Difference between revisions of "Tywin Lannister"

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{{Character   
 
{{Character   
 
| Character_name = [[File:House_Lannister.png|50px]] Tywin Lannister [[File:House_Lannister.png|50px]]           
 
| Character_name = [[File:House_Lannister.png|50px]] Tywin Lannister [[File:House_Lannister.png|50px]]           
| image =    [[File:Tywin Lannister3.png|250px|Charles Dance as Tywin Lannister]]   
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| image =    [[File:Tywin Lannister3.png|450px|Charles Dance as Tywin Lannister]]   
 
| image_caption =  Charles Dance as Tywin Lannister
 
| image_caption =  Charles Dance as Tywin Lannister
 
| Played_by = Charles Dance
 
| Played_by = Charles Dance

Revision as of 21:10, 1 July 2011

House Lannister.png Tywin Lannister House Lannister.png
Charles Dance as Tywin Lannister
Charles Dance as Tywin Lannister

Title Lord of Casterly Rock, Shield of Lannisport, Warden of the West
Allegiance House Lannister
Born +/- 242 AL
Died 299 AL
King's Landing
Books

Played by Charles Dance

Tywin Lannister is Lord of Casterly Rock, Shield of Lannisport and Warden of the West. A calculating, ruthless, and controlling man, Tywin is one of the most powerful lords in Westeros. He is the father of Jaime, Cersei, and Tyrion Lannister. He loves his children Jaime and Cersei, but despises Tyrion. This is partly because Tyrion is deformed, but also Tywin blames his son for causing his beloved wife Joanna's death during his birth, as well as for shaming the family name with his frequent whoring.

Appearance

Tywin is a tall, slender, broad-shouldered man in his fifties. He has kept his head shaved ever since he started going bald, but grows out bushy golden side-whiskers and has green eyes flecked with gold. In battle, he wears deep crimson armor highlighted with gold, with a cloth-of-gold cape.[1]

History

In his youth, Tywin watched his father Tytos mishandle the Lannister fortunes and nearly ruin the family. After becoming lord of the house, Tywin managed to single-handedly restore the family honor and fortunes. He dedicates all his efforts to maintaining the Lannisters' prestige.

Tywin was a powerful Hand of the King for many years under Aerys II until Aerys' increasing paranoia and jealousy drove the two into several bitter disagreements. After Aerys refused to marry Cersei to his heir, Prince Rhaegar, and raised Jaime to the Kingsguard without Tywin's assent, Tywin resigned the position of Hand and returned to his own lands. During Robert's Rebellion Tywin remained at Casterly Rock, taking no side until after Robert's decisive victory at the Battle of the Trident. After the battle, Tywin mustered his forces and rode for the capital of King's Landing. After Aerys was convinced by Grand Maester Pycelle that Tywin had come to aid him, he ordered the gates of the city opened. Tywin's forces brutally sacked the city while knights sworn to him slew Rhaegar's wife and children and his son Jaime slew the Mad King. Tywin swore fealty to newly-crowned King Robert Baratheon and secured the King's marriage to his daughter Cersei, whose proposed betrothal to Prince Rhaegar Targaryen had been rejected by King Aerys much to Tywin's bitter disappointment. Cersei's marriage to the new, young, and popular King did much to make up for Tywin's earlier disappointment. After the rebellion, Tywin returned to Casterly Rock where he continued to serve as Lord and Warden of the West. Due to King Robert's financial mismanagement of the realm, as well as his own new connection to the throne by marriage, Lord Tywin frequently lent money to the crown, placing the court in King's Landing in great debt to House Lannister.

Though ruthless, Tywin Lannister was also an able and shrewd ruler who brought great prosperity during his tenures as the King's Hand. He was especially talented at the raising of funds, leading to a persistent jest that he must "shit gold." His daughter Cersei once reminisced that the common folk cheered twice as loud for him as they did for their actual king, Mad Aerys II. Though his children also greatly respected him, none of them were ever able to conform to the paths he had laid out for them, a fact that caused many difficulties.

Recent Events

A Game of Thrones

Believed to be responsible for hiring an assassin to murder Bran Stark while he lay in a coma, Tywin's son Tyrion was encountered and arrested at the Inn of the Crossroads by Catelyn Tully, the wife of Eddard Stark. She took him to her sister Lysa, at The Eyrie, for trial. Tywin saw his son's arrest as a kidnapping and a direct slight on his family's honor, and in response sent Ser Gregor Clegane and his men, disguised as brigands, to sack and pillage various villages and hamlets across the Riverlands, Catelyn's home. These raids marked one of the seminal points in what was to become the War of the Five Kings.

Tywin's aim was to draw Eddard out of King's Landing, capture him, and exchange him for the freedom of his son. Eddard, however, had been injured in a skirmish on the streets of King's Landing with Tywin's son Jaime and sent Lord Beric Dondarrion in his stead. When Beric's forces reached the Mummer's Ford, soldiers of Tywin's and Gregor's attacked from all sides, routing Dondarrion's host. Dondarrion himself was mortally wounded, though he would be revived by Thoros of Myr and go on to form the Brotherhood Without Banners, which would continually harass the Lannister forces for the duration of the war.

As the war gained momentum, Tywin's forces took the majority of the Riverlands, including Riverrun, before meeting their first real opposition in the Battle of the Green Fork. Just prior to the battle, Tyrion, having won his freedom from the Vale via trial by combat and earned the loyalty of many of the Mountain clans along the way, met up with his father. Tywin sent Tyrion and his clansmen into the battle on the left flank, believing the undisciplined men likely to rout, but giving the Northern commander, which Tywin believed to be the young and inexperienced Robb Stark, a chance to over-commit and be annihilated. The clansmen did not rout, however, and the Northern commander was not Stark but instead the more cautious and experienced Roose Bolton. The battle was a Lannister victory, but it bought enough time for a separate Northern force, under Robb Stark's command, to cross the Trident at The Twins and retake Riverrun, capturing Tywin's other son Jaime in the process.

After the death of King Robert, Tywin had been named Hand of the King for his grandson Joffrey Baratheon. After the battle, he sent Tyrion to King's Landing to serve as Hand in his stead, and to prepare the city's defenses in anticipation of an attack from one or both of Robert's brothers Stannis and Renly, both of whom had laid claim to the Iron Throne, while Tywin managed the war with the North and the Riverlands.

A Clash of Kings

The loss of Riverrun meant that Tywin was not able to pursue and destroy Roose Bolton's forces. Instead he marched south to Harrenhal while he pondered his next move. When Robb Stark marched from Riverrun and invaded the Westerlands, smashing a new Lannister host being raised and trained by Stafford Lannister at Oxcross and turning his forces loose to scour the Westerlands, Tywin left Harrenhal and marched his forces West in pursuit. Robb's plan was to lead Tywin's army on a long chase across the Westerlands, bleeding his forces and living off of their lands. Instead, Edmure Tully, who had been tasked with holding Riverrun, met Tywin's army in the field in the Battle of the Fords.

Tywin's forces were bloodied and thrown back, but the delay allowed word to reach Tywin that Stannis Baratheon had murdered his brother Renly and laid claim to the majority of his army, and that he was marching and sailing on King's Landing with an enormous force. Tywin turned his force Southeast on a forced march to King's Landing, and arrived just in time for the waning moments of the Battle of the Blackwater, where he was able to break and drive away the majority of Stannis' army, which had been on the cusp of victory, by taking them in the flank. Tywin's son Tyrion, who had done much for the city's defenses, was critically wounded in the fighting.

A Storm of Swords

Tywin's timely arrival at the Battle of the Blackwater allowed him to take the majority of the credit for the Lannister victory. Tywin assumed his official position as King Joffrey's Hand, while giving Tyrion, after his recovery, the position of Master of Coin, which Tyrion saw as a demotion and an insult. He arranged for Tyrion to be wed to Sansa Stark, giving him claim over Winterfell and directly denying Tyrion's ambition to inherit Casterly Rock. He also made plans to find a suitor to marry his widowed daughter Queen Cersei, though they were never realized.

After learning that Robb Stark had unexpectedly wed Jeyne Westerling and that House Westerling had gone over to the Starks, Tywin remained in communication, via raven, with Jeyne's mother Sybell Spicer, as well as with Roose Bolton, who had switched sides to the Lannisters after taking Harrenhal, and Walder Frey, who saw Robb's marriage to Jeyne as an insult to his house, as it broke a marriage pact Robb had previously made to wed a Frey girl. The Red Wedding was the direct result of their correspondence, which saw Robb Stark betrayed and slain along with the vast majority of his host, effectively ending the war with House Lannister the victor.

Not long after, King Joffrey was poisoned and died at the feast that followed his wedding to Margaery Tyrell. Tywin's son Tyrion was (falsely) accused of the crime, and Tywin agreed to be one of Tyrion's three judges, alongside Oberyn Martell and Mace Tyrell, at his trial. When it became clear that he was going to be found guilty, Tyrion demanded trial by combat, and Oberyn Martell surprisingly volunteered to champion him. Tywin selected Ser Gregor Clegane to represent the crown. Gregor won the duel, slaying Oberyn, and Tyrion was thus found guilty.

Awaiting his sentencing, however, Tyrion was freed from the Black Cells by his brother Jaime, who had made his way to King's Landing after being released from Riverrun by Catelyn. During his escape, Tyrion came upon a ladder that led directly into the Tower of the Hand, and climbed it straight into Tywin's residence, where he found and retrieved a crossbow. He also found his ex-whore Shae in Tywin's bed, wearing nothing but his father's golden chain of office. Tyrion strangled her to death with it. He then found Tywin in the privy, and brought up old, deep wounds regarding his onetime wife Tysha, that Tywin had, many years back, made to be repeatedly raped as a sharp lesson to his son. Tywin remained belligerent, repeatedly calling her a "whore", which Tyrion saw as the final insult and shot him in his bowels with the crossbow, killing him.

A Feast for Crows

After his body was discovered, it was prepared for a state burial. The remains of Lord Tywin were shown for seven days in the Great Sept of Baelor before making its way west with an entourage of knights and lords from the Westerlands.

Family

Tywin married his cousin Joanna Lannister. They had three children; Cersei, Jaime and Tyrion. Joanna died when giving birth to Tyrion. It is an unexplained mystery why Tywin named his first son Jaime, after no one known, and gave the family-traditional-style name Tyrion to his deformed second son.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Tytos
 
Jeyne
Marbrand
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Tywin
 
Joanna
Lannister
 
Kevan
 
Dorna
Swyft
 
Emmon
Frey
 
Genna
 
Tygett
 
Darlessa
Marbrand
 
Gerion
 
Briony
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Robert
Baratheon
 
Cersei
 
Jaime
 
Tyrion
 
Sansa
Stark
 
 
 
 
 
 
Issue
 
 
 
 
 
Tyrek
 
Ermesande
Hayford
 
Joy
Hill
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Joffrey
Baratheon
 
Myrcella
Baratheon
 
Tommen
Baratheon
 
Amerei
Frey
 
Lancel
 
Willem
 
Martyn
 
Janei
 
 
 


References and Notes

This page uses content from the English Wikipedia. The original content was at House Lannister.
The list of authors can be seen in the page history of House Lannister.
As with A Wiki of Ice and Fire, the content of Wikipedia is available under the GNU Free Documentation License.