Guest right: bread and salt
The oldest and most sacred custom the realm keeps — held holy by the old gods and the new alike — and the terrible weight that falls on any host or guest who breaks it.
The oldest law
Of all the customs the men of Westeros keep, none is older or more sacred than guest right. It is not written in any lord's law-book, for it is older than lords and law-books both; it is held holy by the old gods of the First Men and the new gods of the Andals alike, in a land where the two seldom agree on anything.
Bread and salt
When a guest eats of a host's bread and salt beneath his roof, guest right is invoked, and host and guest are bound to do each other no harm for so long as the guest remains. The sharing of food and drink is the outward sign of the bond, and the offering of bread and salt at a threshold is its most solemn form. A host who shelters and feeds a man has sworn, without words, to keep him safe; a guest who breaks bread has sworn the same of his host. Both gods watch to see the oath kept.
SourcesA Storm of SwordsA Clash of KingsThe weight of it
Men who would think nothing of a lie or a broken betrothal grow uneasy at the thought of violating guest right, for the whole of the realm agrees that to do so is to damn oneself before every god there is. It is the thin thread of trust that lets an enemy be received in a rival's hall, a traveller be sheltered in a stranger's keep, and a lord treat under a roof not his own. Break it, and no hall in the Seven Kingdoms is safe again — for if bread and salt mean nothing, nothing keeps the knife from any guest's back.
SourcesA Storm of SwordsThe World of Ice & Fire
The Rat Cook
The cook of the Nightfort
The oldest tale the Watch tells of guest right is that of the Rat Cook. In the days when the Nightfort still held men, a cook there took some grievance against a king who was his guest, slew the king's son, and baked the boy into a great pie of bacon and onions which he served to the father, who ate of it and praised the taste and asked for a second slice. For this the gods turned the cook into a monstrous white rat that could eat only its own young, and cursed him to hunger forever. Mark well what he was damned for: not murder, and not the horror of a father fed his son — men have done as much and worse — but for the killing of a guest beneath his own roof. That, the gods do not forgive.
SourcesA Storm of Swords
When the law is broken
History is not without its violations, and the chronicles treat them as the blackest deeds a man can do — remembered long after the wars that occasioned them are forgotten.
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.
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.
What is guest right?
Guest right is the ancient and sacred custom by which a guest who eats of a host's bread and salt beneath his roof is under his protection, and host and guest are bound to do each other no harm for as long as the guest remains. It is held holy by the old gods of the First Men and the new gods of the Andals alike.
Why is bread and salt important?
The sharing of food and drink — most solemnly the offering of bread and salt at a threshold — is the outward sign that guest right has been invoked. Once a guest has eaten of them, the bond is sealed: to harm him is no longer merely a crime but a sacrilege against every god there is.
What is the story of the Rat Cook?
The Rat Cook is the Night's Watch's oldest tale of broken guest right: a cook of the Nightfort slew a king's son, baked him into a pie, and served him to the king. The gods cursed the cook into a monstrous white rat doomed to eat its own young — not for the murder, but for the killing of a guest beneath his own roof.
Why is breaking guest right so serious?
Because a host who has shared bread and salt has placed a guest under sacred protection. To violate that protection is more than a crime: it is treated as sacrilege against the old gods and the new, and as an attack on the trust that makes travel and diplomacy possible. The chronicle keeps its notorious later breaches behind the spoiler veil.