Game of Thrones Battles Map Hub Wars, Betrayals, Dragon Battles & Turning Points
Winterfell · Blackwater · Trident · Red Wedding · Rook’s Rest · Long Night
Explore the major Game of Thrones and House of the Dragon battles through map-first guides. This hub connects war routes, battlefield geography, betrayals, dragon fights, siege points, and the political consequences that reshape Westeros and Essos.
The Battles Hub is the main ThroneAtlas page for Game of Thrones and House of the Dragon battle maps. It links the Battle of Winterfell, Battle of the Bastards, Battle of Blackwater, Battle of the Trident, Red Wedding, Purple Wedding, War of the Five Kings, Robert’s Rebellion, Aegon’s Conquest, Rook’s Rest, Hardhome, and other major conflict pages into one searchable atlas library.
Major Wars and Battle Routes Covered
Use this page as the central doorway to the war side of ThroneAtlas.
Battle, war, betrayal, and conflict-location guides.
The North, Riverlands, Crownlands, King’s Landing, Beyond the Wall, Essos, and the Narrow Sea.
Sieges, dragon battles, assassinations, betrayals, rebellions, invasions, sea wars, and survival wars.
Begin with War of the Five Kings or Robert’s Rebellion for broad context.
Find Every Major Battle Map
Search by battle name, region, era, or conflict type.
Battle of Winterfell Map
The final stand of the living against the Night King, centered on Winterfell’s fields, trenches, crypts, godswood, dragons, and Arya’s strike.
- Winterfell
- Night King
- Long Night
- White Walkers
Battle of the Bastards Map
Jon Snow and Sansa Stark’s fight to reclaim Winterfell from Ramsay Bolton, shaped by Rickon’s run, the Bolton shield trap, and the Knights of the Vale.
- Jon Snow
- Sansa Stark
- Ramsay Bolton
- Winterfell
Battle of Blackwater Map
Stannis Baratheon’s naval assault on King’s Landing, stopped by Tyrion’s wildfire defense and Tywin’s late arrival.
- King’s Landing
- Tyrion
- Stannis
- Blackwater Bay
Battle of the Trident Map
The decisive Ruby Ford clash where Robert Baratheon kills Rhaegar Targaryen and Targaryen rule begins to collapse.
- Robert Baratheon
- Rhaegar
- Ruby Ford
- Robert’s Rebellion
Robert’s Rebellion Map
The continent-wide rebellion that ends the Targaryen dynasty, linking Storm’s End, the Vale, the Riverlands, King’s Landing, and the Tower of Joy.
- Ned Stark
- Robert Baratheon
- Rhaegar
- Tower of Joy
War of the Five Kings Map
The fractured war after Robert’s death, following Joffrey, Robb, Stannis, Renly, and Balon across Westeros.
- Robb Stark
- Stannis
- Joffrey
- Riverlands
Red Wedding Map
The Frey-Bolton betrayal at the Twins that destroys Robb Stark’s northern campaign and poisons guest-right memory.
- The Twins
- Robb Stark
- Catelyn Stark
- House Frey
Purple Wedding Location Guide
Joffrey Baratheon’s poisoning at his royal wedding feast, triggering Tyrion’s trial and Sansa’s escape route.
- Joffrey
- Tyrion
- Sansa
- Red Keep
Long Night Map
The survival war against the dead, connecting the far North, Wall breach, Last Hearth, Winterfell, and the godswood.
- Night King
- Bran Stark
- Arya Stark
- White Walkers
Aegon’s Conquest Map
Aegon’s dragon-led unification of Westeros from Dragonstone to Harrenhal, the Field of Fire, Oldtown, and King’s Landing.
- Aegon
- Balerion
- Dragonstone
- Harrenhal
Rook’s Rest Map
A deadly Dance of the Dragons battle where Rhaenys and Meleys face Aegon, Sunfyre, Aemond, and Vhagar.
- Rhaenys
- Meleys
- Aemond
- Vhagar
Stepstones War Map
Daemon Targaryen and Corlys Velaryon’s campaign for control over the Stepstones and its vital sea routes.
- Daemon
- Corlys
- House Velaryon
- Narrow Sea
Hardhome Map
The massacre where Jon Snow sees the army of the dead and learns that Valyrian steel can kill White Walkers.
- Jon Snow
- Night King
- Tormund
- White Walkers
Harrenhal and Gods Eye Map
A combined battle-lore location tied to Aegon’s Conquest, Harrenhal’s curse, Daemon, Aemond, and the Gods Eye.
- Harrenhal
- Gods Eye
- Daemon
- Aemond
How to Read the Battles of Westeros
The battles of Game of Thrones are not only moments of violence. They are map events. A bridge can decide a campaign. A river crossing can end a dynasty. A wall breach can change the difference between myth and invasion. A wedding hall can destroy a kingdom more efficiently than an open battlefield.
This is why a battle hub is necessary. Character pages explain motivation. House pages explain loyalty. Location pages explain setting. Battle pages explain collision. They show what happens when routes, claims, armies, vows, and geography finally meet.
The Three Battle Types That Shape the Atlas
The first type is the political war map: Robert’s Rebellion, the War of the Five Kings, the Battle of Blackwater, and the Battle of the Trident. These conflicts decide who has legitimacy, who controls the capital, and which houses survive the next phase of history.
The second type is the betrayal or assassination map: Red Wedding and Purple Wedding. These events are not normal battles, but they change the realm like battles do. Their terrain is social geography — halls, tables, music, guest-right, cups, witnesses, escape routes, and accusation paths.
The third type is the survival or dragon-war map: Long Night, Battle of Winterfell, Hardhome, Rook’s Rest, Aegon’s Conquest, and Dance-era dragon conflicts. These pages explain how supernatural force or dragon power breaks normal military logic.
Best Reading Order for Battle Pages
For new readers, the best order is: Robert’s Rebellion first, then Battle of the Trident, then War of the Five Kings, Battle of Blackwater, Red Wedding, Battle of the Bastards, Long Night, Battle of Winterfell, and Hardhome. That order explains the political history first, then the northern restoration, then the supernatural threat.
For House of the Dragon readers, start with Aegon’s Conquest to understand dragon-based rule, then move into Rook’s Rest, Stepstones, Harrenhal and Gods Eye, House Velaryon, and House Hightower. That path explains why dragon battles are not simply spectacle — they are dynastic self-destruction mapped through castles, sea lanes, and old claims.
Choose Your War Path
Northern Battles
Follow Winterfell, the Wall, Castle Black, Hardhome, the Battle of the Bastards, and the Long Night to understand how the North becomes the center of survival.
Capital Battles
Track King’s Landing through Blackwater, Purple Wedding, Red Keep politics, and the final consequences of court power turning violent.
Dragon Battles
Explore Aegon’s Conquest, Rook’s Rest, Harrenhal/Gods Eye, and Dance-era conflict where dragons change what war means.
Rebellion Maps
Start with Robert’s Rebellion and the Trident to understand how one dynasty collapses and another house takes the Iron Throne.
Betrayal Events
Use Red Wedding and Purple Wedding to follow how halls, feasts, guest-right, poison, and court spectacle can reshape the realm.
Sea and Border Wars
Follow Stepstones, Eastwatch, the Wall, and Velaryon sea routes to see how coastlines and borders become battlefields.
Game of Thrones Battle Map Questions
Start with the War of the Five Kings Map for the broad political war overview, or the Battle of Winterfell Map for the biggest survival battle against the dead.
The Battle of the Bastards restored Stark control of Winterfell, while the Red Wedding destroyed Robb Stark’s northern campaign. Both are essential northern turning points.
The Battle of the Trident was the decisive battlefield moment where Robert Baratheon killed Rhaegar Targaryen, leading toward the fall of Targaryen rule in King’s Landing.
Start with Rook’s Rest for dragon-to-dragon combat, then follow the Stepstones and Harrenhal/Gods Eye pages for sea power and Dance-era lore connections.
Battle maps explain movement, tactics, factions, consequences, and turning points. Location pages explain the place itself. Keeping both helps readers understand the story from different angles.
Related Hubs and Battle Routes
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