House Dayne

Arthur Dayne

the Sword of the Morning

Life
283 AC, at the Tower of Joy in the Red Mountains of Dorne
House
House Dayne of Starfall, sworn to the Kingsguard; the only man of his line judged worthy to bear the ancestral blade Dawn in living memory

Remembered across the Seven Kingdoms as the finest knight of his generation, killed defending a lonely tower in Dorne at the close of Robert's Rebellion — guarding, by the realm's understanding, nothing more than his fallen king's honor.

A maester who has read every tourney roll of the last fifty years finds no name spoken of with less argument than Ser Arthur Dayne's. At seventeen he was already dueling the Kingswood Brotherhood's Smiling Knight to a standstill, chivalrously pausing the fight so his half-mad opponent could fetch a fresh blade rather than yield the advantage of a notched one — and killed him anyway, then knighted the squire who had fought at his side that day, a Lannister boy named Jaime who would spend the rest of his life measuring every other knight he met against that morning in the Kingswood. Dayne carried Dawn, the pale, rippled greatsword forged of a fallen star and passed only to a Dayne the family itself judges fit to wield it, and wore the title Sword of the Morning as long as the blade stayed sheathed at his hip. Jaime Lannister, no small judge of swordsmanship and no friend to easy praise, would later call him simply the finest knight he ever saw draw a blade — and Jaime, whatever else the realm holds against him, never once revised that opinion.

The arc of Arthur Dayne

This carries the character’s road through the published novels. Read on only if you do not fear to know.

These partings name deaths, endings, and roads not yet ridden in the books. Unveil them only if both roads are known to you — or if you do not fear to know.

SourcesAGOT · EddardASOS · JaimeTWOIAF · Robert's RebellionTWOIAF · Dorne

Explore further

Who killed Arthur Dayne at the Tower of Joy?

The books never say outright. Eddard Stark's fever dream shows the fight beginning and its aftermath — seven dead, two riding away — but not the blow-by-blow, and Ned himself never wrote down what happened inside it.

Why is Arthur Dayne called the Sword of the Morning?

It is the title carried by whichever Dayne of Starfall is judged worthy to wield the family's ancestral greatsword, Dawn — a title that lapses whenever no living Dayne is thought fit to bear the blade.