What does "the dragon has three heads" actually mean? Source : Google Well, the most thrown-out answer to what people think it means is that the three-headed dragon refers to Aegon the Conqueror and his sister-wives. Prince Rhaegar, on the other hand, seems to have interpreted it as needing three Targaryen children in order to fulfill a prophecy. Others think it simply means needing three dragonriders. However, I think everyone in truth is misinterpreting the actual meaning of House Targaryen’s sigil, and, in the Targaryen’s case, they have forgotten the meaning of their own words: Fire and Blood Let's be clear: there is no such thing as a three-headed dragon, at least not physically, so it doesn't simply refer to Aegon and his two sister-wives. No, the three-headed dragon refers to the dragonbond, as do the words of House Targaryen, fire and blood. I am a proponent of the Lemur theory. The idea is that the dragonbond is similar to skin-changer magic in that there is ...
Comments
Post a Comment