In Season One of Game of Thrones, Arya says that she is 11-years-old. Time seems to be moving at one year a season for the HBO show meaning that Arya is 18-years-old in season eight.
A Game of Thrones
While Bran remains unconscious, an attempt is made on his life, and Catelyn delays the assassin long enough for Bran's direwolf, Summer, to kill him.Background. Arya is the third child and younger daughter of Eddard and Catelyn Stark, and is nine years old at the beginning of the book series. She has five siblings: an older brother Robb, an older sister Sansa, two younger brothers Bran and Rickon, and an older illegitimate half-brother, Jon Snow.
Thanks to the changes of the show, she began as 11 years old. This means that, taking each season for a full year in the story's timeline, Arya is now 18.
Character description. Rickon is the fifth and youngest child of Eddard "Ned" Stark and his wife Catelyn, and has five siblings—Robb, Sansa, Arya, Bran, and his illegitimate half-brother Jon Snow.
Even if that's how he lived his life, Littlefinger died under circumstances he could not have possibly foreseen. No, not the fact that he died at the hands of Arya Stark (Maisie Williams), or even the fact that his beloved Sansa betrayed him.
Jon Snow, played by Kit Harrington, is actually a Targaryen prince and the nephew of Daenerys Targaryen. Before the events of Game of Thrones, Daenerys's father Aerys II — better known as The Mad King — was the ruler of Westeros and sat on the Iron Throne.
1. Tyrion Lannister — 4 hours, 53 minutes. With nearly five hours of screen time, Tyrion is the undisputed king of screen time in "Game of Thrones."
So far, the HBO series “Game of Thrones” has mostly stuck to the words that George R. R. Martin wrote in the “Song of Ice and Fire” books. Fans who have read the books follow along giddily as their nonreader friends are shocked by the twists. But last Sunday was different.
Who is Jon Snow's real father?
Eddard Stark
Rhaegar Targaryen
Game of Thrones has come to a polarizing conclusion with its series finale “The Iron Throne” — but the books the HBO series is based on, George R.R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire series, remain unfinished, with no end in sight.
The Hound had Arya in his care for almost two seasons, and they ran into trouble all the time. In the books, the Hound also had a more overt attraction to Sansa. When he asks her to leave with him and she refuses, he kisses her—and at knifepoint, demands a song for her.
What happened in Last Game of Thrones episode?
Meryn Trant
Why: For killing Syrio Forel, Arya's dancing instructor. He was the first person on her list. At a brothel in Braavos, Arya stabbed him in the eyes then slowly stabbed him to death while reminding him who she was.Arya is the only Stark who has the skill and the proper constitution to pull off taking out Cersei and claiming the Iron Throne. And because her motivation is revenge and not any true desire to rule Westeros, she will destroy the throne and end the game that has taken so much from her family.
Baelish brokers a marriage between Sansa and Ramsay Bolton, now the heir to the North after the death of Robb Stark. Though Sansa is reluctant to marry Ramsay, as his father Roose had personally murdered Robb, Baelish persuades her by claiming that the marriage will give her the opportunity to avenge her family.
She was playing the game of faces with her. Sansa could not spot a liar. Arya gives her the dagger because she cares for her sister and wants to protect her from Littlefinger. Petyr bites the dust soon."
Season 2. Incognito, Arya was captured by Lannister men. In the process she rescued a mysterious convict called Jaqen H'ghar, whose assassination skills ultimately enabled her to escape from the Lannister stronghold. He offered to take her to Braavos and teach her to kill like him.
But the newlyweds' wedding night ends with a scene that goes the opposite way, rendering Sansa helpless and victimized—again. Ramsay rips Sansa's wedding gown apart, bends her over, then forces his way into her as she cries out in pain. His tears stream down and Sansa screams in agony. Then the screen fades to black.
It wasn't the brutalization she experienced—it was her survival instincts and cunning that got her through to the end. Which is why Sansa won't die in the final episode. Of all the tragic storylines on Game of Thrones, Sansa Stark's has been the hardest to watch.
But in her final moments of life in Sunday's penultimate episode of Game of Thrones, we got to see … none of that. And now Cersei's dead. She died in the arms of her brother/lover Jaime as the supposedly sturdy Red Keep collapsed on top of them.
In the final moments of the episode she looks at families charred alive, their last moments embracing each other in fear. She sees a white horse, a not so subtle emblem of hope in the war-ravaged ruins around her, and after calming it she gallops out of the city on its back.
Rickon, the youngest Stark child, has been Ramsay's captive since season six episode three when Smalljon Umber turned him over to the Boltons. Seeing what was happening, Jon rode forward on horseback to try and save Rickon, but it was too late. Ramsay struck Rickon with a fatal blow just before Jon could reach him.
13 years old when the Game of Thrones pilot was filmed in late 2009, the now-20-year-old Turner returns this season to play a more empowered Sansa Stark who's dressing a whole lot like her late mother. Left, from Photos 12/Alamy; Right, courtesy of HBO.