It gives us a decent idea of what Drogon did with Dany's body after he melted the Iron Throne and flew away from King's Landing. As theorised by Samwell Tarly in the finale, the dragon flew her to Volantis, where she'd grown up in exile after the death of her father, and cremated her body in line with family tradition.
EMILIA TO NOT RETURN AS DAENERYS
The sequel of Games of Thrones will follow Jon Snow's (Kit Harington) life post the events of the series finale.
Showrunners David Benioff and D.B. Weiss later confirmed Drogon went to Volantis, a southern coastal city in Essos founded by ancient Valyrians.
Drogon knows Jon killed his mother, but instead of taking revenge on him, the dragon turns his wrath on the Iron Throne and melts it into molten slag. According to Djawadi, it's intended to represent Drogon destroying the thing that led to his mother's downfall.
In the Game of Thrones finale, Jon Snow joins the wildlings beyond the Wall after being exiled to the Night's Watch.
No, the Night King is not a Targaryen.
In the books, however, the story of the Night King is slightly different. The Night King isn't the leader of the White Walkers. Instead, he's a legendary historical figure who supposedly betrayed the Night's Watch to marry a “corpse queen” and then crowned himself a king.
At the end of Game of Thrones, Jon Snow is sentenced to the Night's Watch for killing Daenerys Targaryen. He seems to leave to join the Wildlings instead, however.
Game of Thrones' Drogon chose not to kill Jon Snow because of his Targaryen blood, his love for Daenerys, and Drogon's possible understanding that while Jon committed the act, he wasn't the reason for Daenerys' death at the end of Game of Thrones'.
In fact, Martin outright said as much during a Q&A back in 1999, calling the idea that Targaryens were magically immune to fire a “common misconception.” “TARGARYENS ARE NOT IMMUNE TO FIRE!” the author emphatically stated. “The birth of Dany's dragons was unique, magical, wonderous, a miracle.
As expected, shocked viewers weren't happy with the decision. Some even poked fun at how Bran, as the all-knowing Three-Eyed Raven, probably knew he'd end up being crowned all along. This content is imported from twitter.
It gives us a decent idea of what Drogon did with Dany's body after he melted the Iron Throne and flew away from King's Landing. As theorised by Samwell Tarly in the finale, the dragon flew her to Volantis, where she'd grown up in exile after the death of her father, and cremated her body in line with family tradition.
4. Arya Kills Drogon to Fulfill Her Prophecy.
For the Targaryen prince sometimes known as "the last dragon", see Rhaegar Targaryen. The last dragon belonging to House Targaryen died young in 153 AC, during the later part of the reign of King Aegon III, who was called the Dragonbane.
In Season 1, Daenerys married Khal Drogo and became pregnant with their son, Rhaego. The child was stillborn, presumably due to Mirri Maz Duur's blood magic. The witch ultimately used Rhaego's life to help restore Drogo, who remained in a vegetative state and never recovered.
Yeah, Drogo died a pretty nasty death at the end of Season 1, when he was cursed to be in a catatonic state forever by a witch (who also caused his unborn child to die in Dany's womb) and his wife had to, uh, take matters into her own hands to put him out of his misery.
"Yes, there is a Jon Snow show in development," Thrones author George R. R. Martin wrote on his blog after the news came out. "Our working title for the show is SNOW." In the final season, Snow discovered his name was Aegon Targaryen, that he was possibly an heir to the Iron Throne.
Easily the most callous, dastardly, and self-destructive villain in HBO's Game of Thrones universe, Cersei Lannister was, at points, television's most despised character, as her thirst for power and hatred of her brother, fan-favorite Tyrion Lannister, put her at direct odds with the heroes of our story.
So, when Jon saved Commander Jeor Mormont from a Wight, using his bare hand to throw a lantern across the room—he let out a scream. He was burned by the fire; he is not fireproof.
The Targaryens have white or silvery blonde hair because the family is originally from Old Valyria, where lighter hair colours and skin were extremely common. Thanks to generations of inbreeding, the Targaryens have managed to preserve their distinctive Valyrian features.
If you're wondering why Rhaegal allows Jon to ride him in the first place, it's because the former King in the North has Targaryen blood flowing through his veins — his mother is Lyanna Stark and his father is Rhaegar Targaryen. (Something Sam finally fills Jon in about in the premiere, FYI.)
Game of Thrones' Drogon chose not to kill Jon Snow because of his Targaryen blood, his love for Daenerys, and Drogon's possible understanding that while Jon committed the act, he wasn't the reason for Daenerys' death at the end of Game of Thrones'.
When Tyrion announced his support of Bran being made king, he said Bran had the best stories. The world at large took that literally, and started listing every character that had better stories than Bran.
A Storm of Swords
However, she identifies Night's King as a Stark of Winterfell and brother to the King of Winter and suggests his name was Brandon.
Aemon chose to go to the Wall and join the Night's Watch for fear that he might be used in a plot to usurp his brother, King Aegon V Targaryen. The king provided Aemon with an "honor guard" (emptying the dungeons) to take the vows of the Watch with him.
But putting the optics of that aside for a moment, why is a Night's Watch still necessary? The Watchers on the Wall were stationed there as a first line of defense against the dangers of the North, namely the wildlings and the White Walkers.