How did the Unsullied find out that Jon did this?How could Ser Jorah Mormont “find out” about the Second Sons?Did Varys trust Tyrion after the events of A Storm Of Swords?Why did Jon Snow go to this place in Season 5 (Ep 09)?About the claim of Jon SnowHow did Daenerys know about the “Hand of the King” pin?Did Mirri Maz Dur tell Dany she can't get pregnant in the show?Why didn't Ned Stark support this claim to the throne?How did Jon Snow know about Lady and Nymeria?Is Daenerys's decision in Kings Landing consistent with her character arc?Why this character is punished instead of being honoured?

Understanding the TeXlive release cycle: What is the meaning of a TeXlive release and is it ever 'finished'?

Avoiding cliches when writing gods

Was the Tamarian language in "Darmok" inspired by Jack Vance's "The Asutra"?

Can an Aarakocra use a shield while flying?

"You've got another thing coming" - translation into French

Is an early checkout possible at a hotel before its reception opens?

Is this a mistake? (regarding maximum likelihood estimator)

When did Linux kernel become libre software?

Orange material in grout lines - need help to identify

How do I write "Show, Don't Tell" as a person with Asperger Syndrome?

Cross-dimension teleportation using command block or datapack?

What's the name of this light airplane?

Is the term 'open source' a trademark?

Confusion about off peak timings of London trains

Can a black dragonborn's acid breath weapon destroy objects?

How to officially communicate to a non-responsive colleague?

Genetic limitations to learn certain instruments

The eyes have it

Implement Homestuck's Catenative Doomsday Dice Cascader

Are there downsides to using std::string as a buffer?

My coworkers think I had a long honeymoon. Actually I was diagnosed with cancer. How do I talk about it?

What are the peak hours for public transportation in Paris?

How water is heavier than petrol eventhough its molecular weight less than petrol?

Hottest Possible Hydrogen-Fusing Stars



How did the Unsullied find out that Jon did this?


How could Ser Jorah Mormont “find out” about the Second Sons?Did Varys trust Tyrion after the events of A Storm Of Swords?Why did Jon Snow go to this place in Season 5 (Ep 09)?About the claim of Jon SnowHow did Daenerys know about the “Hand of the King” pin?Did Mirri Maz Dur tell Dany she can't get pregnant in the show?Why didn't Ned Stark support this claim to the throne?How did Jon Snow know about Lady and Nymeria?Is Daenerys's decision in Kings Landing consistent with her character arc?Why this character is punished instead of being honoured?






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








20















In the Game of Thrones finale, when Jon




killed Daenerys,




nobody was there to see it. Even the body was nowhere to be found because Drogon took it.



How did Grey Worm and the Unsullied learn that




Daenerys was no longer alive




and Jon was behind this?










share|improve this question



















  • 16





    It occurred to me that he must have admitted to it

    – Valorum
    May 21 at 7:53






  • 8





    Two went in, one came out.

    – Möoz
    May 21 at 7:57






  • 6





    There was blood all over the floor (and his hands) and she was missing. That all seems fairly confirmatory that something violent took place.

    – Valorum
    May 21 at 7:59







  • 2





    @Möoz - Do 'Thunderdome' rules apply in Game of Thrones?

    – Valorum
    May 21 at 8:01






  • 16





    "There was blood all over the floor (and his hands) and she was missing. That all seems fairly confirmatory that something violent took place." - Drogon squished Daenerys and flew away

    – Aegon
    May 21 at 8:11

















20















In the Game of Thrones finale, when Jon




killed Daenerys,




nobody was there to see it. Even the body was nowhere to be found because Drogon took it.



How did Grey Worm and the Unsullied learn that




Daenerys was no longer alive




and Jon was behind this?










share|improve this question



















  • 16





    It occurred to me that he must have admitted to it

    – Valorum
    May 21 at 7:53






  • 8





    Two went in, one came out.

    – Möoz
    May 21 at 7:57






  • 6





    There was blood all over the floor (and his hands) and she was missing. That all seems fairly confirmatory that something violent took place.

    – Valorum
    May 21 at 7:59







  • 2





    @Möoz - Do 'Thunderdome' rules apply in Game of Thrones?

    – Valorum
    May 21 at 8:01






  • 16





    "There was blood all over the floor (and his hands) and she was missing. That all seems fairly confirmatory that something violent took place." - Drogon squished Daenerys and flew away

    – Aegon
    May 21 at 8:11













20












20








20








In the Game of Thrones finale, when Jon




killed Daenerys,




nobody was there to see it. Even the body was nowhere to be found because Drogon took it.



How did Grey Worm and the Unsullied learn that




Daenerys was no longer alive




and Jon was behind this?










share|improve this question
















In the Game of Thrones finale, when Jon




killed Daenerys,




nobody was there to see it. Even the body was nowhere to be found because Drogon took it.



How did Grey Worm and the Unsullied learn that




Daenerys was no longer alive




and Jon was behind this?







game-of-thrones






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited May 21 at 8:25









TheLethalCarrot

61k26400446




61k26400446










asked May 21 at 7:50









I Love You 3000I Love You 3000

58k94450868




58k94450868







  • 16





    It occurred to me that he must have admitted to it

    – Valorum
    May 21 at 7:53






  • 8





    Two went in, one came out.

    – Möoz
    May 21 at 7:57






  • 6





    There was blood all over the floor (and his hands) and she was missing. That all seems fairly confirmatory that something violent took place.

    – Valorum
    May 21 at 7:59







  • 2





    @Möoz - Do 'Thunderdome' rules apply in Game of Thrones?

    – Valorum
    May 21 at 8:01






  • 16





    "There was blood all over the floor (and his hands) and she was missing. That all seems fairly confirmatory that something violent took place." - Drogon squished Daenerys and flew away

    – Aegon
    May 21 at 8:11












  • 16





    It occurred to me that he must have admitted to it

    – Valorum
    May 21 at 7:53






  • 8





    Two went in, one came out.

    – Möoz
    May 21 at 7:57






  • 6





    There was blood all over the floor (and his hands) and she was missing. That all seems fairly confirmatory that something violent took place.

    – Valorum
    May 21 at 7:59







  • 2





    @Möoz - Do 'Thunderdome' rules apply in Game of Thrones?

    – Valorum
    May 21 at 8:01






  • 16





    "There was blood all over the floor (and his hands) and she was missing. That all seems fairly confirmatory that something violent took place." - Drogon squished Daenerys and flew away

    – Aegon
    May 21 at 8:11







16




16





It occurred to me that he must have admitted to it

– Valorum
May 21 at 7:53





It occurred to me that he must have admitted to it

– Valorum
May 21 at 7:53




8




8





Two went in, one came out.

– Möoz
May 21 at 7:57





Two went in, one came out.

– Möoz
May 21 at 7:57




6




6





There was blood all over the floor (and his hands) and she was missing. That all seems fairly confirmatory that something violent took place.

– Valorum
May 21 at 7:59






There was blood all over the floor (and his hands) and she was missing. That all seems fairly confirmatory that something violent took place.

– Valorum
May 21 at 7:59





2




2





@Möoz - Do 'Thunderdome' rules apply in Game of Thrones?

– Valorum
May 21 at 8:01





@Möoz - Do 'Thunderdome' rules apply in Game of Thrones?

– Valorum
May 21 at 8:01




16




16





"There was blood all over the floor (and his hands) and she was missing. That all seems fairly confirmatory that something violent took place." - Drogon squished Daenerys and flew away

– Aegon
May 21 at 8:11





"There was blood all over the floor (and his hands) and she was missing. That all seems fairly confirmatory that something violent took place." - Drogon squished Daenerys and flew away

– Aegon
May 21 at 8:11










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















36














Jon most certainly told them what happened if they hadn't worked it out themselves but I think it's pretty self explanatory. Jon is like Ned "an honourable fool" and so would think it is the right thing to tell people, he doesn't lie. Dany even chastises him for something similar in Season 7 Episode 7, "The Dragon and the Wolf", for not lying to Cersei to get her help. He was brought up not to weasel out of things like this but that aside he is in a fragile enough state that I doubt he'd have been able to lie even if he wanted to.



Jon goes into the Throne Room with Longclaw and a dagger where only him and Dany are in there. A while later Drogon gets really angry, melts the Iron Throne and the back wall of the Throne Room. This would undoubtedly attract Unsullied attention who who rush in to see if their queen is in danger.



They'd come in seeing Drogon flying off and might be able to see Dany's body in his claws. If not they see Jon upset, covered in blood and missing his dagger. They then see a blood patch on the floor near where Jon was standing and most importantly can't see Dany.



It's not much of a stretch to work out from there that Jon did it. There was no one else around that could have done it.






share|improve this answer

























  • A bit out of character for him to kill someone unarmed?

    – Seamusthedog
    May 21 at 13:19







  • 13





    Out of character, yes, and that is why it made him feel like shit

    – TvdH
    May 21 at 13:58






  • 6





    @Seamusthedog Not at all. In the first episode, Jon is shown to agree with Ned's decision to execute a man for failing his duty and betraying an oath. He was unarmed and had no chance to resist-- he was a prisoner. And Jon agrees with Ned that the one to pass the sentence should swing the sword. He does the same with the traitors of the Night's Watch. Once Jon decides that Dany needs to be removed, and that killing her is the only way to do that, it's basically the same decision.

    – Upper_Case
    May 21 at 19:00







  • 1





    I thought Jon felt so bad because she was his 'queen' and, incest aside, he loved her?

    – Seamusthedog
    May 21 at 19:33











Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "186"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);

else
createEditor();

);

function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);



);













draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fscifi.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f212962%2fhow-did-the-unsullied-find-out-that-jon-did-this%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









36














Jon most certainly told them what happened if they hadn't worked it out themselves but I think it's pretty self explanatory. Jon is like Ned "an honourable fool" and so would think it is the right thing to tell people, he doesn't lie. Dany even chastises him for something similar in Season 7 Episode 7, "The Dragon and the Wolf", for not lying to Cersei to get her help. He was brought up not to weasel out of things like this but that aside he is in a fragile enough state that I doubt he'd have been able to lie even if he wanted to.



Jon goes into the Throne Room with Longclaw and a dagger where only him and Dany are in there. A while later Drogon gets really angry, melts the Iron Throne and the back wall of the Throne Room. This would undoubtedly attract Unsullied attention who who rush in to see if their queen is in danger.



They'd come in seeing Drogon flying off and might be able to see Dany's body in his claws. If not they see Jon upset, covered in blood and missing his dagger. They then see a blood patch on the floor near where Jon was standing and most importantly can't see Dany.



It's not much of a stretch to work out from there that Jon did it. There was no one else around that could have done it.






share|improve this answer

























  • A bit out of character for him to kill someone unarmed?

    – Seamusthedog
    May 21 at 13:19







  • 13





    Out of character, yes, and that is why it made him feel like shit

    – TvdH
    May 21 at 13:58






  • 6





    @Seamusthedog Not at all. In the first episode, Jon is shown to agree with Ned's decision to execute a man for failing his duty and betraying an oath. He was unarmed and had no chance to resist-- he was a prisoner. And Jon agrees with Ned that the one to pass the sentence should swing the sword. He does the same with the traitors of the Night's Watch. Once Jon decides that Dany needs to be removed, and that killing her is the only way to do that, it's basically the same decision.

    – Upper_Case
    May 21 at 19:00







  • 1





    I thought Jon felt so bad because she was his 'queen' and, incest aside, he loved her?

    – Seamusthedog
    May 21 at 19:33















36














Jon most certainly told them what happened if they hadn't worked it out themselves but I think it's pretty self explanatory. Jon is like Ned "an honourable fool" and so would think it is the right thing to tell people, he doesn't lie. Dany even chastises him for something similar in Season 7 Episode 7, "The Dragon and the Wolf", for not lying to Cersei to get her help. He was brought up not to weasel out of things like this but that aside he is in a fragile enough state that I doubt he'd have been able to lie even if he wanted to.



Jon goes into the Throne Room with Longclaw and a dagger where only him and Dany are in there. A while later Drogon gets really angry, melts the Iron Throne and the back wall of the Throne Room. This would undoubtedly attract Unsullied attention who who rush in to see if their queen is in danger.



They'd come in seeing Drogon flying off and might be able to see Dany's body in his claws. If not they see Jon upset, covered in blood and missing his dagger. They then see a blood patch on the floor near where Jon was standing and most importantly can't see Dany.



It's not much of a stretch to work out from there that Jon did it. There was no one else around that could have done it.






share|improve this answer

























  • A bit out of character for him to kill someone unarmed?

    – Seamusthedog
    May 21 at 13:19







  • 13





    Out of character, yes, and that is why it made him feel like shit

    – TvdH
    May 21 at 13:58






  • 6





    @Seamusthedog Not at all. In the first episode, Jon is shown to agree with Ned's decision to execute a man for failing his duty and betraying an oath. He was unarmed and had no chance to resist-- he was a prisoner. And Jon agrees with Ned that the one to pass the sentence should swing the sword. He does the same with the traitors of the Night's Watch. Once Jon decides that Dany needs to be removed, and that killing her is the only way to do that, it's basically the same decision.

    – Upper_Case
    May 21 at 19:00







  • 1





    I thought Jon felt so bad because she was his 'queen' and, incest aside, he loved her?

    – Seamusthedog
    May 21 at 19:33













36












36








36







Jon most certainly told them what happened if they hadn't worked it out themselves but I think it's pretty self explanatory. Jon is like Ned "an honourable fool" and so would think it is the right thing to tell people, he doesn't lie. Dany even chastises him for something similar in Season 7 Episode 7, "The Dragon and the Wolf", for not lying to Cersei to get her help. He was brought up not to weasel out of things like this but that aside he is in a fragile enough state that I doubt he'd have been able to lie even if he wanted to.



Jon goes into the Throne Room with Longclaw and a dagger where only him and Dany are in there. A while later Drogon gets really angry, melts the Iron Throne and the back wall of the Throne Room. This would undoubtedly attract Unsullied attention who who rush in to see if their queen is in danger.



They'd come in seeing Drogon flying off and might be able to see Dany's body in his claws. If not they see Jon upset, covered in blood and missing his dagger. They then see a blood patch on the floor near where Jon was standing and most importantly can't see Dany.



It's not much of a stretch to work out from there that Jon did it. There was no one else around that could have done it.






share|improve this answer















Jon most certainly told them what happened if they hadn't worked it out themselves but I think it's pretty self explanatory. Jon is like Ned "an honourable fool" and so would think it is the right thing to tell people, he doesn't lie. Dany even chastises him for something similar in Season 7 Episode 7, "The Dragon and the Wolf", for not lying to Cersei to get her help. He was brought up not to weasel out of things like this but that aside he is in a fragile enough state that I doubt he'd have been able to lie even if he wanted to.



Jon goes into the Throne Room with Longclaw and a dagger where only him and Dany are in there. A while later Drogon gets really angry, melts the Iron Throne and the back wall of the Throne Room. This would undoubtedly attract Unsullied attention who who rush in to see if their queen is in danger.



They'd come in seeing Drogon flying off and might be able to see Dany's body in his claws. If not they see Jon upset, covered in blood and missing his dagger. They then see a blood patch on the floor near where Jon was standing and most importantly can't see Dany.



It's not much of a stretch to work out from there that Jon did it. There was no one else around that could have done it.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited May 21 at 8:36

























answered May 21 at 8:29









TheLethalCarrotTheLethalCarrot

61k26400446




61k26400446












  • A bit out of character for him to kill someone unarmed?

    – Seamusthedog
    May 21 at 13:19







  • 13





    Out of character, yes, and that is why it made him feel like shit

    – TvdH
    May 21 at 13:58






  • 6





    @Seamusthedog Not at all. In the first episode, Jon is shown to agree with Ned's decision to execute a man for failing his duty and betraying an oath. He was unarmed and had no chance to resist-- he was a prisoner. And Jon agrees with Ned that the one to pass the sentence should swing the sword. He does the same with the traitors of the Night's Watch. Once Jon decides that Dany needs to be removed, and that killing her is the only way to do that, it's basically the same decision.

    – Upper_Case
    May 21 at 19:00







  • 1





    I thought Jon felt so bad because she was his 'queen' and, incest aside, he loved her?

    – Seamusthedog
    May 21 at 19:33

















  • A bit out of character for him to kill someone unarmed?

    – Seamusthedog
    May 21 at 13:19







  • 13





    Out of character, yes, and that is why it made him feel like shit

    – TvdH
    May 21 at 13:58






  • 6





    @Seamusthedog Not at all. In the first episode, Jon is shown to agree with Ned's decision to execute a man for failing his duty and betraying an oath. He was unarmed and had no chance to resist-- he was a prisoner. And Jon agrees with Ned that the one to pass the sentence should swing the sword. He does the same with the traitors of the Night's Watch. Once Jon decides that Dany needs to be removed, and that killing her is the only way to do that, it's basically the same decision.

    – Upper_Case
    May 21 at 19:00







  • 1





    I thought Jon felt so bad because she was his 'queen' and, incest aside, he loved her?

    – Seamusthedog
    May 21 at 19:33
















A bit out of character for him to kill someone unarmed?

– Seamusthedog
May 21 at 13:19






A bit out of character for him to kill someone unarmed?

– Seamusthedog
May 21 at 13:19





13




13





Out of character, yes, and that is why it made him feel like shit

– TvdH
May 21 at 13:58





Out of character, yes, and that is why it made him feel like shit

– TvdH
May 21 at 13:58




6




6





@Seamusthedog Not at all. In the first episode, Jon is shown to agree with Ned's decision to execute a man for failing his duty and betraying an oath. He was unarmed and had no chance to resist-- he was a prisoner. And Jon agrees with Ned that the one to pass the sentence should swing the sword. He does the same with the traitors of the Night's Watch. Once Jon decides that Dany needs to be removed, and that killing her is the only way to do that, it's basically the same decision.

– Upper_Case
May 21 at 19:00






@Seamusthedog Not at all. In the first episode, Jon is shown to agree with Ned's decision to execute a man for failing his duty and betraying an oath. He was unarmed and had no chance to resist-- he was a prisoner. And Jon agrees with Ned that the one to pass the sentence should swing the sword. He does the same with the traitors of the Night's Watch. Once Jon decides that Dany needs to be removed, and that killing her is the only way to do that, it's basically the same decision.

– Upper_Case
May 21 at 19:00





1




1





I thought Jon felt so bad because she was his 'queen' and, incest aside, he loved her?

– Seamusthedog
May 21 at 19:33





I thought Jon felt so bad because she was his 'queen' and, incest aside, he loved her?

– Seamusthedog
May 21 at 19:33

















draft saved

draft discarded
















































Thanks for contributing an answer to Science Fiction & Fantasy Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid


  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fscifi.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f212962%2fhow-did-the-unsullied-find-out-that-jon-did-this%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

How to write a 12-bar blues melodyI-IV-V blues progressionHow to play the bridges in a standard blues progressionHow does Gdim7 fit in C# minor?question on a certain chord progressionMusicology of Melody12 bar blues, spread rhythm: alternative to 6th chord to avoid finger stretchChord progressions/ Root key/ MelodiesHow to put chords (POP-EDM) under a given lead vocal melody (starting from a good knowledge in music theory)Are there “rules” for improvising with the minor pentatonic scale over 12-bar shuffle?Confusion about blues scale and chords

What if the end-user didn't have the required library?What is setup.py?What is a clean, pythonic way to have multiple constructors in Python?What does Ruby have that Python doesn't, and vice versa?What is the reason for having '//' in Python?How do I create a namespace package in Python?How to package shared objects that python modules depend on?setuptools vs. distutils: why is distutils still a thing?Navigation in Windows 10 vs code not going to virtualenv library when the same library is installed at user levelPython create package for local usePackaging a project that uses multiple python versionsWhy is permission denied on pip install except for when “--user” is included at end of command?

Esgonzo ibérico Índice Descrición Distribución Hábitat Ameazas Notas Véxase tamén "Acerca dos nomes dos anfibios e réptiles galegos""Chalcides bedriagai"Chalcides bedriagai en Carrascal, L. M. Salvador, A. (Eds). Enciclopedia virtual de los vertebrados españoles. Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales, Madrid. España.Fotos