"Fire is love, fire is passion, fire is sexual ardor, and all of these things." ~ GRRM "If the sky could dream, it would dream of dragons." - Ilona Andrews □icon by perlamarina •header by Melanie Delon
495 posts
They Will Not Have My Dragons, Dany Vowed. They Will Not. ACOK, Daenerys I
They will not have my dragons, Dany vowed. They will not. — ACOK, Daenerys I
Freya Allan as book!Daenerys Targaryen, Heath Ledger as book!Rhaegar Targaryen, Alexandra Moen as book!Rhaella Targaryen, André Dussollier as book!Willem Darry & Jamie Campbell Bower as book!Viserys Targaryen
-
ethereal-elegance reblogged this · 1 month ago
-
wandaofthemaximoffs liked this · 2 months ago
-
guggjnh liked this · 2 months ago
-
mytrashsthings liked this · 2 months ago
-
brokenblossoms liked this · 2 months ago
-
breakerofvows reblogged this · 2 months ago
-
astrella45 liked this · 2 months ago
-
ladydaenys liked this · 3 months ago
-
witchqueenvisenya reblogged this · 3 months ago
-
baelontargaryen reblogged this · 3 months ago
-
blakeivy80 liked this · 3 months ago
-
downydatura liked this · 3 months ago
-
downydatura reblogged this · 3 months ago
-
rhaena-the-black-bride reblogged this · 3 months ago
-
392726 liked this · 3 months ago
-
natashaaromanova liked this · 4 months ago
-
gullveigsdottir liked this · 4 months ago
-
usercanary reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
helaenasgf liked this · 4 months ago
-
bijuice liked this · 4 months ago
-
ofelah liked this · 4 months ago
-
mdkfh liked this · 4 months ago
-
lady-of-winterfell reblogged this · 4 months ago
-
songofthewinterrose reblogged this · 5 months ago
-
wonderwomanquinn liked this · 5 months ago
-
silverlight70 liked this · 5 months ago
-
stareyeds liked this · 5 months ago
-
flowerfemmes reblogged this · 5 months ago
-
cirillabelle reblogged this · 5 months ago
-
silvercelestesstuff liked this · 5 months ago
-
fadingstudentbananacookie reblogged this · 5 months ago
-
fadingstudentbananacookie liked this · 5 months ago
-
sansastarq reblogged this · 6 months ago
-
thedragonsdanced reblogged this · 6 months ago
-
beardedladyqueen reblogged this · 6 months ago
-
beardedladyqueen liked this · 6 months ago
-
stvrlightttts liked this · 6 months ago
-
houseoftoomanyfandoms liked this · 7 months ago
-
matthew-03 liked this · 7 months ago
-
gloster reblogged this · 7 months ago
More Posts from Ethereal-elegance
asoiaf quotes // A Game of Thrones - Daenerys I ↴ Her mother had died birthing her, and for that her brother Viserys had never forgiven her. […] A princess, Dany thought. She had forgotten what that was like.
Daenerys Targaryen Appreciation Month 2021 || Day 27 - Historical Parallel: Daenerys I Targaryen and Elizabeth I Tudor
The sister post of this edit can be found at asoiafdaenerysdaily
Great Houses of Westeros: House Targaryen (2/2)
“But in recent years, it has occured to me from time to time that it might have made for an interesting twist if instead I had made the dragonlords of Valyria, and therefore the Targaryens black….if I’d had dark-skinned dragonlords invade and conquer and dominate a largely white Westeros… though that choice would have brought its own perils. The Targaryens have not all been heroic, after all… some of them have been monsters, madmen, so…Well, it’s all moot. The idea came to me about twenty years too late.”
everyone is happy au:
King Aerys is not mad. Rhaella raises Dany and Viserys.
The Red Comet appears exactly 400 years after the Doom of Valyria. Doesn’t that seem significant?
Because round numbers like that make me want to look twice here… and in doing so, there’s something very interesting in the timeline that GRRM has made efforts to keep slightly veiled.
The Red Comet appears a year before the turn of the century in ASOIAF—that is to say, 299 AC. The Doom occurs in 102 BC. The non-existent year zero of this kind of timekeeping makes it look wrong, but that’s exactly 400 years.
I always thought it was interesting that the Doom of Valyria happened in 102 BC—it’s so close to being a round number, but it’s just off. Just enough off, though, that the Red Comet in 299 AC lines up.
Round numbers feel meaningful, and that’s even true for the characters within the world of ASOIAF:
Joffrey and Margaery shall marry on the first day of the new year, which as it happens is also the first day of the new century. The ceremony will herald the dawn of a new era. (ASOS Tyrion I)
The new century, of course, is 300 years since Aegon’s Conquest:
It’s a new century, my lady. The three hundredth year since Aegon’s Conquest. (ASOS Sansa IV)
It’s almost dissatisfying that all this talk of the new century doesn’t line up with the Doom and doesn’t line up with the Red Coment.
So do we have Aegon to blame for making these numbers not line up? Actually, no—Aegon invaded Westeros in 2BC, exactly 100 years after the Doom of Valyria.
It was then that he crowned himself… but that’s not the date that Westeros counts years from; Westeros counts the years from his coronation in Oldtown. This is a detail apparently so interesting (and perhaps important) that it’s described twice in The World of Ice and Fire. For example:
Only a handful of lords had been present for Aegon’s first coronation at the mouth of the Blackwater, but hundreds were on hand to witness his second, and tens of thousands cheered him afterward in the streets of Oldtown as he rode through the city on Balerion’s back. Amongst those at Aegon’s second coronation were the maesters and archmaesters of the Citadel. Perhaps for that reason, it was this coronation, rather than the Aegonfort crowning or the day of Aegon’s Landing, that became fixed as the start of Aegon’s reign.
If Westeros counted years from the year Aegon crowned himself, rather than from the year Aegon was crowned by the Citadel, then the year that the Red Comet appeared in the sky would be 300AC, and that would be exactly 400 years after the Doom. Seen that way, everything lines up curiously well…
So much happens when the Red Comet arrives—the revival of dragons and the return of magic in the world, whatever the relationship between those things is. Those events, and that year, feels much more like the “dawn of a new era.”
Additionally, seeing it all line up so well raises some eyebrows. Seeing all the dates like this make it seem significant that Aegon invaded exactly 100 years later, and makes room for interpreting the Red Comet as potentially having some kind of relationship to the Doom, because 400 years feels just too regular. Why does the comet appear exactly 300 years after Aegon’s invasion, exactly 400 years after the Doom?
At the least, there’s a sense of fate involved that Dany’s dragons wake exactly 400 years after the Doom—or do the revival of magic and the return of dragons both relate to some unknown third factor?