Stormlands House Territory

House Baratheon Map Storm’s End, Stormlands, Dragonstone & Royal Claims

Storm’s End · Dragonstone · King’s Landing · Stormlands · Blackwater · Royal Claims

Explore the House Baratheon map through the places that shape stag power: Storm’s End, the Stormlands, King’s Landing, Dragonstone, the Blackwater, and the claim routes of Robert, Stannis, Renly, Gendry, and the War of the Five Kings.

Ours Is the FuryStorm’s EndCrowned StagDragonstone ClaimBlackwater
Quick Answer

House Baratheon rules the Stormlands from Storm’s End, a legendary coastal fortress built against storm and siege. After Robert’s Rebellion, Robert Baratheon takes the Iron Throne and makes King’s Landing the center of royal Baratheon power. Later, Stannis rules from Dragonstone, Renly gathers support in the south, and their rival claims help ignite the War of the Five Kings. The Baratheon sigil is the crowned black stag on gold, and its words are “Ours Is the Fury.”

MA
Written by

Maester Aldric

Maester Aldric is the chief cartographer and lore archivist at ThroneAtlas. He creates map-based guides to Westeros, Essos, noble houses, character routes, battle locations, castles, and ancient history from Game of Thrones, House of the Dragon, and A Song of Ice and Fire. This House Baratheon map guide explains how Storm’s End, rebellion, royal marriage, Dragonstone, the Blackwater, and competing brothers turn a stormland house into a realm-shaking power.

Baratheon Facts

House Baratheon at a Glance

The Baratheons are best understood by connecting Storm’s End to rebellion, the Iron Throne, and the divided claims that follow Robert’s death.

House SeatStorm’s End

The ancient stormland fortress and ancestral Baratheon seat.

RegionStormlands

A rugged southeastern region shaped by storms, cliffs, forests, and martial pride.

SigilCrowned Stag

A black stag on gold after Robert’s royal rise.

WordsOurs Is the Fury

A statement of force, anger, claim, and storm-born identity.

Royal CenterKing’s Landing

Robert’s throne turns the Baratheons into a royal house.

Claim SeatDragonstone

Stannis’s island base and one of the most important claim centers.

War EventBlackwater

Stannis’s attack on King’s Landing defines his campaign.

Core RoutesRobert & Stannis

Rebellion, royal rule, Dragonstone, Blackwater, and northern duty.

Claim Map

House Baratheon Territory and Claim Map

A stylized ThroneAtlas view of Baratheon power, showing Storm’s End, the Stormlands, King’s Landing, Dragonstone, and the Blackwater route.

Interactive Stag Explorer

Explore House Baratheon by Claim Center

Select a Baratheon place to understand how storms, crowns, brothers, sieges, and sea routes reshape the house.

Storm’s End

Storm’s End is the ancestral seat of House Baratheon and the symbolic heart of stormland power. Its legendary endurance makes it the perfect castle for a house built around fury, resistance, and hard weather.

RoleHouse seat
Connected RoutesRobert, Stannis, Renly

What the House Baratheon Map Actually Shows

The House Baratheon map is a map of sudden ascent and violent division. Many great houses are defined by long continuity. House Stark feels rooted in ancient northern memory. House Lannister feels carved into western gold. House Targaryen carries the ghost of Valyria. House Baratheon is different. It is a younger great house with older stormland inheritance, and its power changes shape quickly: Storm’s End, rebellion, the Iron Throne, Dragonstone, Blackwater, and the shattered claims of brothers.

That is why a Baratheon map cannot be limited to one region. Storm’s End is the ancestral heart, but King’s Landing becomes the royal stage after Robert’s Rebellion. Dragonstone becomes Stannis’s claim base. Renly’s power grows through the south and the Reach. The Blackwater becomes the place where one Baratheon claim nearly takes the capital and fails. The North becomes the harsh final field for Stannis’s attempt to become more than a stubborn claimant.

Maester’s note: House Baratheon is a stag in a storm: powerful, proud, and dangerous, but often pulled by force rather than patience.

Storm’s End: The Fortress That Defines the House

Storm’s End is the ancestral seat of House Baratheon and one of the most legendary fortresses in Westeros. It stands against storm, sea, siege, and myth. The castle matters because it gives the Baratheons a physical identity before they become royal. It is not a delicate seat of courtly refinement. It is a hard place, built to resist. That matches the house perfectly.

Storm’s End also gives the Baratheons a southern coastal identity that differs sharply from the capital. The Stormlands are close enough to the Crownlands to affect royal politics, but distinct enough to preserve their own martial culture. Robert, Stannis, and Renly all carry something of Storm’s End, even when their paths diverge. Robert carries the force. Stannis carries the endurance. Renly carries the lordly image of a house that can command loyalty through presence.

The Stormlands: Weather, Loyalty, and Martial Pride

The Stormlands are the regional guide of Baratheon power. Their geography is rugged, coastal, forested, and exposed to brutal weather. This is not the wealthy polish of the Westerlands or the fertile abundance of the Reach. It is a harder region, and that hardness matters. Stormland identity supports a house whose words are not subtle: “Ours Is the Fury.”

The Stormlands also sit in an important position on the southeastern map. They border the Crownlands and are near enough to King’s Landing for rebellion and royal politics to matter. When a Baratheon becomes king, the region’s connection to the capital becomes more than geography. It becomes the road from local lordship to realm-wide authority.

Image PlaceholderPrompt idea: storm-battered coastal fortress inspired by Storm’s End, black stag banners, crashing waves, thunderclouds, gold lightning glow, cinematic fantasy, no text.

Robert’s Rebellion: How the Stag Took the Realm

Robert’s Rebellion is the event that turns House Baratheon from a great stormland house into the royal house of Westeros. Robert’s claim, personality, alliances, and victory over the Targaryens transform the map. Storm’s End remains the family seat, but King’s Landing becomes the visible center of Baratheon rule. The Iron Throne changes the house’s scale overnight.

The rebellion also ties House Baratheon permanently to House Stark, House Arryn, House Tully, and the fall of House Targaryen. In map terms, Robert’s rise is a coalition route. Stormland fury alone is not enough. The rebellion succeeds because multiple regions align against Targaryen rule. That is why Baratheon power is never as simple as one man winning a crown. The crown is built on alliances, grievances, and battlefields spread across Westeros.

King’s Landing: Baratheon Rule Without Baratheon Culture

King’s Landing becomes Robert Baratheon’s royal center after the rebellion, but the city never feels truly Baratheon in culture. Robert wins the Iron Throne, yet the capital still operates through court politics, Lannister debt, old Targaryen architecture, bureaucracy, and the dangerous machinery of the Red Keep. Robert can conquer the throne more easily than he can govern the court.

This distinction is crucial. House Baratheon’s royal map contains a weakness: the family’s strongest identity comes from Storm’s End, but its crown must be worn in King’s Landing. The capital rewards patience, calculation, and subtle control. Robert’s strengths are charisma, force, and appetite. That mismatch helps explain why the Baratheon royal period becomes unstable so quickly.

Stannis Baratheon and Dragonstone

Stannis Baratheon is the Baratheon most defined by claim geography. After Robert’s rise, Stannis is associated with Dragonstone, the former Targaryen island seat. This is one of the most interesting location transfers in the story. Dragonstone still carries Targaryen memory, but Stannis turns it into a Baratheon claim base. The island becomes cold, hard, legalistic, and severe under him.

Stannis’s map is not the map of a beloved king. It is the map of a man who believes the law points to him even when love does not. Dragonstone gives him a defensible position, a fleet base, and a symbolic separation from the corruption of King’s Landing. It also places him in the Narrow Sea, close enough to attack the capital but isolated enough to become strange through fire religion, prophecy, and stubborn certainty.

Renly Baratheon: Power Through Image and Alliance

Renly Baratheon represents a different kind of Baratheon map. He does not rely on Dragonstone’s severity or Robert’s proven rebellion. He relies on charisma, courtly appeal, southern support, and alliance with the Reach. His claim shows that in Westeros, legitimacy is not only legal. It can be performed, gathered, and made visible through numbers.

Renly’s geography points southward. His strength comes through Storm’s End, the Reach, and the ability to attract banners. That makes his route especially important for understanding how claims compete. Stannis claims through law. Renly claims through popularity and force. Robert claimed through victory. Three brothers, three versions of Baratheon power, three different maps.

The Blackwater: Where Stannis’s Claim Breaks

The Battle of the Blackwater is the key military event in Stannis Baratheon’s campaign for King’s Landing. It is where the Dragonstone claim reaches toward the capital and is stopped. On a route map, the Blackwater matters because it shows how narrow sea movement, fleets, wildfire, walls, timing, and alliances decide the fate of a claim.

The battle also proves that being right by law is not the same as being able to take the city. Stannis has discipline, claim, and iron will. His enemies have walls, wildfire, Lannister-Tyrell timing, and the chaos of a capital under threat. The Blackwater becomes the place where Baratheon fury meets the practical defenses of King’s Landing.

Image PlaceholderPrompt idea: dark medieval harbor battle inspired by Blackwater, green wildfire glow, stormy ships, golden stag banner, smoky city walls, no text.

The North: Stannis’s Final Geography

Stannis’s later movement north changes the Baratheon map again. After the Blackwater, his claim survives but loses its easiest path to the throne. His northern campaign links him to the Wall, the Night’s Watch, the Boltons, northern politics, and the larger threat beyond ordinary succession. In the North, Stannis becomes more than a southern claimant. He becomes a test of whether duty can survive in the cold.

This northern turn is important because it makes Stannis one of the few southern claimants who seriously engages with the Wall and the realm’s older danger. He may still seek the throne, but his map expands from the Blackwater to Castle Black and Winterfell. That gives his route unusual depth within the Baratheon cluster.

Gendry and the Baratheon Bloodline

Gendry adds a quieter but important layer to the Baratheon map. He begins far from Storm’s End and royal authority, shaped by King’s Landing’s lower streets rather than noble halls. Yet his blood ties him to the Baratheon line. Through Gendry, the house becomes less about banners and more about hidden inheritance, survival, and the way royal blood can exist outside the official map.

Gendry is useful for the ThroneAtlas system because he connects House Baratheon to Arya’s route, King’s Landing, the Brotherhood without Banners, Dragonstone, and the question of what remains after great houses nearly destroy themselves. He represents the bloodline after the storm has passed.

The Baratheon cluster also helps readers understand why the main story becomes unstable so quickly after Robert dies. The house wins the throne through force, but it does not leave behind a clean inheritance map. King’s Landing has Baratheon banners, Lannister money, disputed children, divided brothers, and regions waiting to choose sides. That messy overlap is exactly what makes the Baratheon page important for the whole atlas.

The Stag Sigil and Baratheon Identity

The Baratheon sigil is the crowned black stag on gold. The stag suggests strength, pride, and wild nobility. The crown marks Robert’s victory and the house’s transformation into a royal line. The gold field gives the sigil brightness and visibility, while the black stag keeps it severe. It is less polished than a lion and less ancient than a wolf. It feels like a banner raised in wind.

The words, “Ours Is the Fury,” are perfect because Baratheon power often appears as force before structure. Robert’s fury wins battles. Stannis’s fury hardens into law. Renly’s fury is softened by charm but still demands a crown. The house is always strongest when moving, claiming, resisting, or striking.

Explore More Baratheon Locations, Routes, and Lore

This House Baratheon page connects readers to Stormlands, royal claims, and War of the Five Kings content. It connects to Houses Hub, Locations Hub, Routes Hub, Lore Hub, King’s Landing Map, Dragonstone Map, Storm’s End, Robert’s Rebellion, Battle of Blackwater, and War of the Five Kings Map.

For readers exploring the wider map, House Baratheon is essential because it explains the transition between Targaryen rule and the fractured politics of Game of Thrones. The Baratheons are the bridge between rebellion and succession chaos. Their map shows how a victory can create a crown, and how one crown can become many claims.

Baratheon Reader Path

The Baratheon Where to Go Next

Follow this path through House Baratheon to explore the full stormlands, rebellion, and claim storyline.

1. Storm’s End

Location guide Supports House Baratheon, Stormlands, Robert, Stannis, Renly, siege lore, and claim geography.

2. Robert’s Rebellion

History guide Explains Robert’s rise, Targaryen fall, Stark alliance, Stormlands role, and the Iron Throne transfer.

3. Stannis Route

Claim guide Connects Dragonstone, Blackwater, the Wall, northern campaign, fire religion, and legal kingship.

4. Battle of Blackwater

War guide Explains Stannis’s attack, King’s Landing defense, wildfire, Tyrell arrival, and claim collapse.

5. Stormlands Map

Regional guide Covers Storm’s End, coastal roads, stormland houses, borders, and Baratheon territorial identity.

6. Renly Claim Map

Succession guide Connects Storm’s End, Reach alliance, southern support, charisma politics, and the War of the Five Kings.

Connected Storylines

Key Places, Characters, and Events Connected to House Baratheon

This Baratheon page connects the Stormlands, rebellion, royal claim, Blackwater, and War of the Five Kings clusters.

Key Places

Storm’s End, King’s Landing, Dragonstone, Blackwater Bay, the Wall, Winterfell, and the Stormlands all become stronger with Baratheon context.

Key Characters

Robert, Stannis, Renly, Gendry, Joffrey, Ned, Melisandre, Davos, Cersei, and Jon are the main characters connected through Baratheon claims and aftermath.

Key Events & Lore

Robert’s Rebellion, War of the Five Kings, Battle of Blackwater, Azor Ahai prophecy, Targaryen fall, and royal legitimacy all connect into this house page.

FAQ

House Baratheon Map Questions

House Baratheon is located in the Stormlands of southeastern Westeros and rules from Storm’s End. After Robert’s Rebellion, the house also holds royal power from King’s Landing.

The ancestral seat of House Baratheon is Storm’s End, a legendary coastal fortress in the Stormlands. Stannis Baratheon later rules from Dragonstone as a claim base.

House Baratheon’s words are “Ours Is the Fury.” They reflect stormland force, anger, pride, and the aggressive energy of the crowned stag.

House Baratheon’s sigil is a black stag on a gold field. After Robert becomes king, the stag is commonly shown crowned.

Dragonstone becomes connected to House Baratheon because Stannis Baratheon holds the island after Robert’s rise and uses it as the base for his claim to the Iron Throne.

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