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va'landoor
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'Servant of the Powers'
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  • Updated 20 April 2026
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Valandur

The eighth King of Arnor

Tarondor
Valandur
Elendur

Kings of Arnor

The son of Tarondor, Valandur was born during the time that his grandfather Tarcil ruled Arnor. During this period, in the middle of the first millennium of the Third Age, Arnor was still a strong and united North-kingdom. At this time in history, of the two Kingdoms of the Dúnedain, Arnor would have seemed the more stable and less threatened than the South-kingdom of Gondor. Gondor had began to suffer Easterling invasions during Valandur's lifetime (and indeed its King, Rómendacil I, was slain in battle with these Easterling raiders).

King Tarcil was succeeded by Valandur's father Tarondor, and in time Valandur succeeded his father in turn to become Arnor's eighth King. His reign was one of peace, but his fate is somewhat mysterious: the chronicles consistently record that he met an unnatural and untimely end, though no source elaborates on the cause of this sudden death.2 This unexpected loss of Arnor's King might be seen as presaging the ultimate fate of his realm. While the kingdom saw no immediate troubles during Valandur's reign, his grandson Eärendur - who was born during the later years of Valandur's rule - would be fated to be the last King of a united Arnor.

Valandur ruled Arnor for fifty years before his untimely and unexplained death, and was succeeded by his son Elendur.


Notes

1

The date of Valandur's birth appears only in The History of Middle-earth volume XII, The Peoples of Middle-earth. It cannot therefore be considered completely reliable.

2

In Appendix A(ii) to The Lord of the Rings, Valandur's place in the list of Arnor's Kings is marked with a dagger (†) indicating a premature death, but without further explanation. This typically implies a death in battle, but this does not seem to apply to Valandur; Arnor was involved in no war that we know of at this time, and at the age of one hundred and ninety, it seems rather implausible that the King would have gone to battle in any case.

It might even be tempting to dismiss this single dagger character as some kind of misprint, except that it also appears in the more detailed lists of Kings in volume XII of History of Middle-earth. Unfortunately, in Valandur's case that list is only marginally more detailed, and we're given no more than the perfunctory note, '†slain'.

Perhaps we can take Valandur's death as a hint of the divisions brewing in Arnor that would lead to its dismemberment some two centuries later. If so, it had no obvious direct result at that time: Valandur was directly succeeded by his son Elendur, who ruled for the next 125 years. However he met his end, Valandur's mysterious demise is a reminder that there was more going on behind the scenes of Arnor's history than we see in the chronologies.

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About this entry:

  • Updated 20 April 2026
  • This entry is complete

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