Talion: Difference between revisions
From Tolkien Gateway
m (Removed category) |
Shelob'sWeb (talk | contribs) (Talion avenged the death of his family with the help of Celebrimbor. Since Talion was did not pop out of the mind of Tolkien himself, his games are considered "non-canonical".) |
||
Line 31: | Line 31: | ||
| steed= | | steed= | ||
}} | }} | ||
'''Talion''' is a character created for the video-game ''[[Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor]]'' who served as the captain of the Rangers of Gondor. He was married to Ioreth and had a son with her, named Dirhael, and both were killed by servants of [[Sauron]]. | '''Talion''' is a character created for the video-game ''[[Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor]]'' who served as the captain of the Rangers of Gondor. He was married to Ioreth and had a son with her, named Dirhael, and both were killed by servants of [[Sauron]]. Talion avenged the death of his family with the help of [[Celebrimbor]]. Since Talion was did not pop out of the mind of Tolkien himself, his games are considered "non-canonical". | ||
[[Category:Men from adaptations]] | [[Category:Men from adaptations]] |
Revision as of 02:44, 2 October 2019
"Talion" is a concept which has only appeared in an adaptation of the works of J.R.R. Tolkien. |
This article or section needs to be cleaned up to conform to a higher standard of article quality. |
Talion | |
---|---|
Gondorian | |
Talion as depicted in Middle-earth: Shadow of War | |
Biographical Information | |
Other names | Ranger The Gravewalker The Bright Lord (alongside Celebrimbor) |
Position | Soldier |
Location | Gondor |
Birth | before T.A. 2941 |
Physical Description | |
Gender | Male |
Gallery | Images of Talion |
Talion is a character created for the video-game Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor who served as the captain of the Rangers of Gondor. He was married to Ioreth and had a son with her, named Dirhael, and both were killed by servants of Sauron. Talion avenged the death of his family with the help of Celebrimbor. Since Talion was did not pop out of the mind of Tolkien himself, his games are considered "non-canonical".