The title of this page is conjecture based on information revealed in the A Song of Ice and Fire novels or related material and may be subject to change.
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Bael the Bard[a] was a King-Beyond-the-Wall.
Biography[]
Background[]
Bael once launched a failed attack against the Seven Kingdoms.[1]
Game of Thrones: Season 3[]
Jon Snow tells Ygritte that six historical Kings-Beyond-the-Wall attempted to invade the lands south of the Wall, and failed each time.[1]
In the books[]
In the A Song of Ice and Fire novels, the memory of Bael the Bard is preserved through songs and legends among the free folk.
According to one legend, Lord Brandon Stark called Bael a coward, and to prove his courage Bael climbed the Wall and infiltrated Winterfell under the alias "Sygerrik of Skagos;" sygerrik means "deceiver" in the Old Tongue. He entered Lord Stark's court as a singer, impressing him enough to offer a reward. Bael asked only for the most beautiful flower blooming in Winterfell's gardens, and Brandon presented him with a blue winter rose. The next morning, Brandon's maiden daughter had gone missing, and the blue winter rose had been left on her bed.
One day, Brandon's daughter was back in her room, holding an infant son in her arms. As it turned out, she was never taken from Winterfell, but was being hidden in the crypts. With the Stark line on the verge of extinction, the bastard was legitimized.
Bael invaded the Seven Kingdoms thirty years later. He met his son, now Lord Stark, in battle on the Frozen Ford. Unable to bring himself to kill his own blood, he let himself be killed. Lord Stark brought Bael's head back to Winterfell as a trophy; upon seeing the head, Stark's mother, who had loved Bael, leapt from a tower to her death. The son was eventually killed by one of his lords (presumably a Bolton); according to Ygritte, that was his punishment for killing his father, although he was unaware of their kinship.[2]
When Mance Rayder infiltrates Winterfell to rescue Arya Stark (unbeknownst to him, really Jeyne Poole), he uses the alias "Abel," an anagram of "Bael."[3] He also previously infiltrated Winterfell as a musician during King Robert's visit there, emulating the legend of Bael (he did not go that far by trying to kidnap any of the current Lord Stark's daughters, though).[4]
Appearances[]
- – "The Bear and the Maiden Fair" (mentioned indirectly)
References[]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Game of Thrones: Season 3, Episode 7: "The Bear and the Maiden Fair" (2013).
- ↑ A Clash of Kings, Chapter 51, Jon VI (1998).
- ↑ A Dance with Dragons, Chapter 37, The Prince of Winterfell (2011).
- ↑ A Storm of Swords, Chapter 7, Jon I (2000).
Notes[]
- ↑ Conjecture based on information from A Song of Ice and Fire; may be subject to change.
External links[]
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