Lyanna Updated — Naughty

She was not naughty because she was wrong. She was naughty because she was free.

Her greatest act of naughtiness—the act for which she would bleed out in a tower—was treating her own body as sovereign territory. In the world of Westeros, a noble daughter’s flesh is a political map. Her marriage is a treaty; her maidenhead is a seal on an alliance. By running with Rhaegar Targaryen (whether willingly or in a grey space the histories refuse to color), Lyanna committed the unpardonable sin: she chose. She chose her own desire, her own prophecy, her own tragedy over the neatly scribbled contract between Winterfell and Storm’s End. naughty lyanna

Rather than a shallow reading, this explores the word "naughty" as a coded indictment of female autonomy in a patriarchal world—specifically through the lens of Lyanna Stark of A Song of Ice and Fire . History remembers Lyanna Stark as a ghost wrapped in a crown of winter roses: the beautiful, willful daughter whose abduction sparked Robert’s Rebellion. But the smallfolk, the maesters, and even her own brother Ned use a quieter, sharper word when they recall her. They call her naughty . She was not naughty because she was wrong