Rings Of Powers Númenor Statues Explained By LOTR Director - Screen Rant As Galadriel and Halbrand first sail into Númenor, one of the first figures they see carved into the stones is Ulmo In Lord of the Rings mythology, Ulmo is very much a Poseidon like-figure, the King of the Sea and Lord of Waters, so it only makes sense he would be among the first to welcome visitors sailing onto the island
tolkiens legendarium - Who are depicted in the statues at Númenor . . . While entering Númenor by ship, and in the Númenor palace grounds and prison, several statues are shown, presumably depicting important figures in Númenorean history Who are depicted in the statues? Screencaps of the statues: Statue in the Númenor prison, near Halbrand's prison cell: Characters to be named later
Don’t know if anyone mentioned it already, but look who is . . . - Reddit In the early Second Age the Edain followed the light of his star (which is actually him wearing silmaril upon his ship blessed by the Valar with the ability to fly) to discover Elenna, the island Numenor is on He is an important historical figure to the Numenoreans I didn't say he wasn't important I just said that he wasn't human
Númenor - Wikipedia Númenor, also called Elenna-nórë or Westernesse, is a fictional place in J R R Tolkien 's writings It was the kingdom occupying a large island to the west of Middle-earth, the main setting of Tolkien's writings, and was the greatest civilization of Men
Númenor | The One Wiki to Rule Them All | Fandom Elros son of Eärendil was the first King of Númenor, taking the name of Tar-Minyatur ("High-First King") Under his rule (SA 32 to SA 442 of the Second Age), and those of his descendants, the Númenóreans rose to become very powerful, with lifespans several times that of the Men of Middle-earth
Rings of Power director explains Númenor statue - The Digital Fix In an interview with the YouTube channel Nerd of the Rings, Yip explained how those works of art actually tie into Middle-earth mythology, as two of the most prominent statues we see are actually depictions of the Lord of the Rings characters Ulmo and Eärendil
The statues guarding Numenor are crowned with a familiar ore. The statues in Numenor are adorned with jewels that seem to be crafted from Mithril This detail aligns with the novels, which mention the mining of Mithril in Numenor, making it a subtle yet meaningful reference