Difference between revisions of "House Farman"

From A Wiki of Ice and Fire
Jump to: navigation, search
(A Song of Ice and Fire)
(added coa)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
{{Noble House  
 
{{Noble House  
 
| House_name          = House Farman of Faircastle
 
| House_name          = House Farman of Faircastle
| image        =  
+
| image        = [[File:Farman.png|250px]]
 
| image_caption =  
 
| image_caption =  
 
| Coat_of_arms = three silver ships on blue, a border of crimson and gold
 
| Coat_of_arms = three silver ships on blue, a border of crimson and gold

Revision as of 05:24, 8 November 2011

House Farman of Faircastle
Farman.png
Coat of arms three silver ships on blue, a border of crimson and gold
Seat Faircastle
Head Sebaston Farman
Region the Westerlands
Title Lord of Fair Isle
Overlord House Lannister

House Farman of Faircastle is the noble house ruling the Fair Isle, off the coast of the Westerlands.

Neither their arms or their words appear in the books, but according to semi-canon sources they blazon their arms with three silver ships on blue, a border of crimson and gold.[1]

The Farman House at the end of the third century

The known Farmans during the timespan of the events described on A Song of Ice and Fire are:

References in the books

Dunk and Egg

A Song of Ice and Fire

  • Some years after Lord Tywin defeated the Tarbecks and the Reynes, Lord Farman of Faircastle grew truculent. Tywin just sent him as an envoy a music playing "The Rains of Castamere", and that was enough to make Lord Farman reconsider his position.
  • Jeyne Farman had been Cersei Lannister's companion at Casterly Rock during her youth. It is possible that she is the daughter of the rebellious Lord Farman and was requested by Tywin as a hostage to ensure his loyalty.
  • Cersei Lannister, 'fat' Jeyne Farman and Melara Hetherspoon went together to visit Maggy the Frog, but Jeyne ran away from the tent as soon as the maegi opened her eyes.
  • Cersei thinks that perhaps plump, timid Jeyne Farman did the most clever thing when she fled, since afterwards she had a pleasant life marrying one of her brothers bannermen and whelping a dozen children.

References and Notes

  1. The Citadel. Heraldry: Houses in the Westerlands