That night, Ramsay is visited by Sansa, who watches as his hungry hounds eat Ramsay alive. Ramsay's death marks the end of House Bolton and its rule in the North.
With the phalanx facing inward towards the Stark forces, the Vale knights are able to attack on the Boltons' undefended side, wiping away Ramsay's phalanx and freeing the Stark soldiers. Tormund kills the Smalljon in a brutal duel.
“Battle of the Bastards,” the ninth episode of Game of Thrones' sixth season, saw the long-awaited showdown between Jon Snow and Ramsay Bolton finally take place, culminating in Ramsay's death at the hands of Sansa Stark.
Strategically, Ramsay lost his support pillar in the North. His claim to Winterfell comes from his marriage to Sansa. Without that, he will continue losing his support structure, all the while Sansa and Jon (Ned's only remaining “son” that anyone knows about) will gain more.
Littlefinger's entire reputation in both the books and the show was his incredibly detailed knowledge of the inner-workings of most noble families in Westeros. That means he should have known that Ramsay was a direct threat to Sansa's physical and emotional wellbeing.
Sansa was repeatedly raped, beaten, and psychologically tortured by Ramsay Bolton during their arranged marriage.
Sansa Stark : [to Ramsay] Your words will disappear. Your house will disappear. Your name will disappear. All memory of you will disappear.
Sansa Stark and Theon Greyjoy (aka Reek) Have Escaped From Ramsay Snow. As Stannis and Ramsay's armies clash on the battlefield up near Winterfell, Sansa seizes her opporunity to escape. She's quickly intercepted by Reek and Myranda, who tell her she can't leave until she gives Ramsay an heir.
Bran thanks Theon, and Theon charges at the Night King, but he is killed after the Night King impales him with his own spear. In the aftermath of the Long Night, Theon is cremated along with those slain in battle.
Jon overpowers Ramsay and begins to brutally beat him, but stops short of killing him when he sees Sansa and orders him imprisoned instead, leaving Winterfell once again in the hands of House Stark. At night, Sansa visits Ramsay, who has been imprisoned in the kennels with his hounds.
The last time Sansa and Theon were together was in the beginning of Season 6, after he helps her escape from Ramsey in Winterfell. Ultimately, they're saved by Brienne and Pod, and the latter duo bring Sansa up to Castle Black to reunite with Jon while Theon returns home to the Iron Islands and his sister Yara.
But Sansa survived and rose to power — in one of the last scenes of the series finale of “Game of Thrones,” she was crowned queen of the newly independent North. “It was kind of the perfect ending for her,” Turner said on Monday morning.
Jon returns to the Wall, where he learns that Stannis has been defeated by the Boltons. Later, he is lured into a trap by his steward Olly and is killed by Thorne and his men. They assassinate Jon for his perceived betrayal of the Night's Watch.
Ramsay tortured Theon because of his own sadist nature, loving to inflict pain and misery upon others simply as he could. Theon in particular was like a pet project to Ramsay, seeing just how far he could destroy him and turn him into his willing servant.
But when the Ironborn chose Euron Greyjoy to be the new king, Theon and Yara escaped across the Narrow Sea and made an alliance with the Dragon Queen, Daenerys Targaryen. By the time season 6 ends, Theon has regained much of his old self.
Joffrey was not precisely on House Stark's side, but he betrayed Ned and Sansa specifically at this moment, as he had told them Ned would be shown mercy and sent to the wall.
It also ended on a cliffhanger for Theon Greyjoy and Sansa Stark, who both escape from Winterfell. Both had been physically and psychologically tortured by the vicious Ramsay Bolton, but after being too terrified to help Sansa - who was forced in marriage with Ramsay - Theon helps her make a desperate escape.
He then commands his son Tyrion Lannister to marry Sansa. Tyrion is initially opposed to the marriage, but is eventually enticed by the prospect of becoming Lord of Winterfell, and so agrees to marry her. Sansa is shocked one morning to learn that she is being fitted for a gown to marry Tyrion that day.
One of the most talked-about moments from Game of Thrones season seven was when Arya Stark (Maisie Williams) murdered Petyr Baelish, a.k.a. Littlefinger (Aidan Gillen), in front of literally everyone.
They seem to operate on a year per season scale, so given she married Ramsay in Episode 6, and fled in Episode 10, that would put her with him for around half a year (though this doesn't seem that likely).
Sansa's direwolf, Lady, was killed in season one thanks to Cersei Lannister's machinations. Robb Stark's direwolf, Grey Wind, was killed at the Red Wedding. Both of those wolf-deaths happened in Martin's novels, too.
Sansa is being beaten by Boros Blount when Tyrion Lannister arrives. He stops the beating and has her taken to the Tower of the Hand to be cleaned up and treated.
Sansa is later told by her father that he is considering sending her and Arya back to Winterfell, running the risk of breaking her betrothal to Daveth. Sansa doesn't want to accept it. She tells them that she loves Daveth, she will be his queen and give him beautiful black-haired children.
No. I know people speculated for like, two seasons that Sansa was pregnant, but that's not what that line is. Ramsay was done, his plaything was free, and that was his last attempt to control her.