Valyria & the Doom
For five thousand years the Valyrian Freehold ruled the known world on dragonback — until, in a single night and day, the Fourteen Flames swallowed it whole. What follows is the rise, the ruin, and the arguments that still smoke over the wreck.
- The shepherds and the flames
The Freehold Rises
c. 5,000 BCBefore the Freehold there were only shepherds, or so the Valyrians told it afterward, when they had grown too proud to remember having been anything so humble. What raised them above every empire the world had known was neither steel nor number but the dragons they found sleeping in the smoke of the Fourteen Flames — a ring of volcanoes whose fire and iron the shepherds learned to master.
How a herder tames a beast that can turn a knight to ash is a question the histories answer with a shrug and the word sorcery. The Valyrians were content to let it stay a mystery; a secret shared is a secret spent. What is certain is that where the dragons went, the Freehold followed, and no rival kept its walls for long.
SourcesA Song of Ice and Fire (Daenerys, Tyrion) · the Citadel's fuller histories
- Forty families, no king
The Dragonlords
c. 5,000 – 114 BCValyria crowned no king. It called itself a freehold, and its great houses — the dragonlords, some two-score of them — ruled together in a manner the maesters have never quite untangled, save that every one of them thought himself the equal of any three others. Wealth flowed from the mines their slaves died in; power flowed from the dragons only the old blood could ride.
Their sorcery worked wonders that Westeros has spent four centuries failing to copy. Valyrian steel, folded and spell-forged in dragonflame, still holds an edge no smith in the Seven Kingdoms can match or mend. Their glass candles were said to burn without heat and let a mage see across the width of the world. Much of this the wise account as legend — but the swords are real enough, and a man may test their edge upon his thumb.
SourcesA Storm of Swords (the Valyrian steel) · A Feast for Crows (the glass candles)
- The first empire falls
The Wars with Old Ghis
c. 5,000 – 4,700 BCThe only power that dared name itself Valyria's rival was Old Ghis, an empire of brick and slavery already ancient when the dragonlords were young. Five times the two went to war, and five times the harpy's legions marched in their lockstep ranks against the dragons — a discipline that availed them nothing once the sky itself caught fire.
In the end the dragonlords burned Ghis to its foundations, threw down its walls, and — the tale insists — sowed its fields with salt and skulls so that nothing might grow there again. What Ghis had built over centuries, Valyria unmade in an afternoon. The slave trade it left standing, having found it far too profitable to burn.
SourcesA Song of Ice and Fire (Slaver's Bay) · the Citadel's fuller histories
- The water wizards drowned
The Rhoynar and Garin's Curse
c. 700 BCWestward the Freehold pressed, until it came upon the Rhoynar of the great river — a gentle, clever people whose water wizards were reckoned mighty in their own art. Against dragons their art proved a poor shield. The Rhoynish Wars ended their cities one by one; when Garin the Great raised a quarter-million spears, the dragonlords broke him and, the songs say, left a curse behind them for their trouble.
Rather than kneel, the warrior-queen Nymeria gathered ten thousand ships and what remained of her people and fled across the world to Dorne — a flight that seeded a kingdom, and a grudge, that would outlast Valyria itself.
SourcesA Feast for Crows (the Dornish histories)
- A maiden's warning
Daenys the Dreamer
114 BCAmong the forty families the Targaryens ranked well down the ladder — dragonlords of middling wealth, seated not in Valyria proper but upon the smoking rock of Dragonstone at the edge of the world. Their fortune, and the fortune of every king who would later sit the Iron Throne, turned on a single dream.
Daenys, called the Dreamer, foresaw the Freehold's ruin, and her father Aenar was wise or fearful enough to heed a girl's night-terrors where prouder men would have laughed. He sold his holdings, loaded his household and his dragons onto ships, and quit Valyria for Dragonstone. Twelve years later the Dreamer's warning came due, and the Targaryens were the only dragonlords left alive to profit from it.
SourcesA Song of Ice and Fire (the Targaryen histories) · The World of Ice & Fire
- The day the world broke
The Doom of Valyria
102 BCIt came in a night and a day. Every hill for five hundred miles split open; the Fourteen Flames erupted as one and drowned the Freehold in fire and molten stone. Dragons died screaming in the air. Lords and slaves alike were consumed together, for once the mountains cared nothing which throat wore the collar. Where Valyria had stood, the sea rushed in through a broken peninsula, boiling.
In a single day the mightiest civilization the world had known ceased to be. No maester will say for certain why. The Freehold's sorcery, its slaves, its dragons, and its pride all went into the fire together, and the smoke has not yet cleared. What is left is a sea that steams, a coast no captain will approach, and four hundred years of men picking through the ashes for a scrap of the old power.
SourcesA Song of Ice and Fire (Daenerys, Tyrion)
- The vultures descend
The Century of Blood
102 – 2 BCA world does not mourn an empire quietly. With Valyria gone, its colonies and client cities fell upon one another and upon its corpse alike — a hundred years the histories call the Century of Blood, or the Bleeding Years. Dothraki khalasars rode where roads had run; free companies sold their swords to whoever paid; and out of the wreck the Free Cities carved themselves loose, none more grasping than Volantis, which fancied itself Valyria's rightful heir.
When it was done, the map of the east had been redrawn in ash and the dragonlords were a memory kept alive on one lonely island in the west — where a girl-child of that fugitive house would one day be born to set the whole tale burning again.
SourcesA Song of Ice and Fire (the Free Cities)
- Where no captain sails
The Smoking Sea Today
the present reckoningFour hundred years on, the ruin still smokes, and sailors give it a wide berth by long custom and longer fear. They speak of demons in the fog, of water that boils and burns, of ghosts that ride the wind above the drowned streets. Every man who has tried to plunder Valyria's riches has failed to return to boast of them — a record unbroken enough to discourage the sensible.
The greyscale that scars the survivors of these waters lends the tales a grim credibility. Whether the terrors are truly sorcery clinging to the stones, or merely the ordinary hazards of a sunken volcano dressed up in a captain's imagination, the chronicle cannot say. It notes only that the wise stay home, and the bold do not come back.
SourcesA Dance with Dragons (the Sorrows, the Smoking Sea)
Why did Valyria fall?
No maester will swear to the cause of the Doom. Five explanations have outlived every scholar who first set them down — take your pick, or hold them all at arm's length, as the chronicle does.
The Fourteen Flames burst
The plainest reading, and the one a maester will offer first: the ring of volcanoes that made Valyria rich simply erupted together, as such mountains sometimes will. No curse required — only fire, and the poor judgment of building an empire in its lap.
The spells slipped their leash
Some hold that Valyrian sorcery, not stone, kept the Fourteen Flames sleeping — and that when the spells that bound them failed, or were meddled with, the mountains woke all at once. A tidy answer, and one no one living can put to the test.
A slave's curse
The Faceless Men are said to have been born in Valyria's mines, where they gave the god of death his due when no one else would. Their kind take credit for little and deny nothing; the tale that they called down the Doom to free their brothers persists chiefly because they will not trouble to correct it.
Mother Rhoyne's wrath
The Rhoynar hold that Garin the Great, drowned in a golden cage for defying the dragonlords, cried out to Mother Rhoyne with his last breath — and that the river's grief followed the conquerors home a lifetime later. A curse that takes six hundred years to land is hard to disprove, and harder to trust.
The wages of pride
The pious need no volcano. A people who kept ten thousand slaves, bred men like hounds for their pleasure, and named themselves the equals of gods were, they say, simply paid their wages. The chronicle records the sermon without endorsing the arithmetic.
What happened to Valyria?
The Valyrian Freehold, the world's greatest civilization and the seat of the dragonlords, was destroyed in a cataclysm called the Doom — the Fourteen Flames, the ring of volcanoes that fed its wealth, erupting all at once and drowning the peninsula in fire and molten stone in a single night and day, some four hundred years before the present reckoning.
What caused the Doom of Valyria?
No one knows, and the novels never settle it. The plainest reading is a natural volcanic cataclysm; other traditions blame Valyrian sorcery slipping its bindings, a slave's or a Faceless Man's curse, the drowned water wizards of the Rhoyne, or divine judgment on a cruel and prideful people. The chronicle records all five and endorses none.
How did the Targaryens survive the Doom of Valyria?
Twelve years before the Doom, Daenys Targaryen — called the Dreamer — foresaw Valyria's ruin, and her father Aenar heeded the vision, selling the family's holdings and moving his household and dragons to the island of Dragonstone. When the Doom came, the Targaryens were the only dragonlords left alive.
Can anyone visit Valyria now?
Sailors shun it. Four centuries on, the ruin still smokes above a boiling, sunken coast the maps call the Smoking Sea, wreathed in tales of demons, ghosts, and greyscale. Those who go seeking its lost riches — and a few brave fools do — have a habit of never returning to tell of it.