Forged from the swords of dead or sworn opponents, the Iron Throne from Game of Thrones is extremely uncomfortable and extremely uncomfortable, but author George RR Martin has even broader ideas of its size than he does posted on his blog. When writing the books, he had an even more monstrous piece of seating furniture in mind, and a picture by the artist Marc Simonetti, which can be found in the official “A Song of Ice and Fire Calendar 2013”, shows how grotesquely high and almost impossible to climb the Iron Throne seems .
The throne in King's Landing was invented by Aegon Targaryen I, the first joint head of the Seven Kingdoms. Aegon the Conquerer forged the throne with the help of the fiery breath of his dragon Balerion the Black Dread. His motive for the design of the exclusive piece: A king should never be too comfortable. The picture posted by George RR Martin is more reminiscent of Aegon's descendants, the crazy King Aerys Targaryen II, who allegedly always sustained wounds on the iron throne. A king can freak out and burn his followers alive.
As one of the reasons for the small size of the Iron Throne in the series, George RR Martin cites the set of the throne room, which unfortunately does not have the size of St. Paul's Cathedral or Westminster Abbey.