The Starks vs. Lannisters are one of the central quarrels in Game of Thrones. Ned Stark, the Lord of Winterfell and Warden of the North, often finds himself at odds with Ser Jaime Lannister in the first season of the series. While it may seem like this feud starts with Jaime’s heartless act of pushing Bran Stark out of a tower, the animosity actually began years before the pilot episode.As the unsung hero of Game of Thrones’ first season, Ned acts as a portal into the world of Westeros and its complicated politics. Ned is designed as the moral compass of the series, so audiences are meant to dislike or love whomever Ned chooses to dislike or love. Almost immediately, Ned and Jaime get off on the wrong foot during a dinner at Winterfell when Jaime insults Ned for being “too old” for tournaments. It could’ve been playful banter between a Southerner and Northerner at first, but the conversation is a passive-aggressive product of a bitter history. In fact, most of the hatred actually stems from Ned.The event that produced Ned’s strong resentment for Jaime occurred 17 years before the present day Game of Thrones timeline: King Aerys II Targaryen’s (also known as the “Mad King”) murder. The war known as “Robert’s Rebellion” features many betrayals, but the crux of it is that Prince Rhaegar Targaryen supposedly kidnapped and raped Lyanna Stark, Ned’s sister and Robert Baratheon’s betrothed. Ned’s brother and father were executed on Aerys’ order when they demanded justice, which further gave the Starks and Baratheons reason to declare war.Every Targaryen In House Of The Dragon & How They’re Related To Maester AemonGame of Thrones Actor Never Understood How Big the Show Was While Filming
The Starks vs. Lannisters are one of the central quarrels in Game of Thrones. Ned Stark, the Lord of Winterfell and Warden of the North, often finds himself at odds with Ser Jaime Lannister in the first season of the series. While it may seem like this feud starts with Jaime’s heartless act of pushing Bran Stark out of a tower, the animosity actually began years before the pilot episode.
As the unsung hero of Game of Thrones‘ first season, Ned acts as a portal into the world of Westeros and its complicated politics. Ned is designed as the moral compass of the series, so audiences are meant to dislike or love whomever Ned chooses to dislike or love. Almost immediately, Ned and Jaime get off on the wrong foot during a dinner at Winterfell when Jaime insults Ned for being “too old” for tournaments. It could’ve been playful banter between a Southerner and Northerner at first, but the conversation is a passive-aggressive product of a bitter history. In fact, most of the hatred actually stems from Ned.
The event that produced Ned’s strong resentment for Jaime occurred 17 years before the present day Game of Thrones timeline: King Aerys II Targaryen’s (also known as the “Mad King”) murder. The war known as “Robert’s Rebellion” features many betrayals, but the crux of it is that Prince Rhaegar Targaryen supposedly kidnapped and raped Lyanna Stark, Ned’s sister and Robert Baratheon’s betrothed. Ned’s brother and father were executed on Aerys’ order when they demanded justice, which further gave the Starks and Baratheons reason to declare war.
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