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Night's Watch
Night's Watch

This unnamed man was a Night's Watch officer.

Biography[]

Background[]

This man is an officer in the Night's Watch, stationed at Castle Black. He is a Builder.[1]

Game of Thrones: Season 1[]

He is present for the induction of the new recruits at Castle Black. He calls for the builders after the Lord Commander's speech.[1]

Game of Thrones: Season 2[]

He takes part in Lord Commander Mormont's great ranging. He is among the officers that takes shelter inside Craster's Keep and is present when Mormont speaks with Craster about Mance Rayder's actions and plans.[2]

He is present when Craster expels the black brothers from his keep after Jon Snow is caught spying on the wildling leaving a newborn son in the woods.[3]

Game of Thrones: Season 3[]

He survives the fight at the Fist and joins the survivors' march back into the Haunted Forest all the way to Craster's Keep.[4]

He is present at the hall of Craster's Keep when a group of deserters commits mutinies against the authority of Lord Commander Mormont and break guest right by murdering Craster.[5]

Behind the scenes[]

During Season 1 it was believed McKeever was playing Othell Yarwyck and Brian Fortune was playing Bowen Marsh, based on comments by Fortune and McKeever's character delivering a line said by Yarwyck in the books. Neither of them were absolutely confirmed to be playing these characters, however, as their names were never stated in on-screen dialogue or in the credits. McKeever reappeared in Seasons 2 and 3 in a background role in the great ranging, in which Yarwyck didn't partake. In Season 4, Fortune's character was directly identified in on-screen dialogue as Yarwyck, and Michael Condron was subsequently cast as Marsh for Season 5. This establishes that Fortune's character should always be considered to have been Yarwyck, while McKeever was simply playing an unnamed Night's Watch officer. While this might technically be a retcon, Season 1 never absolutely confirmed which characters these actors were playing, so it introduced no internal continuity errors.

In the books, about a dozen loyal Night's Watch members managed to escape from the Mutiny at Craster's Keep and return to Castle Black. The TV series, however, explicitly showed Jon Snow, Samwell Tarly, Edd, and Grenn are the only black brothers who went on the expedition north of the Wall who managed to return alive. The books also never explicitly showed what happened to the Mutineers after the mutiny, but the TV series did, and no other loyalists were shown to have survived.

Gallery[]

Appearances[]

References[]

Notes[]

  1. In "Winter Is Coming," which takes place in 298 AC, Sansa Stark tells Cersei Lannister that she is 13 years old and Bran Stark tells Jaime Lannister that he is 10 years old. Arya Stark was born between Sansa and Bran, making her either 11 or 12 in Season 1. The rest of the Stark children have been aged up by 2 years from their book ages, so it can be assumed that she is 11 in Season 1. Arya is 18 in Season 8 according to HBO, which means at least 7 years occur in the span of the series; therefore, each season of Game of Thrones must roughly correspond to a year in-universe, placing the events of Season 3 in 300 AC.
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