#alice margerie
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sunfyredefender77 · 7 months ago
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welcome back margaery and loras tyrell
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elycetellsall · 3 months ago
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if we had a daughter, i’d watch and could not save her
i’m telling you those redheads will get you
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alicentsgf · 6 months ago
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the absolute power the name Alyrie Hightower holds in asoiaf. 2 women who birthed some of the cuntiest queers the realms ever seen. we were so robbed never getting to meet either of them.
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marysblo0d · 9 months ago
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How some of you sound
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fictonrantsworld · 8 months ago
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The fact that margery tyrells mother's name is alerie as well, alerie tyrell nèe hightower.
The parallels!!!
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The fact that she's distantly related to margery tyrell and now shireen baratheon bc her mother's sense florent as well tooo
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crazyaboutto · 4 months ago
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I can’t believe I missed out such an amazing website for years!
You can search all books in seconds
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It shows how many times the word was mentioned
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You can see the results with references to the chapter and book.
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Finally you can even search random words too
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I was manually looking through the books just to find a small reference 😭
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selenessology · 7 months ago
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Yes yes yes
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rhaenyrathecruell · 6 months ago
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“Life is too cruel, only a man could have created it”
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lady-green-sleeves · 1 year ago
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The asoiaf/hotd fandom fundamentally misunderstands young/teenage girls and it makes me want to go feral
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cubzsafespace · 5 months ago
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Random head sketches of westerosi queens. My renditions of Alicent, Helaena and Margery. You go girls 🎀💪
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insomniakisses · 1 year ago
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On my knees for my queens + king, and all their beauty ❤️✨
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(Ellaria and Rhaenys technically arent but shusshhh)
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sunfyredefender77 · 1 year ago
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Margery Tyrell appreciation post
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elycetellsall · 3 months ago
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how I love being a woman
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alicentsgf · 5 months ago
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maybe its not normal to be absolutely spitting at the mouth fuming because someone points out margery tyrell is an indirect descendent of alicent. like we're just sharing a little fun fact bro
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thepastisalreadywritten · 3 months ago
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By Meilan Solly
24 October 2024
During an impromptu game of table tennis in September 1934, a player accidentally stepped on the ball.
The host’s father decided to look for a replacement in a cupboard at their English country house.
Instead of table tennis balls, the family patriarch stumbled onto an ��entirely undisciplined clutter of smallish leather books,” including one whose cover “had been eaten away, presumably by a mouse,” as his son later recalled.
That unassuming manuscript turned out to be the only surviving copy of The Book of Margery Kempe, a medieval text chronicling the adventures of a female Christian mystic.
Previously known only through 16th-century excerpts that painted Kempe as an anchoress who walled herself up in a cell to devote her life to private prayer and reflection, the manuscript reframed its namesake as a colorful figure who’d traveled abroad on religious pilgrimages, claimed she’d experienced visions of herself participating in such biblical events as the birth and crucifixion of Jesus, and endured multiple arrests on charges of heresy.
“You lose all sense of her story and her personality when only reading the excerpts," says Eleanor Jackson, a curator at the British Library in London.
“She’s a very larger-than-life character … who was not an anchoress but [rather] incredibly mobile. She’s been to the Holy Land, she’s been to Rome, she’s been to Santiago de Compostela.”
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The chance discovery of Kempe’s autobiography speaks to the rich trove of writing about medieval women that survives to this day, as well as the countless works that have been lost over the centuries, Jackson says.
“Women in the Middle Ages were seen as less important than men, and they were excluded from a lot of areas of power,” the curator adds.
“Their stories were less often recorded, and because women often weren’t given the same level of education as men, [many] couldn’t write themselves.
Women’s histories are much harder to find, but they are there when you look for them.”
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A new exhibition at the British Library tells some of these long-overlooked tales through a selection of more than 140 documents and artifacts spanning roughly 1100 to 1500.
Co-curated by Jackson and Julian Harrison, “Medieval Women: In Their Own Words” spotlights queens, nuns, authors, warriors, physicians, and artisans alike.
As the name suggests, the show emphasizes women’s personal testimony, “telling their stories as much as possible through their own words, whether preserved in their writings or dictated to scribes, as was the case with Kempe," Jackson says.
The individuals featured in the exhibition run the gamut from famous figures like Joan of Arc and Italian French writer Christine de Pizan to the lesser known, including Estellina Conat, the first recorded female printer of Hebrew texts; Shajar al-Durr, the first female sultan of Egypt and Syria; and Alice Claver, a silkwoman who crafted ornate clothing for England’s Edward IV.
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By highlighting such a diverse group, lead curator Jackson and co-curator Harrison hope to move past widely held conceptions of medieval women’s existences being centered around domesticity and oppression by men.
“Their lives were a lot more vibrant than people expect,” Jackson says, “and [visitors] will be surprised by the sheer variety of roles that they occupied in the fields of politics, religion and the arts."
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“Medieval Women: In Their Own Words” is on view at the British Library in London from 25 October 2024 to 2 March 2025.
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closed-third-eye · 2 years ago
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Not them declaring margery a hightower descend alone when she's comes from rhaena, aka dameon's line 🤭 and both tyrells and hightowers abandoned alicent's useless spawn 🤣 and tyrells especially never even raised their banners for anyone but specially because the lady of the house did not like the green policy to Rob her from her position because she was a woman. These people have not read the book and it shows
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