the line of elros ♚ royalty of númenor ♚ headcanon disclaimer ♚ inspiration
Tar-Calmacil was the eighteenth King of Númenor. His mother Tári-Avaldë raised him to disdain the will of the Valar, and though he was crowned with his Quenya name, he was an ardent member of the King’s Men and conducted his court in the Adûnaic tongue, and his supporters called him Ar-Belzagar. Ar-Belzagar renewed Númenor’s focus on imperialism, further expanding their influence in Middle-earth. Though this resulted in Sauron retreating further to the east, it also brought great turmoil and suffering to the Middle Men, whom he pillaged and plundered on his conquests. Calmacil married young, to his sweetheart Naltanárië, and they were madly in love for many years before politics came between them. Naltanárië was of the Faithful, and though she hoped to influence her husband to soften his persecution of her people, her attempts proved unsuccessful as Ar-Belzagar grew more and more wicked, forcing upon her the name Arî-Aglazôri and threatening her life should she continue to defy him. But Naltanárië would not be cowed. She went behind her husband’s back to preach faith in the Valar, friendship to the elves, and compassion for the Faithful, not truly believing that Tar-Calmacil would make good on his threats. Alas, Ar-Belzagar grew so wrathful that he arrested her and promised to execute her as a public example should she not repent of her words. True to her values, Naltanárië met her end with pride, burning at the stake in a horrific display of Númenor’s decline into darkness. Even the King’s Men looked askance at this atrocious act, turning against Ar-Belzagar and to his sons Abattârik and Gimilzagar. Though both young men were, like their father, haughty and ambitious, they loved their mother and refused to accept her execution as just. Abattârik hungered to take the throne as early as he could, that he might, as he saw it, better the nation, and using their grief at Naltanárië’s death he manipulated his younger brother into avenging her with the sword. Upon Ar-Belzagar’s murder, Gimilzagar was now the target of the ire of all Númenor. With false sorrow, the newly-crowned Tar-Ardamin, known to the King’s Men as Ar-Abattârik, held a trial for his brother and declared that he also would meet his end. Betrayed, Gimilzagar spoke against Abattârik, but the people were satisfied that justice had at last been done, and he was lawfully executed before a great crowd of Númenóreans, including his wife and daughter.










