Well, he might have suggested in passing that Roggvir might want to come along.
Well, he might have suggested in passing that Roggvir might want to come along.
Says who? And the authorities are to blame for not saying, it happened in the frikkin palace.
I'm sure Roggvir can make his own decisions, but doesn't the fact that he stayed suggest that others were ok with what he did at the time? Probably because no one tried stopping Ulfric? Hmm?
At last sighting Roggvir's own decisions had his head rolling in a basket, so a little advice may have been welcomed.
So I'm not sure what you are disputing here.
Are you saying the Jarl of Windhelm is in the chain of command for a Solitude gate guard?
Or that in the event of a significant event like the sudden death of the king a gate guard wouldn't have a standing order something like 'keep the gate closed'?
Or that gate guard duty is assigned with the understanding that personnel assigned to such lofty positions require no standing orders and can expect to just make their own decisions under whatever circumstances may arise?
The empire has always been hypocritical and self serving. Rogvir wasn't used to Imperial policy because Nords tend to not be politically conniving. When the Imperials arrived, they needed someone to blame; someone with which to make a strong example. So they picked Roggvir.
I don't see why people like them so much. It's like liking Joffrey Baratheon or something.
How convenient that you ignore this:
....uh, how was I unclear? I'm saying you don't know city protocol, and Elisif's court, and Elisif herself should have said to arrest him. It's their own damn fault if they don't tell the guards at their disposal that he should be arrested if they wanted him arrested.
And how are the guards at the gate supposed to know the king is dead if Elisif never gave the order to arrest him or say something?