One monkey ground the Internet to a halt by being too cute. This weekend, Punch the macaque and his stuffed orangutan companion have dominated social media.
Punch is a little under a year old and was abandoned by his mother. It’s an unfortunate reality of life in the animal kingdom. Luckily for the small monkey, he was raised at Ichikawa City Zoo in Japan. One of the caretakers gave him this stuffed buddy because Punch has had a hard time bonding with the other primates. He’s got a ton of followers he has no idea about now though.
One monkey ground the Internet to a halt by being too cute. This weekend, Punch the macaque and his stuffed orangutan companion have dominated social media.
Punch is a little under a year old and was abandoned by his mother. It’s an unfortunate reality of life in the animal kingdom. Luckily for the small monkey, he was raised at Ichikawa City Zoo in Japan. One of the caretakers gave him this stuffed buddy because Punch has had a hard time bonding with the other primates. He’s got a ton of followers he has no idea about now though.
A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms gave us the Realm’s first Trial of Seven in a century. It also keeps giving us a whole lot of references to George R.R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire. Here are all of the Easter eggs, terms, and lore from Game of Thrones, House of the Dragon, and the history of Westeros in A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms‘ fifth episode.
Followers of the Seven also pray to the caring, merciful, life-giving Mother Above to protect them and those they love in times of need. A knight, who is letting six other people risk their lives to save his, would certainly hope for the Mother’s help in his Trial of Seven. Especially when he’s on trial for protecting the innocent.
The Black Dragon Daemon Blackfyre
The Black Dragon was the nickname of Daemon Blackfyre. He was the legitimized Targaryen bastard who rose up against his own family to claim the Iron Throne. Daemon got his moniker because his personal sigil was an inverted version of House Targaryen’s. He sported a black three-headed dragon on a red field. King Daeron II, Egg’s grandfather, was referred to as the Red Dragon during the civil war.
Daemon’s rebellion ended after a year at the Battle of the Redgrass Field—mentioned in episode two—just outside of King’s Landing. Bards commemorate the victory with the song “The Hammer and the Anvil,” which Egg sang in episode three. His uncle Baelor was the hammer, his father Maekar the anvil. (Neither of them were the one who killed Daemon, though.)
We saw young Dunk and Rafe scavenging the Redgrass in a flashback, but leather adorned with the Black Dragon’s sigil was worthless. You can’t sell a dead traitor’s wares.
Allies at the Battle of the Redgrass Field
HBO
During the first Targaryen civil war, House of the Dragon‘s Dance of the Dragons, major houses picked sides. However, no major houses joined Daemon Blackfyre’s cause a century later. But the ancient noble House Hightower did have members who fought on behalf of both factions. Young Dunk came across a fallen soldier of House Hightower after the Battle of Redgrass. His chest plate had the Hightower sigil, best known from House of the Dragon where the family help form the “Greens” of Aegon.
It’s unclear which side of the war the dying Hightower soldier fought for at Redgrass. We did see that he fell near a Lannister banner, and we know which side the lions supported. During the Blackfyre Rebellion, Ser Quentyn Ball, sworn to the Black Dragon, killed Lord Lefford at Lannisport. Lefford is one of the principle houses sworn to House Lannister. After killing Lefford, Ser Quentyn then forced Lord Damon Lannister to retreat to Casterly Rock. While no Lannister served as a commander that day, any lion on the Redgrass battlefield fought for King Daeron.
HBO
We heard about Lord Damon Lannister on an earlier episode of A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms. Ser Arlan of Pennytree once unhorsed “the Grey Lion” at a tourney. Ser Duncan proved to Baelor Breakspear he truly was Ser Arlan’s squire because he remembered the Grey Lion’s real name is Damon.
Flea Bottom
HBO
Episode five brought HBO viewers back to King’s Landing’s poorest neighborhood, Flea Bottom. The infamous locale has appeared frequently on both Game of Thrones and House of the Dragon. It’s also where important figures like Ser Davos Seaworth and Gendry came from.
We saw young Dunk and Rafe navigating the slum’s narrow, dirty streets full of brothels, taverns, gambling dens, and “bowls of brown” they called home. It’s the kind of place where a violently drunk hedge knight can decapitate a corrupt cop without anyone thinking much of it. It’s also where Margaery Tyrell visited with poor orphans, much to the chagrin of noted elitist snob Cersei Lannister.
HBO
This is the third different century where HBO viewers have wandered around Flea Bottom. But no matter what year it is, that lowborn locale never seems to change.
Gold Cloaks
HBO
The two armed men who murdered Rafe were “Gold Cloaks,” the name given to members of the City Watch in King’s Landing. The City Watch is the law enforcement agency of the city, paid by the crown and wholly loyal to the King. A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms captured a sad truth about the City Watch and many of its Gold Cloaks (named for their identifiable gold cloak attire). Some are dishonorable crooks themselves.
Matt Smith’s Daemon Targaryen was briefly Commander of the City Watch on House of the Dragon. Prince Daemon’s brutal tactics restored order to both King’s Landing and the order of the Gold Cloaks, whose members loved him even if the citizens did not. Ser Harwin Strong, Rhaenyras paramour and actual father to her three oldest boys, was also a member of the Gold Cloaks. But even during more dignified times, Gold Cloak members are often willing to accept bribes.
HBO
On Game of Thrones, Ned Stark tried and failed to bribe Commander Janos Slynt and the Gold Cloaks to support him when he planned to remove Joffrey from the Iron Throne following Robert Baratheon’s death. Unfortunately for Lord Stark, House Lannister had already paid off Slynt. The upstart Commander was later sent to the Night’s Watch because new acting Hand of the King, Tyrion Lannister, didn’t trust him. Bronn then took de facto command of the law enforcement group. Jon Snow ultimately got revenge for his father when he beheaded Slynt for refusing a command.
House Stokeworth
HBO
Young Dunk and Rafe hid along the side of the road from a man on horseback, transporting a dead soldier. The man was carrying a shield with a modified version of House Stokeworth’s sigil. It featured a lamb inside a golden goblet on a green shield. Ser Andrew Ashford also jousted with a knight of House Stokeworth earlier in the season, and that combatant carried the same version of the sigil 15 years after Redgrass. A lamb inside a goblet is a change from the traditional depiction of the Stokeworth sigil from both House of the Dragon and as described in the works George R.R. Martin. The normal version is a lamb holding a golden goblet on a green shield.
This does not mean A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms broke canon. Individual members of households sometimes create their own unique versions of their family’s sigil. Houses might also decide to slightly change theirs or revert back to a previous iteration.
HBO
House Stokeworth of the crownlands is a noble house sworn to King’s Landing and the crown. Stokeworth Castle sits close to the capital city in the North. On House of the Dragon, House Stokeworth originally declared for Rhaenyra, but switched to Aegon’s “without siege.” They then joined Criston Cole’s army as it marched on Duskendale and then Rook’s Rest. Lord Stokeworth’s shifting allegiances during the Dance of the Dragons was a betrayal of his own family’s words, “Proud to be Faithful.”
HBO
On Game of Thrones, where we got to see Stokeworth Castle, Bronn was briefly engaged to Lollys Stokeworth. Ser Bronn of the Blackwater had plans to ensure sweet, simple Lollys’ mean older sister suffered a fatal “accident” so he and Lollys could inherit the castle. They never got married. Jaime Lannister recruited/forced Bronn to join him on his ill-considered mission to Dorne. (All major changes from the novels, where Bronn marries Lollys, a much more tragic figure than depicted on Game of Thrones.)
Woods Witches
HBO
Rafe told Dunk she knew a witch who gives copper for teeth. While there are certainly characters in this world of magic who qualify as a witch in a traditional sense, someone who wields magic like Melisandre, that’s not the type of witch Rafe meant. She was talking about a woods-witch, the name given to Westeros’ wandering medicine women. Rather than magic, they use herbs (and maybe sometimes teeth it turns out) to make medicine. Some also employ simple charms, brew moon tea, and work as midwives. A few even have prophetic dreams.
Alys Rivers from House of the Dragon came to be thought of as a woods-witch. Some also think Maggy the Frog, who gave young Cersei Lannister her terrible fortune, was a woods witch. (Debatable since she might have been more of an actual witch like her book counterpart.) And Egg’s life, along with House Targaryen and mankind itself, will forever be changed by a woods witch who will come to the royal court one day along with her friends, Jenny of Oldstones. (You can read about the Ghost of High Heart in our spoiler-filled piece here.)
Free Cities
HBO
Rafe and (a less enthusiastic) Dunk planned to sail across the Narrow Sea to live in the Free Cities. The Free Cities are nine, influential, free city-states in the western half of Essos. They are: Braavos, Lorath, Lys, Myr, Norvos, Pentos, Qohor, Tyrosh, and Volantis. All of them are important trading partners with Westeros. Armies in Westeros have also turned to sellswords who mostly live and fight in and for the Free Cities.
Eight of the Nine Cities (some of which were Valyrian Freehold colonies) gained total independence after the Doom of Valyria. Braavos, the youngest and richest of the nine, was founded by escaped slaves of Valyria. (Braavos remained hidden for a century, which is why it’s also called the Secret City.) Arya Stark briefly lived there while training with the Faceless Men in the House of Black and White. Many Westerosi lords on Game of Thrones either visited the Iron Bank of Braavos or worked with representatives from the powerful institution.
HBO
Based on how little money they had to sail, Rafe and Dunk were likely headed to either Tyrosh or Pentos. They are the two closest of the Nine Cities to King’s Landing. Pentos is where we first met Daenerys. It’s also where Varys sent Tyrion after he escaped King’s Landing.
On the whole, the Free Cities have much to offer. But while they tend to look down on the denizens of Westeros, they’re not necessarily better than the Seven Kingdoms. A lowborn orphan of Flea Bottom has just as much of a chance to rise in Westeros as he does across the Narrow Sea. So long as he or she can survive growing up in Flea Bottom.
Mikey Walsh is a staff writer at Nerdist. He wants to talk to you more about true knights but he has to wait. You can follow him on Bluesky at @burgermikeOpens in a new tab. And also anywhere someone is ranking the Targaryen kings.
The trial of the Seven opens this episode of A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms in a way that feels perversely on brand, with bodily functions. Or rather, dysfunctions. Both Dunk (Peter Claffey) and Ser Raymun (Sean Thomas) vomit under the weight of what is to come, with physical anxiety. It is crude, grounding, and effective.
A single line from Lyonel Baratheon (Daniel Ings), about how no man fights so fiercely as one neglected by his mother, lands like a thesis statement for the entire series. And the title of this episode makes it clear. Brutality here is not innate, it’s actually inherited, emotional, and learned. Even the closing admonitions, terse and unsentimental, remind us that vigilance is the true currency of survival in this world, and honor offers no protection at all.
As Egg (Dexter Sol Ansell) hands Dunk his jousting lance, doubt flickers across the boy’s face, followed by fear. And before the trial begins, a statement is made:
“May the Seven bear witness to our solemn and bloody offering. May they look within our mortal hearts and find only truth. May the Warrior grant victory to the innocent and unmask the guilty in their lies, and may death itself sustain life.”
The words barely fade before violence takes over. The joust is shown almost entirely through Dunk’s point of view. He is stabbed by Prince Aerion (Finn Bennett) and a mace crashes into his head.
What comes next is memory.
We flash back to Dunk’s childhood, digging for scraps among corpses scattered across a battlefield. It is a graveyard without markers, if you will. A man still clinging to life startles him. Young Dunk (Bamber Todd), stealing from the dead and now from the dying, decides to end the man’s suffering by suffocating him.
He is stopped by Rafe (Chloe Lea), less out of mercy than the hope of ransom. They hover awkwardly over the body, unsure what the moment demands. Rafe asks if Dunk knows any “words,” mocking the idea that prayers matter for people like them. Religion, like dignity, is framed as a luxury of the highborn, meant to spare nobles from hell while the smallfolk expect no such grace. Dunk admits he does not know any prayers, and the conversation turns practical. Rafe tells him to check the man’s mouth for coins or valuables, sneering that even teeth can fetch copper. Death, here, is inventory.
Side note: there is a slight deviation here from Rafe’s characterization in the book. Rafe is originally a boy, and as the recap continues, the series takes the character’s storyline in a different direction. While the adaptation maintains strong parallels to the source material overall, this particular arc marks a notable departure from the book.
As the man finally slips away, crying for his mother, Rafe shrugs it off with brutal familiarity. She has seen death before, just not so slow or so pointless.
Dunk wonders why they are still running. The war is over, he insists. The Black Dragon is dead and Rafe snaps back immediately. Nothing is ever over. She reminds him of a Flea Bottom story, a killing meant as an accident, followed a year later by revenge that burned half the neighborhood.
Side note: the “black dragon” Rafe is likely referring to is that of Daemon I Blackfyre, of House Blackfyre.
They’re interrupted by an Alester City Watchman (Edward Davis), who demands to know what is in their bag. Dunk lies and says it is rats. The watchman does not believe him. They bolt, but not before Rafe lifts his ale skin. Dunk is not pleased with what has happened and Rafe shrugs it off as justice, an eye for an eye. The watchman was going to steal from them anyway. Besides, she says, the ale was sour.
Rafe dreams aloud of sailing away, of a life filled with adventures beyond Flea Bottom. For once, the future sounds almost bright. Dunk hesitates. What if the Free Cities are no better? What if they are worse? Rafe’s answer is fearless in that they will leave again. The true horror would be discovering that this misery is the best the world has to offer.
Dunk’s resistance is grief, not fear of hardship. He clings to the irrational hope that his mother might still be alive, that she might return looking for him. Leaving feels like severing the last thread tying him to her. Rafe cuts through the fantasy with painful honesty. Waiting never gave her anything. Families are not something you wait for, they are something you go out and make.
When Dunk finally admits the truth, that he just wants to stay with Rafe because he loves her, the scene softens. Rafe does not deny it because she loves him too. But Flea Bottom is too small, too suffocating, and too soaked in old grudges to let them grow and by the end, she is already moving, urging Dunk to follow. It is tenderness wrapped in profanity, two children clinging to each other at the edge of the world, choosing motion over stagnation.
At the docks, reality crashes in and they both find out that two pieces of silver will not buy passage. The price has doubled. Everyone wants out. The watchman has been watching them the entire time. Tensions snap and Rafe lashes out, cruelly throwing Dunk’s dead mother in his face. The words land instantly and are immediately regretted.
The watchman returns, armed with a dagger. He demands his ale skin back. Rafe admits she sold it. He rips the coin pouch from her belt and she demands it back. Dunk watches as Rafe does what she knows best, she steals the dagger from his belt.
They walk away.
The watchman realizes he has been robbed again. Enraged, he takes the dagger back and slits Rafe’s throat. Dunk leaps onto him in a blind fury. He is later stabbed by a companion of the watchman. Just as the violence threatens to spiral further, a man bursts from a doorway. It is Ser Arlan of Pennytree (Danny Webb). He commands the boy not be harmed, draws his sword, and kills both attackers. Meanwhile, Dunk watches his best friend bleed to death before his eyes.
Cold, penniless, and alone, Dunk becomes fixated on the drunken knight who saved him. He follows Ser Arlan like a ghost. As Arlan sleeps by the fire, Dunk admires his sword, entranced by the symbol of knighthood. Hunger and exhaustion finally take him and that is when Arlan notices the boy and tells him to get up.
We return to the present. Dunk regains consciousness after being struck by Aerion. Another blow lands. His wound is catastrophic, yet he fights on. The duel is savage, full of stabbings, crushed armor, and a lance to the eye. Dunk is barely alive. Blood spills from his mouth as he collapses. Egg screams for him to get up.
Aerion turns to the crowd and declares it over.
In Dunk’s memory, Ser Arlan tells him again to get up.
Dunk gasps back to life. Egg screams “WAIT!” As the music swells, Dunk rises, not as a champion, but as something rarer. A knight who refuses to stop. At that point Aerion yields and Dunk drags him before the council. The accusation is withdrawn.
As Dunk is treated for his wounds, Baelor Targaryen (Bertie Carvel) enters. He speaks of needing good men. Dunk offers his service. Baelor asks Raymun to remove his helm. The damage is catastrophic. His visor is cracked, his skull crushed, likely by his brother Maekar’s (Sam Spruell) mace. When the helmet is removed, half his head is gone. Baelor collapses into Dunk’s arms and dies.
Dunk weeps. He apologizes.
It is a brutal, devastating episode, one that insists knighthood is not about glory or lineage, but about perseverance, loss, and the terrible cost of standing back up when the world keeps knocking you down.
Disney fans do NOT play about their merch. They also don’t play with their favorite movies, songs, or characters. The buying power of the Disney adult is well-known. But when it comes to collectibles like clothing or figurines, there is no demographic more passionate.
Now, people are going as far as to hire personal shoppers to snag them coveted merch from Disney World. Unfortunately, this setup doesn’t always end well.