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{{Heraldry
 
{{Heraldry
|image=Crow mini shield.png
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|image=Night's-Watch-Main-Shield.PNG
 
|link=Night's Watch
 
|link=Night's Watch
 
}}{{Character
 
}}{{Character
 
| Title=Bowen Marsh
 
| Title=Bowen Marsh
 
| Image= Marsh promo.png
 
| Image= Marsh promo.png
| Season=[[Season 5|5]]
+
| Season=[[Season 5|5]], [[Season 6|6]]
 
| First="[[The Wars to Come]]"
 
| First="[[The Wars to Come]]"
 
| Last=
 
| Last=
| Appearances=7 episodes <small>[[#Appearances|(see below)]]</small>
+
| Appearances=9 episodes <small>[[#Appearances|(see below)]]</small>
 
| Titles=First Steward of the [[Night's Watch]]
 
| Titles=First Steward of the [[Night's Watch]]
 
| Mentioned="[[You Win or You Die]]"
 
| Mentioned="[[You Win or You Die]]"
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| Family=
 
| Family=
 
| Actor=[[Michael Condron]]
 
| Actor=[[Michael Condron]]
| Culture = [[Crannogmen]]}}{{Quote|And why do you think the farmers abandoned those [[The Gift|villages]]? Because the [[Free Folk|Wildlings]] raided them for years, cut them down! Just like they did this [[Olly|boy's]] people!|Bowen Marsh to [[Samwell Tarly]]|Kill the Boy}}'''Bowen Marsh''' is a recurring character in the [[Season 5|fifth season]] who had already been mentioned in the [[Season 1|first season]]. He is played by [[Michael Condron]]. Bowen Marsh is the First Steward of the [[Night's Watch]].
+
| Culture = [[Crannogmen]]}}{{Quote|And why do you think the farmers abandoned those [[The Gift|villages]]? Because the [[Free Folk|wildlings]] raided them for years, cut them down! Just like they did this [[Olly|boy's]] people!|Bowen Marsh to [[Samwell Tarly]]|Kill the Boy}}'''Bowen Marsh''' is a recurring character in the [[Season 5|fifth ]]and [[Season 6|sixth]] season who had already been mentioned in the [[Season 1|first season]]. He is played by [[Michael Condron]]. Bowen Marsh is the First Steward of the [[Night's Watch]].
   
 
==Biography==
 
==Biography==
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Marsh participates in the [[Choosing]] of the 998th [[Lord Commander of the Night's Watch]]. He stands among [[Alliser Thorne]]'s supporters, and fails to applaud or cheer when Jon Snow is elected.<ref>"[[The House of Black and White]]"</ref>
 
Marsh participates in the [[Choosing]] of the 998th [[Lord Commander of the Night's Watch]]. He stands among [[Alliser Thorne]]'s supporters, and fails to applaud or cheer when Jon Snow is elected.<ref>"[[The House of Black and White]]"</ref>
   
At a later meeting in the Night's Watch, Marsh sits alongside Jon, Thorne and First Builder [[Othell Yarwyck]] and openly opposes Jon's proposal to allow the wildlings access through the Wall to settle in the Seven Kingdoms or even join the Watch itself. [[Samwell Tarly]] cites [[The Gift]] as a good place for the wildlings to settle since it has good farmland but is deserted, but Marsh reminds him that this is because the wildlings practically slaughtered everyone on their way to attack Castle Black under Mance Rayder, using [[Olly]]'s family and people as an example.<ref>"[[Kill the Boy]]"</ref>
+
At a later meeting in the Night's Watch, Marsh sits alongside Jon, Thorne and First Builder [[Othell Yarwyck]] and openly opposes Jon's proposal to allow the wildlings access through the Wall to settle in the Seven Kingdoms or even join the Watch itself. [[Samwell Tarly]] cites [[The Gift]] as a good place for the wildlings to settle because much of the farmland there is deserted, but Marsh reminds him that this is because the wildlings frequently targeted the lands of the Gift in their raids of the North, citing [[Olly]]'s village as an example.<ref>"[[Kill the Boy]]"</ref>
   
 
When Jon Snow returns from [[Hardhome]] with thousands of wildlings and lets them in through the Wall, Bowen Marsh is among the many black brothers who look at the wildlings and even their Lord Commander with disgust.<ref>"[[The Dance of Dragons]]"</ref>
 
When Jon Snow returns from [[Hardhome]] with thousands of wildlings and lets them in through the Wall, Bowen Marsh is among the many black brothers who look at the wildlings and even their Lord Commander with disgust.<ref>"[[The Dance of Dragons]]"</ref>
  +
[[File:Bowen Marsh stabs Jon.jpg|thumb|180x180px|Bowen Marsh stabs Jon during the mutiny at Castle Black.]]
 
Marsh later takes part in and helps organize a mutiny against Jon Snow, as many Black brothers feel that he has forsaked the Night's Watch for the wildlings. After tricking Jon into being trapped in a corner, Marsh is the third to stab Jon, after [[Alliser Thorne]] and [[Othell Yarwyck]], though he looks somewhat remorseful while uttering "For the Watch". He and the mutineers then leave Jon for dead as the sun rises.<ref>"[[Mother's Mercy]]"</ref>
   
  +
===[[Season 6]]===
Marsh later takes part in and helps organize a mutiny against Jon Snow, as many Black brothers feel that he has forsaked the Night's Watch for the wildlings. After tricking Jon into being trapped in a corner, Marsh is the third to stab Jon, after [[Alliser Thorne]] and [[Othell Yarwyck]].
 
  +
Thorne openly admits that he orchestrated Jon's murder, and Marsh was one of the conspirators. Marsh is present when Thorne threatens to kill Jon's loyalists if they refuse to surrender by nightfall.<ref>"[[The Red Woman]]"</ref> Come nightfall, Marsh is among the mutineers who try to break into Jon's quarters, stopped only when Eddison Tollett returns with the wildling army. With the Night's Watch outnumbered, Edd orders the mutineers arrested for their treachery. Marsh is subsequently dragged off and locked in an ice cell.<ref>"[[Home]]"</ref>
   
 
==Appearances==
 
==Appearances==
 
{{Season Five Appearances|yes|yes|yes||yes||yes||yes|yes|yes}}
 
{{Season Five Appearances|yes|yes|yes||yes||yes||yes|yes|yes}}
  +
{{Season Six Appearances|yes|yes|||||||||}}
  +
  +
==Quotes==
  +
{{Quote|For the Watch.|Bowen Marsh after stabbing [[Jon Snow]] during the [[mutiny at Castle Black]].|Mother's Mercy}}
   
 
==Behind the scenes==
 
==Behind the scenes==
During the first season it was believed [[Brian Fortune]] was playing Marsh, and [[Dennis McKeever]] was playing [[Othell Yarwyck]], based on comments made by Fortune and McKeever's character delivering one of Yarwyck's lines from the books. However, this assumption was then dispelled: McKeever reappeared in Seasons [[Season 2|2]] and [[Season 3|3]] in the [[Great Ranging]], even though Yarwyck didn't participate in the books; in [[Season 4|season four]], Fortune's character was identified as Yarwyck; and [[Michael Condron]] was subsequently cast as Marsh for the fifth season, which means Fortune's character was always Yarwyck, while McKeever was simply playing [[Night's Watch Officer 2|an unnamed Night's Watch officer]].
+
During the first season it was believed [[Brian Fortune]] was playing Marsh, and [[Dennis McKeever]] was playing [[Othell Yarwyck]], based on comments made by Fortune and McKeever's character delivering one of Yarwyck's lines from the books. However, this assumption was then dispelled: McKeever reappeared in Seasons [[Season 2|2]] and [[Season 3|3]] in the [[Great Ranging]], even though Yarwyck didn't participate in the books; in [[Season 4]], Fortune's character was identified as Yarwyck; and [[Michael Condron]] was subsequently cast as Marsh for the fifth season, which means Fortune's character was always Yarwyck, while McKeever was simply playing [[Night's Watch Officer 2|an unnamed Night's Watch officer]].
   
 
==In the books==
 
==In the books==
In the ''[[A Song of Ice and Fire]]'' novels, Marsh, nicknamed "the Old Pomegranate," is an important and senior figure in the Watch, reporting directly to Lord Commander [[Jeor Mormont]] and is just below him in the command hierarchy of the Watch. When Mormont and the rest of the Night's Watch ride out to investigate the [[wildling]] menace in the so-called "[[Great Ranging]]", he remains in command at Castle Black. Though not explicitly stated, Bowen Marsh hails from House Marsh, a noble house from [[the Neck]] sworn to [[House Reed]].
+
In the ''[[A Song of Ice and Fire]]'' novels, Bowen Marsh first appears in the first book, ''A Game of Thrones''. He is described as being red and round, leading [[Dolorous Edd]] to nickname him "the Old Pomegranate". He is is an important senior figure in the Watch, reporting directly to Lord Commander [[Jeor Mormont]] and is just below him in the command hierarchy of the Watch. When Mormont and the rest of the Night's Watch ride out to investigate the [[wildling]] menace in the so-called "[[Great Ranging]]", he remains in command at Castle Black. Though not explicitly stated, Bowen Marsh hails from House Marsh, a noble house from [[the Neck]] sworn to [[House Reed]].
   
As the [[Wildling]]s advance to Castle Black, [[Mance Rayder]] sends raiding parties the to attack several areas of the Wall, in order to draw attention away from the main host and to draw away the defenders. Unfortunately, Marsh falls for the trick and takes most of the garrison from Castle Black. When [[Jon Snow]] returns, he finds that only forty-one men are left in the castle, most of them old, crippled, and inexperienced.
+
In ''A Storm of Swords'', as the [[wildling]]s advance to Castle Black, [[Mance Rayder]] sends raiding parties the to attack several areas of the Wall, in order to draw attention away from the main host and to draw away the defenders. Unfortunately, Marsh falls for the trick and takes most of the garrison from Castle Black. When [[Jon Snow]] returns, he finds that only forty-one men are left in the castle, most of them old, crippled, or inexperienced.
  +
  +
In the novels, Marsh is friendly with Jon Snow. In ''A Dance with Dragons'', he staunchly supports Jon when he is elected as the new Lord Commander, but slowly becomes disillusioned with him when he proposes an alliance with the wildlings, personally reminding him that what he is proposing is nothing less than treason towards the Watch. When Jon decides to leave Castle Black to seek out and kill [[Ramsay Bolton]], who apparently sent Jon a threatening letter, it is Marsh who instigates the mutiny against Jon instead of Alliser Thorne. He is the second to stab Jon, with tears in his eyes.
   
 
==See also==
 
==See also==
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Marsh, Bowen}}
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Marsh, Bowen}}
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[[de:Bowen Marsh]]
 
[[de:Bowen Marsh]]
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[[es:Bowen Marsh]]
 
[[ru:Боуэн Марш]]
 
[[ru:Боуэн Марш]]
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[[zh:波文·马尔锡]]
 
[[Category:Crannogmen|Marsh, Bowen]]
 
[[Category:Crannogmen|Marsh, Bowen]]
 
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[[Category:Characters from the North]]
 
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[[Category:House Marsh|Bowen Marsh]]
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[[Category:Season 6 Characters]]

Revision as of 22:07, 4 May 2016

"And why do you think the farmers abandoned those villages? Because the wildlings raided them for years, cut them down! Just like they did this boy's people!"
―Bowen Marsh to Samwell Tarly[src]

Bowen Marsh is a recurring character in the fifth and sixth season who had already been mentioned in the first season. He is played by Michael Condron. Bowen Marsh is the First Steward of the Night's Watch.

Biography

Background

Bowen Marsh is the First Steward of the Night's Watch, based at Castle Black. He is in charge of the day-to-day running of the Night's Watch, dealing with issues of supplies, funding, logistics and communications. He hails from House Marsh, a noble crannogmen family of the Neck sworn to House Reed.

Season 1

After the assignment ceremony, Maester Aemon orders Pyp to report to Bowen Marsh in the kitchens.[1]

Season 5

Marsh is present when Mance Rayder is executed by Stannis Baratheon for refusing to bend the knee.[2]

Marsh participates in the Choosing of the 998th Lord Commander of the Night's Watch. He stands among Alliser Thorne's supporters, and fails to applaud or cheer when Jon Snow is elected.[3]

At a later meeting in the Night's Watch, Marsh sits alongside Jon, Thorne and First Builder Othell Yarwyck and openly opposes Jon's proposal to allow the wildlings access through the Wall to settle in the Seven Kingdoms or even join the Watch itself. Samwell Tarly cites The Gift as a good place for the wildlings to settle because much of the farmland there is deserted, but Marsh reminds him that this is because the wildlings frequently targeted the lands of the Gift in their raids of the North, citing Olly's village as an example.[4]

When Jon Snow returns from Hardhome with thousands of wildlings and lets them in through the Wall, Bowen Marsh is among the many black brothers who look at the wildlings and even their Lord Commander with disgust.[5]

Bowen Marsh stabs Jon

Bowen Marsh stabs Jon during the mutiny at Castle Black.

Marsh later takes part in and helps organize a mutiny against Jon Snow, as many Black brothers feel that he has forsaked the Night's Watch for the wildlings. After tricking Jon into being trapped in a corner, Marsh is the third to stab Jon, after Alliser Thorne and Othell Yarwyck, though he looks somewhat remorseful while uttering "For the Watch". He and the mutineers then leave Jon for dead as the sun rises.[6]

Season 6

Thorne openly admits that he orchestrated Jon's murder, and Marsh was one of the conspirators. Marsh is present when Thorne threatens to kill Jon's loyalists if they refuse to surrender by nightfall.[7] Come nightfall, Marsh is among the mutineers who try to break into Jon's quarters, stopped only when Eddison Tollett returns with the wildling army. With the Night's Watch outnumbered, Edd orders the mutineers arrested for their treachery. Marsh is subsequently dragged off and locked in an ice cell.[8]

Appearances

Template:Season Five Appearances Template:Season Six Appearances

Quotes

"For the Watch."
―Bowen Marsh after stabbing Jon Snow during the mutiny at Castle Black.[src]

Behind the scenes

During the first season it was believed Brian Fortune was playing Marsh, and Dennis McKeever was playing Othell Yarwyck, based on comments made by Fortune and McKeever's character delivering one of Yarwyck's lines from the books. However, this assumption was then dispelled: McKeever reappeared in Seasons 2 and 3 in the Great Ranging, even though Yarwyck didn't participate in the books; in Season 4, Fortune's character was identified as Yarwyck; and Michael Condron was subsequently cast as Marsh for the fifth season, which means Fortune's character was always Yarwyck, while McKeever was simply playing an unnamed Night's Watch officer.

In the books

In the A Song of Ice and Fire novels, Bowen Marsh first appears in the first book, A Game of Thrones. He is described as being red and round, leading Dolorous Edd to nickname him "the Old Pomegranate". He is is an important senior figure in the Watch, reporting directly to Lord Commander Jeor Mormont and is just below him in the command hierarchy of the Watch. When Mormont and the rest of the Night's Watch ride out to investigate the wildling menace in the so-called "Great Ranging", he remains in command at Castle Black. Though not explicitly stated, Bowen Marsh hails from House Marsh, a noble house from the Neck sworn to House Reed.

In A Storm of Swords, as the wildlings advance to Castle Black, Mance Rayder sends raiding parties the to attack several areas of the Wall, in order to draw attention away from the main host and to draw away the defenders. Unfortunately, Marsh falls for the trick and takes most of the garrison from Castle Black. When Jon Snow returns, he finds that only forty-one men are left in the castle, most of them old, crippled, or inexperienced.

In the novels, Marsh is friendly with Jon Snow. In A Dance with Dragons, he staunchly supports Jon when he is elected as the new Lord Commander, but slowly becomes disillusioned with him when he proposes an alliance with the wildlings, personally reminding him that what he is proposing is nothing less than treason towards the Watch. When Jon decides to leave Castle Black to seek out and kill Ramsay Bolton, who apparently sent Jon a threatening letter, it is Marsh who instigates the mutiny against Jon instead of Alliser Thorne. He is the second to stab Jon, with tears in his eyes.

See also

References

Template:Watch navbox