Ariast Arc
quote:Interesting. I never read it that way at all. I read the statement as being metaphorical, in reference to his ability to go anywhere and do anything via his visions.
I always took this comment to mean that Bran would be a dragon rider.
quote:quote:Interesting. I never read it that way at all. I read the statement as being metaphorical, in reference to his ability to go anywhere and do anything via has visions.
I always took this comment to mean that Bran would be a dragon rider.
quote:There is a big problem with that theory. Robert had a claim to the throne as opposed to a Lannister, Martell or Stark when he revolted because his grandmother was a Targ. The Baratheons have not ruled long enough to have enough legitimacy to have some random Baratheon 6 generations up with no legit (qualifier included because the first baratheon was allegedly the ******* brother of the conqueror) Targ ancestry become King without the other lords wondering why it should not be then.
Pages back we discussed who has the most legit claim to the Iron Throne if Tommen dies without a child?
Somebody did the research. Turns out it's Cersei. So, if she dies before Tommen, he's actually the rightful King, even with no relation to Robert Baratheon.
Who's up after Tommen?
quote:Or TNK says...quote:Season 8, Episode 7, The Finale, Minute 53:
omg Gendry is Azor Ahai
The Night King lifts his sword over a bloodied Jon Snow and says, "There is no Azor Ahai". Sword flashes down. Fade to black.
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Tower of joy scene with light sabers
**AWESOME ALERT**
quote:You try to base it on Targaryen bloodlines when they make no difference. Robert sat on the throne not because he had some Targaryen blood from a relative. Its because he gathered the banners, rebeled against the King and proceeded to whoop ass. He won the war and was the leader of the rebellion so he won the crown. Therefore, it no longer matters what Targaryen bloodlines are in play. The crown right now is Baratheon and therefore all Baratheon bloodlines are in viable for the crown if Tommen dies. Not Targaryen.quote:There is a big problem with that theory. Robert had a claim to the throne as opposed to a Lannister, Martell or Stark when he revolted because his grandmother was a Targ. The Baratheons have not ruled long enough to have enough legitimacy to have some random Baratheon 6 generations up with no legit (qualifier included because the first baratheon was allegedly the ******* brother of the conqueror) Targ ancestry become King without the other lords wondering why it should not be then.
Pages back we discussed who has the most legit claim to the Iron Throne if Tommen dies without a child?
Somebody did the research. Turns out it's Cersei. So, if she dies before Tommen, he's actually the rightful King, even with no relation to Robert Baratheon.
Who's up after Tommen?
If the claim comes via legitimate Targ blood and the spawn of the mad king are excluded, it would then devolve to the Martells via Daenerys Targaryen sister of Daeron II.
Otherwise the death of Tommen without Dany showing up will lead to the Heptarchy.
quote:Robert was not the first to rebel. The first was Jon Arryn when he refused to send Aerys Ned's and Robert's head. Heck if Aerys had not asked for Robert's head he may not even have been part of the rebellion.quote:You try to base it on Targaryen bloodlines when they make no difference. Robert sat on the throne not because he had some Targaryen blood from a relative. Its because he gathered the banners, rebeled against the King and proceeded to whoop ass. He won the war and was the leader of the rebellion so he won the crown. Therefore, it no longer matters what Targaryen bloodlines are in play. The crown right now is Baratheon and therefore all Baratheon bloodlines are in viable for the crown if Tommen dies. Not Targaryen.quote:There is a big problem with that theory. Robert had a claim to the throne as opposed to a Lannister, Martell or Stark when he revolted because his grandmother was a Targ. The Baratheons have not ruled long enough to have enough legitimacy to have some random Baratheon 6 generations up with no legit (qualifier included because the first baratheon was allegedly the ******* brother of the conqueror) Targ ancestry become King without the other lords wondering why it should not be then.
Pages back we discussed who has the most legit claim to the Iron Throne if Tommen dies without a child?
Somebody did the research. Turns out it's Cersei. So, if she dies before Tommen, he's actually the rightful King, even with no relation to Robert Baratheon.
Who's up after Tommen?
If the claim comes via legitimate Targ blood and the spawn of the mad king are excluded, it would then devolve to the Martells via Daenerys Targaryen sister of Daeron II.
Otherwise the death of Tommen without Dany showing up will lead to the Heptarchy.
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Nerds!!
quote:A coalition of the willing if you will...Stankonia said they would send Bombs over Baghdad.quote:Robert was not the first to rebel. The first was Jon Arryn when he refused to send Aerys Ned's and Robert's head. Heck if Aerys had not asked for Robert's head he may not even have been part of the rebellion.quote:You try to base it on Targaryen bloodlines when they make no difference. Robert sat on the throne not because he had some Targaryen blood from a relative. Its because he gathered the banners, rebeled against the King and proceeded to whoop ass. He won the war and was the leader of the rebellion so he won the crown. Therefore, it no longer matters what Targaryen bloodlines are in play. The crown right now is Baratheon and therefore all Baratheon bloodlines are in viable for the crown if Tommen dies. Not Targaryen.quote:There is a big problem with that theory. Robert had a claim to the throne as opposed to a Lannister, Martell or Stark when he revolted because his grandmother was a Targ. The Baratheons have not ruled long enough to have enough legitimacy to have some random Baratheon 6 generations up with no legit (qualifier included because the first baratheon was allegedly the ******* brother of the conqueror) Targ ancestry become King without the other lords wondering why it should not be then.
Pages back we discussed who has the most legit claim to the Iron Throne if Tommen dies without a child?
Somebody did the research. Turns out it's Cersei. So, if she dies before Tommen, he's actually the rightful King, even with no relation to Robert Baratheon.
Who's up after Tommen?
If the claim comes via legitimate Targ blood and the spawn of the mad king are excluded, it would then devolve to the Martells via Daenerys Targaryen sister of Daeron II.
Otherwise the death of Tommen without Dany showing up will lead to the Heptarchy.
Robert became the candidate for the throne because unlike Ned, Jon or Hoster Tully he could claim legit Targ blood and thus was a viable if weak contender to the Iron Throne over the other Lords Paramount of the former seven kingdoms. There was nothing elevating the young Robert over any of the others. If anything Jon Arryn would have made a better King and was de facto king while Robert *****d around.
Ultimately the Targ blood connection helped create a viable contender for the throne and put together a coalition that got Robert on the throne.
There is no particular legitimacy in Baratheon blood per se. The coalition that brought them to power has now dissolved. As such the new coalition propping up the Iron Throne is a much weaker one consisting of the Lannisters, Martells and the fatally weakened Storm Lords. Dorne is sulking, the North is fuming, the Vale has been indifferent.
So you are right in that the Targ bloodlines are somewhat irrelevant at this point. My point is that it was the Targ bloodlines that elevated the young Robert over everyone else. Once Robert's putative blood dies out there is nothing in terms of succession legitimacy that gives the heir to Storms End any special claim over the throne. What will be likely is a resumption of the Heptarchy, unless the new ruler can cobble together a coalition...which frankly is very unlikely. The Martell alliance dies with Tommen...so it is basically the Lannisters against everyone else. And Storms End is about to fall to the mummers dragon.
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You meant Tyrell in those last 2 paragraphs, not Martell.
quote:quote:quote:Interesting. I never read it that way at all. I read the statement as being metaphorical, in reference to his ability to go anywhere and do anything via has visions.
I always took this comment to mean that Bran would be a dragon rider.
I took it as not the literal flying of dragons....but warging into a dragon (or dragons) on behalf of Jon most likely.
quote:No, Ned elevated young Robert over everyone else. This "Targ bloodlines" was just Ned's excuse. When Ned showed up in the throne room to find Jamie sitting on the Iron Throne, he had choices to make. He was the first to arrive and the de facto rebellion leader. So, the choice was his to make.
My point is that it was the Targ bloodlines that elevated the young Robert over everyone else.
quote:Disagree with everything you wrote.quote:No, Ned elevated young Robert over everyone else. This "Targ bloodlines" was just Ned's excuse. When Ned showed up in the throne room to find Jamie sitting on the Iron Throne, he had choices to make. He was the first to arrive and the de facto rebellion leader. So, the choice was his to make.
My point is that it was the Targ bloodlines that elevated the young Robert over everyone else.
Ned's choices were himself, Robert, baby Aegon, young Viserys, or Tywin. As I recall, Ned wanted to promote Viserys, but had heard he shared his father's mental issues. From his perspective, that was his only good option. All the other options were bad. So he picked Robert as the least painful option. Ned didn't want to be King, he didn't trust or like Tywin, and he thought a broken realm needed more than a baby Aegon with a Regent. And, Ned didn't want to move to King's Landing to be the Regent.
Ned offered Robert. and Robert accepted. They didn't have it planned out. Ned probably had no idea about the tiny amount of Targ blood in Robert. Later, Robert tells Ned several times that it "should have been you" and that Ned would have been a better King.
In Westeros society, a powerful man like Ned would struggle to maintain control if it were common knowledge that he made the choice not to be King. It makes him weird and weak. So, he stuck with the "better claim" story to make it seem like he made the right choice in Robert.
The right choice would have been Aegon with Ned the Regent. But, that's another story.
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I know you read this thread GRRM, help me out here.
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I know you read this thread GRRM, help me out here.
Sorry, bub, you're on your own. I'm too busy trying to figure out how to get Dany out of Meereen. Again.
quote:Agreed. And show writers may have every plot line moving at a snail's pace, but save for Dorne, I'm excited to see what happens next.
ready for another episode....tired of the coulda/woulda/shoulda argument.