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#13 | |||||
Overshadowed Eagle
Join Date: Nov 2017
Location: The north-west of the Old World, east of the Sea
Posts: 3,957
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- Tal-Elmar is the Witch-King. He obviously discovers his Numenorean heritage: Elmar his grandmother was a Hadorian, from an offshoot of the royal house. He winds up as Lord of Lond Daer, and is also proclaimed King of Agar as heir to his father. (This explains the crown Frodo sees, which must have been his in life to have faded with him.) He's a perfect target for Sauron, who he already served by inheritance and culture. But why Lord of Lond Daer? Because it lets me do this: - The second Numenorean is the Lord of Umbar, which I think is in place by this point. He's presumably the Haladin Nazgul, if we're still doing that, because: - The third is the Lord of Pelargir, or Edhellond, or Dol Amroth, or wherever the Numenorean settlement about Anduin was at this point. He's a Beoring, one of what will later become known as the Faithful. Sauron's goal is to subvert the Numenorean presence in Middle-earth. He succeeds admirably with Tal-Elmar, basically removing Lond Daer as a source of attack. The other two aren't as successful. So what about the Easterlings of the First Age? Akallabeth tells us that the survivors of the "evil Men" became kings in the "unharvested lands" back east, ruling over wandering folk who had obeyed neither Morgoth nor the Valar. Could this be the north of Eriador (the obvious place for them to flee)? Could it be possible that: - The Nazgul of Ulfang's house was a ruler in what would later become Angmar. If there were people there, Sauron would want them, because it gives him a good angle to threaten Imladris. Meanwhile, the Grey Annals tell us that the people of Bor were the ancestors of "the most ancient of the Men that dwelt in the north of Eriador in the Second Age". It looks like the Haladin pre-Numenoreans migrated "as far north as the Barrow-Downs", so could the Borians have been the group that first built the Barrows? This would have been a people broadly friendly to the Elves, so Sauron would like to take control of them. - The Nazgul of Bor's house was a lord somewhere in future Cardolan or Arthedain. And while we're here: - Khamul was the easternmost Nazgul. His people were the ancestors of the Wainriders, which is why Sauron was able to move them so far to come attack Gondor later. That leaves three. Khand, Rhun, and (near) Harad? If Sauron's purpose is to build an alliance against Numenor, then probably: those are the lands he would want to draw on. This probably makes Khamul the original least-important Nazgul; his people were just a fallback plan, in case something happened that meant Sauron had to retreat east. It was only once, well, something happened, that Khamul became Sauron's most important asset: the immortal sorcerer-king of a vast people who his enemies didn't even know existed. That's why his name is remembered: because it was actually in continuous use in his far-eastern dominions. This is all still very very fanfic, but I think it's fun. ^_^ hS
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Have you burned the ships that could bear you back again? ~Finrod: The Rock Opera |
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