ThroneAtlas homepage hero map showing a dark fantasy atlas of Westeros and Essos with castles, sea routes, compass lines, and antique gold branding
Independent Fan-Made Fantasy Atlas

THRONE ATLAS

Westeros · Essos · Houses · Routes · Battles · Lore

Step into a map-first guide to Westeros, Essos, and the wider world of thrones. ThroneAtlas organizes kingdom maps, character journeys, noble house territories, battle locations, castles, cities, sea routes, ancient history, and lore connections into one cinematic atlas for fans who want the story to make sense geographically.

Map Guides Character Routes House Territories Battle Locations Deep Lore House of the Dragon
Quick Answer

ThroneAtlas is an independent fan-made map and lore guide for Game of Thrones, House of the Dragon, and the wider world of A Song of Ice and Fire. It helps readers understand Westeros, Essos, houses, battles, character routes, castles, cities, and lore through clear atlas-style pages.

Map-First Method

Why ThroneAtlas Is Built Around Geography

In the world of thrones, geography is never just background. The North feels different because distance, snow, old roads, the Wolfswood, the Wall, and centuries of northern loyalty shape every decision. King’s Landing matters because the capital controls courts, gates, harbors, public spectacle, the Iron Throne, and the political center of the realm. Dragonstone matters because an island fortress can guard a bloodline, command sea routes, store ancient memory, and carry the symbolic weight of dragons long after the sky has gone quiet.

ThroneAtlas is designed to make those connections easy to follow. Instead of treating a map as decoration, every guide explains how place creates pressure. Roads decide who can arrive in time. Rivers decide where armies can cross. Castles decide who can hold power. Seas decide whether a ruler can project strength beyond one coast. Mountains, forests, ports, walls, ruins, and islands all become part of the story.

This homepage is the starting table of the atlas. From here, readers can move into continent maps, city maps, battle maps, house territories, character routes, and lore guides without feeling lost. Each section acts like a gateway into a deeper part of the known world, helping visitors move from broad geography to focused story context.

Editorial Promise

A Cleaner Way to Explore the Realm

ThroneAtlas is built for fans who want quick answers, visual context, deeper reading paths, and map-based explanations in one place.

For New Viewers

If the names feel overwhelming, start with the core maps. Westeros, Essos, King’s Landing, Winterfell, Dragonstone, and the Wall give you the basic structure before you move into houses, routes, battles, and older lore.

For Rewatchers

Use character route pages to follow how a person changes across the map. Jon, Daenerys, Arya, Sansa, Tyrion, Jaime, and Theon all become easier to understand when their journeys are placed on a route.

For Lore Readers

Use house, battle, and lore pages to connect older history with present events. Aegon’s Conquest, Robert’s Rebellion, the Long Night, Valyria, and the Dance of the Dragons all become clearer through geography.

Recommended Reading Path

Start Here, Then Go Deeper

If this is your first visit, follow this order to understand the atlas without jumping randomly between pages.

Step 01

Begin with the World Maps

Open Westeros, Essos, and the Known World to understand the broad geography before you study individual castles or routes.

Maps
Step 02

Move into Power Centers

Read King’s Landing, Winterfell, Dragonstone, the Wall, and other location pages to understand where political and military power gathers.

Locations
Step 03

Follow People Across the Map

Character journey pages show how exile, war, return, loyalty, and survival change by location.

Characters
Step 04

Study Houses and Battles

House territories and battle maps explain who controls land and how conflict reshapes it through roads, rivers, castles, and armies.

Battles
Explore the Atlas

Choose Your Path Through the Known World

Start with the major map hubs, then move into characters, houses, locations, battles, routes, and lore. Each card below now uses the correct image and alt text for its topic.

ThroneAtlas maps hub showing the Known World with Westeros, Essos, coastlines, sea routes, map borders, castles, and antique gold atlas styling
MapsCore Hub

Maps of the Known World

Westeros, Essos, the Narrow Sea, the Wall, Dorne, Dragonstone, King’s Landing, and the larger world beyond the main story.

Open Maps Hub →
ThroneAtlas locations hub showing castles, cities, strongholds, regions, roads, coastlines, and old-world fantasy cartography
LocationsCastles & Cities

Castles, Cities & Regions

Explore major seats of power, ancient ruins, northern strongholds, southern kingdoms, island fortresses, and eastern cities.

Browse Locations →
ThroneAtlas character route atlas showing glowing journey lines across castles, seas, roads, northern regions, eastern cities, and fantasy kingdoms
CharactersJourney Maps

Character Route Atlas

Trace the paths of Jon Snow, Daenerys, Arya, Tyrion, Sansa, Jaime, and more across every major stop.

Explore Characters →
ThroneAtlas noble houses territory map with original heraldic shields, castle seats, kingdom borders, regional power zones, and antique gold lines
HousesTerritories

Noble Houses of Westeros

Map the lands, seats, allies, rivals, sigils, and power centers of the great houses and their regional influence.

View Houses →
ThroneAtlas battle maps hub showing army routes, siege markers, river crossings, burning conflict zones, castle defenses, and dark war-table styling
BattlesConflict Maps

The Great Battles, Mapped

Understand where major battles happened, which houses fought, and how geography shaped the outcome.

Open Battle Atlas →
ThroneAtlas lore archive map with ancient books, parchment scrolls, mysterious ruins, dragon-route marks, old kingdom symbols, and antique gold details
LoreHistory

Deep Lore & Timeline Guides

Explore the Long Night, Valyria, Aegon’s Conquest, Targaryen history, dragons, old gods, and the roots of the realm.

Enter the Lore Archive →
Featured Atlas Route

House of the Dragon Map Guide

Follow the Targaryen civil war through Dragonstone, King’s Landing, Driftmark, Harrenhal, the Riverlands, and the Narrow Sea. This section connects locations, houses, dragons, conflicts, and historical context into one clear guide.

The Dance of the Dragons is not only a family war. It is also a geography problem. Island seats, capital gates, river crossings, naval movements, castle loyalties, and dragon flight paths all decide how quickly power can move. ThroneAtlas treats those details as the core of the guide, not as small notes at the end.

  • Dragonstone and Black faction locations
  • King’s Landing and Green faction power centers
  • Key castles, ports, roads, and battle zones
  • Targaryen family and dragon route context
Routes & Territories

Follow People, Power, and Place

The best atlas pages connect who traveled, who ruled, where battles happened, and why each location matters.

Character Journey Maps

Trace important characters from their starting point to their final major location, with every region and turning point mapped. These pages are especially useful for rewatchers because they turn complicated arcs into clear routes.

Noble House Territories

Explore where each major house ruled, which castles they held, who their rivals were, and how geography shaped their power. A house is easier to understand when you can see its seat, region, borders, allies, and enemies.

Atlas Guide

How to Explore ThroneAtlas

ThroneAtlas is built like a table in the Citadel: every path leads to a clearer part of the known world. Start with the big maps if you want to understand the shape of Westeros and Essos. Then move into castles, cities, houses, routes, battles, and old histories when you want to follow the story in more detail.

The easiest place to begin is the main map collection. From there, the realm opens naturally. The Westeros map explains the Seven Kingdoms, the North, the Riverlands, the Reach, Dorne, the Vale, the Stormlands, the Iron Islands, and the lands around King’s Landing. The Essos map expands the journey across the Narrow Sea, through the Free Cities, Slaver’s Bay, the Dothraki Sea, Old Valyria, Qarth, and the eastern routes that shape Daenerys Targaryen’s story.

After the world maps, the location guides help you understand why certain places matter so much. Winterfell is more than a northern castle. It is the heart of Stark memory, old loyalty, the crypts, the godswood, and the road toward the Wall. King’s Landing is more than a capital. It is a harbor, a court, a battlefield, a public stage, and the place where power is seen by everyone. Dragonstone is more than an island. It is a Targaryen stronghold, a volcanic fortress, a dragonstone seat, and a symbol of return.

Once the places feel familiar, follow the people. Character route pages show how Jon Snow, Arya Stark, Daenerys Targaryen, Tyrion Lannister, Sansa Stark, Jaime Lannister, and other major figures move through the world. Their journeys are easier to understand when you see where they started, what roads they crossed, what seas they sailed, and which strongholds changed their fate.

Contact the Atlas

Help Us Keep the Map Clean

ThroneAtlas is built as a growing fan-made reference. If you notice a broken internal link, a missing map connection, a route that needs more context, or a lore page that should point to another location, you can send a correction or suggestion.

For general messages, use the main contact email. For map corrections, page suggestions, missing lore connections, editorial feedback, or broken internal links, send your note to Maester Aldric.

Questions

What Visitors Usually Want to Know

Clear answers help both users and AI search engines understand the purpose of ThroneAtlas.

ThroneAtlas is an independent fan-made map and lore guide focused on the world of Game of Thrones, House of the Dragon, and A Song of Ice and Fire. It organizes maps, regions, houses, characters, battles, locations, routes, and lore into atlas-style pages.

Start with the Westeros Map, Essos Map, Known World Map, and Game of Thrones Maps hub. These pages explain the main geography before you move into characters, houses, and battles.

Yes. ThroneAtlas includes character journey pages for major figures such as Jon Snow, Daenerys Targaryen, Arya Stark, Tyrion Lannister, Sansa Stark, Jaime Lannister, and others. Each route page connects locations, events, houses, and timeline context.

No. ThroneAtlas is an independent fan-made reference site. It is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to HBO, Warner Bros., George R. R. Martin, or any official Game of Thrones, House of the Dragon, or A Song of Ice and Fire property.

Yes. ThroneAtlas includes a House of the Dragon map section covering Dragonstone, King’s Landing, Driftmark, Harrenhal, the Riverlands, key Targaryen locations, and Dance of the Dragons-related geography.

Most reference pages explain characters or events as summaries. ThroneAtlas explains the same world through map logic: places, routes, castles, borders, seas, roads, battlefields, and house territories. The goal is to make the world easier to understand visually.

For map corrections, page suggestions, broken internal links, missing lore connections, and editorial feedback, contact Maester Aldric at aldric@throneatlas.com. For general messages, use info@throneatlas.com.

ThroneAtlas is an independent fan-made map and lore reference site. It is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to HBO, Warner Bros., George R. R. Martin, Game of Thrones, House of the Dragon, or A Song of Ice and Fire. All names and trademarks belong to their respective owners.