Law & custom

How succession works

The realm's rules for who inherits — with the councils, and the one great war, that settled the question whenever the rules themselves ran short.

The three ways a seat is passed

Worked examples — the Great Councils

The counter-example

韦赛里斯一世立女儿雷妮拉为继承人,命麾下领主起誓效忠于她,此举撇开了他自己那场大会议所立下的先例。他驾崩之后,绿党在数日之内便拥立了他的长子伊耿二世。两方主张,各按某种算法皆属合法,却无一能被所有人共同认可——一代人的巨龙与人命,就此殉葬,以证明维斯特洛继承法则之中最残酷的真相:一个王国的太平,所倚仗的从来不是羊皮纸,也不是律法,而在于它的大领主们是否能够彼此认同。

SourcesF&BTWOIAF

How does succession work in Game of Thrones?

Across most of the Seven Kingdoms, and for the Iron Throne itself, inheritance follows male-preference primogeniture: a lord's eldest trueborn son takes everything, younger sons follow before any daughter, and a woman inherits only when no trueborn brother survives. Dorne and the Iron Islands each keep older customs of their own.

Can a woman inherit the Iron Throne?

The realm has never firmly settled it. Twice — at the Great Councils of 101 and 233 AC — the lords favoured a claim through the male line over one through a woman, and those choices hardened into precedent without ever becoming written law. Dorne is the exception, where a daughter inherits on equal footing with a son.

How is Dornish inheritance different?

Dorne practises absolute primogeniture: the eldest child rules, daughter or son alike, and a younger brother never steps over an elder sister. The Rhoynar brought the custom over the narrow sea with Nymeria, and a thousand years of Martell rule have kept it unchanged.

What is a kingsmoot?

The kingsmoot is the ironborn's ancient custom of choosing a king rather than inheriting one: the captains of the Iron Islands gather on Old Wyk and raise up whichever reaver they judge worthiest of the driftwood crown. Father-to-son succession later crept in from the green lands, but the old elective right was never wholly lost.