- "Maegor agreed to marry the High Septon's niece to unite the Faith and the crown, but then secretly wed a second wife in a Valyrian ceremony artfully combining bigamy and heresy."
- ―Petyr Baelish
Queen Alys Harroway was the second wife of Maegor Targaryen. They were secretly wed in a Valyrian wedding ceremony officiated by Queen Visenya Targaryen. When King Aenys Targaryen learned of this marriage, he exiled Maegor and named Septon Murmison as Hand of the King.[1]
Family[]
Visenya Targaryen Deceased |
Aegon I Targaryen Deceased |
Rhaenys Targaryen Deceased |
Orys Baratheon Deceased |
Argella Baratheon née Durrandon Deceased | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Aenys I Targaryen Deceased |
Alyssa Velaryon Deceased |
Maegor I Targaryen Deceased |
Ceryse Hightower 1st wife Deceased |
Alys Harroway 2nd wife Deceased |
Tyanna of the Tower 3rd wife Deceased |
Elinor Costayne Black Bride Deceased |
Jeyne Westerling Black Bride Deceased |
Rhaena Targaryen Black Bride Deceased |
Axel Baratheon Deceased |
Raymont Baratheon Deceased | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Rhaena Targaryen Deceased |
Aegon Targaryen Deceased |
Viserys Targaryen Deceased |
Jaehaerys I Targaryen Deceased |
Alysanne Targaryen Deceased |
Vaella Targaryen Deceased |
Child Stillborn |
Child Stillborn |
Child Stillborn |
Child Stillborn | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
In the books[]
In the A Song of Ice and Fire novels, Alys was the daughter of Lord Lucas Harroway of Harrenhal. She was Maegor's second wife, and the first to die of his six wives.
Alys Harroway secretly married Maegor Targaryen in 39 AC in a Valyrian ceremony officiated by Queen Visenya Targaryen. The septon on Dragonstone refused to perform the wedding since Maegor was already married to Lady Ceryse Hightower, whom he claimed barren, making Alys's marriage to Maegor a polygamous one. Once the marriage became known, the High Septon denounced the marriage as sin and many pious lords began to call her "Maegor's Whore"; thus, Maegor's deed was the initial trigger of the Faith Militant uprising. King Aenys, unhappy that Maegor married a second time without his permission, gave Maegor a choice: to set Alys Harroway aside or suffer five years of exile. Maegor chose exile and, in 40 AC, the two left Westeros for Pentos.
Alys's husband was first to return to the Seven Kingdoms in 42 AC when King Aenys I died on Dragonstone. After he had been cremated and buried, Queen Visenya Targaryen flew to Pentos on Vhagar, to bring Maegor back to Westeros to claim the Iron Throne. Alys returned from Pentos with six hundred sellswords and Tyanna of the Tower who was rumored to be Alys's Paramour. When Maegor took Tyanna as his third wife later that year, Alys presided over the bedding ceremony.
In 44 AC Alys became pregnant. Grand Maester Desmond confined her to her bed, assisted by two septas, a midwife, and her sisters Jeyne and Hanna, and per Maegor's insistence, both Queen Ceryse and Queen Tyanna served her as well. However, after three months Alys went into labor bleeding heavily. She gave birth to a stillborn monstrosity, an eyeless and twisted son. In his rage, Maegor ordered the executions of those in charge of the Queen's care, sparing only Alys's sisters. Following those executions, Queen Tyanna approached King Maegor and claimed that Alys's child was not his but that the child of one of Alys's affairs. At first Maegor refused to believe this, but Queen Tyanna provided a list of twenty names as proof.
Queen Alys was dragged from her bed by knights of the Kingsguard, and her sisters were killed when they tried to protect her. Her father was flung to his death from the Tower of the Hand. Alys's brothers, uncles, and cousins were impaled on the spikes within the dry moat of Maegor's Holdfast. Alys herself received the worst death: she was given over to Tyanna. It is said that her death took a fortnight of agonizing torture. After her death, Maegor cut her body into seven pieces and placed it on spikes above the seven gates of King's Landing. In 48 AC, Tyanna confessed that she had poisoned Alys's child in the womb.
Gallery[]
Appearances[]
- – "The Hand of the King" (illustrated)
- – "The Blackfyres" (illustrated)
References[]
- ↑ Histories & Lore: Season 7, Short 7: "The Hand of the King" (2017).
Notes[]
External links[]