House Baratheon

Renly Baratheon

Lord of Storm's End

Life
277 AC, at Storm's End – 299 AC, at Storm's End, killed in his own tent during a parley with his brother Stannis
House
Baratheon of Storm's End
Titles
Lord of Storm's End · Master of Laws · King of the Seven Kingdoms (self-proclaimed)

A younger brother who discovered, rather too late, that charm and popularity are not the same thing as a claim to a throne, and who built the largest army of the war on that discovery — an army that did not survive the parley it was marching toward.

The Youngest Baratheon

Renly was born at Storm's End in 277 AC, the youngest of Lord Steffon Baratheon and Lady Cassana Estermont's three sons, and was orphaned in infancy when his parents drowned in Shipbreaker Bay returning from a voyage to Volantis. Raised largely by his household rather than either of his brothers, he grew into the most conventionally charming lord at Robert's court, made Lord of Storm's End in name and, later, Master of Laws on the small council — a seat that owed more to his popularity than to any particular gift for the law.

He cultivated the devotion of Loras Tyrell, the Knight of Flowers, and through that bond built an alliance with Highgarden that outweighed anything his own modest holdings could offer. His household became the fashionable one at court, admired by nearly everyone and, not incidentally, resented by his sober elder brother Stannis, who considered Renly's charm cheap coin next to the birthright Stannis felt Robert had cheated him of.

A Crown Taken, Not Given

After Robert's death in 298 AC, Renly refused to bend the knee to his nephew Joffrey, whom he suspected was no Baratheon at all, but he declined just as firmly to support Stannis's stronger claim, arguing that a crown ought to go to the man lords would actually follow. He married Margaery Tyrell in haste to bind Highgarden formally to his cause and crowned himself king with the full weight of the Reach's soldiery behind him — by most reckonings the largest host raised in the entire war.

He marched on King's Landing expecting an easy throne, pausing near Storm's End to parley with Stannis, who had arrived to press his own claim. The parley produced no battle — only Renly's murder in his own tent that same night, witnessed by Catelyn Stark and Brienne of Tarth as a shadow wearing Stannis's face and wielding a blade shaped like his. Within a day the bulk of his host, the Tyrells foremost among them, had abandoned the field rather than follow the brother they blamed for it.

Key events

  1. 277 ACBorn at Storm's End, youngest son of Lord Steffon Baratheon and Lady Cassana Estermont.
  2. 298 ACDeclines to recognize Joffrey as king after Robert's death, and refuses in turn to support Stannis's claim.
  3. 299 ACCrowns himself King of the Seven Kingdoms, marries Margaery Tyrell, and marches on King's Landing at the head of the war's largest host.
  4. 299 ACKilled in his tent outside Storm's End by a shadow during a parley with Stannis; his army fractures within a day.

The arc of Renly Baratheon

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.

Legacy

Renly's death reshaped the war more than his life had managed to: it took the single largest army off the board without a battle fought, cost Stannis the very alliance the parley had been meant to win, and pushed House Tyrell into the Lannisters' arms through a fresh royal match for Margaery — a realignment that arguably decided the war's outcome as surely as any pitched field would have.

SourcesAGOTACOKASOSTWOIAF

Explore further

Who is Renly Baratheon?

A younger brother who discovered, rather too late, that charm and popularity are not the same thing as a claim to a throne, and who built the largest army of the war on that discovery — an army that did not survive the parley it was marching toward.

Is Renly Baratheon from the books or the show?

Book canon. This profile follows George R. R. Martin’s novels and histories, and notes where the television series diverges rather than following it.