In-fiction etymology Tolkien intended the name
Gondor to be
Sindarin for "Stone-land". This is echoed in the text of
The Lord of the Rings by the name for Gondor among the
Rohirrim, Stoningland. Tolkien's early writings suggest that this was a reference to the highly developed masonry of Gondorians in contrast to their rustic neighbours. This view is supported by the
Drúedain terms for Gondorians and
Minas Tirith—Stonehouse-folk and Stone-city. Tolkien denied that the name
Gondor had been inspired by the ancient Ethiopian citadel of
Gondar, stating that the root
Ond went back to an account he had read as a child mentioning
ond ("stone") as one of only two words known of the
pre-Celtic languages of Britain. Gondor is also called the South-kingdom or Southern Realm, and together with Arnor as the Númenórean Realms in Exile. Researchers
Wayne G. Hammond and
Christina Scull have proposed a
Quenya translation of
Gondor:
Ondonórë. The Men of Gondor are nicknamed "Tarks" (from Quenya
tarkil "High Man", Númenórean) by the
orcs of Mordor.
Fictional geography Country and
Mordor Gondor's geography is illustrated in
the maps for
The Lord of the Rings made by
Christopher Tolkien on the basis of his father's sketches, and geographical accounts in
The Rivers and Beacon-Hills of Gondor,
Cirion and Eorl, and
The Lord of the Rings. Gondor lies in the west of
Middle-earth, on the northern shores of Anfalas with the great port of Pelargir near the river Anduin's delta in the fertile and populous To the north-west of Gondor lies Arnor; to the north, Gondor is bordered by
Wilderland and
Rohan; to the north-east, by Rhûn; to the east, across the great river Anduin and the province of Ithilien, by
Mordor; to the south, by the deserts of northern
Harad. To the west lies the Great Sea. The wide land to the west of Rohan was Enedwaith; in some of Tolkien's writings it is part of Gondor, in others not. The region of Lamedon and the uplands of the prosperous Morthond, with the desolate Hill of Erech, lay to the south of the White Mountains, while the populous The region of Calenardhon lay to the north of the White Mountains; it was granted independence as the kingdom of
Rohan. To the northeast, the river Anduin enters the hills of the Emyn Muil and passes the Sarn Gebir, dangerous straits, above a large river-lake, Nen Hithoel. Its entrance was once the northern border of Gondor, and is marked by the Gates of Argonath, an enormous pair of kingly statues, as a warning to trespassers. At the southern end of the lake are the hills of Amon Hen (the Hill of Seeing) and Amon Lhaw (the Hill of Hearing) on the west and east shores; below Amon Hen is the lawn of Parth Galen, where the Fellowship disembarked and was then broken, with the capture of Merry and Pippin, and the death of Boromir. Between the two hills is a rocky islet, Tol Brandir, which partly dams the river; just below it is an enormous waterfall, the Falls of Rauros, over which Boromir's funeral-boat is sent. Further down the river are the hills of Emyn Arnen.
Capital, Minas Tirith of medieval legend.), lay at the eastern end of the White Mountains, built around a shoulder of Mount Mindolluin. The city had seven walls: each held a gate, and each gate faced a different direction from the next. The city was surrounded by the
Pelennor, an area of farmlands ringed by a wall.
John Garth writes that the White Tree has been likened to the
Dry Tree of the 14th century
Travels of Sir John Mandeville. Tolkien's map-notes for the illustrator
Pauline Baynes indicate that the city had the
latitude of
Ravenna, an
Italian city on the
Adriatic Sea, though it lay "900 miles east of Hobbiton more near
Belgrade". The
Warning beacons of Gondor were atop a line of foothills running back west from Minas Tirith towards Rohan.
Dol Amroth Dol Amroth (
Sindarin: "the Hill of Amroth") was a fortress-city on a peninsula jutting westward into the Bay of Belfalas, on Gondor's southern shore. It is also the name of the port city, one of the five great cities of Gondor, and the seat of the
principality of the same name, founded by prince Galador. The whimsical poem "
The Man in the Moon Came Down Too Soon" in
The Adventures of Tom Bombadil tells how the Man in the Moon fell one night into "the windy Bay of Bel"; his fall is marked by the tolling of a bell in the Seaward Tower (
Tirith Aear) of Dol Amroth, and he recovers at an inn in the city. Its ruler, the Prince of Dol Amroth, is subject to the sovereignty of Gondor. The principality's boundaries are not explicitly defined, though the Prince ruled Belfalas as a fief, as well as an area to the east on the map labelled Dor-en-Ernil ("The Land of the Prince"). He was the brother of Lady Finduilas and uncle to her sons
Boromir and
Faramir; a kinsman of
Théoden; and the father of
Éomer's wife Lothíriel. Imrahil played a major part in the defence of
Minas Tirith; the soldiers whom Imrahil led to Minas Tirith formed the largest contingent from the hinterland to the defence of the city. They marched under a banner "silver upon blue", Some like Finduilas are of Númenórean descent, and still speak the Elvish language.
Fictional history Pre-Númenórean The
first people in the region were the
Drúedain, a hunter-gatherer group of
Men who arrive in the
First Age. They were pushed aside by later settlers and came to live in the pine-woods of the Druadan Forest The next people settled in the
White Mountains, and became known as the Men of the Mountains. They built a subterranean complex at Dunharrow, later known as the Paths of the Dead, which extended through the mountain range from north to south.
Númenórean kingdom The shorelands of Gondor were widely colonized by the
Númenóreans from the middle of the
Second Age, especially by Elf-friends loyal to
Elendil. His sons
Isildur and Anárion landed in Gondor after the drowning of Númenor, and co-founded the Kingdom of Gondor. Isildur brought with him a seedling of Nimloth (Sindarin:
nim, "white" and
loth, "blossom") the Fair, the white tree from Númenor. This tree and its descendants came to be called the White Tree of Gondor, and appears on the kingdom's
coat of arms. Elendil, who founded the Kingdom of Arnor to the north, was held to be the
High King of all the lands of the
Dúnedain. Isildur established the city of
Minas Ithil (Sindarin: "Tower of the Moon") while Anárion established the city of Minas Anor (Sindarin: "Tower of the Sun").
Third Age, under the Stewards holding the white staff of the Lord Steward of the King's Household, Scotland, the same symbol as that of the Stewards of Gondor. Portrait by unknown artist after
Daniël Mijtens, 1622 During the early years of the
Third Age, Gondor was victorious and wealthy, and kept a careful watch on Mordor, but the peace ended with Easterling invasions. Gondor established a powerful navy and captured the southern port of Umbar from the
Black Númenóreans, With a Great
Plague the population began a steep decline. The
Ringwraiths captured and occupied Minas Ithil The badge of office of the Stewards is a white rod. Faramir reports that Boromir as a boy had asked his father Denethor how many centuries it would take for a steward to become a king. Denethor replied "Few years, maybe, in other places of less royalty. In Gondor ten thousand years would not suffice." Growing in strength,
Sauron attacked Osgiliath, forcing the defenders to leave, destroying the last bridge across the Anduin behind them.
Minas Tirith then faced direct land attack from
Mordor, combined with naval attack by the Corsairs of Umbar. The
hobbits Frodo and
Sam travelled through Ithilien, and were captured by
Faramir, Boromir's brother, who held them at the hidden cave of Henneth Annûn, but helped them to continue their quest. When Imrahil declined to send the entirety of Gondor's army against Mordor, Aragorn led a smaller army to the
Black Gate of Mordor to distract Sauron from Frodo's quest. == Concept and creation ==