Of course, Thrones has impressive source material: George R. R. Martin has spent the last couple of decades meticulously exploring the various cities, towns, villages, and various geographical
Warning: contains spoilers for House of the Dragon episodes 1 – 3 and Game of Thrones seasons 1-8. The Game of Thrones TV show is set in the years 298 – 305 AC (After Conquest, referring to
This is a visual timeline of A Song of Ice and Fire, the book series by George R. R. Martin on which HBO's Game of Thrones is based. This timeline does not attempt to represent every character or event, but rather presents a slightly more abstracted view of the more consequential ones, which admittedly involves a fair degree of subjectivity.
We'll first share the Game of Thrones watch order with an eye towards the in-story timeline. In the world of Game of Thrones, characters track years relative to the conquest of Westeros by the first Targaryen king, Aegon the Conqueror, with the number and the abbreviation 'AC' (for 'after the conquest') indicating the number of years which have
OCMQ. If you just want the events (minus its First Age prologue) that are covered by the show, including both the Eregion and the Númenor threads, then you have: Appendix A has at most 1 1/3 of a page on the relevant events, maybe a little bit less. Appendix B has a tiny bit over one page of timeline dealing with the relevant Second Age material. At
By Matt Miller Published: Aug 01, 2017 8:50 AM EST. The timeline of Game of Thrones has always been mildly inconsistent. In Episode Two, Grey Worm and Missandei were having awkward eunuch sex in
The Wheel of Time, a fantasy TV show based on the novel series of the same name by Robert Jordan, premiered Nov. 19 on Amazon Prime Video, bringing new audiences and longtime fans alike to an
Even the most devout readers of George R.R. Martin’s “A Song of Ice and Fire” book series were surprised by how some aspects of the Red Wedding played out (it should go without saying that
3 days ago · The Dance of the Dragons results in the deaths of nearly all the dragons, as well as Prince Daemon, Queen Rhaenyra, Lady Rhaenys, Queen Helaena and her children, Aemond, Daeron, and all three of Rhaenyra's children from her first marriage. King Aegon II effectively wins the war when he has Rhaenyra burned and eaten by his dragon, Sunfyre.
game of thrones books vs show timeline