Éomer


Éomer is a fictional character in J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth. He appears in The Lord of the Rings as a leader of the Riders of Rohan, who served as cavalry to the army of Gondor, fighting against Mordor.
The name Éomer, meaning "Horse-famous" in Old English, occurs in Beowulf, at line 1959, as that of a king descended from Offa of Mercia. Tolkien had studied Beowulf extensively and drew material from it in writing The Lord of the Rings.
Despite the evident Old English connection, Tolkien denied that Éomer and the Riders of Rohan directly represented the Anglo-Saxons. Scholars have noted that while in a book the imagery remains ambiguous, and can combine suggestions of Gothic as well as Anglo-Saxon origins, film such as Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings trilogy inevitably has to choose. When Éomer appears in a helmet recalling the Sutton Hoo helmet, he is plainly Anglo-Saxon.

Fictional account

Appearances

Éomer was the son of Théodwyn and Éomund. After their parents' death Éomer and his sister Éowyn were adopted by their uncle Théoden, king of the Rohirrim. He was the leader of the forces of Rohan who attacked and killed the Uruk-hai who had kidnapped the hobbits Merry Brandybuck and Pippin Took. Against orders, impressed by Aragorn, he helped Aragorn, Gimli and Legolas by lending them horses and guiding them to where the attack had taken place.
On his return to Edoras, Éomer reported this meeting to Théoden, and was imprisoned on the orders of Gríma Wormtongue, Théoden's sinister advisor. Aragorn, Gimli and Legolas arrived in Edoras with the wizard Gandalf, who released the king from Gríma's spell. Éomer was released and restored to honour. He fought at the battle of Helm's Deep, where the forces of Rohan drove Saruman's army of Orcs and Dunlendings from the walls of the Hornburg, buying enough time for Gandalf to arrive with Erkenbrand and his men of the Westfold of Rohan.
Éomer played a major role in the Battle of the Pelennor Fields, the pivotal battle of The Return of the King against the forces of the Dark Lord Sauron from Mordor. After leading a successful cavalry charge, he was dismayed to find Théoden mortally wounded. Théoden appointed him King of Rohan with his dying breath. Seeing Éowyn seemingly dead on the battlefield, Éomer threw himself and the remaining Rohirrim at the enemy. Aragorn arrived unexpectedly from Pelargir, and joined forces with Éomer, fulfilling his prediction that they would meet in the midst of their enemies. They routed the Orcs, and won the battle.
Éomer accompanied Aragorn to the Gates of Mordor for the final stand against Sauron, the Battle of the Morannon. This distracted Sauron long enough for the One Ring to be destroyed in Mount Doom, leading to his downfall. Theoden was taken back to Edoras to be buried, and Éomer became King of the Mark.

Interpretations

The critic Paul Kocher notes that in his first meeting with Aragorn on the plains of Rohan, Éomer is moved by affection more than just by the policy of the Mark, and indeed he risks both his command and his life by assisting him, contrary to orders.
The Tolkien scholar Tom Shippey contrasts Éomer's behaviour with that of Faramir, son of the Ruling Steward of Gondor. In his view, Faramir is courteous, urbane, and civilised where Éomer is "compulsively truculent", in both cases reflecting the character of their nations: Gondor "a kind of Rome", subtle and calculating, Rohan a simple but vigorous Anglo-Saxon society. In his view, Rohan resembles Anglo-Saxon society in many ways, except for one: the Anglo-Saxons did not like to fight on horseback.
Shippey writes further that prominent at the critical moment of the Battle of the Pelennor Fields, the decisive charge of the Riders of Rohan, is panache, which he explains means both "the white horsetail on helm floating in his speed" and "the virtue of sudden onset, the dash that sweeps away resistance." Shippey notes that this allows Tolkien to display Rohan both as English, based on their Old English names and words like "eored", and as "alien, to offer a glimpse of the way land shapes people".

Adaptations

In the 1978 animated adaptation of The Lord of the Rings by Ralph Bakshi, Éomer has no lines and is not fully animated.
In Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings film trilogy, Éomer was played by New Zealand actor Karl Urban.
The Tolkien scholar and encyclopedist Michael Drout states that Jackson's film version of Éomer's helmet is plainly based on the Sutton Hoo helmet, "the single most iconic image of Anglo-Saxon culture". Tolkien, he notes, had denied that the Riders of Rohan were actually the Anglo-Saxons, though he had made them speak the Mercian dialect of that language. In a book, Drout states, there can be ambiguity about visual images which are always partly in the reader's imagination; but a film inevitably reduces that useful ambiguity. Éomer's crest of horsetail, and the riders' flaxen hair give the impression of "continental Gothic" rather than Anglo-Saxons, but the film collapses that ambiguity. Drout further contrasts Jackson's presentation of Éomer in close-up in his elaborate helmet, with the later scene of an Easterling soldier whose helmet covers his face. Drout writes that this carries the suggestion of "veiling and Orientalism", whereas Éomer's face can be seen between his cheek-guards, making him seem more open and less threatening.

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