strike wolf wrote:Oh and i was asking if the books told more about how Lyanna Stark died.
Nope. Only that Ned found her dying.
strike wolf wrote:As far as I can tell with the Targaryens out of the picture, the three biggest or most influential houses in the kingdom were Stark, Lannister and Baratheon. I believe Robert put his name up for king and Ned Stark backed his claim. With the two most influential houses siding for Robert, Tywin probably made a deal about supporting him in exchange for marrying his daughter. Someone who's read the books can probably more accurately detail that.
This is more or less accurate in terms of what happened socially. What put Robert over the top to be king, politically, was that he had the best "claim" on the throne as he was the grandson of a Targaryen. So they considered him to have the greatest claim of anyone left alive after the rebellion.
betiko wrote:by the way; there is something I didn't quite understand, how did robert baratheon get the power, because it's mainly the lanisters who defeated the mad king?
See above for how Robert became king. But I wanted to answer to your comment on the Lannisters:
The rebellion was lead by Robert and his two main "lieutenants" were Ned Stark and John Arryn. You might not know/remember who John is, but he is the one who is killed in the very beginning of the show (former Hand of Robert) for finding out who Joffrey's real father is, and his death drives Robert to go ask Ned to be his new hand. His wife is the one who was seen breastfeeding the older child in Season 1 (she kinda went crazy after he died, obviously). They control a considerable part of Westeros (the East) and have not gotten involved with the current wars nor committed to any of the kings.
The Lannisters were involved in the rebellion, but not heavily. Tywin was actually the hand of the mad-King Aerys and his son, Jaime, was in the Kingsguard. To keep the Lannisters out of the war, Aerys forbade Jaime from going out and fighting against the rebellion and kept him as his personal guard. Yes this ended up costing him his life, but it also kept Tywin from fully committing to the rebellion until the end in order to keep his son safe.
Robert was the one who killed Rhaegar (Aerys' son and the next in line to the throne) that, more or less, sealed the victory for the Baratheon/Stark/Arryn armies.
After Rhaegar was killed, the Lannisters now entered the rebellion at the very end. Tywin, who was supposed to be loyal to Aerys, marched his entire army to Kings Landing and asked Aerys to let him in "so he could help protect the city". Once his army was inside the gates, they turned on the Targaryens, Jaime killed Aerys, and the war was over.