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Dates
Men travelled to Hithlum from the time of Malach Aradan (I 307 - I 398), and settled Dor-lómin from c. I 419;1 Dor-lómin was overrun by Easterlings in I 472 after the Nirnaeth Arnoediad
Location
Hithlum, and especially its southern region of Dor-lómin
Origins
People of the following of Marach who travelled to Hithlum and entered the service of Fingolfin
Race
Division
Family
Ruled by the House of Hador
Pronunciation
Hithlum is pronounced 'hi'thloom'
Meaning
Hithlum means 'mist-gloom'
Other names

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About this entry:

  • Updated 23 December 2024
  • Updates planned: 1

Men of Hithlum

Descendants of Malach Aradan

Some time after the first Men came over the Blue Mountains into Beleriand, High King Fingolfin sent messages of greeting to their settlements at Estolad. One of the leaders of the newly arrived Men was Marach, and his son Malach travelled westward to Fingolfin's lands in Hithlum. There, he went into Fingolfin's service for fourteen years, and was given the title Aradan, 'noble Man' by the Elves.

Malach brought a great part of his descendants westwards to settle, and these became the first Men of Hithlum, staunch allies of Fingolfin and his people. Malach's son Magor was not among these, and instead he led a party of the Edain to settle the southern slopes of Ered Wethrin, the mountains that bordered Hithlum to the south and east. Magor's grandson was Hador, who entered Fingolfin's service as his great-grandfather Malach had done, and also rose to greatness. In reward for his service, Fingolfin granted Hador the lordship of Dor-lómin, a country within the southern borders of Hithlum. Hador gathered his people there, and from these Men of Hithlum came some of the greatest heroes of the later First Age.


Notes

1

Dating the origins of the Men of Hithlum is difficult. Malach Aradan was apparently the first of the Edain to travel to the land and, while we know that he served the Elves there for fourteen years, we are not told which fourteen years those were. It seems reasonable to assume that Malach was relatively young when he went into the service of Fingolfin (dating the event to very approximately I 330), but we have no real evidence for an exact date.

Malach's great-grandson Hador would later establish himself as the Lord of Dor-lómin, ruling the Edain who had settled the land. Again, we have no definite date for this, but circumstantial evidence would point to a date of about I 419 (see the entry for Lord of Dor-lómin for more discussion on this point). If these approximations are close to correct, then there would have been Men in Hithlum for a period of (very approximately) ninety years before the Eldar appointed Hador as the first formal Lord of Dor-lómin.

2

The Men of Dor-lómin were those of the Edain who dwelt in the land of Dor-lómin under the lordship of the House of Hador. In practice, the terms 'Men of Hithlum' and 'Men of the North' are used interchangeably to describe these same people, but strictly speaking there were some slight differences. In particular, as noted above, there had been Men in Hithlum from the time of Malach Aradan, some decades before Dor-lómin was formally settled. So, to be absolutely precise, the term 'Men of Hithlum' would also include these earlier Men, and would therefore have a slightly broader definition than that of the 'Men of Dor-lómin'.

Indexes:

About this entry:

  • Updated 23 December 2024
  • Updates planned: 1

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