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Докладване на проблем с превода
Winterfell is the major town of the north right? How many people are there.. 20?
A Red Wedding would do that to any house: kill off any soldiers that they had. Also, if you look carefully in Episode 1 during Ethan's part in Ironrath, you can see Royland training a few soldiers.
Also, the Whitehills were most likely on the side of the Boltons during the Red Wedding, so it's obvious that they still have a good portion of their men.
And as for the Whitehills, I would say that they are allied to the Bolton and suvived the Red Wedding with the vast majority of their army.
This guys actually right, because I believe it is in episode 2 Royland and Duncan propose that you take some food from the smaller properties surrounding Ironrath to keep the people who live in Ironrath from dying. The reason for the lack of soldiers is because of the slaughter at the Red Wedding. I mean you saw it for yourself how much more evidence do ya want?
You mean to tell me that they couldn't find 20 men? 20 ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ men? Out of all their holdings they can't even raise 20 soldiers? This is ridicilous and you know it.
They probably (apart for the fact that people sometimes doesn't understand the concept of distances, or population density, or feudalism) have "only" a few dozen soldiers, because they are bannermen of a house who is, in turn, bannermen of another (to put it in real life terms, if the Starks were Dukes, the house Clover would be Counts, and the Forresters would be Lords - which is a real rank, despite in Westeros everybody being "Lords").
The number of soldiers seems correct IF we do not take into account LEVIES. That's it, when going to war, the Lord would pick the strongest men aged 16 to 50 (or 18 to 40, or 14 to 60, depending how serious the war is), arm them, train them (about a week, or less), and they would go to war. For every Knight, between 5 and 10 peasants would go to war, and not precisely as squires. After returning, always before winter, the survivors (and their families, and the ones who didn't go to war) would work harvesting so that every doesn't starve.
For many Lords this could prove problematic if they are poor and cannot supply adequate weapons to their peasants, but House Forrester is PRECISELY a productor of shields, and I guess arrows, amor parts, and so. They could make wooden helmets and pectorals if the ironwood is so awesome as it apparently is.
So, the real questions is, if they are so desperate for men, why are not calling them to arms? Is most people dead? Because, in that case, it doesn't matter; if they don't have enough people to harvest and cut (to sell ironwood), because the war has been apparently so annihilating for them, then the House is doomed anyway. Come winter their people die or emigrate (which could be punishable by death if they are land-bound serfs, but sometimes possible death by axe is better that sure death by starvation) and they are masters of a wasteland.
Apparently you all forgot about something call the Red Wedding, which wiped out many of their soldier. And even if they they still had a good amount of peasants under their protection, it's not that easy to train them in full-fledge soldiers, not when the Boltons and Whitehill have fully trained soldiers.
You don't have a point unless you mean to imply that Old Lord Forrester left no garrison and took all the male population of his holdings to the war.
As if he would have a chocie if Robb told him to bring all of his men, or at least all of his fully-trained men.
First: you missed my first post here on that. Let me requote myself on that specific question of where are the garrisoned troops.
Ser Royland also mentioned about putting more on top of the gate. So they HAVE a garrison. Just not a big one.
And second: as they've mentioned in both Episode 1 and 2, most of their men were with Robb. It is very possible, if not likely, that this was Robb's decision, as Robb was losing men even before before the Red Wedding, especially after the execution of Lord Karstark.