A maegi was a woman who lay with demons and practiced the blackest of sorceries, a vile thing, evil and soulless, who came to men in the dark of night and sucked life and strength from their bodies. "I am a healer," Mirri Maz Duur said.
seen from Trinidad & Tobago

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from Macao SAR China
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China

seen from Switzerland
A maegi was a woman who lay with demons and practiced the blackest of sorceries, a vile thing, evil and soulless, who came to men in the dark of night and sucked life and strength from their bodies. "I am a healer," Mirri Maz Duur said.
Without Nettles, Timett son of Timett wouldn't have existed.
Last appearance of Nettles :
(Source : Fire and Blood)
Now these people who revered Nettles were called 'Painted Dogs'. This tribe had an offshoot called 'Burned Men' and we know that Timett son of Timett was the leader of the 'Burned Men'.
Have a look at another picture which is a screenshot of the Asoiaf wiki :
If Nettles did not exist, the 'Burned Men' would never have that coming of age ceremony and certainly wouldn't get their name. But they form a significant part of the main Asoiaf series. Also, they were included in the show.
Ryan Condal does not understand that HotD is a prequel of GOT. People expect to see a 'prequel' and also improvements in certain areas in which the GOT failed. People don't want to watch his fanfiction. If we needed fanfiction we would go to AO3, Wattpad and Tumblr.
Again, Nettles plays a very important role in the Dance of Dragons. Her closeness with Daemon drove Rhaenyra further into madness and caused Daemon to sacrifice himself in order to kill Aemond. Daemon was originally planning to do things strategically. But once he realised that things have gone too far and there is no going back, he went on a suicide mission.
The presence of Nettles would also prove that Rhaenyra's judgement isn't good enough and she makes several errors after taking the King's Landing which eventually lead to her downfall. But the show runners don't want us to think that Rhaenyra is an idiot. However, I am surprised that they let go of a chance to make Daemon an adulterous man and portray Rhaenyra as a lonely wife who is betrayed by everyone including her beloved husband.
Anyways, I am still hoping that I am wrong and my fears are meaningless. I am still hoping to see Nettles on the show.
I wonder why the fandom thinks "maesters are grey rats" and "there is a Maester conspiracy against Targaryens" when it suits them, but the moment Maesters write about Vis2/D2 being good rulers, they never doubt these words?
It’s especially strange when they use D2 having maesters at his court as a sign of his intellect and virtue when GRRM portrays most maesters as incorrect, corrupt, hypocritical, cowardly, ingratiating, sexist/racist, and too attached to their birth families. But when D2 seems to like them, suddenly they’re pretty good guys I guess.
After a bit of a hiatus I'm returning to my Discworld/A Song of Ice and Fire crossover idea.
The main premise is, due to the events of A Thief of Time and Night's Watch, Ankh-Morpork and the surrounding is transported to Westeros roughly replacing Saltpans, approximately when Robert and the court are heading north to Winterfell. One of the side effects of the transportation is that Ankh-Morpork provides another source of magic besides Dragons.
In this scene we see one of the first signs of this.
On a side note, this scene sill have several references to Susan. I'm not completely sure about this since one of the things Susan provides is an ability to interact with the supernatural. Since one of the things I like the best about Mr. Martin's writing is the ambiguity of whether the supernatural is real or not, I'm not sure if this is a good idea.
However, since I have a few ideas for running gags, I think I'm stuck with it.
Anyway, I look forward to what you all think, and am open to suggestions!
PROLOGUE
Pylos followed the maester down the Spiral stairs. He had never been to this part of the Citadel, none of the acolytes ever did before their vigil,
He remembered the rumors, all fresh in his head from the other night when he and his friends were celebrating the successful forging of his chain at the Quill and Tankard.
"What about the glass candle?" He had asked.
"Nothing is going to happen" his friend Arman, who had only forged a single link of his chain so far, had said.“It's best just to pray."
"But... Shouldn’t I at least try?" He had asked.
“Try what?” asked another acolyte, a young dark-skinned boy named Alleras. He had just arrived in the Citadel and had already forged his first link.
“What in seven hells for? Arman asked.
Well... In the name of knowledge, shouldn't we see if it can be lit?” he asked. Arman had given him a long look but had just shaken his head. Pylos hadn't been sure why he had wondered. Like most of the acolytes, he had never bothered forging a Valerian steel link and knew magic was simply superstition, but he had attended some of Archmaester Marwyn's talks and there had been something about the history of the glass candles he could not shake.
“Think about it. According to the stories, the Valerians used them to communicate across the empire. Wouldn't that make them technology, like Valerian steel? Isn’t it the duty of the Citadel to retrieve lost secrets?”
Arman took a sip of wine. “The glass candle is your last lesson before you finally take your vows. It tells you the beauty and danger of knowledge, not to seek out more of it! Honestly, Pylos, everyone knows you have a post waiting for you in Dragonstone. Why would you want to risk that by shaming yourself now?
Pylos had sighed. Dragonstone was prestigious but isolated and not what it was before the fall of the Targaryens. Besides, from everything Archmaester Ebrose had told him about the position, he would only be an assistant to the famous Maester Cresson, While he was sure he would learn much, he was not sure how much value he would be.
"In here." Pylos shook himself out of his reverie. The maester had unlocked a large door and motioned Pylos to enter. The room was dark, but for a second the glass candle had reflected the light of the Maester's lantern. It was nearly five feet tall, Pylos looked up and ran his hand across it. Immediately he pulled it back and sucked his finger. The glass was sharp and nothing but edges. Behind him, he could hear the master sigh. Pylos could imagine him rolling his eyes
“What do I..."
"We will see you in the morning,” the Master said and closed the door. Pylos stood alone in the darkness. The only sound he heard was the door lock. He was sure it was his imagination, but he thought he could still see the candle in the center of the pitch-black room.
He supposed he should just start his meditation now. He knew no one expected him to light the candle... But still, he had to try.
"If I am going to make a fool of myself, I'd best get it done now,” he said, clapping his hands twice.
The room shone in a light slightly brighter than the darkness of the chamber. Pylos blinked as he stared at the candle that was glowing in what was not quite a light and not quite darkness, but something far older. He looked down at his hands and clapped again… The light went out. He repeated this several times, watching the glass candle go on and off every time he clapped. Finally, he left it on, illuminating the room in the strange dark light.
He turned towards the door to summon the maester but stopped. For a moment, just a moment, he had thought someone was behind him. There’s nobody there, came a thought that was not his own. They do not expect you to succeed. They will only open the door when the sun rises. Slowly, Pylos turned back to look at the candle.
Suddenly he was in the vastness of space. There was nothing to see but stars.
There were no constellations he recognized as he studied them, he saw a small spec coming slowly towards him.
After an eternity he saw that it was a large turtle slowly through the void. No, not large, huge, the creature was larger than the world itself. Lights, a sun, and a moon, spun around it.
As it came closer he saw that on top of its shell were four elephants and on top of their backs was a vast platform.
The turtle swam beneath him and he found himself looking down on a world of seas continents and mountains.
They came towards him at an unimaginable speed and he found himself hovering over a city that was bigger and older than Oldtown. A large river cut it in half and at its center was a tower that dwarfed the Hightower.
Storm clouds were gathering. He saw two people running across a roof in one of the buildings surrounding the tower. He wanted to warn them about the oncoming storm but they were fighting. They crashed into and fell through a glass dome.
Before Pylos could react, thunder boomed behind him. He turned to see lightning shooting up from a distant house.
Before he could ask how something impossible like that could happen, he was there. It was a large workroom filled with… devices all with circular faces with sticks… arms in the center. Several people stood around another device mounted in a tall box made entirely out of crystal. Something that looked like the skeleton of a rat wearing a black robe climbed to the top of it. It raised a tiny scythe and struck it.
At once the room was filled with light and force. To Pylos, it felt as if he had suddenly moved thousands of miles. But as the light faded, nothing had changed.
Behind him, he heard the creak of a door opening. A cloaked figure walked into the room
The cloak it wore was like nothing he had seen before. It was exquisite, somewhere between dark purple and the darkest night. Somehow he knew it was velvet, with lace trimming. Only a lord could wear such finery, he thought to himself. A lord or a…
The figure pulled down her hood revealing a young but striking woman. Her hair was white, with a single black streak bedded in a sensible bun. She turned to look at him frowning. “The Maid?” Pylos asked himself.
Certainly not the Mother, he thought to himself. Her stern expression made him think of the Crome though he knew he would never dare suggest that to her. Then a final name came to his mind uninvited... Stranger.
“The Stranger is a Maiden?” Pylos whispered. “Or is she someone else? But how can that be? There are seven gods!”
“No,” the Glass Candle told him. “Eight. The true number is eight. Eight gods, eight colors, eight. Eight is the number of magic, the number of power… after all, if you push it over, lying on its side, it becomes eternity. “
Pylos looked into the flame again. The woman looked back at him. In a panic, Pylos clapped his hands. The Glass Candle went out. Whoever the Lady in Black and White with sensible lace was, when she finally met Pylos, she would want answers.
(S4) ASoIaF "Career": Maester
this career is a very simple, nonactive one meant to assist in any ASoIaF playthroughs people have, therefore it's pretty superficial. It's more a placeholder for immersion.
DESCRIPTION
As the order of scholars, healers, messengers, and natural philosophers, maesters educate new students at the Citadel of in Oldtown, a city in the Reach. House Hightower was integral in the Citadel's foundation, and continues to patronize the order. The Citadel is also financed by the lords who pay for having a maester in their service, and from certain taxes that it collects at Oldtown.
As advisers to the Westerosi nobility, the maesters have largely supplanted the Alchemists' Guild. They are sometimes called "the knights of the mind." Some may never become an official maester or even an acolyte!
-----------------------------------------------------------
Levels
"Novice": You are a new students and have begun your education at the Citadel. Most acolytes will treat you as if you have little mindpower, and if you violate the rules of the Citadel, a maester order you to be confined to your rooms by the maesters. You may receive a more physical punishment, such as if you steal from the kitchens, a rector might put you in stocks at the Seneschal's Court, where acolytes may throw rotten vegetables at you. Act smart! To officially become an acolyte, you must earn a link for your chain by going before an archmaester to demonstrate your knowledge. If the archmaester judges your knowledge to be proficient, they will award you with a link of a metal reflecting the subject.
“Acolyte”: You have earned your first link for your chain! You can train at letters at the Scribe's Hearth, and an Oldtowner may hire you to read their letters or write their wills. When you complete your training and are prepared to take your vows to become a maester, you will put in a black-dark room with one of the Citadel's glass candles made of razor-sharp dragonglass. You must stay in that room for the entire night in darkness, unless he is able to light the candle.
Branches
"Maesters": Scholars and healers who have completed their training at the Citadel. They can be sent by the Citadel to serve at the holding of a lord throughout the Seven Kingdoms. A lord has to pay the Citadel for a maester's service, and smallfolk believe that maesters are unwilling to help them. Maesters are only found in castles; if a lord does not have a maester in his service, he is seen as unimportant. They have vowed to hold no lands or lordships, and to be celibate. Maesters wear a collar, which is supposed to remind him of the realm they serve. When they complete their education and take their vows, a maester puts aside their House name. Although they are supposed to be loyal to the seat to which they are assigned, regardless of the changes in control of that holding, old allegiances or loyalties might continue linger.
"Archmaesters": Maesters who have demonstrated mastery of a particular subject. They receive a mask, ring, and rod in the metal corresponding to the link of the maester's chain which signifies their expertise on the topic. Archmaesters teach the students at the Citadel in their subject of expertise, and they judge whether a novice or an acolyte has shown enough knowledge on their subject to receive a link for their chain. They have the right to sit on the Conclave, a council which elects the Grand Maester and determines when the seasons change. Although the Conclave puts effort into demonstrating their consideration of ability before birth, this is generally a pretense, as family status often affects their final choice for Grand Maester. The meetings of the Conclave are conducted behind closed doors at the Citadel. Each archmaester is said to carry a heavy, black iron key that will open most of the doors in the Citadel. They keep them close on their person, or hide them well.
"The Grand Maester": The office of Grand Maester was created in 5 AC by Aegon I Targaryen, who asked for an archmaester to advise him on governing the Seven Kingdoms. Sworn to serve the whole realm, the Grand Maester sits on the monarch's small council and acts as one of the royal advisers. As the Citadel's representative at the royal court of the monarch on the Iron Throne the Grand Maester is elected by the Conclave, and only the Conclave can unmake them again, although several Grand Maesters have died violently. The Grand Maester wears many interwoven maester chains to indicate their high office, but these do not reflect their true studies. Gems are woven into the chains.
-----------------------------------------------------------
Go Check it out or Download
Within Westeros people know Lyanna Stark was "abducted" and held at the Tower of Joy where she died, but from what? What do people think she died from? Also for R+L=J did Rhaegar not send at least one maester for the delivery since I thought only Ned and Howland Reed survived the seizing of the tower?
Your first question is answered here, but to sum up, most likely a fever. (People die from fevers and "chills" in ASOIAF all the time, they don't have modern medicine.) Because, well, Lyanna did die from a fever. And you don't have to tell people it was specifically childbed fever when all you're bringing home is bones.
For your second question, note that only Ned and Howland survived the battle for the tower. "They had been seven against three, yet only two had lived to ride away." This doesn't mention any non-combatants who might have been in the tower -- and note that Ned's thoughts about Lyanna's death actually do mention someone else:
Promise me, she had cried, in a room that smelled of blood and roses. Promise me, Ned. The fever had taken her strength and her voice had been faint as a whisper, but when he gave her his word, the fear had gone out of his sister's eyes. Ned remembered the way she had smiled then, how tightly her fingers had clutched his as she gave up her hold on life, the rose petals spilling from her palm, dead and black. After that he remembered nothing. They had found him still holding her body, silent with grief. The little crannogman, Howland Reed, had taken her hand from his. Ned could recall none of it. —AGOT, Eddard I
Bolding mine-- "they", there was at least one other person besides Howland who found Ned holding his dead sister. Many people suspect that person to be Wylla, who as a wet nurse was also very likely to be a midwife. Whether there was a maester there too, who knows? Maesters can't fix everything, and heck, we've learned from F&B that they seem to be especially bad at saving women from childbed fever and other complications of pregnancy.
Targaryen Maesters
There have been two Targaryen Maesters.
Vaegon Targaryen | 63 AC - ? |
Vaegon was the seventh born child of Alysanne and Jaehaerys. He was not well liked, and being around him made others miserable. He wasn't at all interested in romance (with his sisters or anybody else) He said he would never marry Daella, but it was more because she was 'stupid' than that she was his sister. He eventually became an Archmaester. It was his idea to have the Great Council to set the succession after King Jaehaerys.
Aemon Targaryen | 198 AC - 300 AC |
Aemon was the third child of Maekar Targaryen and Dyanna Dayne. His grandfather King Daeron II sent Aemon to the Citadel as to not have too many heirs. He refused the throne after his fathers death, letting it instead go to his younger brother Aegon V. Afterwards, he chose to go to the Night's Watch so he couldn't be used to usurp his brother. Aemon serves the Night's Watch, and is helpful to both Jon Snow and Samwell Tarly. After Stannis arrives, Jon sends away all kings blood so that Melisandre cannot use him in a ritual. Aemon gets very sick while traveling, and dies in his sleep on the ship Cinnamon Wind while on his way to Oldtown.
CC used: Vaegon: hair robes Aemon: robes
Its so weird that there's only been two Targ Maesters. So few Targs enter a monastic life/chose to not have kids, and I feel like more should have become Septas/Septons/Maesters. The targs should have had Medici level control over the citadel/High Septonship(?))
May make some sims that I think would have been at that sometime in the future.... ALSO I really don't like that Vaegon was the seventh child of Jae and Aly. I feel like he and Maegelle should have been switched, so that the child promised to the Faith of the Seven was the seventh one. That's one of my many slight tweaks that I have to the Targ dynasty lol
Do you know what fields of study that the metals brass, pewter, platinum, red gold, and tin could represent on a maester chain? I think the other metals are more straightforward but I am blanking on what these five could mean.
We may actually have an answer when it comes to red gold, or at least the suggestion of a potential answer. Jon noted to Maester Aemon back in AGOT that “gold [was] for the study of money and accounts”, while Bran told Luwin in ACOK that “gold [was] for sums and numbers”. Neither Jon nor Bran specifies red or yellow gold in their respective statements, meaning that it is nearly impossible to differentiate between the two metals in terms of their respective subjects. Personally, I like to imagine that red gold is for “sums and numbers” while yellow gold is for “money and accounts”, signifying the close connection but important, if subtle, distinctions between the two. However, all of this is only a guess, and red gold could represent virtually anything.
The question of red gold aside, I do have some thoughts regarding the other metals. As far as we know, there are at least seven metals whose respective areas of study have yet to be revealed: brass, pewter, platinum, tin, electrum, steel, and lead. (Note that there also appear to be at least six other areas of study for which an accompanying link metal is unknown, as there are 21 listed archmaesters in the appendix of AFFC.) When considering the subjects that these metals might represent, I think it is important to remember that the Citadel functions as both a de facto Westerosi university and as a business marketing the services of its scholars. Therefore, while I would expect - and indeed, we have evidence of - maesters studying and writing works on what we might call purely academic subjects, we should also anticipate (and again, I think we have some evidence for) maesters studying more practical, quasi-professional subjects.
So here’s how I personally envisions the subjects for the known-but-unassociated metals (long, more under the cut):