Pevensie
In C.S. Lewis's "The Chronicles of Narnia" series, the four siblings Susan, Lucy, Peter, and Edmund do not have a specified last name. They are known simply as the Pevensie siblings.
Only Peter, Edmund and Lucy.
The four children in 'The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe' are Peter, Susan, Edmund, and Lucy Pevensie. They are the main characters who discover the magical land of Narnia through a wardrobe in a professor's house.
susan and lucy
Susan stops believing, so never returns.In The Last Battle, Peter, Edmund, and Lucy all die in a train wreck but live in Narnia forever.
No, only Peter, Edmund and Lucy appear on The Last Battle - book 7
The last name of the kids in Narnia is Pevensie. Their names are Peter, Susan, Edmund, and Lucy Pevensie.
in the book it only mentions Edmund Lucy and there cousin eustance but in the movie peter and susan are seen in the last battle
in the last Narnia peter, Lucy ,Edmund all die and susan lives because she refuses to go back to Narnia and forget all about naria
susan and lucy
Peter and Susan won't return because they are too old to come back to Narnia. The journey they made in Prince Caspian was their last; Lucy and Edmund return with their cousin in The Dawn Treader. That was their last journey. After that, none of the Pevensies came back to Narnia until The Last Battle, which was the very last book in the series. In the last few books, the main characters are the Pevensies' cousin Eustace and his friend from school Jill.
Peter returns in the final book of the series, The Last Battle. In the Chronicles of Narnia, Susan does not return with the rest of the heroes because she had stopped believing in Narnia when they left this world for the last time (they were killed in a train accident). Whether she returned to a belief in Narnia and then made her own return to Narnia later is not known.
The seven friends of Narnia are Peter, Susan, Edmund, Lucy, Eustace, Jill, and Polly. They are the main characters who play key roles in the Chronicles of Narnia series by C.S. Lewis.