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    • The War of the Roses. Stark? York? Lannister? Lancaster? Come on people! Surely you can see the connection? Taking place between 1455 and 1485, The War of the Roses was a series of bloody battles over the British throne by rival royal families.
    • Hadrian's Wall. George R. R. Martin (GRRM) has admitted that he came up with his giant ice wall creation (imaginatively called ‘The Wall’) while visiting Hadrian's Wall near the Scottish border with England.
    • The Roman Empire. But it’s not just that great big wall the Romans constructed that GRRM was inspired by. Various elements of the Roman Empire have seeped into the world of Game of Thrones.
    • The Black Dinner. One of the most notorious events in GoT history is the brutal, gruesome ‘Red Wedding’ where King Robb Stark, his wife, Queen Talisa, his mother, Lady Catelyn and many many more were murdered during the marriage of Edmure Tully to Roslin Frey.
  2. May 28, 2019 · Dragons, giants, White Walkers, and that weird thing Melisandre gave birth to in a cave — everyone knows Game of Thrones is all just fantasy. But there are a lot of historical parallels in Game of Thrones, and George R.R. Marting included many of them intentionally.

    • 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.
    • Lancaster vs. York
    • The Next Generation
    • Who Is Richard III?
    • The Last Targaryen and The First Tudor
    • It’S Not Over Yet
    • But Wait! What About My Favorite Character?

    Game of Thrones Equivalents: Robert Baratheon and Cersei Lannister; Ned Stark and Catelyn Tully

    It’s 1453. Henry VI is on the throne, but there have been years of unrest. Disgruntled nobles are feuding, and everyone thinks Henry’s advisors have too much influence over him. Even though he has a newborn son, Henry himself has had a mental collapse. A regency government has to be set up to rule the country, and it’s headed up by a powerful duke from the north of England: Richard of York. And believe it or not, Richard is also descended from good old Edward III and has his own solid claim t...

    Game of Thrones Equivalents: Robert Baratheon and Cersei Lannister; Robb Stark and Talisa (Jeyne Westerling in the books); Stannis and Renly Baratheon

    The Lancasters may have thought they were safe, but Richard of York’s son, Edward, took up his father’s cause—and his claim to the throne. After a series of battles, Edward and his forces entered London, where he was informally declared King Edward IV. Despite urging from his advisors to marry a French princess, he met and secretly wed a commoner, Elizabeth Woodville. So, here’s where sorting out the real history behindGame of Thrones gets complicated. Young Edward IV sounds a lot like Robb S...

    Game of Thrones Equivalents: Theon Greyjoy, Stannis Baratheon, Tyrion Lannister

    Edward IV’s 12-year-old son, Edward V, assumed the throne after his death. And as we learned from Richard II, a child rarely makes an effective king. Young Edward’s uncle Richard, Duke of Gloucester, was named Lord Protector. He used that power to execute a bunch of people, claim Edward IV and Elizabeth’s marriage was illegitimate, and seize the young king, sending him to the Tower of London with his younger brother. The two became known as “the princes in the tower.” Not long after Richard d...

    Game of Thrones Equivalents: Daenerys Targaryen, Jon Snow

    Richard III held the throne for only two years. While all of these many battles had been going on, yet another man with a claim to the throne was watching and waiting from France. (Blame Edward III for having so many children.) Henry Tudor traced his lineage through his mother, Margaret Beaufort, back to Edward III. Because this was through the maternal line, it wasn’t the strongest case, but he was the only male Lancaster left. And by all accounts, Margaret was fiercely determined to see her...

    Game of Thrones Equivalents: Daenerys Targaryen; Bran, Sansa, and Arya Stark

    As we know, Game of Thrones doesn’t end with a marriage between a Stark and a Lannister, but with the crowning of a random kid who claims he’s a raven. Let’s let history explain this one. Imagine Dany is a hybrid of Henry VII and his son, Henry VIII. She has Henry VII’s basic life story paired with Henry VIII’s charisma and, later, his paranoid thoughts and burning desire to do whatever the heck he wants with no input from the Pope (or in Dany’s case, her advisors). Henry VIII even had an old...

    The real history behind Game of Thronesis a huge, sprawling epic with hundreds of important characters—and so is GoT itself! Not everyone made it into this post. But here’s a quick rundown of some books to read based on a few other GoTcharacters.

    • Kathleen Keenan
    • Iron Born - Vikings. Perhaps the clearest connection between the real world and Game of Thrones is the Ironborn. The Ironborn are Westerosi who live on the Iron Islands.
    • Invasion Of The First Men. Before the invasion of Aegon the Conqueror, Westeros had been subject to two major invasions - the first was the invasion of the First Men and the second was the invasion of the Andals.
    • Greek Fire/ Wild Fire. Greek fire was one of the most powerful and mysterious weapons of the ancient world. The name comes from the first use of the fire by Greeks who were being besieged in the 7th Century.
    • Roman Empire. The Valyrian Empire was incredibly similar to the Roman Empire in two main ways. The first is in infrastructure. The Valyrian's built vast roads that helped connect distant lands and make travel between two points far easier.
  3. Game of Thrones is roughly based on the storylines of the A Song of Ice and Fire book series by George R. R. Martin, set in the fictional Seven Kingdoms of Westeros and the continent of Essos. [ 5 ][ 6 ] The series follows several simultaneous plotlines. [ 7 ] .

  4. Aug 23, 2020 · Game Of Thrones. The Red Wedding was one of Game of Thrones' most brutal events and George R.R. Martin based the massacre of the Starks on real-life Scottish history.