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After the Duel, [[Beron I Durrandon|Beron the Boring]] was crowned king in 115 A.I., but Balder continued to call himself king in the Slayne. Beron marched on the Slayne with the full might of the Stormlands, and returned it to the fold in 120 A.I. Afterwards, Andals across the kingdom started fomenting dissent or causing chaos. In 122 A.I., [[House Uller]] usurped Tarth from the Blacktydes, necessitating a costly war to reconquer it six years later. Morne was sacked, and all septs on the isle were burned. Andals were pushed to resettle on Morningside Isle, and prohibited from re-establishing themselves on the main island of Tarth. [[House Leygood]] seceded and swore fealty to Duskendale in 128 A.I., and Beron I lost that war within eight months. Duskendale further expanded to the Baywater Woods due to his weakness. [[House Sloane]] arrived somewhere around 130 A.I. and promptly began pillaging the countryside, with many lords failing to capture their leader, Isembard. Their work would continue for years until Isembard's host moved on to other regions, having raided the Stormlands to his contentment for near two entire years uncontested.
After the Duel, [[Beron I Durrandon|Beron the Boring]] was crowned king in 115 A.I., but Balder continued to call himself king in the Slayne. Beron marched on the Slayne with the full might of the Stormlands, and returned it to the fold in 120 A.I. Afterwards, Andals across the kingdom started fomenting dissent or causing chaos. In 122 A.I., [[House Uller]] usurped Tarth from the Blacktydes, necessitating a costly war to reconquer it six years later. Morne was sacked, and all septs on the isle were burned. Andals were pushed to resettle on Morningside Isle, and prohibited from re-establishing themselves on the main island of Tarth. [[House Leygood]] seceded and swore fealty to Duskendale in 128 A.I., and Beron I lost that war within eight months. Duskendale further expanded to the Baywater Woods due to his weakness. [[House Sloane]] arrived somewhere around 130 A.I. and promptly began pillaging the countryside, with many lords failing to capture their leader, Isembard. Their work would continue for years until Isembard's host moved on to other regions, having raided the Stormlands to his contentment for near two entire years uncontested.


In 130 A.I., the Yronwood kingdom collapsed, and [[House Dondarrion|Lord Harras Dondarrion]] moved to secure the Stone Way. He held it for only a year, and was forced to return it to the Wyls after intervention by [[House Dayne|King Dagos Dayne]]. The Durrandons had no hand in such a conflict, for their attention was fixed firmly on the Blackwater and vengeance against House Leygood. The Stormlands assembled a coalition to break Duskendale and return it to a first man king, Ormond Darklyn. From 132-136 A.I., Stormmen, Reachmen, Rivermarkers, Rivermen, and Duskmen pushed each other back and forth over the Blackwater Rush. The bloodiest war Westeros has seen in generations filled the Rush with so much blood that it ran more red than black, and the greater war goal was abandoned. The Durrandons settled for the return of the Baywater Woods, a costly victory that left Beron I feeling hollow.
In 130 A.I., the Yronwood kingdom collapsed, and [[House Dondarrion|Lord Harras Dondarrion]] moved to secure the Stone Way. He held it for only a year, and was forced to return it to the Wyls after intervention by [[House Dayne|King Dagos Dayne]]. The Durrandons had no hand in such a conflict, for their attention was fixed firmly on the Blackwater and vengeance against House Leygood. The Stormlands assembled a coalition to break Duskendale and return it to a first man king, Ormond Darklyn. From 132-136 A.I., Stormmen, Reachmen, Rivermarkers, Rivermen, and Duskmen pushed each other back and forth over the Blackwater Rush. The deadliest war the Blackwater has seen in generations filled the Rush with so much blood that it ran more red than black, and the greater war goal was abandoned. The Durrandons settled for the return of the Baywater Woods, a costly victory that left Beron I feeling hollow.


== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 20:26, 29 August 2025

The people of the stormlands are like unto their weather, it has oft been said: tumultuous, violent, implacable, unpredictable.
- The World of Ice and Fire[1]
The Stormlands is a violent and fickle land, and constantly beset by hurricane winds and fierce storms.

The Stormlands, also known as the Kingdom of the Storm, is located to the south-east of Westeros, bordering the Riverlands and the Blackwater to the north, the Reach to the west, Dorne to the south, and the coast of the Narrow Sea to the east. The Stormlands is renowned for its autumn storms that rip through deep forests, stony mountains, and wind-battered cliffs, and beyond[1]. The region is dominated by its enormous woods, and timber is never in short supply[2]. The Stormlands has been nominally ruled by House Durrandon since the Dawn Age as Storm Kings, and for millennia the men of this land have existed as a largely homogenous group with shared customs, traditions, and heritage.

The First Men of this region are known as Stormmen. They are a harsh, martial people, where strength and resilience are highly prized, and a man's competence is oft more respected than bloodline. The Stormmen value a fierce warrior, praising battle-talent and a man's prowess as the highest virtues. As such many second sons and ambitious smallfolk seek out fame, fortune, and glory as wandering sellswords, brave mercenaries, and valiant adventurers both within and far beyond the confines of the Stormlands seeking their next conquest.

Life is rarely easy here, and success is largely defined by defiance against the elements and uncompromising stubbornness with much of the land actively resisting attempts to tame it. While competition is fierce between the nobility, outsiders face a united front if they encroach on the hard-earned prosperity in the Stormlands, though local raids, minors wars, and feuds are a regular occurrence. To outsiders, the nobility of this land are known as Stormlords[3].

With the Coming of the Andals much of Durrandon control eroded, and the unity of the Stormmen was undone. By 31 A.I. Massey's Hook, much of Cape Wrath and the Rainwood, and the Isle of Tarth paid little heed to the Storm Kings, and existed independently.

Main Regions

History

The Coming of the Andals

First Century A.I.

Few Andals arrived in the Stormlands in the early days of their coming. Houses Manning and Pyle landed on the southern edge of Blackwater Bay, while House Polander settled on the Severisles in the Red March. The most impactful of the first Andals in the Stormlands, however, was House Morne, which settled on the eastern portion of Tarth. In 31 A.I., the Mornes launched a conquest of Tarth, and expelled House Evenstar from their ancestral seat after a year's long war. Ser Galladon of Morne named himself king in 40 A.I., and refused to bow to Storm's End when Durrandon messengers were dispatched following his crowning.

The Storming of Tarth followed in 42 A.I., and House Morne was ejected from the isle after two years, with Evenstar Hall and Tarth itself granted to House Blacktyde of Tarth. Storm King Qarlton II Durrandon led this reconquest, and his rule would see the Pyles, Polanders, and Mannings subjugated under the Storm Throne. Qarlton expanded his dominion to the southern edge Blackwater Rush by 56 A.I.

The Storm Kings saw relative prosperity for a time after this. They launched a raid upon the Yronwoods in 67 A.I, and after Qarlton II's death in 75 A.I., his son Durran XIX joined the Reach in expelling House Risley from Goldengrove in 79 A.I. In 86 A.I., Ser Prentys Strickland attempted to land on the Hook, and forcibly convert the populace to worship of the Seven, but an alliance between Storm King Durran XIX Durrandon and King Kermit Massey saw his host shattered.

Second Century A.I.

This would be the end of Durran Stormcrowned's achievements by and large, however. His realm fought several wars that all ended in defeat for the Stormlands, and saw many homes empty come winter. A foray into the Blackwater was shattered by Vance and Darklyn forces in 103 A.I., and an attempt at fighting the Yronwoods again resulted in failure two years later. With his ambitions falling flat, the Storm King fell into depression. He abdicated suddenly in 110 A.I., and left the realm to join the Night's Watch with three of his sons. The remaining sons then squabbled over their inheritance, resulting in a crippling civil war called the Great Stag Duel.

After the Duel, Beron the Boring was crowned king in 115 A.I., but Balder continued to call himself king in the Slayne. Beron marched on the Slayne with the full might of the Stormlands, and returned it to the fold in 120 A.I. Afterwards, Andals across the kingdom started fomenting dissent or causing chaos. In 122 A.I., House Uller usurped Tarth from the Blacktydes, necessitating a costly war to reconquer it six years later. Morne was sacked, and all septs on the isle were burned. Andals were pushed to resettle on Morningside Isle, and prohibited from re-establishing themselves on the main island of Tarth. House Leygood seceded and swore fealty to Duskendale in 128 A.I., and Beron I lost that war within eight months. Duskendale further expanded to the Baywater Woods due to his weakness. House Sloane arrived somewhere around 130 A.I. and promptly began pillaging the countryside, with many lords failing to capture their leader, Isembard. Their work would continue for years until Isembard's host moved on to other regions, having raided the Stormlands to his contentment for near two entire years uncontested.

In 130 A.I., the Yronwood kingdom collapsed, and Lord Harras Dondarrion moved to secure the Stone Way. He held it for only a year, and was forced to return it to the Wyls after intervention by King Dagos Dayne. The Durrandons had no hand in such a conflict, for their attention was fixed firmly on the Blackwater and vengeance against House Leygood. The Stormlands assembled a coalition to break Duskendale and return it to a first man king, Ormond Darklyn. From 132-136 A.I., Stormmen, Reachmen, Rivermarkers, Rivermen, and Duskmen pushed each other back and forth over the Blackwater Rush. The deadliest war the Blackwater has seen in generations filled the Rush with so much blood that it ran more red than black, and the greater war goal was abandoned. The Durrandons settled for the return of the Baywater Woods, a costly victory that left Beron I feeling hollow.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 George R.R. Martin. (2014). The World of Ice and Fire - The Stormlands. London: HarperVoyager. p.221
  2. Steven Attewell. (2015). Stormlands Economic Development Plan in Race for the Iron Throne. Wordpress.
  3. George R.R. Martin. (2013). The Winds of Winter - Arianne I. Bantam Books.
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