Jamie Lannister if I Ever See Tyrian Again I Will Kill Him Myself

Cersei Lannister: "You killed our father."
Tyrion Lannister: "Afterward he sentenced me to death for a crime I didn't commit, yeah, I killed him. Hate me for information technology if you want; I hate myself for it, in spite of what he was, in spite of what he did to me."
— Cersei Lannister and Tyrion Lannister[src]

The bump-off at the Tower of the Manus is an event in the War of the Five Kings. It is set in move past the liberation of Tyrion Lannister by his brother, Jaime Lannister, which ultimately leads to the bump-off of their father, Tywin Lannister, Hand of the King and Protector of the Realm.

Contents

  • 1 History
    • 1.1 Prelude
    • 1.2 From scapegoat to kinslayer
    • 1.3 Aftermath
  • two In the books
  • 3 References

History

Prelude

"The gods have made their will known. Tyrion Lannister, in the name of Male monarch Tommen of the Business firm Baratheon, First of His Name, you're hereby sentenced to death."
―Tywin Lannister passes the judgement. [src]

Tyrion is put on trial for the murder of his nephew, Male monarch Joffrey, which he did not commit. Realizing the whole spectacle is a rigged farce, he demands a trial by combat instead.[1] However, his champion Oberyn Martell is defeated and killed, and therefore Tyrion is deemed to be guilty. He is sentenced to death by his male parent Tywin.[2] In the middle of the dark on the eve of his execution, his brother Jaime suddenly enters his cell and frees him. Jaime instructs Tyrion that Varys volition aid him escape the city for Essos, and the two brothers hug and say good day. Instead of going straight to Varys, even so, Tyrion decides to confront his father one last time in the Tower of the Hand before leaving the city.

From scapegoat to kinslayer

Tyrion strangles Shae

Tywin Lannister: "You shot me... you are no son of mine."
Tyrion Lannister: "I am your son. I have always been your son."
— Tyrion before he kills his father[src]

Tyrion enters the belfry through a hugger-mugger passage in the flooring, and is shocked to observe Shae in his begetter's bed. Shae sleepily calls out "Tywin, my king of beasts", the proper noun she had previously used for Tyrion. Later they make center contact, she grabs a dagger and they struggle. Tyrion disarms her and strangles her to death with the aureate concatenation that he previously gave her around her neck. He immediately feels regret and apologizes to her corpse for what he has only done.

Tywin is shot dead by his ain son

Tyrion takes Joffrey'south crossbow from the wall and finds his begetter sitting on the privy. Tywin correctly deduces that Jaime released him, considering equally Tywin noted, "he ever had a soft spot for you." He reassures Tyrion that he would never have allowed him to be executed, just enrages his son past dismissing Shae as a whore. Tyrion warns him not to phone call her that again. He demands to know why Tywin sentenced his ain son to decease, despite knowing that he did not kill Joffrey. Tywin does not reply, and once again tries to placate Tyrion merely when he nonchalantly refers to Shae as a whore once more, Tyrion shoots him in the breadbasket. Stunned, a wounded Tywin hisses, "Y'all are no son of mine." Tyrion retorts that he is, and e'er has been, Tywin'southward son. He reloads the crossbow and shoots his father once more, killing him.

Backwash

"What have you done?"
―Varys to Tyrion Lannister [src]

Varys sitting next to the crate Tyrion is in every bit their transport leaves Rex'southward Landing.

Tyrion makes information technology to Varys, who realizes that he has done something horrible. Varys loads him into a crate, and the crate is loaded onto a ship for the Free Cities. Varys walks away from the ship simply and so hears the bells tolling from the Blood-red Keep, signifying that Tywin's body has been discovered. Varys turns around and boards the ship with Tyrion.[3] A funeral is held for Tywin equally his body is placed on brandish in the Great Sept of Baelor until it is later properly cached in the same sept. Cersei berates Jaime for setting Tyrion free and accuses him of accidentally killing Tywin, whom she says loved Jaime more than anyone.[4] Cersei subsequently orders a manhunt for Tyrion, promising a lordship to the human who brings her his head.[5] Jaime confides to Bronn that he volition impale Tyrion for murdering their father if he sees him again.[six]

In Braavos, Tywin's murder is portrayed in the play The Bloody Hand in a very ridiculous manner, including a blunt reference to the joke "Tywin shits gold" - much to the amusement of the crowd.[7]

Although Cersei and Jaime eventually notice the truth that Tyrion did not in fact kill their son Joffrey, Cersei still despises him for killing their father, an act that she believes made the Lannisters look weak in the eyes of their enemies, and blames him for the subsequent deaths of Myrcella and Tommen likewise. Tyrion expresses his regret for killing their father, revealing that he hates himself for the deed, despite what Tywin did to him.[8]

When Jon visits Tyrion in prison, Tyrion goes over his past sins, including the murders of Shae and his father.[9]

In the books

In the A Song of Ice and Burn novels, the bump-off of Tywin is described in Chapter 77 of the 3rd book "A Storm of Swords"​. The bones details are the aforementioned in the Boob tube series, though the motivations are drastically different:

  • Jaime sneaks into Varys'due south room and threatens him with a knife, forcing him to assistance release Tyrion. This is revealed in a flashback in the fourth volume "A Feast for Crows".
  • Afterward Jaime rescues Tyrion from the cell, the two brothers have a talk nearly Tysha, Tyrion's offset wife, whose story was revealed in Flavor 1 episode "Baelor" in the Television series. Jaime confesses that Tysha was no whore, instead of what Tyrion was told previously, and that Tywin instructed him to tell this lie to give Tyrion a lesson. Tyrion realizes that Tysha had been genuinely in love with him, and becomes furious with Jaime; he swears that Jaime, Cersei and their father will pay dearly (Cersei had nothing to do with Tysha, but she has been doing her all-time to make Tyrion'due south life miserable for years). He also tells Jaime that Cersei that has been sleeping with other men, amidst them Lancel, Osmund Kettleblack (a knight in Cersei's service and a member of the Kingsguard), and, sarcastically, Moon Boy the court jester. In guild to hurt Jaime as much equally he can, Tyrion falsely admits to killing Joffrey, later on commenting he was more than of a monster than the Mad King.
  • Tyrion is led by Varys through underground passages before killing Tywin; when Tyrion wants to face up Tywin, Varys begs him not to practise something then foolish and dangerous when he is then close to freedom, but indicates him the surreptitious passage to the Tower of the Hand.
  • There are two guards, Red Lester and Lum, who baby-sit the apartments of the Hand of the Male monarch when Tyrion sneaks into them. Luckily for Tyrion, the guards do not notice him because they are too busy making jokes about Shae and arguing whether Tyrion volition confront his executioner bravely or beg for mercy.
  • Tyrion emerges from the hush-hush passage at the hearth in the bedchamber of the Tower of the Hand.
  • Shae tries to save herself by claiming that she did not mean what she said in the trial, and that Tywin and Cersei forced her to. In a flashback at "A Banquet for Crows" information technology is revealed to be a prevarication: Cersei offered Shae a ransom for her fake testimony.
  • Shae never attempts to set on Tyrion; he kills her when she calls him "my giant of Lannister". The manner of the killing is the same, though the concatenation that Tyrion uses to strangle her is a necklace composed of gilt hand-shaped segments, which serves equally the badge of office worn by the Manus of the Male monarch that Tyrion and Tywin successively used in the books, and it is the only thing Shae is wearing at the moment. In the Idiot box series the badge for the Mitt is inverse to a manus-shaped brooch, thus the chain used here is appropriately inverse to the 1 that Tyrion previously gave Shae in the Season 3 episode "The Carry and the Maiden Fair".
  • While strangling Shae, Tyrion recites the song "Hands of Gold".
  • The crossbow Tyrion uses is Tywin's own crossbow, whereas in the evidence, the crossbow belonged to Joffrey.
  • Tywin figures that it was Varys, non Jaime, who released Tyrion, and says "I'll accept his caput for this".
  • Tywin tries to salvage himself by saying "You are not to be killed, if that is what you fearfulness. It's still my intent to send you to the Wall, but I could not do information technology without Lord Tyrell's consent. Put down the crossbow and we will go back to my chambers and talk of it". Tyrion either does not believe or does not intendance if it is true, existence mistreated by his father so long and especially recently. It is doubtful whether Tywin actually needed the approval of Mace Tyrell, who had zilch to practice with the offer that was given to Tyrion during the trial.
  • Tyrion confronts Tywin nigh Tysha. Subsequently he finds his male parent in the privy he inquiries about her and her whereabouts. Tywin doesn't call up her proper name (or pretends that he doesn't, as an insult) until Tyrion refers to her every bit his outset married woman, and recalls her as Tyrion'southward "showtime whore". Tyrion promptly warns his male parent, "The next fourth dimension y'all say that word, I'll kill y'all" (he gives the same warning in the TV series, but referring to Shae instead). Tywin cannot think, other than that he did not have her killed, simply stating that she was paid and the steward sent her on her way "wherever whores go". Hearing this, Tyrion looses his crossbow at him.
  • Tyrion kills Tywin with a unmarried bolt to the pelvis, which causes his bowels to loosen. Tywin says incredulously "you shot me", and Tyrion says sarcastically "You ever were quick to grasp a situation, my lord. That must be why you're the Manus of the Rex". Tywin swiftly disowns Tyrion, claiming him to be no son of his, to which Tyrion replies by stating that he is in fact Tywin "writ small", and that the two are more alike than he cares to realize.
  • Tyrion departs afterwards telling his father to do him a courtesy and die speedily, noting from the smell as Tywin'due south corpse voids its bowels every bit he leaves that for once his begetter did as he asked. The narration remarks that the oftentimes repeated jape in the novels about Tywin (in the show information technology was first mentioned by Robb in "The Pointy End", and repeated by Bronn in "The Lion and the Rose") was another lie as he, in the terminate, "did non shit gilded."
  • The business relationship of the bump-off concludes with Tywin'south death. The escape of Tyrion and Varys is not depicted. Information technology is not revealed until A Dance with Dragons that Tyrion successfully escaped from Rex's Landing, while Varys disappears from the volume afterward he indicates Tyrion the secret passage, and for a quite long period his whereabouts are unknown until he resurfaces in the epilogue of A Trip the light fantastic toe with Dragons.
  • Tyrion is not smuggled to the ship in a crate. When the ship reaches its destination, he is arranged into a butt.
  • Following Tyrion'southward escape, his loyal squire Podrick Payne leaves the urban center in search for him. Pod hears from Brella, the merely of Sansa'due south maids who was not a spy of Cersei, that Brienne looks for Sansa. Pod goes afterward Brienne and eventually joins her, hoping that finding Sansa will lead to Tyrion.
  • There is a foreshadowing of Tywin's expiry in the First Volume "A Game of Thrones" and the Idiot box episode "Baelor": after Tyrion tells the story nigh Tysha (nonetheless unaware that she was not a whore), Bronn comments "I would have killed the man who did that to me".
  • Tywin'south death is also foreshadowed in "The Mountain and the Viper": Littlefinger says that people die at their dinner tables, die in their beds, and die squatting over their chamber pots.
  • Tywin'southward funeral is much longer. As the Lord Commander of the Kingsguard, Jaime is to stand up vigil at his father's side for a few days until his body is taken back to Casterly Rock for burial. Due to the fashion of his expiry, Tywin's corpse emits a foul odor, making information technology difficult for visitors, particularly young Tommen, to pay their respects, and his body decays in such a way that his mouth forms an eerie grin, ironically the starting time smile Jaime has e'er seen on his father'due south face.
  • After Tywin'south funeral, his body is escorted dorsum to Casterly Rock for burial, whereas in the show, his body is cached in the Sept of Baelor itself.
  • Jaime blames himself for his male parent's death, musing "Tyrion may have loosed the crossbow bolt that slew him, but I loosed Tyrion". Recalling Tyrion'southward taunting last words about Cersei and Joffrey, Jaime thinks "He never said he meant to kill our male parent. If he had, I would have stopped him. Then I would be the kinslayer, not him". Unlike in the evidence, though, Jaime never states aloud or thinks that he will kill Tyrion the adjacent time they meet - perhaps because, as mentioned above, he feels information technology was his fault.
  • Tyrion does not feel whatever remorse or regret for killing his father, or for violating the taboo of kinslaying. On the contrary, in the fifth novel he occasionally brags about the murder, and even jokes well-nigh it: "Lord Tywin was sitting on a privy, then I put a crossbow commodities through his bowels to see if he really did shit gilt. He didn't. A pity, I could take used some gold". About Shae, withal, he feels some remorse; he admits to himself that she is one of the people whom he misses (aslope Jaime and Tysha).

References

  1. "The Laws of Gods and Men"
  2. "The Mountain and the Viper"
  3. "The Children"
  4. "The Wars to Come"
  5. "The House of Black and White"
  6. "The Sons of the Harpy"
  7. "Blood of My Blood"
  8. "The Dragon and the Wolf"
  9. "The Iron Throne"

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Source: https://gameofthrones.fandom.com/wiki/Assassination_at_the_Tower_of_the_Hand

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