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"House Tully"[3] is the sixth short of the third season of Histories & Lore. It is the forty-ninth short of the series overall. It was released on February 18, 2014 in Game of Thrones: The Complete Third Season. It was narrated by Clive Russell as Brynden Tully and written by Dave Hill.

Premise[]

Brynden "The Blackfish" Tully details the history of House Tully, the noble and diplomatic Lords Paramount of the Riverlands.[3]

Narration[]

Brynden Tully: Other houses chose dragons, krakens, and lions for their sigils. We Tullys took the trout. That most terrifying of fish, especially when it leaps out of the water.

I suppose you don't have many options when you live in the Riverlands.

Could've been worse. We could have been minnows. Or wheat (after all, we make a lot of it). Though a land does not get as fertile as ours just by water. The old River Kings, Storm Kings, and the Kings of the Rock spilled blood here for thousands of years, squabbling like children over a new toy. Until the Ironborn came and spanked them with their axes.

Under Harren the Black, their kingdom stretched all the way to the Gods Eye, where they built the largest castle Westeros had ever seen. Maesters teach that Harren was a fool, but he had some sense.

If you're going to enslave and torture an entire people, you best have thick walls to hide behind.

But the very day the last stone was laid in Harrenhal, Aegon Targaryen landed in Westeros. As soon as he saw Aegon's host on the horizon, my ancestor Edmyn led the mass desertion of Riverlords to Aegon's side. I doubt Harren even noticed. The problem with huge castles is they blind you to what's outside, both by their size and the arrogance they inspire.

Not that the Ironborn ever lacked for that. They take pride in their ignorance of every trapping of civilization. Though any baker could have told them that fire turns stone walls into an oven.

And so Harren the Black finally lived up to his name, and the Riverlords swept the Ironborn back to the sea.

In return for Edmyn's service, House Tully was made Aegon's new Lord Paramount of the Trident, and all of the other lords had to swear us fealty. But old habits die hard. The Riverlands are and always have been the middle child of Westeros, caught up in every fart from one lord at another.

My ancestors knew that for the Tullys to survive, alliances must be made. Our trout has swum up so many rivers over the centuries and leapt onto so many plates that it's a wonder half of the realm's sigils do not have fins by now. Thus every Tully child is taught "Family, Duty, Honor," the Tully words. And pains in the Tully arse.

When I returned from the War of the Ninepenny Kings, people called me "Ser Brynden," but my older brother Hoster called me engaged. A great match with a very rich house to be sure, but I had just fought and killed a great deal of men and had no desire to be told when and whom to marry.

I broke ties with him, earning the name "Blackfish," along with my personal sigil, a much more intimidating black trout. I was too stubborn at the time to realize that while other houses fight with swords, House Tully fights with marriages.

Then my niece Catelyn's betrothal to Brandon Stark, drew us into the war against the Mad King, while my other niece Lysa's betrothal to Jon Arryn cemented the rebellion.

If I had obeyed my older brother earlier, we'd have had the largest navy in Westeros with us as well, and our victory would have been swift. Of course, I never mentioned this fact to my brother. He'd have taken it as an apology.

My brother is dead now, and my nephew Edmure rules in Riverrun. Gods help us, a trout that cannot tell the worm from the hook. But he is a Tully, and he is unmarried, and there is a war.

We all know how this story ends. Maybe she'll be beautiful. Maybe she'll be rich. As long as she brings swords and men to House Tully, she could look like the fish we hang all over Riverrun. He'll honor his duty to family and swallow it. One Blackfish per family can be overlooked. Two, and we'd have to change all those pretty banners.

Appearances[]

Individuals[]

Houses[]

Locations[]

Events[]

Titles[]

Cast[]

Behind the scenes[]

  • The preceding Histories & Lore: Season 2 short "Harrenhal" vaguely implied that the River lords revolted against the Ironborn and sided with the Targaryens only after the fall of Harrenhal and death of Harren Hoare. In this short, Brynden makes it clear that in the TV continuity (just as in the books), the River lords revolted before the fall of Harrenhal, seeing Aegon Targaryen as a chance to overthrow the yoke of brutal Ironborn oppression. The armies of the River lords swelled Aegon's ranks: he landed at the mouth of the Blackwater with an army of only 3,000 men, which then split to advance on two objectives: one group with Aegon went to Harrenhal and another led by Orys and Rhaenys advanced to Storm's End. They may have also picked up some levies from the defeated lords near the landing site (such as Rosby, Duskendale, etc.). Aegon's western host therefore numbered perhaps less than 2,000 when he began, but with the addition of the armies of the Tullys and other River lords his numbers swelled to 8,000 by the time he arrived at Harrenhal.

Gallery[]

References[]

  1. Jacob Klein (June 24, 2013). Game of Thrones Season 3 Blu-Ray & DVD Release Date Confirmed. HBO Watch. Retrieved December 15, 2023.
  2. Histories & Lore: Season 3, Short 6: "House Tully" (2014).
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 Game of Thrones: The Complete Third Season (2014).
  4. Vanessa Cole (July 22, 2017). Game of Thrones writer Dave Hill gives a behind the scenes look at the creative process. Watchers on the Wall. Retrieved December 15, 2023.


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