đ¨ HE DIED BROKE AND FORGOTTEN IN THE MUD… BUT THIS ONE HEDGE KNIGHT MAY HAVE BEEN THE BIGGEST FRAUD IN WESTEROS HISTORY â AND THE TRUTH COULD SHATTER EVERYTHING YOU THINK YOU KNOW ABOUT SER DUNCAN THE TALL! đą
What if the man who âknightedâ the tallest, most legendary knight in the Seven Kingdoms… was never a real knight himself?
Read more:

In the sprawling saga of Westeros, few figures are as quietly influential yet as overlooked as Ser Arlan of Pennytree. A hedge knight of modest means, he appears in George R.R. Martinâs âA Knight of the Seven Kingdomsâ novellas primarily through flashbacks and the memories of his famous squire, Ser Duncan the Tall. Yet with the premiere of HBOâs new series âA Knight of the Seven Kingdomsâ in 2026, Arlan has suddenly become a focal point of speculation. Who was this man who shaped one of the realmâs most legendary knights? Was he the honorable mentor Dunk remembers, or something far more complicated? The books and the television adaptation present a portrait that invites questions without easy answers.
Arlan was born around 150 AC in the small village of Pennytree, located in the Riverlands on the ever-shifting border between House Blackwood and House Bracken. The villageâs name, as Arlan himself explained in one of the showâs tender flashback scenes, comes from an ancient oak tree where locals nail pennies in memory of sons lost to endless wars. Control of Pennytree flipped back and forth for centuries, a symbol of the regionâs instability. Little is known of Arlanâs early family life beyond one key detail: as a young boy, his grandfather took him to Kingâs Landing, where he witnessed the last Targaryen dragon before it perished the following year. This fleeting childhood memory surfaces repeatedly in both the books and the series, underscoring Arlanâs connection to a fading era of wonder and power.
Rising from these humble roots, Arlan became a skilled soldier and eventually earned his spurs as a knight. His coat of arms â a silver winged chalice on a brown field â offers no clear tie to any major house, though some fans note a superficial resemblance to House Hersyâs sigil. Whether this is coincidence or hint of distant relation remains unknown. Arlan lived the classic life of a hedge knight: traveling the realm, taking temporary service with lords great and small, and competing in tourneys for coin and glory.
His tournament record was respectable for a man of low birth. In Lannisport he unhorsed the young Ser Damon Lannister. In 193 AC at a melee in Kingâs Landing he toppled Lord Stokeworth and the Bastard of Harrenhal. Most memorably, at Stormâs End around 200 AC he faced Prince Baelor Targaryen, breaking four lances according to the prince himself â though Arlan always insisted the number was seven. Baelor, known as Baelor Breakspear, returned Arlanâs armor and horse without ransom, an act of princely generosity that Arlan recounted with pride for the rest of his life. After that near-victory against one of the realmâs finest knights, Arlan hung up his lance and never jousted again, reportedly saying, âIt is not every man who can boast that he broke seven lances against the finest knight in the Seven Kingdoms. I could never hope to do better, so why should I try?â
Arlan also saw real warfare. During the First Blackfyre Rebellion he and his nephew Roger fought beneath the banners of Lord Hayford, a Targaryen loyalist. At the Battle of the Redgrass Field, Roger was slain and Arlan stood beside Lord Hayford when the lord fell to Lord Gormon Peake. Three years before the events of âThe Hedge Knight,â Arlan and his squire Dunk served Lord Dondarrion in the campaign against the Vulture King in the Red Mountains. He spent time in service to House Florent and even escorted a Dornish merchant alongside the infamous Ser Bennis of the Brown Shield. These scattered employments paint a picture of a reliable, unremarkable professional soldier who survived by wits and loyalty rather than fame.
The turning point in Arlanâs life came when he discovered a starving orphan boy in the slums of Flea Bottom. That boy was Dunk â later Ser Duncan the Tall. After losing his nephew Roger at Redgrass Field, Arlan took the tall, awkward youth as his new squire. The two traveled the roads together for roughly a decade. Arlan taught Dunk the practical arts of knighthood: how to care for horses (Thunder, Chestnut, and Sweetfoot), how to swing a sword, and, more importantly, the quiet code of a true knight. He was not a glory-seeker. He enjoyed simple pleasures â watching sunsets, sharing a horn of ale, and telling stories. One drunken night he promised to take young Dunk to a brothel but forgot by morning, a humorous detail that humanizes the old knight in the books.
Yet the relationship was not without tension. Arlan repeatedly told Dunk he intended to knight him one day. That day never came while Arlan lived. In early 209 AC, as the pair headed toward the tourney at Ashford Meadow, Arlan caught a chill and died on the roadside. Dunk buried him on a hill facing the sunset, speaking a heartfelt eulogy: âYou were a true knight, and you never beat me when I didnât deserve it.â Then Dunk claimed the dead manâs armor, horses, and name. At Ashford he told the steward Plummer that Ser Arlan had knighted him on his deathbed, dubbing him Ser Duncan the Tall with only a robin in a thorn tree as witness. Two years later he repeated the claim to Lady Rohanne Webber. No independent confirmation exists.
This is where the story grows murkiest â and where the HBO series leans hardest into ambiguity. In flashbacks and fever-dream visions throughout Season 1, viewers see a more gritty, fallible Arlan. Portrayed by British actor Danny Webb, the character is shown as a hard-drinking wanderer who, in one memorable sequence, drunkenly slays two gold cloaks in a back alley to rescue young Dunk from the City Watch. He passes out under trees, tells the Pennytree origin story with melancholy, and appears to die mid-conversation only to wake and finish his tale with the line, âA true knight always finishes his story.â During Dunkâs trial of seven against Prince Aerion Targaryen, Arlanâs spectral voice urges his former squire to rise and fight. In the season finale, his spirit rides beside Dunk and Egg toward Dorne.
These added scenes amplify the central question the books only hint at: Did Arlan actually knight Dunk? Or did Dunk, desperate to escape his lowborn origins, simply take the title for himself? Some viewers and readers have gone further, speculating that Arlan himself may never have been formally knighted. Theories circulating on forums suggest possible identity theft during the chaos of the Blackfyre Rebellion â a commoner assuming a dead knightâs armor and name to survive. Others point to Arlanâs reluctance to knight Dunk as evidence he knew the ceremonyâs weight and feared passing on a title he himself had never truly earned. The show deliberately leaves these threads dangling, letting Dunkâs visions and memories raise doubt without resolution.
Neutral observers note that knighthood in Westeros has always been flexible. Any knight can make another knight, and hedge knights often operated in gray areas. Arlanâs life embodied the ideal Martin frequently explores: true knighthood is not a title granted by ceremony but a code lived through daily choices. Arlan never sought glory, never refused a cup of wine that might be his last for a year, and never abandoned the orphan he took in. Dunk, in turn, carries those lessons forward, becoming the âtrue knightâ Arlan hoped he would be.
In the broader tapestry of âA Song of Ice and Fire,â Arlanâs small life intersects with larger events. His childhood sighting of the last dragon ties him to the Targaryen dynastyâs decline. His service in the Blackfyre Rebellion places him at one of the realmâs bloodiest turning points. His decision to train Dunk sets in motion the adventures that will eventually entangle the giant knight with Targaryen princes, Dornish plots, and the mystery of the dragon eggs.
As âA Knight of the Seven Kingdomsâ continues into future seasons, Arlanâs presence is expected to fade. Showrunner Ira Parker has indicated that the mentorâs spirit has completed its narrative purpose: Dunk is now his own man. Yet the questions linger. Was Ser Arlan of Pennytree simply a good-hearted hedge knight who died too soon? Or was he a man carrying secrets â about his own dubbing, his true name, his loyalties â that died with him on that Ashford road?
The books and the series offer no definitive proof either way. What they do offer is a poignant reminder that in Westeros, as in life, the most important legacies often belong to those history barely remembers. Ser Arlan never wore a crown, never sat on the Iron Throne, never commanded great armies. He simply rode the roads, trained a boy, and tried to live as a knight should. In the end, perhaps that is the only truth that matters.
News
THE TITAN SLAYER: New âInfinite Stunâ Meta Reveals How to Bully Crimson Desertâs Most Overwhelming Bosses
STOP GETTING BULLIED BY OVERWHELMING BEINGS! âď¸đĽđš Are the Forgotten General or Belellith flattening you like a runaway train? The “Infinite Stun” and “Volcanic Archer” metas are officially here to save your playthrough! đ¨ The Crimson Desert community is reeling…
DEADLY ELEGANCE: âElegant Carmineâ Armor Blueprint Discovered for Damiane After High-Stakes Jungle Raid
UNLEASH THE ELEMENTAL PRINCESS: DAMIANEâS CARMINE ARMOR FOUND! đđĄď¸â¨ Stop letting Damiane wear basic gear! The blueprint for the ultra-rare Elegant Carmine Leather set has finally been locatedâbut beware, this treasure is buried deep in a trap-filled cave! đ¨ The…
HIDDEN IN THE HIERARCHY: Why Most Players Will Never Find the Insane Hellfryn Armor Set in Crimson Desert
THE RAREST ARMOR IN PYWEL HAS BEEN FOUND! đĄď¸đđĽ Have you walked through Deinus a dozen times and still missed this “Ghost” set? The secret to the Hellfryn Armor and Black Sun Shield is finally DECODED! đ¨ The Crimson Desert…
BEYOND THE PROTAGONIST: Damianeâs âElemental Princessâ Build Is Officially Nuking the Crimson Desert Meta
MOVE OVER KLIFF, THE PRINCESS IS HERE! đđĄď¸âď¸ Everyone is obsessed with Kliff, but have you seen what a maxed-out Damiane can do? This “Elemental Princess” build is literally breaking the game! đ¨ The Crimson Desert community is losing its…
THE POWER PARADOX: Why Overstacking Abyss Gear is Quietly Killing Your Damage in Crimson Desert
DON’T RUIN YOUR CHARACTER! đđąđŤ Warning: Overstacking Abyss Gear might actually NUKKE your DPS and drain your resources in seconds. Do you know which powers are actually TRASH? đ¨ The Crimson Desert community is buzzing after a shocking discovery: The…
KOOPA CRITICAL CONDITION: Critics Slam âSuper Mario Galaxyâ as âToxic,â While Fans Power-Up a Record $350M Opening
BOWSER IS “TOXIC”? CRITICS ARE OFFICIALLY LOSING THEIR MINDS! đ˘đ The Super Mario Galaxy Movie just hit theaters, but the “expert” reviews are reading like a political manifesto! While fans are driving a massive $350M opening, professional critics are busy…
End of content
No more pages to load