Stormlands
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

The Stormlands, synonymous with the Kingdom of the Storm, is located to the south-east of Westeros, renowned for its autumn storms that rip through deep forests, stony mountains, and wind-battered cliffs, and beyond. The Stormlands has been nominally ruled by House Durrandon since the Age of Heroes, 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 Storm Lords.
But the unity of the Stormmen has been broken, and with the Coming of the Andals much of Durrandon control eroded. The Hook of Massey, much of Cape Wrath and the Rainwood, and the Isle of Tarth pay little head to the Storm Kings these days, and exist largely independently.
Shipbreaker Bay

Rocky, wet, and wild, the storms that assault the stout stone keeps of Shipbreaker Bay are legendary. Here prosperity is ripped from the ground and sea in the form of stone, metal, and some of the finest sailors in all of Westeros. The lords of arguably the most hostile lands in the kingdom have made them long-acquainted with the fickleness of the weather, and guest right here is oft sought-after and highly respected.
Dominated by the Stag Kings of House Durrandon, the lords of this region are at the nexus of royal power in the Stormlands, where guest right and hospitality has a centuries-spanning tradition. The lords of the bay regularly break bread with each other, sharing salt, hearth, and home to those in need, and are perhaps more attuned than most to the struggles of their leal smallfolk. Loyalty, brotherhood, and a shared sense of commitment dominate local politics due to the storms that threaten all, with proud families such as House Konugtun, Gale, and Reaper coexisting for mutual benefit and support.
Notable Houses of Shipbreaker Bay
- House Buckler of Bronzegate
- House Durrandon of Storm's End
- House Gale of Parchments
- House Grimsby of Shearfield
- House Hasty of Hadlow Keep
- House Konugtun of Griffin's Roost
- House Reaper of the Giant's Layer
- House Rooke
- House Staines
- House Straw of Strawcastle
The Hook

A windy, and mountainous peninsula, the Hook has long dominated the eastern Blackwater where ships must sail around it to reach the isles in the Gullet, the richer plains and fields of Duskendale, or the banks of the Blackwater River. Nominally apart of the Stormlands, House Massey has broken away from Storm King control and has reigned as Kings in their own right over the Hook since the reign of Durwald the Fat. During the Coming of the Andals, large numbers of immigrants flocked to the Hook, and isles off the coast were put under Andal rule.
Natural traders, opportunists, and merchants, the men of this peninsula charge high tolls for safe passage along their shores and profit is a common aspiration among the lords of the Hook. Closer than most Stormmen to the growing numbers of Andals from over the sea, and the wildly different cultures from the Blackwater, and the Narrow Sea, the men of the Hook are more amenable to change, and tend to look past cultural differences if a beneficial partnership can be reached.
Notable Houses of the Hook
- House Bean of Seedskull Cove
- House Bentley of Benthill Dale
- House Follard of Wisewood
- House Massey of Stonedance
- House Quince of Gullet Isle
- House Sunglass of Sweetport
- House Sweet of Sweet Bay
The Cape of Wrath

The largest peninsula within the Stormlands, Cape Wrath juts out into the Narrow Sea, bordering Shipbreaker Bay, the Eastern Marches, the Sea of Dorne, and encompassing the Estermont Isles. Dominated by the primeval Rainwood, this region bears the brunt of storms sweeping through from the Summer Sea, and is rich in timber, furs, amber, and fertile soil. Though since the reign of the incompetent Durrandon king Durwald the Fat, most of the region has fallen away from the Storm Kings and are now under the influence of the mysterious Green Queen, where many Stormmen houses pay greater heed to the words of this woods-witch rather than any missives from Storm's End.
The men of Cape Wrath are a varied lot. Those woodsmen of the Rainwood and the Estermont Isles dwell in quiet, murky subsistence in their wet forests - preferring to uphold the laws of weirwood and root above bronze and stone, holding the Pact signed on the Isle of Faces in especially high esteem. The scions of House Wylde and House Greenstone have learnt to live in tune with nature, to the beats of thunder on the coasts, and the breath of wood and branch - with most of Cape Wrath following suit. But for a few the ancient traditions of Durran Godsgrief, that of the primordial god-couple of Sea and Sky, still hang heavy in the minds of Houses Crow and Slayne - to appease and overcome the gods, and to grow strong in a often cruel and uncaring world.
Notable Cape Wrath Houses
- House Brownhill of Brownshore
- House Crow of the Crow's Nest
- House Densmore of Densmore
- House Gore of Goring Hill
- House Greenstone of Greenstone
- House Hamfast of Bronzeaxe
- House Kellby of Bluegrove
- House Lush of Amberly
- House Redwind of Redwind
- House Shaw of Greenpools
- House Slayne of the Slaynefort
- House Tudbury of Tudbury Hall
- House Whitehead of the Weeping Tower
- House Wylde of the Rain House
The Eastern Marches

Hundreds of leagues of grassland, moors, and plains stretch across the northern border of the Red Mountains. Existing in a constant state of battle-readiness, the marchers of these lands have fought back and forth with the Dornish and each other for thousands of years, and have garnered a reputation for their grinding martial culture and century-long feuds. The harsher sister of the Western Marches, the Storm Lords of the Eastern Marches keep a tight grip on their power and maintain some of the finest fighting men in Westeros.
Harsh, stubborn, and avenging, marchers are slow to forgot slights and pursue vengeance for misdeeds true or false at great cost to themselves. The continuous wars and raids from both sides of the marches has left little room for higher culture or religion, bar lengthy ballads of conflict in the marches. They have a highly secular approach to ruling - trusting in themselves above any god and tree. As such they keep their godswoods neat, small, and pragmatic, and weirwoods do not take easily to the dryer soil here.
Notable Marcher Houses
- House Caron of Nightsong
- House Dondarrion of Blackhaven
- House Ginett of Nailstone
- House Harvest of Harvest Hall
- House Lambert of Dead Rise
- House Peck of Thrushcastle
- House Ripping of Ressview
- House Spurn of Sour Hill
- House Swann of Stonehelm
- House Polander of Sever Watch
The Kingswood and the Wendwater

The northernmost part of the primeval wood that stretches across the Stormlands - the Kingswood, like its sister-forest down south, is vast, fertile, and old. Swept by winds billowing in from the Blackwater and Shipbreaker Bay, the rustling of trees swaying in the wind goes hand-in-hand with the sound of saws and foresters harvesting timber. There is a great number of streams and small brooks flowing in the woods, and from the coast of the Blackwater runs the Wendwater River, making fertile ground for both the Stormmen and Andal settlers that reside there.
Here, House Fell and House Blackheart dominate the woods within the Stormlands, harvesting large quantities of lumber to build ships, forts, houses, and tools across Westeros. Outside, newly landed Andals such as House Pyle have found rich, fertile land to consolidate their rule over.
Notable Kingswood Houses
- House Belgrave
- House Blackheart
- House Bywater
- House Correy of Noblewood
- House Crowell of Murdren
- House Fell of Felwood
- House Groves
- House Hildreath of Wellwend
- House Manning
- House Miller
- House Pyle
- House Wendwater
- House Wormwood of Wormwood
The Western Meadows

Shielded from the worst excesses of the autumn storms and the dry battlegrounds of the marches - the grasslands, woods and farms west of Storm's End are the breadbasket of the Stormlands and where virtually all inland trade occurs, primarily with the Reach.
Though not as renowned as the warrior-lords that dominate the region's history, the lords of the Meadows have a penchant for diplomacy and reflection that many other Stormmen lack. Strife is not common here, and where feuds are resolved by blood-prices and calm mediation. Content in their godswoods and their enduring rule, the Western Meadows are rarely disturbed, a state of affairs they are in no great rush to change.
Notable Houses of the Meadows
- House Clover
- House Gower
- House Grand of Grandview
- House Harthwood of Harthwood Hall
- House Herston of Herston Hall
- House Morrison of Muchrye
- House Musgood of Goodwreath
- House Peasebury of Poddingfield
- House Wagstaff of Scale Valley
The Isle of Tarth

Known as the Sapphire Isle, Tarth is the largest island of the Stormlands, and sits like a jewel in the shining Straits of Tarth. Renowned for its beauty, of rich fertile soil, lakes, and waterfalls, it was coveted by both First Men and Andals in equal measure.
Though ruled by House Evenstar for millennia, during the Andal Invasion, the isle was split in two with the arrival of House Morne with Ser Galadon Morne claiming the eastern side of the island.
Notable Houses of Tarth
- House Evenstar of Evenstar Hall
- House Morne of Morne