I thought of it and realized - the king on the iron throne does not have much power. Maybe, somehow, you could make the king on the iron throne like the pope. he gives you missions and can declare you as a usurper or something like that.
I thought of it and realized - the king on the iron throne does not have much power. Maybe, somehow, you could make the king on the iron throne like the pope. he gives you missions and can declare you as a usurper or something like that.
Originally Posted by Marcus Aurelius
But we want to be able to play as him as well?
"Five had been his brothers. Oswell Whent and Jon Darry. Lewyn Martell, a prince of Dorne. The White Bull, Gerold Hightower. Ser Arthur Dayne, Sword of the Morning. And beside them, crowned in mist and grief with his long hair streaming behind him, rode Rhaegar Targaryen, Prince of Dragonstone and rightful heir to the Iron Throne."
Have you actually read A Song of Ice and Fire books?
If you did, I am surpised you can compare the literary non-existent power that Joffrey had as of a Clash of Kings with the power of the Pope, who had *very much* influence in Medieval Europe; in Total War it manifsts in form of calling crusades, excommunication and potentially dead inquisitors.
Comparing to excommunication, calling some would-be king in Westros usurper is pointless, they *are* usurpers, and none of would-be kings actually have any legal claim to the Iron Throne (except for Stannis, but very few recognize his claim). Declaring that Robb Stark, Balon Greyjoy or Renly Baratheon are usurpers carries as much sense as declaring that raven is black.
The amount of actual power that the King on the Iron Throne has is very well illustrated by Cersei and Tyrion's conversation.
Cersei: "Has father lost his sense? Or did you forge this letter? Why would he inflict you on me? I wanted him to come himself. I am Joffrey's regent, and I sent him a royal command!"
Tyrion: "And he ignored you. He has quite a large army, he can do that. Nor is he the first. Is he?"
Well, it depends on your definition of usurper.
If you define usurp as a controversial claim to kingship, it would hardly be possible to define any claim as far as Robb Stark and Balon Greyjoy are concerned.
And if you define usurpation as an illegitimate claim to kingship, you might wanna consider that Renly's claim is exactly as valid or invalid as Stannis' , as both are brothers to the late king Robert. I'm no expert for Westerosi law, but taking Earth's Medieval customs as a rule, there was originally no preference for the eldest son.
Neither Robb Stark nor Balon Greyjoy had any claim to the Iron Throne.
Robb, however, *does* have claim for the North, and as a matter of fact, he doesn’t actually claim the Iron Throne, he fights for the North and Riverlands’ independence as a separate kingdom, and in a sense, he is not an usurper.
The legality of Balon’s claim is very well illustrated in a conversation between Cersei and Tywin.
Cersei: By what right does he [Balon Greyjoy] call himself king?”
Tywin: By the right of conquest.
In Westros custom it is not “preference” for the eldest son, the eldest son inherits, it is a simple as that. Disinheriting the eldest son is not even a simple matter of father’s choice: Randyll Tarly had to force Samwell to join the Night’s Watch (which makes him forfeit his claim for Horn Hill) to disinherit him, he couldn’t simply say that his second son will be his heir.
If the ruler or lord in question has no sons, the ruleship passes to the eldest daughter, if the ruler or lord has neither sons nor daughters – to the eldest brother, who is in turn succeeded by his sons and daughters.
Therefore, if Joffrey was revealed and acknowledged as a bastard born of Jaime and Cersei’s incest, Stannis would be rightful king of Westros (in fact, technically he is, but no one acknowledges that). Renly has no right to the Iron Throne regardless, as Stannis stands next in line to succession after Robert’s children, and this was remarked upon by numerous characters, especially Stannis’ famous:
Originally Posted by Stannis Baratheon
(Note: I don’t have the books with me at the moment, so it is not an exact quote, but it was along these lines.)
But that is beside the point. The point is that Joffrey’s (who doesn’t have anyone, not even his allies, obeying him at this point) calling a ruler of some other faction usurper, traitor, etc. would have no bearing on anything. Therefore, giving the King on the Iron Thrones Pope-like powers would be outright wrong: at this point, it is indeed Total War in Westros and only might makes right, and the King on the Iron Throne has very little of it.
I have read, and the influence is quite similiar. Joffrey has little power because others claimed the throne/declared indipendence. But if you look at the influence of other kings, per se, Robert, then he DID have power. similiar to the pope. there are different factions, each acting by their own, but they are rallied under the same banner - one time by the king on the iron throne, and the other by the pope. You can easily rebel against the pope in M2, you just don't listen to the old fool. Such a thing can be easily done by noble families of westeros as well.
Originally Posted by Marcus Aurelius
Exactly which part of it do you dispute? The fact that the elder son/brother’s inherits before younger?
It is all over the books: Eddard Stark was succeeded by Robb, Gregor succeeded his father as the head of House Clegane, Samwell, despite his personal failings, should have succeeded Randyll as the head of House Tarly (Randyll has to force him to join Night’s Watch to remove him from inheritance ladder).
Do you insist that the second son can succeed before the elder? Then why don’t provide an example?
Renly claim is superior to Joffrey only if he is revealed to be a bastard and not Robert’s trueborn son, and it is hard to prove for certain (about everyone took Stannis’ statement about Joffrey as nothing but an attempt to justify his rebellion). And even if that case, his claim is inferior to Stannis’, it is noted not only by Stannis, but by Catelyn and Robb as well.
And you should note that Renly himself makes no secret of what his “claim” is; when Catelyn disputes his claim, Renly shows her his army’s campfires and says, “Here is my claim, as good as Robert’s”. He meant to be the king by the right of conquest alone. As a matter of fact, he had no idea that Joffrey wasn’t Robert’s trueborn son when he started his rebellion, and doubted that even when he read about it in Stannis’ letter.
Yes, both the Pope in Medieval Europe and Joffrey/Cersei can be defied.
The difference is that if you defy the Pope, he can excommunicate you, call a crusade against you and send rampaging inquisitors into your lands. Joffrey and Cersei can only seethe, but have to watch their tongue when the person who openly defied their orders (Tywin) comes at the head of his army and with his allies Tyrells in tow (who supported an usurper to begin with, but later received lands, honors and castles for “switching back”).