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Ar-Pharazôn

Trystan Gravelle lotr


Home(s)
Language(s)
People
Time period
S.A. 3118-3319
Gender
Male
Parents
Sibling(s)
Spouse
Child(ren)
Notes
(N) = non-canon

The twenty-fourth and final King of Númenor (S.A. 3255-3319), Ar-Pharazôn (Q.Tar-Calion) was the son of Gimilkhâd and the nephew of Tar-Palantir. He was still young when he became a member of the númenorean army , where he befriened a young Elendil the Tall.Both men fought in many wars along the coasts of Middle-earth and rose quickly through the ranks, eventually becoming knighted, but with Pharazôn's growing fame both old friends became more and more alienated as Elendil began to withdraw himself from the wars and criticize the growing agressiveness of many númenórean exploits along the coasts of Middle-earth, while Pharazôn became a prized general and conqueror and grew increasingly proud and radical, even by the standards of most of the King's men. As Palantir grew older and his life vigour started to fade, Pharazôn became the most powerful member of the ruling Council, wielding more and more power even while princess Miriel was still officially her father's regent.When his uncle died a few years after his father, he resolved to seize the throne. Palantir's daughter Miriel, the designated Queen, was forced to marry Pharazôn, and he took the sceptre of rulership for his own. Like Gimilkhâd, Ar-Pharazôn was unhappy with Palantir's policies of friendship to the Elves. This made him a very popular king, for sentiment in Númenor was increasingly hostile regarding the Eldar, and the King's Men and the common folk were both overwhelming prejudiced against the immortals. They were also greedy, which suited the new King quite well. Hungry for power and land, Ar-Pharazôn led the greatest campaign of conquest that had ever been seen by Men in Middle-earth. In S.A. 3262, he landed a huge army at Umbar and defeated the Dark Lord, who was then at the height of his power. Humbling the Lord of the Rings, the Golden King forced him to surrender and return to Númenor as a prisoner of the Dúnedain. In his pride and self-assurance, however, Ar-Pharazôn made a fatal mistake. Sauron remained a prisoner for only a very short time; before long, he was Ar-Pharazôn's chief counselor. The King desired most the one thing he could not win by conquest in war — immortality — and Sauron convinced him that the way to greatness was the worship of Melkor and the path of Darkness. In the ensuing years the Faithful were openly persecuted, the White Tree was burned, and Ar-Pharazôn presided over human sacrifices to the Black Enemy. Sauron's revenge upon the overproud Edain was almost complete. He then persuaded the King that the Númenóreans could indeed wrest eternal life from the Valar. The Dark Lord asserted that the land of Valinor, not its people, held the secret of immortality. Arrogant beyond reason, Ar-Pharazôn spent nine years building the greatest fleet ever constructed by Men. In S.A. 3319, the Great Armament was complete and the Golden One led his armada westward toward Aman, to the shores forbidden to mortals. The Ainur mourned, for the proud Edain broke the Ban of the Valar altogether and were bent on conquering the Undying Lands. The doom of Númenor was sealed. As Ar-Pharazôn set foot in Aman, the Akallabeth (Ad. "Downfall") began.

So, the Valar laid down their Guardianship of Arda and asked their master Iluvatar (Eru), to take matters into his own hands and rebalance the world. The One opened , swallowing Númenor in a great cataclysm and entombing Ar-Pharazôn and his entire fleet deep beneath the earth until the Changing of the World.

Pharazôn and Míriel had been married for six decades, but had no children. Accounts of the King's Men say she was barren; accounts of the Faithful note that they never lay together, for Pharazôn knew that abuse of Míriel may inflame the Faithful left. According to some reccords, he kept a middling-lesser noblewoman of Númenor as his mistress, and they had four daughters, while he also had a son Pharazônthôn by a slave-concubine from Harad (said to be the son of Míriel in some fabricated records), who may have been his heir if not for the Downfall of Númenor. The veracity cannot be confirmed, as in the Third Age the Dúnedain often omitted mentions of illegitimate children for the sake of propriety, while the Adûnai sometimes invented illegitimate children of Black Númenórean kings to be their ancestors in order to stake a claim to primacy over other Houses.

Ar-Pharazôn's Principal Items[]

  • Armor — full plate armor of a lightweight golden alloy. The armor shone with a gold light.
  • Sword — ("Blade of the Sun") broadsword of gold alloy
  • Helm — ("Tall Helm of the Golden King") Fashioned of gold and yellow gems
  • Cloak of Sunset — Scarlet cloak
  • Sceptre of the Sea-lords — Symbol of the High-captain of the Uinendili of Númenor, the Guild of Venturers. It was fashioned of mithril, a rod three feet long designed to resemble a stalk or branch. At the tip was a beautifully made flower with five tall petals. Set within the flower, on tali stamens, were five glittering white adamants. The sceptre shimmered with a silvery light, and conferred upon its holder a True Aura.
  • Heirlooms — Aranrúth, Dramborleg, & Bow of Bregor

Names[]

  • Angor
  • Kalion
  • Kulu
  • Tar-Calion
  • Tar-Kulu
  • Tarkalion
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