Board Thread:Lore Discussion/@comment-10561605-20130820164006/@comment-203.87.139.41-20150713141341

ok so to sum up eveything I read, albeit read very quickly, in this thread.

Even though alduin's wall could have been a way to stop those historical events from happening, it was too obscure and very vague on the details, and even if some one did understand what it was trying to say, It woud have been impossible to stop them because of wibbley-wobbley timey-wimey, elder scroll stuff.

And about that argument about dragon borns, I'm not a master of Elder Scrolls lore so i apologize if I am mistaken.

Dragon blood is basically The blood of Akatosh, from what I've read up there.

Dragons are immortal (since they're children of the god of time)  and can only be slain by other dragons/dragonborn.

Dragonborn is a general term for those with dragon blood.

St. Alessia prayd to akatosh to help humanity against the armies of the daedra, so Akatosh gave her Dragon blood (aka his blood), the amulet of the kings, and the ability to light the dragonfires, which together sealed the gates of oblivion (I'm not sure but that's what i understood.) and these three were passed to the next in line and they became kown as dragonborn rulers, despite the fact that St. Alessia had no children (so I've heard.)

Talos or Tiber Septim was one of the dragonborns as we came to know it. He had the power of the Thu'um, which were a Power that Dragons naturally had.

And in a fortunate coincidence He became one of the Dragonborn Ruler starting a truer "Dragonborn line of kings". And this problably was what Alduin's wall was actually talking about.

not the Alessian "Dragonborn/dragonblood rulers" but the Septim bloodline of "dragonborn Rules".

or perhaps both. Because the Alessian line was symbolized by the Amulet of the kings. and Martin Septim was the last member of the Septim bloodline. Martin shattered the Amulet, ending the alessian line, and sacrificed himself, successfully ending Tiber Septim's blood line as well