Todos los personajes de OG Game Of Thrones vivos durante Un Caballero de los Siete Reinos

Aunque Juego de Tronos terminó hace siete años, HBO sigue expandiendo el mundo con nuevas series derivadas. El más nuevo, Un Caballero de los Siete Reinos, está basado en Tales of Dunk and Egg de George R. R. Martin y sigue la historia de Ser Duncan el Alto y su compañero, quien algún día se convertirá en el Rey Aegon Targaryen. Al igual que con los libros originales de Canción de hielo y fuego, HBO está comenzando a adaptar esta historia antes de que Martin termine de escribir la serie Dunk and Egg, y planea cubrir el resto de las aventuras de Duncan y Aegon en futuras entregas.

As a huge fan of Game of Thrones, I’m really curious to see where A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms goes. It’s exciting for those of us who loved the original series, and many of us are already hoping to see some characters we recognize. The timeline is interesting – by the time Dunk and Egg’s story ends, people like Tywin Lannister will have been born. There’s about 40 years between the events at Summerhall and the start of Thrones. And even in the Dunk and Egg stories we’ve gotten so far, quite a few characters who were around in the original series are still alive, even if we don’t always know exactly when they were born.

Even though you probably won’t see the same actors, dedicated fans of the world of Westeros should watch for hidden references, or ‘Easter eggs,’ in the upcoming seasons of A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms. The show might include nods to well-known characters from Game of Thrones – characters who existed during the time of the knight and prince’s early adventures.

Aemon Targaryen

Even if you only watched the Game of Thrones TV show and didn’t read the books, you might recognize the name “Egg” because of Maester Aemon. He appears early in season 1, episode 3, and becomes a mentor to Jon Snow at the Night’s Watch. He reveals he’s a Targaryen – and kept that secret while serving the Night’s Watch, even during the time Robert Baratheon destroyed the rest of his family – when he tries to convince Jon not to abandon Castle Black after Ned Stark is imprisoned.

Aemon was a loyal friend to Jon and Samwell Tarly until he passed away in season 5, and his last words were a cherished memory of his brother, Egg. His insightful advice continued to be impactful throughout the rest of the series. While he hasn’t physically appeared in the show or the novella A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms for over ten years, a potential appearance there would mark his return to the screen. As of now, he remains absent from both formats.

During the first season of A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, Aemon was studying to become a Maester, but Raymun Fossoway criticized him for choosing that path over staying with his family. If the show continues to tell Aegon’s story, we might see a young Maester Aemon give up his claim to the Iron Throne, letting Egg take over as king after his father, Maekar. That would be a satisfying turn for one of the most respected Targaryens in Game of Thrones.

Brynden Rivers

Viewers who only watched the show might not realize the Three-Eyed Raven has a complex history. He appeared as a simple man living beyond the Wall, teaching Bran Stark how to see into the past. However, those who read the books know he was originally Brynden Rivers, the illegitimate son of King Aegon IV, also known as Bloodraven. He was a controversial figure, most notably for allowing a rival claimant to the throne, Aenys Blackfyre, to come to King’s Landing under safe passage, only to then kill him inside the Red Keep during the Blackfyre Rebellions.

As a huge fan of the series, I’ve always been fascinated by Brynden Rivers, also known as Bloodraven. Despite being incredibly powerful and having a lot of sway with the Targaryens when young Aegon – or Egg, as many of us call him – became king, Brynden ended up exiled to the Wall for something he did that was considered deeply dishonorable. He eventually rose to become Lord Commander of the Night’s Watch, a position he held for years, until he just… vanished. Now, in the books, it’s pretty clear that Brynden is the Three-Eyed Raven that Bran encounters – the one who teaches him so much. It’s a shame the show never fully explained that connection, but as a book reader, it’s a really cool reveal, even if it happened before his death at the hands of the Night King.

As a huge fan of the show, I was really excited to spot young Brynden Rivers in one of Daemon Targaryen’s visions in House of the Dragon. It was a small detail, but they included the red birthmark he has in the books – something the Game of Thrones version left out! Given that Brynden and Aemon are later sent to Eastwatch-by-the-Sea with Ser Duncan the Tall, I’m hoping we might see him pop up again in A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms. It would be fantastic to see that storyline continued!

Old Nan

Old Nan wasn’t a major character in Game of Thrones, mainly appearing in the first season with a brief flashback in season six. She was a Winterfell resident known for caring for Bran Stark after his fall and telling him stories about the White Walkers. In the book series, it’s established she was captured by the Boltons when Winterfell was taken and likely died while imprisoned.

Almost nothing is known about Old Nan’s life before she came to Winterfell. It’s believed she arrived roughly 197 years after Aegon’s Conquest, several years before Egg was born. Some fans think she was sent by Bloodraven to secretly observe the Stark family, looking for someone with the potential to become the next Three-Eyed Raven. However, unless she appears in A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, this is unlikely to be confirmed by the show.

Walder Frey

Walder Frey always seems like an old man, but surprisingly, he would have been younger than Prince Aegon Targaryen (Egg) during the events of A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms. Since he was around 90 years old when we first meet him in Game of Thrones, he was likely just a small child during the time period depicted in A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms. Despite starting as a toddler, he grew into one of the most unlikeable characters in George R.R. Martin’s stories, living a long life with multiple wives and many children.

While Frey hasn’t appeared in the A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms series yet, he’s shown as a young boy in The Mystery Knight, one of the Dunk and Egg stories. We see, through Dunk’s eyes, that even as a child at his sister’s wedding to Lord Ambrose Butterwell, Walder Frey was quick to anger – a trait he clearly never lost, as evidenced by his betrayal of Robb Stark at the Red Wedding in Game of Thrones.

Walder Frey doesn’t appear with Dunk and Egg in any stories, though he’s already a grown man and the Lord of the Crossing by the time they likely die at Summerhall. As many viewers expected, Arya Stark eventually kills him in Game of Thrones, a fitting end for a character whose demise was long anticipated.

Leaf

In Game of Thrones, the Children of the Forest are an enigmatic people. While their appearance changed throughout the show, the character Leaf, played by Kae Alexander, became the most prominent of their kind, revealing she was thousands of years old. It was discovered she witnessed the ancient war between the Children of the Forest and the First Men, and that the Children actually created the White Walkers as a defense against their enemies.

Leaf, a character from Game of Thrones, may be the oldest, even older than the Night King, but the books portray her as much younger. A Dance with Dragons states she was born around two hundred years before the show’s events, still a century before the birth of Egg. Because Egg never ventured north, the Children of the Forest will only appear in A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms if the show explores what happened to Bloodraven after he disappeared beyond the Wall, which occurred years before the Tragedy at Summerhall.

Melisandre

Throughout Game of Thrones, Melisandre remained a mysterious character. In season 6, it was revealed her youthful appearance was maintained by a magical necklace, concealing her true form as an old woman. Beyond this, little was known about her age or history, except that she was a close advisor to Stannis Baratheon, believing he was the prophesied savior, Azor Ahai, also known as ‘The Prince Who Was Promised’.

Melisandre probably lived for centuries, potentially throughout the entire period covered in Dunk and Egg. However, her activities during that time remain unknown. George R.R. Martin has indicated she went to Dragonstone and sought out Stannis Baratheon on her own initiative, but her overall goals are still unclear. It would be a surprising twist if Carice van Houten returned as Melisandre in A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, implying her schemes began well before the events of Game of Thrones.

It’s likely that Melisandre, or another red priestess, was present at the Tragedy of Summerhall, which appears to be a key location in the upcoming stories from A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms. The limited details Martin has revealed about this event hint at the use of fire magic and sorcery, suggesting there’s more to discover about Melisandre’s past beyond her age and involvement in the fight against the White Walkers.

White Walkers

The TV series Game of Thrones showed the Children of the Forest as the creators of the first White Walker, known as the Night King, but this hasn’t been confirmed in George R.R. Martin’s original books. Still, the story suggests White Walkers have existed since the very beginning of human settlement in Westeros. While it’s unknown how long it took, the Night King eventually built an army and they’ve been hidden north of the Wall since a historic conflict called the Long Night.

In the time period covered by the Dunk and Egg stories, the White Walkers were considered myths, used to frighten children, and were thought to be gone forever. According to the show and books, the first confirmed sighting of a White Walker in thousands of years happens when a member of the Night’s Watch is killed in the very first episode of Game of Thrones. What the White Walkers were doing all that time remains a mystery, but the fact that the book A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms uses their original name suggests we might find out more about them later in the series.

2026-04-19 20:41