Herumor: Difference between revisions

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{{numenorean
{{disambig-two|the [[Black Númenóreans|Black Númenórean]]|character in ''[[The New Shadow]]''|[[Herumor (The New Shadow)]]}}
| image=
{{numenorean infobox
| name=Herumor
| name=Herumor
| image=[[File:Isabella Pavani - Herumor.png|250px]]
| caption="Herumor" by [[:Category:Images by Isabella Pavani|Isabella Pavani]]
| pronun=
| othernames=
| othernames=
| birth=Late [[Second Age]]
| titles=
| rule=
| position=
| location=Associated with [[Harad]]
| affiliation=[[Sauron]]
| language=
| birth=
| birthlocation=
| rule=Late [[Second Age]]
| death=
| death=
| deathlocation=
| age=
| age=
| party=[[Black Númenóreans]]
| notablefor=
| language=
| house=
| parentage=
| siblings=
| spouse=
| children=
| gender=Male
| gender=Male
| height=
| height=
| hair=
| hair=
| eyes=
| eyes=
| parentage=
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}}
|}}
'''Herumor''' was a [[Black Númenóreans|Black Númenórean]] who lived in the late [[Second Age]].<ref group=note>Based on the ordering of events there, he appears to have been a lord among the [[Haradrim]] at some point after the [[Downfall of Númenor]], dating him to {{SA|3319}} or later. The order of events is not entirely clear, and an argument could be made that he lived slightly earlier, but he certainly belonged to the closing centuries of the [[Second Age]].</ref> Herumor was among those [[Númenóreans]] who sailed east from [[Númenor]] to establish fortresses and dwellings along the coasts during Sauron's stay in [[Númenor]] (from {{SA|3262}} to {{SA|3319}}) and were already bent to Sauron's will. Herumor rose to power among the [[Haradrim]]. It is possible that Herumor was among those Númenórean servants from the south that Sauron gathered to him when he prepared to attack [[Gondor]] in {{SA|3429}} after he had taken shape again after the [[Downfall of Númenor]].<ref>{{S|Rings}}</ref>
'''Herumor''' was a [[Black Númenóreans|Black Númenórean]] who lived in the late [[Second Age]]. After the [[Downfall of Númenor]] he, along with [[Fuinur]], rose to power among the [[Haradrim]] and served [[Sauron]].
 
== Etymology ==
== Etymology ==
{{Pronounce|Herumor.mp3|Ardamir}}
{{Pronounce|Herumor.mp3|Ardamir}}
Herumor means "Black Lord" in [[Quenya]] (from ''[[heru]]'' = "lord" and ''[[morë]]'' = "dark").
''Herumor'' is [[Quenya]]. Its meaning is not glossed, but as Paul Strack explains it seems to mean "Black Lord" and to be a compound of
''[[heru]]'' ("lord") and ''[[morë]]'' ("dark, black").<ref>{{webcite|author=Paul Strack|articleurl=https://www.eldamo.org/content/words/word-3301232385.html|articlename=Q. ''Herumor'' m.|website=Eldamo|accessed=25 November 2021}}</ref> [[Christopher Tolkien]] suggests that the initial element of this name is Q. ''[[heru]]'' ("lord").<ref>{{S|Appendix}}, entry ''heru''</ref>


== The New Shadow ==
== Portrayal in adaptations ==
In "[[The New Shadow]]", a short tale included in ''[[The Peoples of Middle-earth]]'', Herumor is also the name of the leader of a growing evil cult in [[Gondor]] during the [[Fourth Age]] about one hundred years into the reign of [[Eldarion]], the son of [[Aragorn II|Aragorn]]. This Herumor could be the same as the [[Númenóreans|Númenórean]] ruler of the [[Haradrim]], as there is some speculation that he became either one of the [[Ringwraiths]] or the [[Mouth of Sauron]].
In the defunct [[Middle-earth Role Playing]] game from the 1980s, Herumor is given an extended history. Fuinur is then his older brother. [[J.R.R. Tolkien|Tolkien]], however, had nothing to do with writing this history.


== Other Versions of the Legendarium ==
{{notes}}
In the defunct [[Middle-earth Role Playing]] game from the 1980s, Herumor is given an extended history. [[J.R.R. Tolkien|Tolkien]], however, had nothing to do with writing this history. Fuinur is then his older brother.
{{References}}
{{title}}
[[Category:Black Númenóreans]]
[[Category:Characters in The Silmarillion]]
[[Category:Mariners]]
[[Category:Númenóreans]]
[[Category:Quenya names]]
[[Category:Second Age characters]]
[[Category:Servants of Sauron]]


[[Category:Númenóreans]]
[[de:Herumor]]
[[Category:Black Númenóreans]]
[[fi:Herumor]]
[[fr:encyclo/personnages/hommes/2a/numenoreens_noirs/herumor]]

Revision as of 14:17, 25 November 2021

This article is about the Black Númenórean. For the character in The New Shadow, see Herumor (The New Shadow).
Herumor
Númenórean
Isabella Pavani - Herumor.png
"Herumor" by Isabella Pavani
Biographical Information
LocationAssociated with Harad
AffiliationSauron
RuleLate Second Age
Physical Description
GenderMale
GalleryImages of Herumor

Herumor was a Black Númenórean who lived in the late Second Age.[note 1] Herumor was among those Númenóreans who sailed east from Númenor to establish fortresses and dwellings along the coasts during Sauron's stay in Númenor (from S.A. 3262 to S.A. 3319) and were already bent to Sauron's will. Herumor rose to power among the Haradrim. It is possible that Herumor was among those Númenórean servants from the south that Sauron gathered to him when he prepared to attack Gondor in S.A. 3429 after he had taken shape again after the Downfall of Númenor.[1]

Etymology

Herumor is Quenya. Its meaning is not glossed, but as Paul Strack explains it seems to mean "Black Lord" and to be a compound of heru ("lord") and morë ("dark, black").[2] Christopher Tolkien suggests that the initial element of this name is Q. heru ("lord").[3]

Portrayal in adaptations

In the defunct Middle-earth Role Playing game from the 1980s, Herumor is given an extended history. Fuinur is then his older brother. Tolkien, however, had nothing to do with writing this history.

Notes

  1. Based on the ordering of events there, he appears to have been a lord among the Haradrim at some point after the Downfall of Númenor, dating him to S.A. 3319 or later. The order of events is not entirely clear, and an argument could be made that he lived slightly earlier, but he certainly belonged to the closing centuries of the Second Age.

References

  1. J.R.R. Tolkien, Christopher Tolkien (ed.), The Silmarillion, "Of the Rings of Power and the Third Age"
  2. Paul Strack, "Q. Herumor m.", Eldamo - An Elvish Lexicon (accessed 25 November 2021)
  3. J.R.R. Tolkien, Christopher Tolkien (ed.), The Silmarillion, "Appendix: Elements in Quenya and Sindarin Names", entry heru