Difference between revisions of "Children of the Forest"

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Approximately eight thousand years before Aegon's Landing, during an extended period of winter known as [[The Long Night]], the Children of the Forest joined with the First Men, to fight against the [[Others]] in the [[The Long Night#War for the Dawn|War for the Dawn]]. Eventually the Others were driven back into the Lands of Always Winter.  
 
Approximately eight thousand years before Aegon's Landing, during an extended period of winter known as [[The Long Night]], the Children of the Forest joined with the First Men, to fight against the [[Others]] in the [[The Long Night#War for the Dawn|War for the Dawn]]. Eventually the Others were driven back into the Lands of Always Winter.  
  
The children of the forest taught the worship of the Old Gods to the First Men, but this was largely supplanted in the South by the [[Faith of the Seven]] after the [[Andal Invasion]]. Relations between the children and humans grew distant over the years, until they ceased altogether. By the time of Aegon's Landing, humans had not seen the children for thousands of years.
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The children of the forest taught the worship of the Old Gods to the First Men, but this was largely supplanted in the South by the [[Faith of the Seven]] after the [[Andal Invasion]]. Relations between the children and humans grew distant over the years, until they ceased altogether. By the time of Aegon's Landing, humans had not seen the children for thousands of years.<ref>[[A Game of Thrones]], Chapter 66, Bran</ref>
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==References and Sources==
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{{references}}
  
 
[[Category:Sentient species]]
 
[[Category:Sentient species]]
 
[[fr:Enfants de la forêt]]
 
[[fr:Enfants de la forêt]]
 
[[ru:Дети Леса]]
 
[[ru:Дети Леса]]

Revision as of 05:24, 16 January 2010

The Children of the Forest are the original sentient inhabitant of Westeros. They are a mysterious and magical people who have not been seen by humans for thousands of years.

Appearance

The appearance of the children is not definitively known. Tales describe them as diminutive humanoid creatures, dark and beautiful.

History

Approximately 12,000 years before Aegon's Landing, the children ruled the entire continent of Westeros, worshiping nameless nature spirits that were later called the Old Gods. Around this time the First Men crossed into Westeros from the eastern continent via the Arm of Dorne. Their burning of the great weirwoods caused the children to go to war against them. The children wielded obsidian weapons and bows in battle, but also used powerful magic. They shattered the Arm of Dorne, forming the archipelago later known as the Stepstones, but it was not enough to stop the advance of the First Men. Eventually, the war ended in a truce known as the Pact, which was made on the Isle of Faces in the midst of the lake known as Gods Eye. The children's greenseers and wood dancers met with the First Men and terms were agreed: the Children retained the standing forests and the First Men were able to settle the open lands. Faces were carved on all the trees of the island to cement the agreement, with the sacred order of green men established to maintain it, and the Pact endured for some four thousand years.

Approximately eight thousand years before Aegon's Landing, during an extended period of winter known as The Long Night, the Children of the Forest joined with the First Men, to fight against the Others in the War for the Dawn. Eventually the Others were driven back into the Lands of Always Winter.

The children of the forest taught the worship of the Old Gods to the First Men, but this was largely supplanted in the South by the Faith of the Seven after the Andal Invasion. Relations between the children and humans grew distant over the years, until they ceased altogether. By the time of Aegon's Landing, humans had not seen the children for thousands of years.[1]

References and Sources

  1. A Game of Thrones, Chapter 66, Bran