House Stark is described as one of the Great Houses of the Seven Kingdoms and the principal house of
the North. Its seat is at
Winterfell, one of the oldest castles in the Seven Kingdoms. Its coat of arms displays a grey
direwolf running on a white field, and its
words are
Winter is Coming. Bastards born in the North are given the surname "Snow". House Stark had ruled as the Kings in the North for thousands of years until
House Targaryen conquered Westeros, whereafter the Starks were known as the Lords of Winterfell and Wardens of the North. For prizing honor and devotion to duty, House Stark is the closest of the noble houses to heroism. Descended from Bran the Builder, the architect of the Wall, House Stark is the chief First Men dynasty in Westeros due to their successful repulsion of the Andal invasion and became the ruling house in the North after defeating the Barrow Kings and slowly uniting the North into one kingdom, contesting for dominance with House Bolton of the Dreadfort, the second-most powerful Northern house with a sinister reputation for their flaying tradition. Their expanding dominion would also repel incursions of pirates and raiders, and secure control of the Neck through their vassals of House Reed. They would also gain a new vassal from the Reach after House Manderly was exiled, granting them White Harbor in exchange for protection against piracy. House Stark would ultimately unite the North and drive the ironborn away, making enemies with House Hoare, and a new vassal in House Mormont of Bear Island, just as the Andals arrived in Westeros and began conquering every kingdom the First Men had built and converting them to the Faith of the Seven. The Starks made peace with the Boltons and finally unified the North and began opposing the Andals as one force instead of individually like the rest of the First Men, sacking Andalos and driving them back from the fortress of Moat Cailin. They would lose their strength at sea after a failed voyage across the Sunset Sea ended in all their ships being torched. House Stark would also aid the Night's Watch several times against wildling raids, defeating many Kings-beyond-the-Wall, and forming a second branch, called House Karstark. During Aegon's conquest of Westeros, the Starks intended to oppose the Targaryens, unwilling to bow to an outsider, but King Torrhen Stark knelt after hearing of the scorching of Harrenhal and the devastating outcome of the Field of Fire caused by the Targaryen dragons, becoming the first Warden of the North, and had a marriage alliance with House Arryn to keep the realm together. Over the course of the novels, the Starks are scattered by the War of the Five Kings, and the fate of the House remains uncertain, as most characters believe that all the legitimate Stark sons are dead.
Family Eddard Stark Eddard "Ned" Stark is the Lord of Winterfell and Warden of the North, and briefly serves as Hand of the King to Robert Baratheon. He is executed, by Joffrey's order, on the steps of the Great Sept of Baelor. He serves as a POV character for 15 chapters in
A Game of Thrones.
Catelyn Stark Catelyn Stark is the Lady of
Winterfell, wife of Lord
Eddard Stark, and mother to his children Robb, Sansa, Arya, Bran, and Rickon. She is the daughter of Lord
Hoster Tully of Riverrun; niece to Ser
Brynden Tully (also known as the legendary "Blackfish") and sister to
Lysa Arryn of the Vale and to
Edmure Tully. She is murdered during the Red Wedding, and later resurrected as an undead, vengeful killer under the name of Lady Stoneheart. She serves as a POV character for 25 chapters throughout
A Game of Thrones,
A Clash of Kings and
A Storm of Swords.
Robb Stark Robb Stark is the oldest child of Eddard and Catelyn Stark, and the heir to Winterfell. He is not a POV character, but features in the POV chapters of his family members in the first three novels in the series. After his father's arrest and execution, Robb rebels against the Crown and seeks to
secede the North from the Seven Kingdoms. Robb is also slain at The Red Wedding along with his mother.
Sansa Stark Sansa Stark is the second child and elder daughter of Eddard and Catelyn Stark. She serves as a POV character for 24 chapters throughout
A Game of Thrones,
A Clash of Kings,
A Storm of Swords, and
A Feast for Crows. Sansa is introduced as beautiful and demure.
Arya Stark Arya Stark is the third child and younger daughter of
Eddard and
Catelyn Stark. She serves as a POV character for 33 chapters throughout
A Game of Thrones,
A Clash of Kings,
A Storm of Swords,
A Feast for Crows, and
A Dance with Dragons. So far, she is the only character to appear in all 5 books as a POV character.
Bran Stark Brandon "Bran" Stark is the second son and fourth child of Eddard and Catelyn Stark. He serves as the third-person narrator of twenty-one chapters throughout
A Game of Thrones,
A Clash of Kings,
A Storm of Swords, and
A Dance with Dragons. In
A Game of Thrones, he sees Queen Cersei and her brother Jaime Lannister committing
incest, and Jaime pushes Bran from the window to keep the relationship secret. Bran survives, but loses the use of his legs. While comatose, Bran dreams of a three-eyed raven. Slowly, he develops the ability to assume his wolf Summer's consciousness, making him a
warg or
skinchanger. After his older brother
Robb is crowned King in
the North, Bran becomes Robb's heir and the acting Lord of Winterfell. In
A Clash of Kings, Jojen Reed teaches Bran how to correctly use his
telepathy, and directs him
beyond the Wall. In
A Dance with Dragons, Bran meets the Three-Eyed-Raven: an alias of the last trained clairvoyant.
Rickon Stark Rickon Stark is Ned Stark's youngest child and is three years old in
A Game of Thrones. When
Theon Greyjoy captures
Winterfell in
A Clash of Kings, Rickon hides in the crypts. After Winterfell is sacked, he and the wildling woman Osha travel through
the North. In
A Dance with Dragons, he is said to be on an island of cannibals, presumably Skagos.
Jon Snow Jon Snow was raised as Ned Stark's illegitimate son and serves as the POV character in 42 chapters throughout
A Game of Thrones,
A Clash of Kings,
A Storm of Swords, and
A Dance with Dragons. He shares the Stark family values of honour, and tries to stay morally correct and honest, even when forced to act otherwise. He is roughly the same age as Robb and was close with Robb, Bran, and Arya, with his strongest bond seeming to be with Arya, who openly regarded him as her brother. Jon's mother remains an unknown, and the mystery of who his mother is generated significant debate and theorizing within the fandom, with the prevailing theory being that he is the son of Rhaegar Targaryen and Lyanna Stark, thus making him the true heir to the Iron Throne. This theory, while established to be true of his television counterpart, has not been confirmed yet within the novels, leaving the issue of his mother unresolved within the book series. In
A Dance with Dragons, Jon is slain by members of the Night's Watch, much like his television counterpart. Unlike his television counterpart, however, the Jon of the novels currently remains dead, with his ultimate fate currently unknown.
Benjen Stark Benjen Stark is Ned Stark's younger brother and a First Ranger in the Night's Watch. He appears briefly at the start of
A Game of Thrones, first in Winterfell and then later on the Wall at Castle Black, where he travels with his bastard nephew
Jon Snow. Benjen is sent on a mission into the lands beyond the Wall to search for a missing ranging party, but he and his men also disappear. The bodies of two of his men are later found and brought back to Castle Black; they reanimate as undead wights and kill several men before they are destroyed, but no trace of Benjen has yet been found.
Lyanna Stark Lyanna Stark is Eddard Stark's younger and only sister, and has been deceased for 14 years at the beginning of
A Game of Thrones, but is mentioned in every published book in the series. She died at the age of 16 and was said to have been very beautiful by all who knew her as "a child-woman of surpassing loveliness" and "a wild beauty". She was also remembered as being headstrong and "had a touch of" the Starks' fabled "wolf blood", and was one of the best horse-riders in the North. She was betrothed to
Robert Baratheon, who was deeply in love with her, although she was unimpressed by Robert's reputation for infidelity. Her life's tales are mainly told through the words of Eddard Stark and
Meera Reed (via
Bran Stark's viewpoint chapter), with some passing commentaries from other people such as
Barristan Selmy,
Cersei Lannister,
Roose Bolton and
Kevan Lannister. During the Tourney at Harrenhal, the greatest
tourney in Westerosi history, Lyanna rescued Stark bannerman
Howland Reed by beating away three bullying squires. She was later chosen by the eventual
jousting champion,
Crown Prince Rhaegar Targaryen, as the tourney's "Queen of Love and Beauty". Because Rhaegar was already married, and Lyanna was a maiden betrothed to Robert Baratheon, Rhaegar's wooing of Lyanna was considered an outrageous scandal at the time. One year later, she was said to have been abducted and raped by Rhaegar, triggering a
civil war that resulted in the overthrow of
House Targaryen. At the end of the war, Eddard and six of his companions ventured to the Tower of Joy within
Dorne, where Lyanna was located and guarded by three of the most prominent Kingsguard knights — the "Sword of the Morning" Ser Arthur Dayne, Ser Oswell Whent, and the "White Bull" Ser Gerold Hightower (Lord Commander of the Kingsguard). After a fierce skirmish that killed everyone except Eddard and Howland, Eddard entered the tower and found Lyanna dying in a "bed of blood". Before she died, she asked her brother Eddard to make a promise, something that Eddard regarded as a price he paid that haunted him days and nights for 14 years. Eddard later takes her body home to be entombed in Winterfell's crypt, and installs a stone statue in her likeness in front of her sarcophagus. When he returns, he also brings back a newborn boy named Jon Snow, whom he claims is his own bastard by a woman named Wylla, who was later implied to be a
wet nurse serving House Dayne of Starfall. Although
Jon Arryn persuaded Robert to marry Cersei Lannister, Robert greatly mourns Lyanna for over a decade, causing great strain in his marriage with Cersei.
Jeyne Westerling Jeyne Westerling is the older daughter of Lord Gawen Westerling of the Crag, a Westerlands bannerman of
House Lannister. She meets
Robb Stark when he is wounded, and falls in love with him during his convalescence. He marries her the next day to preserve her honour, in doing so breaking a marriage contract with
House Frey. After Robb's departure for the Twins, Jeyne remains in Riverrun and does not witness the massacre. After the Red Wedding, she is granted a royal pardon. In
A Feast for Crows, she is openly mourning and last appears riding to
Casterly Rock as a political prisoner. During the 2014
San Diego Comic Con, George R. R. Martin stated that Jeyne Westerling will appear in the prologue of the sixth book,
The Winds of Winter, but did not reveal whether she would be the prologue POV character.
Servants and vassals Roose Bolton Lord
Roose Bolton is a significant
vassal of Lord Eddard Stark. His seat is the Dreadfort and his sigil is a flayed human, a homage to the ancient Bolton tradition of
flaying enemies. He is nicknamed "the Leech Lord" for regular
leechings meant to improve his health. He initially joins
Robb Stark's rebellion but later becomes disillusioned when it becomes clear the Starks are losing. This leads him to contact
Tywin Lannister and arrange with
Walder Frey to betray Robb. At the Red Wedding, Roose personally kills Robb, and is later named Warden of the North by Tywin.
Ramsay Bolton Ramsay Snow is the bastard son of Lord Roose Bolton, later legitimized as Ramsay Bolton. He is known as the Bastard of Bolton or the Bastard of the Dreadfort. Ramsay is vicious, ruthless, psychopathic, sadistic, opportunistic, unpredictable, and fearless. He takes great pleasure and pride in torturing others and enthusiastically practices the Bolton custom of flaying their enemies. Roose suspects that Ramsay murdered Roose's legitimate heir and expects that Ramsay will kill all of Roose's future children. He is described as ugly, with blotchy skin and dry, dark hair.
Rickard Karstark Rickard Karstark is the Lord of Karhold and one of the main Stark vassals. During the Battle of the Whispering Wood, Jaime Lannister kills two of his sons, who were guarding Robb Stark. When Catelyn helps Jaime escape in an attempt to recover her daughters, Rickard murders two of Jaime's cousins and has his army desert Robb to search the Riverlands for Jaime, offering his daughter Alys Karstark to whoever brings him the Kingslayer. Due to this Robb executes Rickard personally.
Alys Karstark Alys Karstark is the only daughter and youngest child of Lord Rickard Karstark. She is betrothed to Daryn Hornwood, heir to the Hornwood, but Jaime Lannister kills him alongside two of her brothers. Her father offers her to whoever captures Jaime Lannister, so the sadistic sellsword Vargo Hoat captures Jaime in the hope of becoming Lord of Karhold. However, after Rickard's death his uncle Arnolf Karstark plots to take control of Karhold. He declares for Stannis when he comes North in the hope this will mean the Lannisters execute his great-nephew Harrion Karstark, so Karhold will pass to Alys, whom Arnolf intends to force into marriage with his son Cregan Karstark. Arnolf also intends to betray Stannis when the Boltons attack. However, Alys (pursued by Cregan) flees to the Wall seeking Jon Snow's help and reveals her uncles' plans. To protect her Jon imprisons Cregan and arranges for Alys to marry the Wildling leader Sigorn, Magnar of Thenn, in a ceremony performed by Melisandre, which will aid Wildling integration into the North. If Harrion dies childless, Karhold will pass to the newly formed House Thenn.
Wyman Manderly Wyman Manderly is the Lord of White Harbor, the only city in the North, and the wealthiest of the Stark vassals. He is an enormously fat man, with two sons, Ser Wylis and Ser Wendel Manderly. During the War of the Five Kings the Manderlys and Boltons begin a private war over the Hornwood lands after Ramsay kidnaps the widowed Lady Donella Hornwood, Wyman's cousin, forces her to marry him and then starves her to death. Wyman's heir Wylis is captured when Roose Bolton treacherously sends a large Northern force to be wiped out by Randyll Tarly. Wyman's younger son Wendel is murdered at the Red Wedding by the Freys. Due to his heir being held captive Wyman cannot openly defy the Lannisters. Three Freys come to his city with Wendel's bones and a peace is apparently made, in which Wyman's granddaughters Wynafryd and Wylla will marry one of these Freys, Rhaegar Frey, and another of Walder Frey's grandsons, "Little" Walder Frey. When Davos Seaworth arrives in White Harbor to treat with Wyman to support Stannis, Davos denounces the Freys present for their treachery. Wyman apparently has him executed but secretly executes a criminal in his place, leading to Cersei returning his heir. Wyman reveals to Davos he knows where Rickon Stark is hiding and will support Stannis if Davos returns him. Wyman is implied to have murdered the White Harbor Freys when their stay was over (thus keeping to guest right), then put them in pies which he serves to the Freys and Boltons when he attends Ramsay's wedding, even eating some himself. The Freys suspect him of murdering their kin, and when Little Walder is murdered (possibly by his cousin Big Walder Frey) their uncle Hosteen Frey attacks Wyman and cuts him in the neck. It is unclear if he survives.
Hodor Hodor is Old Nan's great-grandson and a
slow-witted stable-boy at
Winterfell. Although his real name is Walder, he is commonly called "Hodor" because that is the only word he is capable of saying. He is over seven feet tall, and hinted to possibly have
giant ancestry. He has a friendly, childlike disposition and possesses great physical strength, though he is too timid and gentle to use it against others. After
Bran Stark is crippled in
A Game of Thrones, Hodor is tasked to carry him around in a sling on his back. When Winterfell is sacked and burnt, Hodor escapes north with Bran, Jojen, Meera, Rickon and Osha.
Osha Osha () is a wildling woman who sneaks south of
the Wall to escape the
Others. When she and her fellow refugees try to kidnap Bran Stark in
A Game of Thrones, she is captured by Robb Stark and taken back to
Winterfell, eventually employed as a
scullery maid, and is given limited freedom for her good behavior. She becomes close to Bran Stark and often gives him advice about the oncoming winter. When
Theon Greyjoy captures Winterfell, Osha chooses to protect Bran and Rickon over her freedom. She joins Bran and Rickon hiding in Winterfell's
crypt after faking escape. She later parts ways with Bran and is entrusted to take care of Rickon through
the North in their escape, and by
A Dance with Dragons, they are reported to have landed on the island of Skagos, supposedly inhabited by cannibals.
Jeyne Poole Jeyne Poole is the daughter of Vayon Poole, the steward of
Winterfell, and
Sansa Stark's best friend. She has brown eyes and dark hair and is described as being very pretty. Following the arrest of
Eddard Stark in
A Game of Thrones, the members and servants of his household are killed. Jeyne reappears in
A Dance with Dragons, having survived the massacre by being sent to
Petyr Baelish's brothels. The Lannisters use her as a stand-in for Sansa's younger sister
Arya and send her north to marry
Ramsay Bolton at Winterfell.
Theon Greyjoy recognizes that she is a fake, and that the Boltons are aware of the ruse. It is implied that Ramsay Bolton tortures her and forces her to perform sexual acts on dogs. Jon Snow, Arya's half-brother, believes Jeyne to be the real Arya and sends
Mance Rayder to rescue her. The group enlists Theon's help, but their cover is blown and Theon and Jeyne barely escape.
Jojen and Meera Reed Jojen and Meera are the children of Howland Reed, the Lord of Greywater Watch and a loyal Stark bannerman. They first appear in
A Clash of Kings, when their father sends them in his place, to attend the
harvest festival and renew House Reed's pledge to House Stark and support the children of the late
Eddard Stark. They become fast friends with
Bran Stark and his baby brother,
Rickon, and are shown solely from Bran's
point of view. The older sister, Meera, is sixteen years old when introduced in
A Clash of Kings. As is typical of crannogmen, Meera is short, slim, and flat-chested with long brown hair and green eyes, and is described as having a cheerful disposition. She is intensely loyal and protective of her "prince" as well as of her own brother, with Bran commenting that the only one who ever angers or upsets her is her brother, Jojen. Though she is never described as being particularly beautiful, both Theon Greyjoy and Bran Stark seem to consider her attractive. She is a skilled huntress and fights with a small
fishing net and a
three-pronged frog spear (similar in style to a
retiarius); she is able to defeat Bran's
direwolf, Summer, in
mock combat by entangling the direwolf in her net. The legacy of Bran's late aunt
Lyanna Stark is also largely narrated through her storytelling. The younger brother, Jojen, is thirteen when he first appears, but his sullen seriousness and maturity make him seem older. He is short and slim with unusually deep green eyes, and he wears green-colored clothing. He claims to have "greensight" and the power of prophetic "green dreams", from which he knows various arcane facts, including the day of his death. In Winterfell, Jojen recognizes
Bran Stark as a skinchanger who is able to enter the mind of an animal and control it, and he mentors Bran to help him gain control of his abilities. When
Theon Greyjoy captures Winterfell, Jojen and Meera hide with Bran and Rickon in Winterfell's
crypt after feigning escape, and they join Bran in his journey north in search of the
three-eyed raven after
Ramsay Snow sacks and burns Winterfell. At the end of
A Storm of Swords, they travel
beyond the Wall and Jojen becomes very weak. In
A Dance with Dragons, Meera struggles to keep the group's spirits up but implies that Jojen's future is bleak. == House Targaryen ==