Difference between revisions of "House Gardener"
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==History== | ==History== | ||
− | The Gardeners claimed descent from | + | The Gardeners claimed descent from the mythical [[Garth Greenhand]] who is said to have been the High King who lead the [[First Men]] across the [[Arm of Dorne]] and the ancestor of numerous houses in the Reach. His firstborn child was [[Garth the Gardener]], the legendary first King of the Reach who reigned in the Age of Heroes, and the founder of House Gardener. According to legend, Garth the Gardener made his home on the hill atop the [[Mander]] that in time would become known as Highgarden, and wore a crown of vines and flowers. From his loins sprang House Gardener, whose kings would rule the Reach for many thousands of years.{{ref|TWOIAF| The Reach}} |
The Gardener kings initially ruled the [[Reach proper]], although over time they expanded their territory, adding the western marches between [[Horn Hill]] and [[Nightsong]]. King [[Meryn III Gardener|Meryn III]] brought the [[Arbor]] into the Kingdom and made [[House Redwyne]] his vassals after his cousin, the last King of the Arbor, was lost at sea.{{ref|TWOIAF| Oldtown}} King [[Garland II Gardener|Garland II]] the Bridegroom brought [[House Hightower]] of [[Oldtown]] and their domains into the realm by wedding his daughter to [[Lymond Hightower]] whilst putting aside his own wives to marry Lord Lymand's daughter.{{ref|TWOIAF| The Gardener Kings}} King [[Gwayne III Gardener|Gwayne III]] the Fat persuaded Lords [[House Manderly|Manderly]] and [[House Peake|Peake]] to accept his judgement on their quarrel, and do fealty for their lands without any bloodshed. | The Gardener kings initially ruled the [[Reach proper]], although over time they expanded their territory, adding the western marches between [[Horn Hill]] and [[Nightsong]]. King [[Meryn III Gardener|Meryn III]] brought the [[Arbor]] into the Kingdom and made [[House Redwyne]] his vassals after his cousin, the last King of the Arbor, was lost at sea.{{ref|TWOIAF| Oldtown}} King [[Garland II Gardener|Garland II]] the Bridegroom brought [[House Hightower]] of [[Oldtown]] and their domains into the realm by wedding his daughter to [[Lymond Hightower]] whilst putting aside his own wives to marry Lord Lymand's daughter.{{ref|TWOIAF| The Gardener Kings}} King [[Gwayne III Gardener|Gwayne III]] the Fat persuaded Lords [[House Manderly|Manderly]] and [[House Peake|Peake]] to accept his judgement on their quarrel, and do fealty for their lands without any bloodshed. |
Revision as of 21:25, 18 March 2015
House Gardener of Highgarden | |
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Coat of arms | Argent, a hand couped vert |
Seat | Highgarden |
Head | Extinct |
Region | The Reach |
Title | King of the Reach |
Cadet branches |
|
Founder | Garth the Gardener[1] |
Founded | Age of Heroes |
Died out | 1 AC in the War of Conquest |
House Gardener of Highgarden is the extinct house of the old and famed Kings of the The Reach. Their seat was Highgarden, and the Gardener kings sat upon a living throne called the Oakenseat that grew from an oak that the mythical Garth Greenhand himself was reputedly said to have planted. The Kings of House Gardener wore crowns of vines and flowers when at peace, and crowns of bronze thorns (later iron) when they rode to war.[2] Their blazon was a green hand over a white field.[3][4]
History
The Gardeners claimed descent from the mythical Garth Greenhand who is said to have been the High King who lead the First Men across the Arm of Dorne and the ancestor of numerous houses in the Reach. His firstborn child was Garth the Gardener, the legendary first King of the Reach who reigned in the Age of Heroes, and the founder of House Gardener. According to legend, Garth the Gardener made his home on the hill atop the Mander that in time would become known as Highgarden, and wore a crown of vines and flowers. From his loins sprang House Gardener, whose kings would rule the Reach for many thousands of years.[1]
The Gardener kings initially ruled the Reach proper, although over time they expanded their territory, adding the western marches between Horn Hill and Nightsong. King Meryn III brought the Arbor into the Kingdom and made House Redwyne his vassals after his cousin, the last King of the Arbor, was lost at sea.[5] King Garland II the Bridegroom brought House Hightower of Oldtown and their domains into the realm by wedding his daughter to Lymond Hightower whilst putting aside his own wives to marry Lord Lymand's daughter.[2] King Gwayne III the Fat persuaded Lords Manderly and Peake to accept his judgement on their quarrel, and do fealty for their lands without any bloodshed.
The Gardeners often warred with the Stormlands and Dorne. Gyles III was a king that went to war against the Storm King. While he was with his army in the east, the Reach was attacked by the King of the Rock.[3] Approximately a thousand years ago House Gardener drove House Manderly out of the Reach after the latter House overreached itself. The Manderlys fled from the Mander for the White Knife in the North.[3][6][7] King Garse VII Gardener was killed by the Storm King Argilac the Arrogant at Summerfield.
War of Conquest and Extinction
House Gardener died out in the Targaryen War of Conquest three hundred years before the time of the War of the Five Kings. When Aegon the Conquerer invaded Westeros, King Mern IX joined forces with King Loren of the Rock to put an end to the invaders.The two armies came togeather amongst the wide open plains south of the river Blackwater, near where the Goldroad would one day run.
King Mern demanded, since he had brought half as many more men to the battle, he should have the honor of commanding the center of the combined Reach-Westerlands army, and he led the charge against Aegon's army alongside his kin. A major battle was then fought in which the forces of the two kings met the Targaryen army. The Targaryen host broke, but by then Aegon and his sisters had taken to the air on their dragons.
The dragons killed 4,000 men of the combined Lannister-Gardener army, among them King Mern alongside all of his sons, grandsons, brothers, cousins, and other kin.[8] Another thousand men perished from sword and spears and arrows. The battle become known afterward as the Field of Fire. One nephew of King Mern survived, but he died of his burns three days later. When he died, House Gardener died with him.
Mern's steward, Harlen Tyrell, surrendered Highgarden to Aegon and was named Lord of the Reach in exchange for his submission to the Iron Throne.[9] Many of the houses from the Reach can trace their descent back to Garth Greenhand, a fact that is often used to boast of a better claim than the Tyrells as the rightful rulers of the Reach (the Tyrells are descendants of the Gardeners only through the female line). Among the houses with Garth as an ancestor are the Florents, the Rowans, the Oakhearts, and many others. Apparently Garth had many sons himself.[10]
Golden currency from the time of the Gardeners is still in use, albeit rare.[11][12] The coins are named Hands, each worth roughly half a Gold Dragon,[12] and feature the Hand sigil of House Gardener on one side and the likeness of the current king on the other side. They are known to have been made with Garth XII's effigy.[11]
Historical Members
No precise lineage of House Gardner is known. Beginning with the mythical first king Garth the Gardener, the Gardeners ruled as Kings of the Reach, through war and peace and later the assimilation with the Andal invaders, down the generations until the last Gardener King Mern IX and his kin was killed at the Field of Fire in the War of Conquest.
- King Gareth II, called "the Grim"
- King Garland II, called "the Bridegroom", who brought Oldtown into the realm.
- King Garland VI
- King Garse VII, slain by the last Storm King, Argilac the Arrogant, in the Battle of Summerfield.
- King Garth the Gardener, the mythical first King of the Reach, apocryphal son of Garth Greenhand.
- King Garth III, called "the Great"
- King Garth V, called "Hammer of the Dornish"
- King Garth VI, called "the Morningstar"
- King Garth VII, called "the Goldenhand", greatest of all the Gardener Kings. His rule is known as the Golden Reign.
- King Garth IX
- King Merle I, called "the Meek", his son and successor.
- King Gwayne V, his grandson, Merle I's son and successor. The first Gardener king born into the Faith of the Seven, as well as the first to be made a knight.
- King Merle I, called "the Meek", his son and successor.
- King Garth X, called "Garth Greybeard", under his long reign House Gardener reached the nadir of their power.
- King Garth XII,
- King Gordan I, called "Grey-Eyes"
- King Greydon
- King Gwayne I, called "the Gallant"
- King Gwayne III, called "the Fat"
- King Gwayne IV, called "the Gods-fearing"
- King Gyles I, called "the Woe", who reportedly sold three quarters of Oldtown's population into slavery.
- King Gyles II
- King Gyles III, under whose rule Highgarden reached the apex of its power.
- King John II, called "the Tall"
- King Mern II, called "the Mason"
- King Mern III, called "the Malding"
- King Mern VI
- King Garth XI, called "Garth the Painter", his son and successor.
- King Mern IX, last of the Gardener Kings. Killed at the Field of Fire alongside his kin.
- Prince Edmund Gardener, his son and heir
- Prince Gawen Gardener, his son
- Two other sons
- Two young grandsons
- A nephew, last of the Gardeners
- King Meryn III, who brought the Arbor into the realm.
- King Perceon III, who had House Manderly exiled from the Reach.
References and Notes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 The World of Ice & Fire, The Reach.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 The World of Ice & Fire, The Gardener Kings.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 The Sworn Sword.
- ↑ The Citadel. Heraldry: Houses in the Reach
- ↑ The World of Ice & Fire, Oldtown.
- ↑ A Dance with Dragons, Chapter 9, Davos I.
- ↑ A Dance with Dragons, Chapter 19, Davos III.
- ↑ A Game of Thrones, Chapter 13, Tyrion II.
- ↑ A Game of Thrones, Appendix.
- ↑ A Storm of Swords, Chapter 61, Sansa V.
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 A Feast for Crows, Chapter 7, Cersei II.
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 A Feast for Crows, Chapter 16, Jaime II.
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