Forgot to post these from earlier this month! Wanted to update my art shop's keepers since the old ones were...well, old ;u;
seen from Iraq
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Forgot to post these from earlier this month! Wanted to update my art shop's keepers since the old ones were...well, old ;u;
elves of arda ◆ misc. noldor ◆ headcanon disclaimer
Daurin and Tórin were elves of the Tatyar who awoke upon the shores of Cuiviénen. They were soul-brothers, possessing a sibling bond between them, and were inseparable while they remained by the Waters of Awakening. Not far from the site where they awoke, another nér opened his eyes for the first time: this was Ñolyo, who befriended the brothers and was as dear to them as they were to each other. Ñolyo had no bonds until he wed the Nelyarin elf Silindë, and their child Míriel Þerindë was among the first children born among the Quendi. Tórin and Daurin loved Míriel like she was their own family, and indeed they wished to forge a brother-bond with Ñolyo should he also be willing—but before they could take that step together, Ñolyo and Silindë both vanished into the Wild Wood, leaving their young daughter behind. Ñolyo’s body was discovered some weeks later, but Silindë was never found, and the Quendi whispered that she had been taken by the being they had begun to call the Shadow. Distraught at losing their almost-brother, Daurin and Tórin turned to one another for comfort. They looked after Míriel as best they could, and as she gravitated toward her friend Finwë they began to look to him as their leader. Thus when Finwë led the Tatyar upon the Great Journey to Aman, Tórin and Daurin were among his staunchest supporters, and hoped to see Ñolyo and Silindë reborn again when they arrived in the Blessed Realm. As they traveled, shadow-shapes lurked in the darkness of unfamiliar forests. The Great Hunter Oromë protected the Eldar as best he could, but still some elves disappeared into the grip of the unknown. One such elf was Tórin, who was there one moment and gone the next, and though Daurin lingered, waiting for his brother to reappear, when the Nelyar caught up to him he was forced to accept his brother as dead, and hastened to rejoin the Tatyar. Daurin attached himself to Míriel as her staunch protector, the last of what he could call his family. He remained at her side when she married Finwë, and grieved her when she wearied of life, and devoted himself all the more fiercely to her son Fëanáro. As Fëanáro grew into a skilled and beautiful young nér and began to sire children of his own, Daurin’s heart at last found another companion in the form of Liatamë, a seamstress who had once served Míriel Þerindë and whose family now served the House of Nolofinwë. Liatamë and Daurin wed, and she moved to the Daurin’s estate near Fëanáro’s halls, where she bore her husband four children, three daughters and a son. The eldest was Calarië, who became a smith under Fëanáro’s tutelage; then Quildalótië Ñillendil, who would wed Fëanáro’s favorite son, Curufinwë II Atarinkë and bear his only grandchild; then Sinwatië, a dancer whose skills later turned to the blade; and lastly young Nasarion, who had not yet found his craft when Darkness fell upon Aman. When Fëanáro went into exile at Formenos, Daurin took his family with his lord. Liatamë his wife and Quildalótië his daughter held private concerns about Daurin’s fanatic loyalty to his lord, but accompanied him with grace; not until Fëanáro urged the Noldor into Flight from Aman did they speak out against him. Then Quildalótië refused her husband’s command to follow and begged to keep her son with him, but this Curufinwë refused, and forsook their marriage bond. Liatamë was less extreme in parting from her husband, but she chose to march with her birth family among the host of Ñolofinwë while Daurin and their other daughters remained steadfast by Fëanáro’s side. Nasarion, barely older than Quildalótië’s son, remained in Aman with his sister at Liatamë’s bidding, and counted Daurin’s silence on the matter a blessing, for at least he was not openly forsaken as others were. Daurin rushed headfirst into tragedy in the bloodshed at Alqualondë, slaying Telerin soldiers without remorse, his daughters at his side. In the aftermath of the Kinslaying, Calarië was the captain of the first ship to set out into the sea, and she and her crew were drowned by Uinen’s wrath against the murderers of her beloved people. But not every ship was lost, and in the end Daurin and Sinwatië made it to Endórë at Fëanáro’s side, setting alight the swan-ships and dooming Liatamë to walk the Grinding Ice should she wish to follow. This she attempted, but perished before the end, one among many lives claimed by the Helcaraxë. In the Dagor-nuin-Giliath, Daurin took his rightful place in the vanguard of Fëanáro. He remained with his lord to the very end, the last of his friends to fall when Balrogs surrounded them, and knew not that he had come close to reunion with his long-lost brother. For Tórin had not died in the darkness of the Great Journey. Instead he was taken captive and made a thrall in Angband, forced to work in the mines alongside other unfortunate slaves. There he met Rôg, another Tatya from Cuiviénen, and they began to scheme up a revolt against their cruel masters. When word came of another captive’s miraculous rescue from the cliffs of Thangorodrim, Rôg and Tórin stirred their thrall-kin to rebellion, and though many were lost amid the bloodshed, they and twenty-two others escaped into the light of the newborn Sun. They escapees sought refuge in Doriath, but Elu Thingol refused them entry, and so they turned instead to the land of Mithrim where their Noldorin kin now dwelt. There Ñolofinwë agreed to shelter the ex-thralls, and Tórin faced the dreadful news that Daurin his brother had come nearly to the gates of Angband, but died before they could meet again. Amid his grief he took the name Tauren, feeling kingly no longer, and turned to the forests for comfort. In time, he followed his friend Rôg to Gondolin under the banner of the House of the Hammer of Wrath, and dwelt there for the rest of his days until he fell in the Fall of Gondolin. Last of Daurin’s kin, Sinwatië pledged her service to Curufinwë her law-brother, husband of the sister who remained in Aman. Under the Quenya ban, she altered her name to Sinneth, and served as Curufin’s right-hand nís in Himlad. When the Sudden Flame descended upon the Noldor, Sinneth was separated from her lord and took a small group of refugees to Himring, where she served under Curufin’s brother Maedhros until he fled there in exile from Nargothrond. Sinneth fought in the Second Kinslaying, though her heart grew sick and weary of death, and in the Third Kinslaying at the Havens of Sirion she could stand such atrocities no longer. With Curufin dead and no end to bloodshed in sight, Sinneth turned on her Fëanorian lords at long last and was slain by Maglor as she defended the tower of Elwing. Many years would pass before Daurin, Tórin, and their kin were reunited: but in time their grievous wounds would heal, and their lost spirits would be released from Mandos, and even Ñolyo and Silindë would walk among the living once more to thank Daurin and his family for their service to their daughter and her descendants.
In the Lost Tales, there is a very brief mention of Fëanor's kinsman — uncle? — Daurin (Tórin) who had wandered away from the festival with a vaguely foreboding premonition and caught Melkor and Ungoliant attacking the Two Trees. Without a second thought, he rushed to the defense of the Two Trees and was able to cut off one of Ungoliant's legs despite losing his life in the process and ultimately failing.
However.
I understand he just came from a party but why is his sword coated in miruvor?
Daurin responde…
Hace un momento publicamos un video de Noticias Telemicro, donde la expareja de Daurin Muñoz hace la fuerte denuncia de que este la amenaza con quitarle la vida y luego quitarse la vida, aunque en el video no explica los motivos de las supuestas amenazas.
Pues luego de colocar la noticias, la información llegó al mismo Daurin, quien con mucha altura y respeto hacía la mujer, dice que mejor…
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Daurin Muñoz Habla Al País En Exclusiva Como Fue Su Cancelación Y Presenta Equipo De Abogados Para Responder A La Policía.
TOLEDO, Ohio – Police in Cleveland say that two persons were arrested in connection with a fatal stabbing of a 54-year-old man and fatally shooting a woman in two separate incidents were arraigned Tuesday before the Toledo Municipal Court, according to the reports.