In before the rest of the season starts to air. Ormund Hightower and Jon Roxton are going to have homoerotic overtones I can sense it from the 90 seconds of them we’ve seen so far
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In before the rest of the season starts to air. Ormund Hightower and Jon Roxton are going to have homoerotic overtones I can sense it from the 90 seconds of them we’ve seen so far
New look at Ormund, Daemon, and Jon Roxton via house the dragons on Twitter!
The death of Bold Jon Roxton Artwork by Ertaç Altinöz
Seasmoke proved even more devastating than the riverlanders, setting alight tents and pavilions—including those belonging to Ser Hobert, Lord Unwin, and even Prince Daeron. To fight the dragon would require more dragons, but the dragonriders were asleep: Daeron in his tent, Ulf White in a drunken stupor at an inn, and Hard Hugh Hammer abed with the widow of a knight killed at the First Battle of Tumbleton. Hard Hugh was the first to wake, and he prepared to mount Vermithor when Bold Jon Roxton seized his chance, opening him from groin to throat with the Valyrian steel sword Orphan-Maker. (Roxton managed to kill three more of the Hammer’s followers before he was himself killed—some said by slipping on Hard Hugh’s remains.)
In King's Landing, there are two sorts of people. The players and the pieces.
Morya & Jon Roxton
The Two Betrayers felt the need of a king as well...but Daeron Targaryen was not the king they wanted. “We need a strong man to lead us, not a boy,” declared Hard Hugh Hammer. “The throne should be mine.” When Bold Jon Roxton demanded to know by what right he presumed to name himself a king, Lord Hammer answered, “The same right as the Conqueror. A dragon.” And truly, with Vhagar dead at last, the oldest and largest living dragon in all Westeros was Vermithor, once the mount of the Old King, now that of Hard Hugh the bastard. Vermithor was thrice the size of Prince Daeron’s she-dragon Tessarion. No man who glimpsed them together could fail to see that Vermithor was a far more fearsome beast.
Fire and Blood by GRRM, pg 526-527
Second Battle of Tumbleton
Jon: Lord Hammer, my condolences.
Hugh: For what?
Jon: You died in the battle.
House Words Wednesdays: House Roxton
Welcome to House Words Wednesdays! Each week, I take a House without known canon or semi-canon words and present what I think could make sense as that House’s motto. You’re free to suggest more as well, if your favored House has not yet been suggested; take a look at this link to see what has already been suggested, and shoot me an ask if you have another House you’d like to see done.
House Roxton of the Ring is a noble House of the Reach, though whether it is still extant, where the Ring is, or who the head of the House is today are all equally unknown. (It's probable, however, that House Roxton is a landed knightly House; Gyldayn writes in “The Princess and the Queen” that Lord Peake and Hobert Hightower summoned “eleven other lords and landed knights” in their conspiracy, and since Ser Jon Roxton was a part of this conspiracy, it stands to reason he was a landed knight.) Maester Yandel writes that the Roxtons were one of the “many” Houses which trace their ancestry back to Andal adventurers given lands and First Men brides by the Three Sage Kings of House Gardener (along with upcoming HWW feature House Cuy). Whether that means the Roxtons, like the Cuys, were made vassals of some already-established reacher House is impossible to say, but the Roxtons were sufficiently important enough that at some point, the family acquired a Valyrian steel sword (the charmingly named “Orphan-Maker”).
By far the most important Roxton - he's the only one we know, he has to be - is Ser Jon Roxton, presumably the Knight of House Roxton, who fought on the side of the “greens” in the Dance of the Dragons. “Bold Jon” first saw action at the Battle of the Honeywine, in which he slew the “black” Lord Owen Costayne. He seems to have stuck with the reacher force led by Lord Ormund Hightower, for Ser Jon next appears in the aftermath of the First Battle of Tumbleton, among the conspirators known as the Caltrops. It was Bold Jon who “settled the dispute” about what to do with the dragons commanded by the Two Betrayers, suggesting that they “kill the bastards now” and afterward have “the bravest of us claim their dragons” (a strategy that worked wonderfully for Steffon Darklyn and Gormon Massey, of course). Ser Jon never got the chance to try for a dragon, but he did manage to win lasting fame as the slayer of Hugh Hammer - “opening the bastard from groin to throat”, how nice - and killing three of the Hammer's men before himself being overwhelmed and slain during the Second Battle of Tumbleton. What happened to House Roxton in the aftermath of the Dance and Ser Jon's death cannot be said; however, there is a fun, if rather minor, theory that the Golden Company serjeant Chains (seen in “Arianne II” of TWOW) is a descendant of House Roxton (sort of a kin theory to the idea that the Windblown sellsword Webber is a descendant of House Webber).
For the Roxton words, I went with Proven True. As with the Yarwyck words, I took inspiration from a Bible verse - in this case, the Book of Wisdom, which reads in part “as gold in the furnace he proved them”. Given the gold chains present in the Roxton sigil, I thought it a fitting motto for the Roxtons to adopt - they, like the gold they show, would be proven by trial (though not, perhaps, in a literal furnace, unless Ser Jon had gotten his draconic wish) until they showed that they were true, loyal subjects. They had won lands from the Three Sage Kings by proving they would be loyal to Gardener rule and peaceful assimilation of Andals into the First Men of the Reach, and during the Dance, Jon Roxton proved that House Roxton would stay true to the green cause - not seeking a crown for himself, as the Two Betrayers wished, but swearing allegiance to young Prince Daeron and dying for his claim.
Let me know what you think of these words for House Roxton. Next week's House is a reacher family as well, but one most prominently featured in AFFC.
Luthor Largent, Bold Jon Roxton, and Adrian Redfort have been cast, but still no Daeron