Haleth Redesign! ❤️🔥
Some inspiration notes under the cut
#phm#ryland grace#rocky the eridian#project hail mary spoilers






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Haleth Redesign! ❤️🔥
Some inspiration notes under the cut
My Haleth design ^^
I chose mongolian inspired clothing for her since I feel like a nomadic character fits the three houses of the edain in general, but especially the haladin!
Caranthir and Haleth
I love these two, they are one of my favorite Silmarillion duos. This seems early on in the getting to know each other stage.
Enjoy, and give me any feedback you like as I am always working on improving.
Noble Maiden
Then Haleth held the people together, though they were without hope;
Of the Three Houses of the Edain; Bëor, Haleth, and Hador
I swear! This is the last time I change Bëor´s design! I am happy with him now!
Caranthir and Haleth relaxing after a day of hunting orcs.
A fitting contribution for @feanorianweek?
Haleth: silverlynxcosplay
Caranthir & edit: foedhrass
Photo: elemmireofaman
@tolkienfemfeb day 20 | found family | haleth and her bodyguards
There were many who loved the Lady Haleth and wished to go whither she would.
—The Silmarillion, “Of the Coming of Men into the West”
One of the strange practices spoken of was that many of their warriors were women, though few of these went abroad to fight in the great battles. This custom was evidently ancient; for their chieftainess Haleth had been a renowned amazon with a picked bodyguard of women.
—The History of Middle-earth: Volume XII: The Peoples of Middle-earth, “Of Dwarves and Men: The Atani and their Languages”
I've seen some posts lately assuming that the Rohirrim are basically descendants of Hadorians who didn't go to Númenor. It's an understandable assumption because that is an in-story belief about the Rohirrim. However, Tolkien repeatedly suggests this is essentially a Gondorian myth.
They're not lying—by the WOTR, they genuinely believe it's correct—but it isn't true. In "Of Dwarves and Men," Tolkien wrote (c. 1969) that Gondorians "attributed to them [the Rohirrim] actual direct descent from the Folk of Hador in the First Age." Furthermore, he said:
This was a general belief in Gondor at that time [the War of the Ring], and was held to explain (to the comfort of Númenórean pride) the surrender of so large a part of the Kingdom to the people of Eorl.
In a footnote, he adds that the Rohirrim had no ancestral traditions or cultural memories of the wars of Beleriand at all. They don't really have any reason to care about this version of their history, though they accept it as it contributes to the strength of their alliance with Gondor.
Then there's a marginal note about the footnote (because this is Tolkien) that says this belief in an ancient Edainic kinship with Men of Middle-earth could have actually been true of some of the Men the Númenóreans found when they came back to Middle-earth, but not of the Rohirrim specifically. The Rohirrim may be similar to the Hadorians in appearance and temper, but they are at most related to the larger group of First Age Men that all the Edain had originated from and not any of the Three Houses in particular.
This "Edainic" concept of the Rohirrim's history is also thrown into doubt in Lord of the Rings itself, right before their first appearance, when Aragorn explains to Legolas and Gimli:
'they are true-hearted, generous in thought and deed; bold but not cruel; wise but unlearned, writing no books but singing many songs, after the manner of the children of Men before the Dark Years ... They have long been the friends of the people of Gondor, though they are not akin to them. It was in forgotten years long ago that Eorl the Young brought them out of the North, and their kinship is rather with the Bardings of Dale, and with the Beornings of the Wood...'
You know who are actually kin to the Edain, though?
Also it must be said that 'unfriendliness' to Númenóreans and their allies was not always due to the Shadow, but in later days to the actions of the Númenóreans themselves. Thus many of the forest-dwellers of the shorelands south of the Ered Luin, especially in Minhiriath, were as later historians recognized the kin of the Folk of Haleth; but they became bitter enemies of the Númenóreans because of their ruthless treatment and their devastation of the forests, and this hatred remained unappeased in their descendants, causing them to join with any enemies of Númenor. In the Third Age their survivors were the people known in Rohan as the Dunlendings.