Game of Thrones Characters Complete Journey Map Hub
Starks · Targaryens · Lannisters · Routes · Houses · Locations
Explore the major Game of Thrones characters through the places that shaped them. This ThroneAtlas hub connects character routes, houses, castles, cities, battles, exile paths, and turning points across Westeros, Essos, and the Known World.
This Game of Thrones characters hub organizes major characters by journey, house, region, and story role. Start with route pages like Jon Snow Journey Map, Daenerys Targaryen Journey Map, Arya Stark Journey Map, Tyrion Lannister Journey Map, and Sansa Stark Journey Map. Each route connects the character to key locations, houses, battles, political shifts, and the larger map of Westeros and Essos.
Character Atlas at a Glance
Every character route on ThroneAtlas is designed to link person, place, house, event, and timeline into one clear map-first guide.
Explore Character Journey Maps
Search or filter the first wave of ThroneAtlas character pages. These cards are built to become a scalable route atlas as the site expands.

Jon Snow Journey Map
From Winterfell to Castle Black, Beyond the Wall, Dragonstone, and the heart of the northern war.
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Daenerys Targaryen Journey Map
From exile in Essos to dragons, Slaver’s Bay, Dragonstone, and the return west.
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Arya Stark Journey Map
A route of survival through King’s Landing, the Riverlands, Harrenhal, Braavos, and back home.
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Tyrion Lannister Journey Map
From King’s Landing politics to exile, Essos, Meereen, Dragonstone, and war councils.
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Sansa Stark Journey Map
From Winterfell to King’s Landing, the Vale, and back to northern power.
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Jaime Lannister Journey Map
A route of honor, captivity, Riverlands campaigns, northern choices, and return to the capital.
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Rhaenyra Targaryen Route
From the Red Keep to Dragonstone, Driftmark, and the center of the Black claim.
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Daemon Targaryen Route
A volatile route through King’s Landing, Dragonstone, the Stepstones, Driftmark, and Harrenhal.
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Aemond Targaryen Route
A dragonrider’s path through King’s Landing, Storm’s End, Harrenhal, and the wider Dance.
Open Route →Character Routes Across Westeros and Essos
A stylized route overview showing how the strongest character journeys cross regions, seas, houses, and political borders.
Why Character Maps Matter
A character in Game of Thrones is never only a name, a house, or a title. Every major character is also a route across the map. Jon Snow is shaped by the North, the Wall, and the lands Beyond the Wall. Daenerys Targaryen is shaped by exile in Essos, the Dothraki Sea, Qarth, Slaver’s Bay, and Dragonstone. Arya Stark is shaped by the road itself: King’s Landing, the Riverlands, Harrenhal, Braavos, and the long return to Winterfell. Tyrion is shaped by court, captivity, exile, and counsel. Sansa is shaped by what each castle teaches her about power.
This is why ThroneAtlas treats characters as map entities. A normal character guide tells you what happened. A character journey map shows where it happened, why the location mattered, what changed after each stop, and how the person’s identity was rewritten by distance. The map does not replace the story. It reveals the pressure underneath it.
How to Use This Character Hub
This hub is the central starting point for all ThroneAtlas character pages. From here, readers can move into individual route maps, house territory pages, location guides, and lore explainers. Each character route should answer five practical questions: where did the character begin, what were the major stops, which houses or factions controlled those places, what events changed the character, and where did the route finally lead?
For example, Jon Snow’s route is a northern identity map. It begins at Winterfell, moves to Castle Black, crosses Beyond the Wall, returns through war, reaches Dragonstone, and circles back to the North. Daenerys’s route is an eastern transformation map. It begins with exile, crosses the Dothraki Sea, burns through Slaver’s Bay, and returns to Westeros carrying armies, dragons, and a belief in destiny.
The Stark Character Routes
The Stark routes are some of the most emotionally powerful routes in the entire story because they begin together and scatter. Winterfell is the origin point. From there, the family fractures across Westeros and beyond. Ned goes south and never returns. Robb moves through war and betrayal. Sansa is pulled into the politics of King’s Landing, the Vale, and Winterfell. Arya becomes a road survivor and later a Braavosi apprentice. Bran’s route moves beyond ordinary geography into memory, trees, and the old powers of the North. Jon’s route turns the Wall from a punishment into a destiny.
On ThroneAtlas, the Stark routes should connect tightly to Winterfell Map, The North Map, The Wall Map, Beyond the Wall Map, and House Stark Map. This creates a strong internal network around northern identity and old memory.
The Targaryen Character Routes
Targaryen routes are different because they often cross seas and generations. Daenerys begins in exile and moves west only after Essos has remade her. Rhaenyra moves between King’s Landing, Dragonstone, and Driftmark as the Dance of the Dragons grows. Daemon’s path is volatile and restless, moving through King’s Landing, Dragonstone, the Stepstones, Driftmark, and Harrenhal. Aemond’s route becomes the map of a dragonrider whose choices can change entire regions.
These routes belong to the same larger cluster as the House Targaryen Map, Dragonstone Map, House of the Dragon Map, and lore pages about the Dance of the Dragons, Aegon’s Conquest, and the Doom of Valyria. Targaryen character pages should always feel like part of a larger dragon geography.
The Lannister Character Routes
Lannister routes are usually routes through power, debt, family, pride, and reputation. Tyrion’s path moves from privilege to accusation, exile, and counsel. Jaime’s route turns a feared knight into a more complicated man through captivity, loss, duty, and return. Cersei’s route is less about distance and more about holding one location — King’s Landing — with increasing desperation. For the Lannisters, the map is not always wide, but it is politically dense.
Their pages should connect to King’s Landing Map, House Lannister, Casterly Rock, Riverlands battle pages, and the wider politics of the War of the Five Kings. The Lannister cluster is where ThroneAtlas can explain how a character may travel less than others but still shape the entire continent.
Character Routes in House of the Dragon
House of the Dragon character routes are especially useful because the story is compressed around key locations: King’s Landing, Dragonstone, Driftmark, Harrenhal, Storm’s End, and the Riverlands. The characters are not exploring the world like Arya or Daenerys. They are fighting over inherited power inside an already-mapped realm. That makes each move more political.
Rhaenyra’s route is a claim route. Daemon’s route is a volatility route. Alicent’s route is a court power route. Aemond’s route is a dragon threat route. Each one should connect back to the House of the Dragon Map so readers understand the Dance as a map war, not just a family feud.
Book vs Show Character Routes
Character routes sometimes feel different in the books and show because pacing changes the sense of distance. The books often make movement feel slower, harder, and more dangerous. The show can compress travel for dramatic pacing, especially in later seasons. ThroneAtlas route pages should acknowledge those differences without turning every page into a debate. The goal is to explain the story geography clearly.
A route page should make a simple promise: if a reader wants to understand where a character went and why it mattered, they can follow the page like an atlas. Book notes can add depth. Show notes can add visual clarity. The map holds both together.
The First Character Where to Go Next
This is the publishing order that gives ThroneAtlas the strongest character route guide.
How This Hub Builds Topical Authority
The Characters hub connects every major route to houses, locations, battles, and lore.
Key Places
Each character page should link to locations like Winterfell, King’s Landing, Dragonstone, the Wall, Braavos, Meereen, Harrenhal, and Dorne.
Connected Houses
Character journeys become stronger when connected to House Stark, House Targaryen, House Lannister, House Baratheon, and other house territory pages.
Key Events & Lore
Major routes should connect to events like Aegon’s Conquest, the War of the Five Kings, the Long Night, the Dance of the Dragons, and the Doom of Valyria.
Game of Thrones Character Map Questions
A character journey map shows where a character travels across Westeros, Essos, or the Known World, including major stops, connected houses, important events, and how each location changes the character’s story.
Start with Jon Snow for the northern route, Daenerys Targaryen for the Essos-to-Westeros route, Arya Stark for the survival road, Tyrion Lannister for politics and exile, and Sansa Stark for the captivity-to-power route.
Yes. Every strong character route should connect to its related house map, such as House Stark for Jon, Arya, and Sansa; House Targaryen for Daenerys and Rhaenyra; and House Lannister for Tyrion, Jaime, and Cersei.
No. The broad geography is often similar, but the books usually make travel feel slower and more detailed. The show sometimes compresses distance for pacing. ThroneAtlas route pages can explain both when needed.
Yes. The hub can include House of the Dragon routes for Rhaenyra, Daemon, Alicent, Aemond, Aegon II, and other Dance-era figures, especially through Dragonstone, King’s Landing, Driftmark, Harrenhal, and Storm’s End.
Related Routes, Maps, Houses, and Lore
Character Routes
Essential Maps
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, or any official Game of Thrones, House of the Dragon, or A Song of Ice and Fire property. All names and trademarks belong to their respective owners.
