Shmi Skywalker (Anakin's mother) is buried next to her husband, Cliegg Lars, at the Lars homestead on Tatooine; however, Wookieepedia mentions other graves nearby, possibly belonging to Cliegg's first wife and child, or Owen's mother, but these are often speculated and not definitively identified in canon, with Cliegg confirmed as buried alongside Shmi after his own death.
Shmi was buried at the farm with a gravestone marking her grave. After her husband Cliegg Lars died, he was buried next to her.
Skywalker learned from the Lars' that Shmi had been kidnapped by Tusken Raiders and set out to find their camp, where he discovered that Shmi had been severely beaten and was near-death.
During a trip to the bustling spaceport of Mos Espa, Cliegg fell in love with Shmi Skywalker, a slave owned by Toydarian junk trader Watto. Cliegg purchased Shmi's freedom and, soon after, made her his bride.
According to Anakin's mother Shmi, there was no father - she simply woke up pregnant one day. According to Sheev Palpatine, his Sith master Darth Plagueis had figured out how to manipulate the Force into creating life.
No, Darth Plagueis is not Anakin Skywalker's biological father, but there's a strong theory (especially in Star Wars Legends and early drafts) that his experiments with midi-chlorians to create life led the Force itself to create Anakin, the Chosen One, as a reaction, making Plagueis the "unintentional father" of the prophecy. In current canon, Plagueis is a legend Palpatine uses to lure Anakin, and the exact nature of Anakin's conception by the Force remains a mystery, though he had no conventional father.
History. Owen Lars was a young adult when his father Cliegg married Shmi Skywalker, a Mos Espa slave he'd purchased and then freed. After Tusken Raiders kidnapped Owen's stepmother, a Jedi Padawan arrived in search of Shmi. This was Shmi's son Anakin, the stepbrother Owen had wondered if he'd ever meet.
Shmi holding her baby son Anakin. At some point, perhaps by the will of the Force, the very energy created by all living things that bound the universe together, Skywalker mysteriously became pregnant. Without a man having fathering her child, it was believed to have been conceived within her by the midi-chlorians.
The saddest Star Wars deaths often involve poignant sacrifice, broken relationships, or innocent lives lost, with fan favorites including Kanan Jarrus (heroic sacrifice for his family), Duchess Satine (Obi-Wan's lost love, brutally killed by Maul), Clone Trooper 99 (innocent loyalty and tragic end), Tech (sacrifice for his squad), Padmé Amidala (heartbreak and loss of hope), and Han Solo (fatherly tragedy). These deaths resonate due to their emotional impact, the characters' potential, or the deep impact on other heroes.
Therefore, from a categorical perspective, our psychiatric diagnosis of Anakin Skywalker is BPD.
The Skywalkers' influence on the galaxy—both for good and evil—proves that legacy is about more than just blood; it's about the choices we make. While the Skywalker bloodline technically ended with Ben Solo, Rey ensured its name would live on.
While Yoko Ono has never confirmed the exact location, it's long been believed that she scattered John's ashes in Central Park, across from their home at The Dakota — in what became known as Strawberry Fields. 🌿 On March 26, 1981, City Council Member Henry J.
Ben Jonson, dramatist and poet, is the only person buried in an upright position in Westminster Abbey.
Vader's Attitude Towards Leia Reveals the Truth
As viewers know, Vader betrayed and killed the Sith Lord and saved the entire galaxy soon after reconnecting with his son and learning that Leia was his daughter. The survival of Anakin Skywalker's children propelled the once-great Jedi Knight back to heroism.
As we all know, Darth Vader was Anakin Skywalker first and foremost, son of Shmi Skywalker. The name of Anakin's father has never been provided but that's simply because, well, he doesn't have one.
When you really think about it, Luke and C3PO are technically half brothers.
After years of speculation, Star Wars: The Last Jedi revealed that Rey (Daisy Ridley), the main character of the new trilogy, is not the child of Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill). In fact, she's the child of “nobody” — per Rey's own words. However, the subtitle for J.J.
The answer, revealed in Episode IX: The Rise of Skywalker, rewrote much of what we thought we knew. Rey is the granddaughter of Emperor Palpatine, also known as Darth Sidious or Sheev Palpatine—not through a traditional lineage, but through a failed clone named Dathan, Rey's father.
Luke was the last Jedi, then. Rey is the last Jedi, now. The title of each film in the sequel trilogy is a direct reference to the main protagonist of the sequel trilogy, Rey. In the Force awakens, it awakens in her.
It's pretty clear that operation necromancer is the effort to bring back Emperor Palpatine and Snoke is a step in that effort who served as an intermediate vessel to host his spirit until the Palpatine clone was ready. It's the project to clone palpatine in to a new body after his death in VI.
Qimir has already been calling himself Darth Venamis, and is ready to officially be a Sith Lord Apprentice, but, is also already conspiring to get a pupil of his own, & eventually kill his own master as well.
Darth Vader's failure to recognize Leia as his daughter in Star Wars: A New Hope stems from George Lucas's late decision to make Luke and Leia siblings. Leia's Force abilities and her lack of awareness of her true identity also contributed to Vader's inability to sense their familial connection.