Lannisport

Lannisport is a walled city in the Westerlands located less than a mile south of Casterly Rock, the seat of House Lannister. Lannisport is located along the coast of the Sunset Sea where the River Road, the Gold Road, and the Ocean Road meet. It is one of the major ports of the Seven Kingdoms and is the largest settlement in the Westerlands. Lannisport is smaller than King's Landing or Oldtown but larger than Gulltown or White Harbor.

Lannisport is ruled by House Lannister of Lannisport, a branch of House Lannister of nearby Casterly Rock. The Lord of Casterly Rock includes "Shield of Lannisport" amongst his titles. The Lannisters anchor their fleet in its harbor. The city is renowned for its goldwork. Lannisport is policed by the well-trained City Watch. Besides the Lannisters of Lannisport, other distant kin living in the city are Lannys, Lannetts, and Lantells, many of whom are yellow of hair.

Origins
A lesser branch of House Lannister of Casterly Rock developed a village a mile from Casterly Rock into first a town and then a city, as the fertile vicinity has a natural harbor with abundant fish. While the Lannisters of Lannisport fortified the city, the Lannisters of Casterly Rock became the Kings of the Rock. By the time of the Andal invasion the only city in Westeros larger than Lannisport was Oldtown. It is said that King Loreon V Lannister, nicknamed Queen Lorea, disguised himself as a whore and wandered the docks of the city.

Due to the city's proximity to the Iron Islands, Lannisport has often been a target for their attacks, being burned at least three times and raided two dozen times over the centuries. After being mutilated by the Shrike, Lelia Lannister was sent from the Iron Islands back to Lannisport, which led to years of warfare between the Ironborn and the Westermen.

300-301AC - The Second War of Conquest
After the fall of Tommen Baratheon and Cersei Lannister, the Lannisters of Lannisport do not object to Tyrek Lannister being named the new Lord of the Rock by Aegon VI and Daenerys Targaryen. Lannisport bends the knee to the Targaryens, and the rest of the Westerlands follows soon thereafter.

335AC - The Red God Revival
Lannisport was one of many cities in Westeros that saw a surge of Red God worshippers, as the events across the Narrow Sea and the legend of the saviour who fought the Others with a flaming sword began to spread. Though they did not prove as troublesome here as they did in other regions, the City Watch of Lannisport kept a careful eye, and the faith did not spread far from its centers within the city.

339AC - The Summer Sickness
The Westerlands was terribly afflicted by the effects of the Summer Sickness, with Lannisport being the most heavily affected settlement due to its constant exposure to incoming trade. Many grew fearful and suspicious of strangers, most especially the red god adherents who had begun settling in the city only four years before. Some were ousted, their property revoked, and either turned to banditry in the hillsi

de or returned to the lands of the east.

4th Century AC
During the Scarlet Winter, the Lion’s Bay froze near a third up its length, jagged ice floes drifting between the narrowing coastlines before freezing solid near the city itself. Though the sight was a rather pretty one, inspiring artists to create renditions of the Rock rising proud against the pale vista of the city and its waters, trade all but halted, ships unable to reach the ports. The Lannisters hired men to break up the ice, tramping out in great teams strung along ropes, but after the first tragedy struck, no man dared risk life and limb to fight the cold grip of winter.

Recent History
Following the Mummer's War of 408 AC, the Sept of the Faithful was constructed in Lannisport, completed in 417 AC. For some time, the Lannisters had been attempting to preserve religious unity in the West, but rifts remained after the Tourney of Summerhall in 418. Following the death of Lord Loreon and Lord Tytos, the reign of Lord Tybolt and his Lady Tya brought forth a golden age to the city, cultivating art and culture from Essos.

The Grand Lannisport Academy was opened during this time, a project of some forty years. It was the last of Lord Loreon's many accomplishments. As winters came and passed, however, Lannisport was the sight of some struggles, and after the Great Synod of Lannisport, a fire erupted in the poorest quarter of the city. It took three weeks to suppress the fires, and by the time it was done, the city had been a third destroyed.

The Three-Banner War
The Three-Banner War, or the War of Three Banners, began shortly after the Great Fire, and waged for the next three years. Lannisport was assaulted six times during that war, but was only successfully taken once. When the fighting was done, Lannisport was said to have needed, 'a decade to recover,' and as of 438 AC, is still being rebuilt.

Geography

 * The Silver Gate - Leads to Casterly Rock and the River Road
 * The Gold Gate - Leads to King's Landing through the Gold Road
 * The Ocean Gate - Leads to Highgarden through the Ocean Road
 * The Sept of the Faithful - In the centre of Lannisport, the bastion of the Faith. Almost as large as the Sept of Baelor, it hosts thousands of visitors in a day.
 * Tyland's Square - The grand market of the city, hosting dozens of shops and streets.
 * The Street of Gold - Named not for the gold so famous of the West, but the hair of the women who inhabit this part of the city. Courtesans are popular here, cultivated in the city's dozens of pillowhouses.
 * The Silver Arches - An alleyway situated in a deep valley. Silver bridges span overtop, and can be looked upon from below.
 * The Heights - The home of the nobility of the city, on the south end. On a hill, the Heights overlook Lannisport.
 * The Lion's Hold - The home of the Lord Admiral of Lannisport.