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  2. Apparently there’s some TV show called Game of Thrones which isn’t a chair-based quiz show at all, but a fantasy epic with swords and dragons and the like. The author of the books that the ...

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  3. The series is based on A Game of Thrones, the first novel in the A Song of Ice and Fire series by George R. R. Martin, adapted for television by David Benioff and D. B. Weiss. HBO had ordered a television pilot in November 2008; filming began the following year.

  4. Does each current Game of Thrones season roughly equal one A Song of Ice and Fire book? And do we know which future seasons will cover which books? I am planning to read the first book after the TV show has finished depicting the events in the first book.

    • The War of the Roses. To begin with, the main plot of A Song of Ice and Fire is plucked directly from the English War of the Roses. The war was generations-long and fairly complicated (especially since everyone in English history has one of three names), but it boiled down to a fight for the English throne between the Lancasters (Lannisters) and the Yorks (Starks), complete with boy kings, scheming mothers, a duty-bound "hand of the king," and a royal growing up in far off Europe with a claim to the throne (little Daenerys and her jerk brother).
    • The Fall of Rome. Before the Targaryens brought their dragons to Fantasy England, they were part of a vast empire over in the Fantasy Mediterranean. Old Valyria bears a striking resemblance to the Roman Empire: both were technically "republics," both empires enslaved people from all across (Fantasy) Europe and the (Fantasy) Middle East, both arose on a peninsula in a warm climate, both built roads and buildings with wildly advanced technology for their time, and both eventually collapsed, leading to centuries of conflict.
    • Pompeii and the Pink and White Terraces. In real history, of course, there were a whole mess of different factors that led to the fall of Rome, like invasions and over-reliance on slave labor and too much military spending.
    • The Black Dinner and the Massacre of Glencoe. Yes, the Red Wedding is indeed based on a true story — two true stories, to be exact, and both of them in Scotland.
    • The Lannisters, Incest, and Anne Boleyn. It didn’t take long for rumors of Jaime and Cersei Lannister’s sexual escapades to run throughout Westeros. While adultery and bastard children are well known casualties of Kinghood, incest has been always a taboo bridge too far.
    • The Red Wedding and the Massacre of Glencoe. Oathbreakers seldom get mercy. For Robb Stark, his decision to follow his heart rather than his word meant death for his bannermen, his mother, and his pregnant wife.
    • Robert Baratheon and the Slaughter of the Innocents. Bloodlines are everything. In Game of Thrones, they are the strength of kings and the pride of families.
    • Daenerys and Moses. Daenerys Stormborn is a leader and a freer of slaves. She is a just woman with the survivalist instincts and faith that carry her through extended periods of uncertainty and desert wandering.
  5. Apr 13, 2024 · Of course, the world where Game of Thrones is based is entirely fictional, but are there real-life events that inspired George R. R. Marin, who wrote the original books? If you think that Game of Thrones is completely fictitious and has no relation to real-life events, then you might just be wrong. Table of Contents.

  6. It premiered with "Winter Is Coming" on April 17, 2011 on HBO, and concluded with "Fire and Blood" on June 19, 2011. It is based on A Game of Thrones, the first novel of A Song of Ice and Fire by George R.R. Martin.