I don't think Davos Seaworth is Hand of the King to Jon. If he is, then Jorah Mormont should be counted as a hand since Daenerys said in the second episode of the final season: "You're advising me to forgive the man [meaning Tyrion] who stole your position [Hand of the Queen]". My point is that ser Davos has never been Hand of the King (officially), so has Jorah.
If Robert Baratheon was a legitimate king, then Stannis was a king too as his legitimate heir. If on the other hand Robert wasn't a legitimate king, then Ned Stark wasn't a hand either. Also, that would make Daenaeris the one and only queen-in-exile all along and Jorah her de facto hand I guess.
Exactly. Tyrion wore it twice (Joffrey and Daenerys), Ned for Robert Baratheon, Davos for Stannis (and I want to say maybe Joffrey or Tommen for a little while? Not 100%). While Jorah was definitely the unofficial hand to Daenerys, he never wore a pin, nor was referred to as hand of the queen.
Yeah, but it's not something you would know just from watching. Every other question regards the fictional world itself. The filming question is something you'd need to learn by doing outside reading or research. There are so many different possible questions about the plot of Game of Thrones that it makes little sense to add behind-the-scenes trivia. I agree with Nikhil that the question is out of place.
I knew the answer to that from watching some of the "Inside The Episode" clips that play after the show on HBO (and are on Sky Atlantic here in the UK). It's been mentioned a few times, including after the most recent episode. Sure, not in the show itself, but I wouldn't say you have to do outside reading or research. It's the kind of thing that many fans will know from just watching the broadcast, or the Blu-rays etc. I get your point though.
I still got the correct answer and knew what you were going for, but I believe the Arbor (technically part of the Reach) is just as far south as the southernmost part of Dorne and may even stretch further south.
Read the question again. Either QM changed the wording since you commented, or you didn't read carefully enough. Also, it't not as south as Dorne. It's quite far south, but the southernmost point of Westeros is safely in Dorne.
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