Unaligned

Kinvara

High Priestess of the Red Temple of Volantis (television only)

House
Red Temple of Volantis; not a figure the novels record

This entry exists to note a divergence rather than to report a fate: readers of the novels will not meet Kinvara there.

The Citadel's chronicle holds to the novels as its primary record, and on that standard, Kinvara is a gap rather than a person — a compression, for the screen, of two red priests the books keep separate. Benerro, High Priest of Volantis's red temple, preaches from his own city and never travels; it is Moqorro, one of his order, who takes ship for Meereen bearing the temple's prophecies and crosses paths with Tyrion Lannister and Jorah Mormont along the way, seeing in the dwarf's shadow something he is not yet willing to explain in full. Where the adaptation collapses these two men into a single woman of considerable screen presence, the novels have, as of their last published word, kept them apart.

The arc of Kinvara

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.

SourcesADWD · TyrionTWOIAF · The Free Cities

Is Kinvara in the A Song of Ice and Fire books?

No. She was created for the television series, combining elements of two book characters — Benerro, the High Priest of Volantis, and Moqorro, the red priest he sends to Meereen.

Who is the book equivalent of Kinvara?

Closest is Moqorro, the red priest who travels toward Meereen and prophesies about Tyrion Lannister; the office of High Priest of Volantis in the novels belongs to a man, Benerro, who never leaves the city.