Wiki of Westeros

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Wiki of Westeros
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Wiki of Westeros

The social and political structure in the Seven Kingdoms is based on Feudalism. While this is used as a term of convenience within this article, the term "feudalism" does not exist within the narrative of Game of Thrones - for that matter, people living in the real-life Middle Ages in Europe did not use the term "feudalism" to describe their own contemporary society. The term "feudalism", and terms associated with it, were retroactively applied by later historians.

Feudalism was introduced to Westeros by the Andals during their invasion of the continent six thousand years ago. It was imposed throughout what would later become the "Seven Kingdoms", and even in the North where the First Men resisted the advance of the Andals, the Northerners gradually adopted many of the social and political practices of their Andal neighbors to the south.

Social structure

The feudal society of the Seven Kingdoms is based on a rigid social structure dividing the population between a hereditary nobility set above commoners known as smallfolk. A strict political hierarchy is in place, consisting of kings and great lords who command the allegiance of lesser lords who serve as their vassals. This "government" is based on personal oaths of allegiance: while one can speak of "the realm" on a vague level, they do not possess an abstract concept of the "Nation-state" in modern terms.

Kings

Nobility

Knights

See main article: "Knighthood"

Commoners

See main article: "Smallfolk"

Inheritance laws

The feudal society of the Seven Kingdoms follows inheritance law based on primogeniture, a winner-take-all system in which the designated heir inherits all of their parents' lands and possessions, to the exclusion of younger siblings. This is in contrast to a system of partible inheritance, in which lands would be divided evenly among siblings upon the death of their parents.

The designated heir in line of succession is decided by birth order, in which an elder brother would inherit ahead of a younger brother. Many heirs will still try to provide for their younger siblings, giving them funds to live on or minor holdfasts to rule over in their name. For example, Tywin Lannister inherited all of his father's holdings, while his younger brother Kevan Lannister inherited no lands. Even so, Tywin looks out for his family, and has rewarded Kevan with substantial wealth over the years for his loyal service. However this is a matter of personal preference and not a requirement. In contrast to the Lannisters, when their bannerman Gregor Clegane succeeded to the rule of House Clegane, he gave absolutely nothing to his younger brother Sandor, at which Sandor struck out on his own to seek his fortune as a bodyguard in direct service to the Lannisters.

The other major rule under primogeniture inheritance law is that a lord's children will inherit before the lord's younger siblings. A lord's younger brother will only inherit once his younger brother's bloodline is exhausted, leaving no surviving children or grandchildren. Officially, if a lord dies leaving an infant daughter and an adult younger brother, his infant daughter is first in line of succession. In practice, uncles and aunts often try to claim inheritance ahead of their nephews and nieces, feeling that they are better suited to rule. This is not always without good reason, as a noble House officially led by an infant daughter will be seen as weak and easy to attack by hostile neighbors. There have been many instances where an uncle claimed rule ahead of infant children of their older brother, and indeed had widespread support, and truly had only the best interests of the family's holdings in mind. Of course, there is also much truth to the trope of the wicked greedy uncle trying to cheat the rightful heirs out of the family lands. This sort of situation frequently leads to succession conflicts. Other times an adult daughter or a child son may be deemed unfit to rule, though this would be seen as a stretch by many of their vassals (if the only surviving child is not only an infant but a female, she stands the highest chance of having her succession disputed).

There are actually three different variations of primogeniture which are practiced in the Seven Kingdoms:

Male-preference Primogeniture

Commonly known as simply "primogeniture", this is the standard inheritance practice throughout almost all of the unified realm of the Seven Kingdoms. In this system, children inherit in birth order, but daughters are counted behind sons.

For example, the birth order in the current generation of House Stark is: Robb, Sansa, Arya, Bran, Rickon. The inheritance order, however, is "Robb, Bran, Rickon" followed by "Sansa, Arya". Thus, despite the fact that Sansa is the second-born Stark child, she actually follows her little brother Rickon in the line of succession.

As the children of a lord inherit before his younger siblings, if Robb Stark were ever to father a child, male or female, it would become next in line of succession ahead of Robb's younger brother Bran. Thus the new succession order would be "Robb, Robb's child, Bran, Rickon, Sansa, Arya".

In House Lannister, Tywin's children are officially in the line of succession ahead of Tywin's younger brother Kevan. Normally, Jaime Lannister would be Tywin's legal heir, but he forfeited the right to all inheritance when he joined the Kingsguard (which also requires its members to take a vow of celibacy). Normally, this would mean that Tyrion Lannister stands ahead of his sister Cersei in line of succession, even though Tyrion is younger than Cersei. While there is little ambiguity that Tyrion should be Tywin's heir, Tywin despises his dwarf son so much that he has never officially named Tyrion as his legal heir, a gesture normally seen as a mere formality.

Equal Primogeniture

Royal Primogeniture

Terms

In the books

The feudal practices in the A Song of Ice and Fire novels actually do not accurately reflect many real-life medieval practices.

The greatest deviation presented in the society of the Seven Kingdoms is the extreme level of uniformity in feudal practices on the scale of an entire continent. Since the 1970's, medieval historians have strongly challenged that "feudalism" was one uniform set of practices in all countries of Europe. For that matter, feudal laws and customs differed dramatically even within feudal countries from one major county or duchy to the next. On the other hand, the Seven Kingdoms were unified under the Targaryen kings three hundred years ago, and this may explain the uniformity in feudal practices across the continent. In later books, George R.R. Martin began incorporating new background information to try to convey that each of the Seven Kingdoms didn't always possess uniform societies. For example, coinage across the Seven Kingdoms during the time of Ned Stark is quite uniform, without regional variation. However, by the fourth book, A Feast For Crows, Martin established that before the Targaryen Conquest the Kingdom of the Reach minted its own local coinage called "Hands" which were not equivalent to coinage from other kingdoms.

Another major difference is that primogeniture really wasn't practiced throughout much of Europe for most of the Middle Ages. The famous post-Word War II historian Georges Duby put forward a very influential social model of the Middle Ages claiming that primogeniture was practiced throughout Western Europe, but the past thirty to forty years' worth of medieval historians have largely debunked Duby's theories.

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