valyria?
What is Valyrian steel and why is it special?
What is the Prince That Was Promised prophecy?
Who created the White Walkers?
What happened in Robert’s Rebellion?
What is the significance of weirwood trees in Game of Thrones?
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