How does jaime lannister die
The knight was pardoned by Robert Baratheon, who became lord of the seven kingdoms and protector of the realm. Sadly, none of the three ever reached adulthood. Before his end, Jaime was able to reunite with his friend Brienne of Tarth, with whom he shared a brief romance following the Great War in Winterfell. On this trip to the capital, Jaime lost his right hand defending Brienne from a group of assaulters.
The loss changed him forever, as he could no longer identify as the fierce knight he was previously known to be. From then on out, Jaime wore a prosthetic golden hand Cersei had made for him. Why would Cersei still be the woman that Jaime loves? Did everyone forget that this happened?
Did Tyrion seriously live through this, and still suggest that his brother escape and live a life far away with his murderous, scheming sister? It seems like the showrunners might have completely forgotten that they wrote this branch storyline for Bronn.
When Jaime left Cersei a season ago, following her double-crossing in the fight against the White Walkers, that should have meant something. Just as his desperate plea to join the North in the fight should have meant something; just as his choice to be the one to finally knight Brienne, and finally consummate his seasons-long simmering relationship with her should have meant something.
This, combined with the world collapsing around them, gave Jaime one last heroic moment—ridding the show of one of its last remaining truly heinous characters. Was this meant to show that Jaime still was a changed man? Cersei cried that she doesn't want her baby to die, and he took her face in his hands and said, "Nothing else matters. Only us. Cersei long thought her brother Tyrion would kill her , thanks to a prophecy she was told when she was a little girl : "When your tears have drowned you, the valonqar shall wrap his hands about your pale white throat and choke the life from you," the valonqar translating to her "younger sibling.
A different interpretation is that Jaime was the valonqar, because technically he was born seconds after Cersei. And in Episode Five, Jaime did technically wrap his hands around her neck and then they did die. But that's a stretch. The Valonqar prophecy was a bust. We knew Cersei had to die. But she should have been forced to answer for her cruelty. Cersei also makes a similar to statement to Ned Stark in season 1 of Game of Thrones. Many fans believed that Jaime would be the one to take Cersei out, whether it was a mercy killing or simply a way to end the madness that surrounded her chaotic reign and their doomed relationship.
However it was ultimately the castle collapsing around them that killed them both. The belief that Jaime would kill Cersei largely stemmed from the flashback in season 5 in which a young Cersei has her future told by a witch named Maggy the Frog. Then comes another — younger, more beautiful — to cast you down and take all you hold dear…The king will have 20 children, and you will have three…Gold will be their crowns, gold their shrouds.
By the time that season 8 rolled around, all of these predictions had already come true.
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