Wiki of Westeros

Dueling Trailers Choose your trailer. Green vs. Black. Two sides. One war. June 16.

READ MORE

Wiki of Westeros
Advertisement
Wiki of Westeros
House Stokeworth
House Stokeworth

"We won't get to live at Stokeworth. When mother dies my sister gets the castle because she's older."
Lollys Stokeworth to Bronn[src]

Tanda Stokeworth[a] is the head of House Stokeworth.

Biography[]

Game of Thrones: Season 5[]

Bronn mistakenly believes that he and his betrothed Lollys will one day reside at Castle Stokeworth. Lollys corrects him by saying that when her mother dies her older sister Falyse will inherit the castle. She also tells him that Falyse pulls her hair when their mother is not looking.[1]

Family[]

 
 
 
House-Stokeworth-Square
Husband

Deceased
 
House-Stokeworth-Square
Tanda
Stokeworth


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
House-Stokeworth-Square
Falyse
Stokeworth


 
House-Bracken-Square
Wyllis
Bracken


 
Famtree-LollysStokeworth
Lollys
Stokeworth


 

In the books[]

In the A Song of Ice and Fire novels, Tanda Stokeworth is the Lady of Stokeworth. She is very old, and known to not be a very bright or attractive woman.

Tanda is the head of House Stokeworth in the novels. When House Stokeworth was first mentioned in the TV series in Season 4's "Mockingbird", a point of some confusion was that Tyrion said that Lollys's older sister would inherit Castle Stokeworth after their father died. When Lollys first appeared on-screen in Season 5, however, she made it clear that her older sister will inherit the castle after their mother dies. It is possible that the TV writers thought that having a female head of a major House would be confusing and require some sort of lengthy explanation, so they simply pushed back the explanation about Lollys's mother being the actual head of the House to Season 5. It can easily be explained that Tyrion was simply mistaken or misspoke.

During the reign of Aerys II, Manly Stokeworth was Commander of the City Watch. He was succeeded in the position by Janos Slynt. Littlefinger remarked that the widowed Lady Tanda has no love for the Lannisters: it is quite possible that Manly was in fact her husband, and that he died during the Sack of King's Landing committed by Tywin's army.

Unable to find a husband for her daughter Lollys, she made several attempts to convince Littlefinger to marry Lollys by serving him extravagant meals. Littlefinger had no intention of marrying Lollys, finding her to be bad company as well as overweight and unattractive. She later makes similar attempts with Tyrion, with him repeatedly trying to avoid the invitations.

Once the War of the Five Kings breaks out, Tanda and Lord Gyles Rosby provide half of the food still in arriving King's Landing as their lands lie close to the city to the north and are still untouched by war.

Along with her daughters, Tanda attends several significant events in King's Landing such as Joffrey's nameday celebration, Myrcella's departure for Dorne (after which the riots in King's Landing take place, in which Lollys is gang raped and impregnated) and the Purple Wedding. During the Battle of the Blackwater, they take shelter with the other women in Maegor's Holdfast.

After Tywin's death, Tanda suggests naming Lollys's child after him, as she claims to have admired him above all other men. Cersei is disgusted by the notion that her father's name would be given to a bastard born of rape and flatly forbids Tanda from doing so. This subplot was omitted from the TV series, in which Lollys was never raped.

In the fourth book, Tanda suffers a severe accident, falling from her horse when her saddle girth snaps, causing her to break her hip in the fall. A stable boy is beaten for not noticing the saddle girth was worn and liable to break, but it is implied Bronn might have engineered the accident to accelerate his own plans.

Falyse and her husband attempt to kill Bronn, at Cersei's request. The plot fails, Bronn kills Falyse's husband and expels her from Castle Stokeworth. Falyse tells Cersei what happened, wondering what will become of her mother now. Cersei thinks that Tanda might very well be dead already, as Bronn doesn't seem the type of man who would bother putting much effort into nursing an old woman with a broken hip.

Some time later it is reported that Tanda has died of a chill in the chest, brought on by her injury.

Appearances[]

References[]

Notes[]

  1. Conjecture based on information from A Song of Ice and Fire; may be subject to change.

External links[]


Advertisement