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  1. The materials in the book include writings on the foundation, history and destruction of the land of Númenor; the forging of the Rings of Power; and the Last Alliance against Sauron that ended the Second Age. Sibley provided new introductions and commentaries.

    • Overview
    • History
    • Legacy

    The Downfall of Númenor, also called the Fall or Drowning of Númenor, was the utter destruction of the island of Númenor, a divine punishment by Eru Ilúvatar to the Númenóreans for breaking the Ban of the Valar. Ar-Pharazôn, the King of Númenor, had been coerced by Sauron to assault the Undying Lands which ultimately led to the island's destruction...

    Prelude

    Early in the Second Age, Morgoth's greatest servant, Sauron, had grown mighty in Middle-earth. Ruling through terror, force, and persuasion, Sauron dominated peoples of Middle-earth in the south and east. After the forging of the One Ring Sauron launched an invasion of Eriador and destroyed Eregion in the War of the Elves and Sauron. Númenor dispatched an immense military force to Middle-earth to aid the Elves of Lindon and after a period of heavy fighting, defeated Sauron and his hosts. Sauron returned to Mordor to rebuild his strength and having tasted the power of conquest and victory in arms, the Númenóreans began establishing settlements along the coasts and oppressed the Men of Middle-earth. Many began to speak openly of their envy of the Eldar's immortality and in defiance of the Ban. It appeared to the Valar that the shadow of Morgoth had returned to plague their hearts. Emissaries of the Valar came to Númenor during the reign of Tar-Atanamir, seeking to remind them that death was not given as a punishment, but the people of Númenor did not heed their words and later became split into two factions; the King's Men, those loyal to the King and prone to oppose the restraints upon Númenor, and the Faithful, those who remained true to their friendship with the Eldar and loyal to the Valar. As time went on, Númenor continued to grow in wealth and might, yet its people's bliss was diminished.

    Advisor to the King

    After returning to the height of his power, Sauron began attacking Númenórean cities by the coasts and took on the titles 'Lord of the Earth' and 'King of Men'. Ar-Pharazôn the King received word of his rise in power, and angered by Sauron's pride the Númenóreans swiftly came once more to Middle-earth with a great military force to confront Sauron a final time in SA 3261. So mighty were they that Sauron's forces fled from them with barely a fight. Sauron realizing he could not defeat the Númenóreans militarily allowed himself to be captured, and begged falsely for mercy. The Númenóreans brought him back as a prisoner. Through Sauron's cunning and persuasion he rose from prisoner to adviser for the King, convincing many officials to worship Morgoth, they quickly became corrupted to his side. Under Sauron's influence the Númenóreans prospered but became more nefarious, the Men of Middle-earth were hunted and enslaved and brought back to Númenor to be slain cruelly, sometimes sacrificed in the name of Morgoth. The White Tree, Nimloth, was cut down and its wood was used to light the first fire on the altar of a mighty Temple for Morgoth]] that was built in Armenelos. Recognizing the corruption of the council Amandil, the Lord of Andúnië withdrew to Rómenna where most of the Faithful had been forced to relocate and were being openly persecuted. The shadow of death soon loomed over Ar-Pharazôn and fearing death and old age the king was prompted by Sauron to make war upon the Valar, seize the Undying Lands and take immortality by force and so preparations began in SA 3310 of a great armada for the invasion. Amandil was aware of the king's machinations and consulted with his son Elendil, revealing his plan to sail west in secret, imitating their forefather Eärendil, and seek mercy from the Valar for what was to come, as Amandil perceived it would be the Doom of Númenor. Amandil then departed, along with three close servants he sailed east as if heading for Middle-earth, then turned the west and was never seen or heard of again. Following the advice of his father Elendil prepared for the ruin of Númenor, gathering more of the Faithful and prepared their ships that were anchored in the east coast, storing their heirlooms and goods.

    Drowning of Númenor

    During these days the weather in Númenor grew restless, and storms wrecked the ships of the Númenóreans. Then a great cloud "shaped as an eagle" loomed over the island and beneath its wings lightning struck the land. Few Númenóreans repented; most of them defied the warning, and Sauron stood on the temple roof unscathed by the lightning. By SA 3319, Ar-Pharazôn's armada was complete, known as the Great Armament. Ar-Pharazôn boarded his flagship Alcarondas ahead of his fleet and departed for Aman. Sauron remained behind. The fleet finally arrived on the shores of Aman and Ar-Pharazôn's host made their camp about Túna. The Valar feared that this host could wreak havoc in Valinor, but they were forbidden from killing or otherwise using force against Men. Manwë, chief of the Valar, thus called upon Ilúvatar, who opened a massive chasm in the sea between Númenor and Aman that swallowed the Great Armament of Ar-Pharazôn. And the king himself, along with his host that had landed on Aman, was 'buried under falling hills', and were said to remain in the Caves of the Forgotten until the Dagor Dagorath. Númenor was drowned by a great wave and sank into the abyss, killing its inhabitants, including the body of Sauron, which robbed him his ability to assume fair forms ever after. Ilúvatar broke and changed the world, changing Arda's shape from flat to round and taking Aman and Tol Eressëa from the world forever, so that no mortal sailor could reach the True West again.

    After its fall Númenor was called Akallabêth or Atalantë in Quenya, meaning "the Downfallen", Mar-nu-Falmar ("Land under the Waves").

    Sauron's plan to destroy Númenor had been overwhelmingly successful, and though he too was caught by the flooding, he escaped, and at some point, returned to Middle-earth, believing himself to now be fully unopposed.

  2. 25. Nov. 2023 · The Downfall of Númenor, also called the Fall or Drowning of Númenor, was the utter destruction of the island of Númenor, a divine punishment by Ilúvatar to the Númenóreans for breaking the Ban of the Valar.

  3. 4. Mai 2024 · The Fall of Númenor: and Other Tales from the Second Age of Middle-earth is a collection of writtings by J.R.R. Tolkien, edited by Brian Sibley as a single book and published in 2022. It collects all the published materials concerning the Second Age of Middle-earth , presenting them for the first time in a single volume.

    • J.R.R. Tolkien
    • Alan Lee
    • Brian Sibley
    • HarperCollins
  4. Das Buch Der Untergang von Númenor (engl. "The Fall of Númenor") stellt die Handlungen und Geschehnisse im Zweiten Zeitalter von Arda dar, wobei ein besonderer Fokus auf der Geschichte von Númenor liegt. Der Inhalt des Buches besteht aus gesammelten und kurz kommentierten Texten aus Der Herr der Ringe, den von Christopher Tolkien ...

  5. 23. Nov. 2022 · Hier sollte eine Beschreibung angezeigt werden, diese Seite lässt dies jedoch nicht zu.

  6. 26. Sept. 2023 · It tells the story of the Downfall of Númenor after the Númenóreans, the descendants of those Men who aided the Elves in their fight against Morgoth during the late First Age, turned by degrees against the Valar, and were later corrupted by Sauron. The Akallabêth was written by Elendil near the end of the Second Age and was preserved in Gondor [1]