After Rhaenyra Targaryen's death during the Dance of the Dragons, her rival Aegon II Targaryen briefly reclaimed the Iron Throne before being poisoned, leading to Rhaenyra's surviving son, Aegon III Targaryen (Aegon the Younger), being crowned king, establishing her direct lineage as the rulers who ultimately won the civil war, notes A Wiki of Ice and Fire and Wikipedia.
(Spoiler)After Rhaenyra's death, Aegon-II was crowned again(it lasts for six months), during that period he says the title "queen" must belong to his mother, Rhaenyra should only be mentioned as a princess.
Princess Rhaenyra rules as Queen Rhaenyra for about half a year on the Iron Throne. As many of her children are killed, she flees King's Landing after a riot known as the Storming of the Dragonpit, and is eventually caught. Her half-brother, Alicent's son Aegon II, feeds her to his dragon, Sunfyre.
King Aerys II Targaryen, [c] commonly called the Mad King, was the sixteenth member of House Targaryen to rule from the Iron Throne. Although his rule began benevolently, he succumbed to the madness caused by his incestuous lineage, and was eventually deposed by Lord Robert Baratheon in a civil war.
Although viewers thought Jon would end up on the Iron Throne or as the king consort with Daenerys as queen, Bran was named the new ruler. After Tyrion was brought before a council in Westeros, he said there should be a vote, but his choice would be Bran because of his narrative and special skills.
There's no single "saddest" death, but Hodor, Shireen Baratheon, and Ned Stark are consistently cited due to their tragic innocence, shocking betrayal, or profound thematic weight, with Hodor's mind-bending sacrifice ("Hold the door") and Shireen's burning by her own father often topping lists for sheer emotional devastation, while Ned's execution defined the show's brutal realism.
No, The Night King was created by the Children of the Forest, not born of Targaryen blood.
Jon was half Targaryen and half Stark. So, he had dark hair. All of the Baratheon line had dark hair when Ned was looking at the history until Robert's children. They are the product of Cervi and Jamie.
And the Night King was the ruler of all White Walkers, whereas Night's King was a servant to them and was never said to have had become a White Walker himself. The Night King is seemingly an actual king to the White Walkers, whereas Night's King had named himself King at the Wall.
King Aegon IV Targaryen, known as Aegon the Unworthy, is considered to be one of the worst Targaryen kings ever to sit on the Iron Throne. He sired numerous bastards, legitimizing them on his deathbed, an act that led to five Blackfyre Rebellions.
For their betrayal, Hugh Hammer and Ulf White infamously became known as the Two Betrayers. It was believed that the treachery of the two dragonseeds was out of avarice, as they both resent the lands that Rhaenyra gave them and that Hugh and Ulf, who have a lust for power and wealth, desired to become lords.
During the wedding, exiled knight Ser Jorah Mormont pledges his loyalty to Daenerys while her benefactor Illyrio Mopatis gifts her three petrified dragon eggs. Daenerys is afraid of her new husband initially, but after learning the Dothraki language, she begins to bond with Drogo and genuinely falls in love with him.
Jon is the last known Targaryen, but his identity as the son of Rhaegar Targaryen is kept a secret, and he was exiled to the Night's Watch for the assassination of Daenerys, effectively ending House Targaryen.
Robert claimed the Iron Throne because he started the war and killed Prince Rhaegar personally. Robert also had the best claim to the throne among the rebels, being of Targaryen descent through his mother.
King Jaehaerys I Targaryen, commonly known as the Old King and Jaehaerys the Conciliator, was the fourth king of the Targaryen dynasty. The longest-reigning king in the history of the Seven Kingdoms, he is known for building the Kingsroad and reconciling with the Faith after the Faith Militant uprising.
By the end of the Dance in 131 AC, only four dragons remained alive: the wild Cannibal, never ridden; Sheepstealer, hiding in the Mountains of the Moon with its rider; Silverwing, who had gone feral after the deaths of her rider and her mate; and the young dragon Morning, who had hatched during the war.
The dagger, also known as the catspaw dagger, has a dark tie to Arya's family as it was once meant to kill her brother, Bran Stark. Arya's killing blow to the Night King could mean she is the surprise incarnation of The Prince That Was Promised.
it doesn't seem like Jaime really regrets what he did. He straight up says he's ashamed of doing that in the last sentence of your quote though.
Later, Viserion's corpse is hauled up from the lake by the wights, and is resurrected by the Night King, becoming an ice dragon, his eyes glowing with the same blue tint as the White Walkers and wights. With Viserion as his mount, the Night King leads his army to Eastwatch-by-the-Sea.
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'.
Its quite simply genetics. Ciri takes after her mother Pavetta, and her Grand Mother Calanthe, and so on. Also, just so people know, in reality a lot of people that are born with blond hair have almost ashen white hair.
TARGARYENS ARE NOT IMMUNE TO FIRE! The birth of Dany's dragons was unique, magical, wondrous, a miracle. She is called The Unburnt because she walked into the flames and lived. But her brother sure as hell wasn't immune to that molten gold.
While these ideas in the pitch memo were tentative, they do seem to fit with what was revealed in Season 4 of the TV series - implying that the White Walkers are actually never "born", do not reproduce biologically as their own independent race, but "reproduce" by turning select humans into new White Walkers.
This came about because, as Bran warged into his mind (taking him over), he warged back in time — causing the seizure and implanting the phrase "hold the door" (AKA "Hodor") into his mind. For those working on the show, their version was a bittersweet moment to shoot.
After his betrothed Lyanna Stark was allegedly kidnapped by Prince Rhaegar Targaryen, and Eddard's father and brother were murdered by Rhaegar's father, the "Mad King" Aerys II Targaryen, Robert, Ned, and Jon started a rebellion.