Men of Darkness: Difference between revisions
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The following peoples can be considered Men of Darkness: | The following peoples can be considered Men of Darkness: | ||
*[[Easterlings]] ([[Wainriders]], [[Balchoth]]) | *[[Easterlings]] ([[Wainriders]], [[Balchoth]]) | ||
*[[Variags]] | *[[Variags]] | ||
*[[Black Númenóreans]] and [[Corsairs of Umbar]] | *[[Black Númenóreans]] and [[Corsairs of Umbar]] |
Revision as of 21:25, 10 February 2019
Men of Darkness or Men of Shadow were the men of the east of Middle-earth who fell under the dominion of Morgoth in the First Age or were dominated by Sauron and worshipped him in the Second Age. In the Third Age they were moved by him against the Dúnedain.
The Dúnedain used the term with no account of race, culture or language; it was a generic term for all those peoples who were not simply barbaric plunderers or brigands, but fanatically opposed the Realms in Exile, the Free Peoples and their allies, as enemies of their "gods".[1]
The following peoples can be considered Men of Darkness:
- Easterlings (Wainriders, Balchoth)
- Variags
- Black Númenóreans and Corsairs of Umbar
- Half-trolls
- Haradrim
- Dunlendings
- Hill-men
References
- ↑ J.R.R. Tolkien, Christopher Tolkien (ed.), The Peoples of Middle-earth, "X. Of Dwarves and Men", "The Atani and their Languages"