Jon Snow in 'Game of Thrones' is indeed a Targaryen, as both the HBO show and George R.R. Martin's books A Song of Ice and Fire reveal us. His real name, it turns out, is Aegon Targaryen.
In the novel series A Song of Ice and Fire by George R.R. Martin, Jon Snow is indeed a Targaryen. Rhaegar Targaryen and Lyanna Stark are his parents. In the books, this ancestry is progressively disclosed through a number of story points and clues. His actual ancestry, which links him to the strong and legendary Targaryen dynasty, has important ramifications for both his own character arc and the plot as a whole.
2025-02-16 02:25:26
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Reborn as a dragon Queen
Liana evadne
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She was the lowest among them, an omega meant to serve, to obey, to be forgotten.
Until the Alpha touched her.
Until he marked her with words that felt like a promise... and shoved her off a cliff like she was nothing.
Ayla thought betrayal had a name, a face, a heartbeat she once trusted.
She thought the crashing water would be her grave.
But death didn’t claim her.
The dragon did.
She awakens not in darkness, but in silk sheets soaked with sweat, her body wracked with fire, strangers calling her Queen Liliana.
The child they beg her to bring into the world is no wolf pup, it’s something older, deeper… and hers.
Now fire sings in her veins. Scales burn beneath her skin.
She remembers being Ayla. But they swear she is a queen, reborn through flame and fury, the last of the dragon-blooded line.
Torn between two lives, two names, two fates…
Was she reborn by fate’s hand, or was she always meant to rise?
Because if this isn’t death, then it must be the beginning…
of the Dragon Queen.
*She was banished to die. He saved her to possess her. Now three kings want to claim her… and the secret she carries could shatter kingdoms.*
Elysia Belrose has spent her entire life as nothing—scentless, powerless, invisible. The night her mother dies, she drowns her grief in the arms of a brutal stranger who makes her feel wanted for one perfect moment… before shattering her: *“Don’t get the wrong idea. This didn’t mean anything.”*
Two years later, she finally finds hope when Killian, the Alpha’s son, claims her as his mate. She tells herself she can earn his love. She’s wrong.
When she discovers him in bed with the Alpha King’s daughter, her rejection provokes his rage. Beaten bloody and accused of seduction, Elysia is banished to the Wildlands for 100 days—a death sentence wrapped in mercy.
But the man who saves her is the same stranger from that night. The one who broke her.
Rhaegar Draven. The Alpha King.
He doesn’t want her. He doesn’t believe in second chances. But when she begs for 99 days of protection, he agrees to one condition: she stays silent, obedient, and out of his way.
Except Elysia is hiding something that pulses beneath her skin, growing stronger with each passing moon. A forbidden bloodline. A secret pregnancy. And a truth that makes her the most dangerous woman alive.
Three men are hunting her—one who wants to reclaim her, one who wants to breed her, and one who’s trying to convince himself he doesn’t want to burn the world down to keep her.
But Rhaegar’s wolf knows what he refuses to admit: she’s his. His mate. His queen. His salvation and his ruin.
In 99 moons, everything will change.
After the four elemental stones have been stolen, the magical kingdoms of Castamere and Everus find their kingdoms slowly dying due to the Great Plague. To restore order and balance, the stones must be found and returned to the Dragon's keep.
Aeryn is the lost queen of Everus and heir to the Dragon Flame elemental stone. After the great war that leaves both kingdom in shambles, a dangerous sacrifice is preformed and she absorbs the power of the Dragon flame stone to keep it from getting into the wrong hands. The young queen is taken away from her kingdom few days after for her protection. She grows up as a commoner in her rival kingdom till she is kidnapped by a fanatic who sees the power in her fiery eyes.
He enrols her into the Queenstrial as one of the thirteen maidens vying for the Crown Prince of Castamere, Lucien's hand in marriage. Her task is simple, spy on the Crown Prince and retrieve the elemental ice stone or risk the kingdom of Castamere and Everus destroyed by the great plague.
Falling in love with the Crown Prince was not in the equation especially when he is also hiding a very dangerous dark secret.
Nymeria has spent her whole life running from her past, from her bloodline, and from the kind of love that always ends in betrayal.
So when her brother drags her into his elite hockey world, she promises herself one thing: don’t get attached, don’t get close, and don’t fall.
Especially not for him.
Declan Cross, the Ice King, is her brother’s best friend, her first love, and her biggest mistake.
He’s colder now, darker, and dangerous in ways she can’t explain. The way he watches her feels wrong, and she doesn't want to think of her brother's friend in that way. Satisfying her.
And the worst part? He refuses to stay away.
But Nymeria isn’t just hiding scars. She’s hiding a secret powerful enough to start a war. Because she isn’t just a girl with a broken past.
She had the hunted bloodline. A secret the werewolf world would kill to control.
And Declan? He didn’t find her by accident. He was sent to hunt her.
When fate binds them as mates, Nymeria does the unthinkable. She rejects him.
But Declan doesn’t accept rejection. Not from her or from anyone.
As obsession replaces control and enemies close in, Nymeria must decide: Run like she always has, or risk everything for a man she doesn’t trust. A man who might destroy her.
Born as the daughter of the Skybound Alpha King, Anastasia Zyaire was born to rule, trained with Luna etiquette, duty, and expectations , but not love. Raised by her parents who saw her as a bargaining chip instead of a daughter. At 21, still unmated, she's summoned to a grand family dinner, only to be told she's to marry a stranger from a rival pack in two weeks.
She already gave her heart away. But when she runs to the only man who she thought would save her, she walks in on his betrayal.
Broken and drunk at the full moon Fiesta, Anastasia finds herself ranting on a balcony, and falling into the arms of a mysterious stranger whose scent she can't even place. The heat, the touch, the mark…everything feels real.
Until the next day.
Because the stranger is one of two identical twins…cursed heir of the Dragon Rider Pack.
And she’s betrothed to the cold one.
Now bound by blood, politics, and secrets, Anastasia must choose between obeying her father’s command or chasing the bond that threatens to destroy everything.
One wears the crown.
The other marked her soul.
And her heart was never meant to survive either.
How will the Lannister family handle the rumors of the blood-stained virgin whom their son had mercilessly taken advantage of? With the press on their neck, Monica Lannister and Warren Lannister had to do something about it.
They did?
Or
They didn't?
However, what if the blood-stained virgin girl was more than whom they assumed she was?
Dangerous?
Or
Manipulative
Or
Both?
Perhaps, she came back for revenge; for all, they had done to her previously? For the love, she was deprived? For the maltreatment she experienced?
Possibly, she could be the rich kid whom he had loved all of his life.
You can only find out in this novel.
#Unexpected Romance
#Erotic
#Pain
#Plot Twist
#Cliffhanger
Read at your risk
Jon Snow's true parentage is one of the most jaw-dropping reveals in 'A Game of Ice and Fire'. He's not Ned Stark's bastard but the legitimate son of Rhaegar Targaryen and Lyanna Stark. This makes him Aegon Targaryen, the rightful heir to the Iron Throne, and explains why Ned kept his identity secret—to protect him from Robert Baratheon's wrath. The Tower of Joy scene confirms it: Lyanna died in childbirth, not from kidnapping. Jon’s bloodline gives him a claim to Westeros and ties into the prophecy about the Prince That Was Promised. His Targaryen heritage also explains his bond with dragons and resistance to fire.
Jon Snow is one of those characters who feels like he’s been carved straight out of myth, but with all the messy humanity of real life. In 'A Song of Ice and Fire', he’s introduced as the bastard son of Ned Stark, growing up in Winterfell with his half-siblings but always carrying the weight of his illegitimacy. What’s fascinating about Jon isn’t just his journey from the Wall to the heart of the supernatural threats beyond it, but how he embodies the series’ themes of identity and duty. He’s constantly torn between his Stark upbringing and the secrets surrounding his true parentage, which fans obsess over. The books dive deeper into his internal struggles—his loneliness, his leadership challenges with the Night’s Watch, and that haunting sense of never truly belonging. Martin writes him with this quiet intensity, like a smoldering fire you can’t look away from.
And then there’s the show, which—love it or hate it—brought Jon to life in a way that made him a household name. Kit Harington’s brooding portrayal added layers of charisma, though the later seasons definitely took some liberties with his arc. But whether you’re team book-Jon or show-Jon, his core remains the same: a reluctant hero who keeps choosing honor even when it costs him everything. That moment in the books where he refuses to abandon his vows, even when offered everything he’s ever wanted? Chills. Makes you wonder how much more Martin will unravel about him in 'Winds of Winter'.
You know, the Targaryen family tree is a tangled mess of dragons, incest, and political drama, but Jon Snow’s place in it is one of the most fascinating twists in 'Game of Thrones'. Officially, he’s Ned Stark’s bastard, but the big reveal in the later seasons shows he’s actually the son of Rhaegar Targaryen and Lyanna Stark. That makes him Aegon Targaryen, the rightful heir to the Iron Throne—though he never really embraces that legacy. The show leaves it ambiguous whether he’s ever formally acknowledged in Targaryen records, but blood doesn’t lie.
What’s wild is how this secret reshapes everything. Daenerys thinks she’s the last Targaryen, only to find out her nephew is alive and a rival claimant. Jon’s lineage fuels her paranoia and ultimately contributes to her downfall. The books might handle it differently, but in the show, his Targaryen blood is a ticking time bomb that never fully explodes. He ends up back at the Wall, a king without a crown, and the last surviving Targaryen—even if he doesn’t want the title.