Baratheon of King's Landing (by name; Lannister by blood)
Titles
King of the Andals and the First Men · Lord of the Seven Kingdoms
A gentle, plump boy-king who inherited a throne built on rather more than the realm has been told, and a mother determined to rule through him for as long as anyone lets her.
The Spare Made King
Born in 291 AC, the youngest of Cersei's three children by Jaime Lannister, Tommen is believed by the realm — and by himself — to be Robert Baratheon's trueborn son. Gentler and softer than his elder brother Joffrey by a wide margin, he takes more interest in his growing menagerie of kittens, each named with more enthusiasm than sense, than in swords or crowns, a trait the text treats as mercy rather than flaw.
He was crowned King of the Seven Kingdoms after Joffrey's poisoning at his own wedding feast, a boy of eight elevated to a throne he never sought and barely comprehends, and married almost at once to Joffrey's young widow, Margaery Tyrell, in a match arranged chiefly to keep the Reach bound to the crown.
Ruled by Regents
Tommen has been governed throughout his short reign by others — his grandfather Tywin as Hand until Tywin's murder, then his mother Cersei as regent, with Margaery's Tyrell influence tugging him the opposite direction — and his own preferences rarely factor into decisions made in his name.
As the published chronicle stands, Tommen remains on the Iron Throne at King's Landing while his mother sits imprisoned by the Faith Militant and his wife's family besieges the last Baratheon holdouts on his behalf — a king in name who has ruled almost nothing in fact.
Key events
291 ACBorn at King's Landing, the youngest child of Queen Cersei Lannister.
300 ACCrowned King of the Seven Kingdoms after Joffrey's death at the Purple Wedding.
300 ACMarries Margaery Tyrell, Joffrey's widow, within weeks of his coronation.
The arc of Tommen Baratheon
This carries the character’s road through the published novels. Read on only if you do not fear to know.
Whether Tommen ever learns — or has always half-sensed — that Robert was not his father is a question the published text has not yet answered directly.
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
Tommen's reign, brief as it has been on the page, mostly demonstrates how much of kingship in Westeros is decided by the adults standing behind the throne rather than the child sitting on it.
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Who is Tommen Baratheon?
A gentle, plump boy-king who inherited a throne built on rather more than the realm has been told, and a mother determined to rule through him for as long as anyone lets her.
Is Tommen 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.