Jamie forgives Claire (and, reluctantly, Lord John) for having slept with each other while thinking him dead—but can't bring himself to forgive Lord John for baldly acknowledging his own desire for Jamie.
five seasons in. Here's what we know about Jamie's fate, and his chances for TV survival, past Season 5. Good news, Jamie fans. As you may have suspected, Jamie is still alive and kicking in the Outlander book series, which currently has eight installments and doesn't show any signs of stopping.
Jamie and Claire went on to have another daughter Brianna Fraser (Sophie Skelton), who came back through the stones to be reunited with her parents. The Highlander mentioned Brianna had red hair like her sister Faith after Claire showed him photos of their child in season three when the lovers were reunited.
OUTLANDER fans saw Jamie Fraser blackmailed into sleeping with Lady Geneva Dunsany. However some fans have questioned the scene and its ambiguous sex scene and whether the Highlander was forced into something against his will. Sign up for FREE now and never miss the top Royal stories again.
Grey asks Claire to marry him in order to protect her, and she agrees. During their marriage, Claire and John become intimate, and there is mutual respect and kindness between them. In mid-June 1778, Jamie arrives at Lord John's house, very much alive, making John's marriage to Claire invalid.
Sunday night's episode of Outlander, "Of Lost Things," featured an intense and intimate sex scene between Jamie Fraser (Sam Heughan) and Lady Geneva Dunsany (Hannah James). He acquiesces and sneaks into her chambers late at night to perform the deed.
Murtagh Fraser is Jamie's godfather. He swore that he'd spend his entire life protecting Jamie. Mind you, that oath was not simply given because Murtagh is Jamie's father Brian's second cousin — it's because Murtagh was very much in love with Jamie's mother, Ellen.
His sister Jenny calls him out on not being himself anymore and suggests he sleep with Mary MacNab, an idea that initially angers him. Yet, after he decides to turn himself in to the British army and Mary offers herself to him, he chooses to sleep with her.
Even though Jamie was unable to return the romantic sentiment it's proven as time goes on that Jamie does love John, similar to the way that Claire loves Frank upon her return. Though Jamie is pained to see him go, he knows that John's love will keep him safe and John is honored to have a piece of Jamie forever.
They were married for a year, and had no children. Simon MacKimmie was Laoghaire's second husband.
Jamie marries Claire to keep her from falling into the hands of the evil Captain "Black Jack" Randall. They have one child, Faith, who doesn't survive birth; an adopted son named Fergus; and a daughter, Brianna. Jamie has a son named William Ransom with Geneva Dunsany, who died during William's birth.
So there's a slight age gap between the two with Claire revealed to be the more experienced one out of the couple. By the time we get to season three or the third novel Voyager, the couple has been separated for 20 years. Claire is 50 and goes back through the stones to be reunited with Jamie.
Laoghaire was jealous and wanted to punish Claire for marrying Jamie in a shock move. Claire had encouraged Laoghaire to pursue things with Jamie but in a twist, she had ended up wed to him for protection. "They brought him out of his shell, and it was the first time he felt happiness again after losing Claire.
Even if you've committed Diana Gabaldon's Outlander novel series to memory, there was a moment in Sunday's episode that likely surprised you — because it's a pretty large change from the books. The “A. Malcolm” found Jamie confessing his parentage of young William soon after Claire's return to 18th century Scotland.
While she didn't die, Jenny has been unable to return due to actress Laura Donnelly's conflicting work commitments, which is only set to increase when she becomes the lead in Joss Whedon's new HBO show The Nevers.
Inevitably, Geneva ends up pregnant from this one night stand, but doesn't stick around to pick up the pieces — she dies shortly after giving birth to Jamie's son, William, whom Ellesmere immediately threatens to kill, since he's well aware the "bastard" isn't his.
While it's alarming for Brianna, Roger notes that he has the exact same mark. Sure enough, this mark tends to be hereditary, and that's proof enough that Roger is Jemmy's biological father. While there is still a chance that the mark is just a coincidence, Diana Gabaldon shares that Roger is definitely Jemmy's father.
Dougal MacKenzie and Geillis DuncanRoger is a descendant of Geillis and Dougal's son. Roger has Geillis's green eyes and inherited her ability to pass through the stones. He meets her in 1739, having traveled through time in search of his son, Jem.
He doesn't even know it was Laoghaire who had turned Claire in for witchcraft in season one. In the books, their marriage is never really a "marriage." They do sleep together, but Laoghaire's past experiences with men must have been fairly awful, because she can barely stand to have Jamie touch her in the bedroom.
The men loot Jamie and Claire's big log cabin house and end up dying in a fire that Ian sets. With the house and their family now gone, Jamie says he and Claire must return to Scotland to fetch his printing press.
The house on Fraser's Ridge does burn down, but, as you may have surmised since there are more books after this one, Jamie and Claire are not fatally harmed when it does.
In response to a fan tweet, Gabaldon confirmed that Jamie would never travel to the future. “Nope, never happening,” she tweeted, much to the dismay of hopeful fans. So, unless Gabaldon changes her mind for the final book of the Outlander series, it looks like Jamie Fraser is locked in the past forever.
“Ye werena the first lass I kissed…but I swear you'll be the last.” Claire came from the 20th century – and she was also a married woman – which meant she had a sexual history that the women in 18th century Scotland normally didn't have.
Due to unforeseen circumstances, the two ended up having to get married, but it doesn't take them long before they fall in love. But the hard part about this love triangle is that both Frank and Jamie make excellent partners for Claire.
Obviously, Roger doesn't fulfill Jamie's dying wish—since Jamie doesn't actually die—but he ends the episode by telling Jamie he'll help find and kill Bonnet.
Claire, pregnant with Brianna goes back through the stones on April 16, 1746 and reappears in Inverness in 1948, still expecting her first child with Jamie. Twenty years go by before Claire travels again, but in 1968 she goes through the stones for a third time to seek out her lost love Jamie.
Although Craigh na Dun is a fictional stone circle, there are other similar locations which exist in Scotland and are said to have inspired those used in Outlander. The stones used in the TV series are made of styrofoam and installed on location at Kinloch Rannoch in Perth and Kinross.