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#jocelyn baratheon
mairoon · 2 days
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Super random but can you draw Jocelyn Baratheon? I feel like she's underrated as Prince Aemon’s wife and Rhaenys’ mom
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in her prime
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joycieillustrations · 1 month
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Lady Jocelyn, even taller than her daughter, moves gracefully despite taking such long strides to make up the distance betwixt herself and her good mother. Cordially, Corlys relinquishes the Queen to her and steps back as if to excuse himself.
Queen Alysanne does not let him escape.
“Lord Corlys, do join Jocelyn and I in our carriage. The walk to the docks from here is most tiresome and, worst of all, dreadfully boring; I promise my good daughter and I are excellent entertainment.”
A doodle of two of my favourite ladies from waaaaaaaaaaay back in Chapter 4 of Ex libris ❤️ this era of Targaryens is by far my favourite
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arte072 · 2 months
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Jocelyn Baratheon 🦌💛🖤
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littlest-gemini · 6 months
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A young princess Rhaenys with her parents Jocelyn Baratheon and Aemon Targaryen
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ironlily1413 · 1 month
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Lady Jocelyn Baratheon
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lilosdraws · 2 months
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Prince Aemon Targaryen and Lady Jocelyn Baratheon
Twitter Instagram
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salialenart · 7 months
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Rhaenys was born in 74 AC on the seventh day of the seventh moon of the year. As her father was the Prince of Dragonstone, and she was his firstborn child, many considered her as being next in line for the Iron Throne, after her father Aemon.
Queen Alysanne Targaryen, when being presented with her granddaughter, called her "our queen to be".
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coldraindropsss · 7 days
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Little Leana Valaryon with grandma Jocelyn Baratheon. New version
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catherine-sketches · 2 years
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If Laenor doesn’t throw the “actually my grandmother, Lady Jocelyn, was a Baratheon. My three white and dark haired children just took after her” excuse I will be VERY disappointed
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paparinka · 1 year
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81 AC
King Jaehaerys I Targaryen also known as “The Conciliator”, “The Wise” or “The Old King” with his wife “Good Queen” Alysanne Targaryen and their children (left to right): princess Daella, prince Vaegon, crown prince Aemon with his wife Jocelyn Baratheon and daughter Rhaenys, prince Baelon with his wife Alyssa and son Viserys, princess Maegelle, princess Saera and princess Viserra. The Queen holds princess Gael or “Winter Child”
Upd: Damn, drawing 14 people in my style is just- …wild. Took a month and a half 💀
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starry-aesthetic · 3 months
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Lady Jocelyn Baratheon, daughter of Dowager Queen Alyssa Velaryon and Lord Rogar Baratheon.
A solemn girl, Jocelyn grew to become one of the greatest beauties of the realm. She had been frail as a babe, but by the age of six had become a tall young girl. At the age of sixteen, Jocelyn was an inch short of six feet tall. (F&B, The Long Reign)
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vaegonposting · 1 year
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can't decide if he's angrier about the betrothal or the stupid pillow case they made him wear
look 100% daella deserved better but a lot of the people being upset that vaegon didn't want to marry her strike me as
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joycieillustrations · 1 month
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The Lady Jocelyn stands where he had anticipated her daughter. Hair as dark as the princess’ is fair, dressed in accents of yellow where Rhaenys would favour hues of red, the resemblance between the two is still remarkable; the same dark eyes, capped by an arched, sceptical brow, offset by the curve of high cheekbones. She even has a freckle upon her cheek, he notices for the first time, a mirror image of the one she had bestowed upon her only child.
POV: you just pissed off Jocelyn Baratheon by making romantic overtures towards her daughter 😅
I’m in a Jocelyn phase at the moment, so here’s a doodle from chapter six of Ex libris
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sunfyre-targaryen · 2 months
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House Baratheon
of Storm's End
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Ours Is The Fury
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credits: divider created by @zaldritzosrose
this is the last house at the moment. ✨
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The Royal Families of The Seven Kingdoms: Part 2
By Jota Saraiva
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mononijikayu · 10 months
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the horrifying what happened to aemma in episode one about this is that it is only when the woman is ACTUALLY dying or are already dead that c-sections are performed. that told me they do not care of about the historical telling of the story AT ALL. so i just wanna break down the situation and why i dont think that scene in episode one was necessary in the way it was.
now we have a precedence of this shown in the form of queen dowager alyssa velaryon in f&b. the first birth of her marriage to rogar had not been good, she was already weakened by that and her second pregnancy in the marriage was worse, to the point she was dying.
the maester informs that alyssa was already dying and that the only solace they could give is dreamwine. if she had consented or never woke up, we dont really know - but either way the baby, jocelyn, would actually die if they hesitate longer and that if nothing is done, alyssa could take the baby with her as well.
so jaehaerys and alyssane are told and its jaehaerys that tells rogar - that alyssa is dying and the babe could be as well, but they would have to cut her open. rogar was horrified but its something that had to be decided. yet it was a hard choice to make, because no matter the outcome, there would be pain and death - brutal one at that.
but because alyssa was already dying, it was offered as an option and hence it aligns heavily with the medieval standards. in fact, we can find this in a book by historian renate blumenfeld-kosinski called not of woman born where she talks about this.
there's a passage where she mentions saint thomas aquinas and the conundrum of conducting a c-section as soon as possible to annoint the child in holy baptism, to 'save its soul' from damnation — which details a conversation but saint thomas wrote against that, in defense of the mother and explicitly details that he rejects killing the wives.
if the mother is already dead but child is still alive, that's where you move to cut open because the child would die just the same as the mother. thomas rejects the idea that you should kill the mother in order to baptize the child. it is so interesting that the church is against abortion, but one of its outspoken individuals has this sort of perspective.
in fact, there is a passage on three instruction manuals for women's health and medicine called trotula (the little work of trotula) in medieval italy in the 12th century. the midwives who study these texts are encouraged to take care the mothers first. this was at a time where people are HIGHLY religious and would have caused such a social taboo. it was a shock wave to the population seeing these radical ideas for the first time.
the text on c-section on the trotula goes as follows: "whan the woman is feble and the chyld may noght comyn out, then it is better that the chylde be slayne than the moder of the child also dye." - which means it was highly encouraged that they ONLY CUT when the woman is already dying or is dead. this text tries to tells that the mother and child need tp be looked on but women need to be cared for as much as the child. if there is any other way, it should be taken. only in the event of no more choices should there be cutting.
in fact the woman who was behind ideas in trotula — trotula of salerno was a radicalist in her time. she believes both women AND men can have defects. specifically how men's semen can be medically unfit to conceive a child. and that WOMEN should not be suffering at child bed, discussing the use of opiates from herb plants to help with pain and just like saint thomas, she believes that women are not meant to suffer or die from childbirth and that women should not have to make up for the sins committed by even in eden.
in fact, c-sections were also heavily regulated by local authorty. jakob nufer in 1580s for example was a veterinarian who found that his wife was having such a hard time with childbirth that he was so concern and begged to be allowed by local authorities to perform a c-section on his wife because he feared she would die and he succeeded, which his wife surviving AND that child living a long life according to the records.
historians have said that this would not happen just without any reasonable cause to do forced c-sections on their wives for the fact that their wives are also belonged in other royal houses and strong noble families. the people in charge needed these alliances and connections in order to keep the peace going. foul play cannot be a must, the childbed is risk enough for these alliances already. marriages and childbed tied the peace together. alas, the best childbed care is a MUST.
aemma's death would have been fine as a regular death in childbirth or even a similar situation as alyssa's, which would have at least dignified her death. unless it was the natural progression of childbed and or foul play, aemma arryn would have no need to die like that on her childbed. this was not a good way for aemma to die.
it was just insulting to the book material, historical record and aemma herself. not to mention to viserys i. losing his son was tragic enough but having him decide prematurely without her consent, without her actually nearing death or without discussing it in depth with the maester and or not insisting any other way was so off to me. he would have been making a bunch of questions, this was his wife - she was tied to house arryn and she was a high ranking woman. he would not HAVE had her cut open like that when she was not dead yet or actually on her death bed.
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