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"Shire... Baggins..."
Khamûl, to Farmer Maggot[1]

Khamûl was one of the nine Ringwraiths, second to the Witch-King, in Middle-earth after Arnor was defeated. During the Third Age, he held Dol Guldur as Sauron's lieutenant. After the Witch-King was slain, he became the Lord of Nazgûl for a short period.[2]

Biography

Second Age

John Howe - Khamul the Easterling

Khamûl the Easterling, by John Howe

Khamûl was once a mortal man who ruled the lands of the East known as Rhûn. He received one of the nine Rings of Power from the Dark Lord Sauron and in time he was corrupted and became one of his servants. His fall into Sauron's hands could explain why Rhûn was allied to Mordor.

He first appeared as one of the Nazgûl in SA 2251.[3]

Third Age

Denis Gordeev- Khamul in the Shire

Khamûl in the Shire, by Denis Gordeev

In TA 2951, Sauron sent three Nazgûl to abide in Dol Guldur, and Khamûl commanded the fortress thereafter.[4][5][3]

War of the Ring

Khamûl was the Wraith who pursued the Hobbits to Bucklebury ferry in the Shire, and who asked Farmer Maggot for "Baggins" just before Frodo Baggins left Hobbiton.[1]

Khamûl also appeared in the Battle of the Pelennor Fields with the other Nazgûl, mounted on his Fell beast and killing Gondor's soldiers at the beginning of the battle. After the Witch King´s demise, he and the other seven lesser Nazgûl retreated to Mordor.[6]

Afterwards, Khamûl became the leader of the Nazgûl. He led the Nazgûl on the Battle of the Black Gate riding his fell beast before being attacked by the eagles. The Nazgûl retreated when they sensed that Frodo claimed the Ring for himself. He fell after the Ring was destroyed.[7]

Names

Khamûl was called the Shadow of the East, the Second Chief, and the Black Easterling.[5] He was the only Ringwraith whose name was given by J.R.R. Tolkien, as well as one of the six Ringwraiths not of Númenorean descent.

Portrayal in adaptations

Peter Jackson's film trilogy

Khamul's true apperance.

The model for Khamûl's true appearance

NineMen2

Khamul's pre-Wraith identity according to TheLandOfShadow.com

In Peter Jackson's film adaptation of The Lord of the Rings trilogy, Khamûl was shown briefly and speaks to Farmer Maggot, who directs him onward to Hobbiton. Later, the Hobbits evade Farmer Maggot, but Frodo senses a presence and tells his friends to get off the road. Hiding behind a tree, the Hobbits hushed as Khamûl approached, catching their scent. As the four stayed quiet, Merry throws a sack of vegetables behind the Rider's horse, alarming Khamûl and causing him to leave the Hobbits undetected.

In The Return of the King, after the ring was destroyed, Khamûl died along with the seven other Ringwraiths during the eruption of Mount Doom, the Witch-King having perished during the Battle of the Pelennor Fields.

The Hobbit film trilogy

File:Khamûl concept in The Hobbit.jpg

Concept art believed to be Khamûl, as seen in The Hobbit films

In the The Hobbit films, the nine Ringwraiths were buried in the High Fells of Rhudaur, but emerged at the summons of the Necromancer, who is revealed to be Sauron.

In the The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies, Khamûl, along with the other eight Ringwraiths, engaged the White Council in battle, with Khamûl wearing spectral Khaganate Easterling armor.

Video games

  • Though not named in the game, Khamûl was featured in The Lord of the Rings Online as the Lieutenant of Dol Guldur. He commands the forces of Sauron in Mirkwood and was the final boss of the 12-person raid on Barad Guldur, along with his Fell-beast.

Rumors

  • According to another version of the stories Khamûl was stationed at Dol Guldur on March 6th, when Aragorn revealed himself to Sauron and began marching on the wood elf kingdoms on March 10th. On March 11th, his forces began assailing the nearby Lórien. After this failed, much of his force passed around the border of the woods and entered the Wold of Rohan. On March 12th, they were met with Ents sent east from Fangorn and Isengard, and were routed. Lórien was then attacked twice more on March 15th and March 22nd, but was never entered. The forces of Dol Guldur also went north into Mirkwood, battling the forces of King Thranduil under Mirkwood's trees, the climax of these battles being on March 15, 3019 which after a "long battle... and great ruin and fire" was won by Thranduil's forces.

Trivia

Lists of miscellaneous information should be avoided. Please relocate any relevant information into appropriate sections or articles.
  • Khamûl is the only other Nazgûl whose name is revealed.

Translations around the World

Foreign Language Translated name
Arabic كامول
Armenian Խամոլ
Assyrian ܟܗܐܡܘܠ
Belarusian Cyrillic Кhамул
Bengali খামুল
Bulgarian Cyrillic Хамул
Cambodian ខមឡ ?
Chinese (Hong Kong) 克哈穆爾
Georgian კჰამული
Greek Καμούλ
Gujarati ખમુલ
Hebrew ךהאמול
Hindi खमुल
Japanese ハムール
Kazakh Cyrillic Кһамұл
Kannada ಖಮುಲ
Kyrgyz Cyrillic Кhамул
Macedonian Cyrillic Кхамул
Marathi खमुल
Mongolian Cyrillic Кhамул
Nepalese खमुल
Pashto کهامول
Persian کهامول
Punjabi ਖਮੁਲ
Russian Кхамул
Sanskrit खमुल्
Serbian Кхамул (Cyrillic) Khamul (Latin)
Sinhalese ඛමුල්
Tajik Cyrillic Кҳамул
Tamil க்ஹமுல்
Telegu ఖముల
Thai คามูล
Ukrainian Cyrillic Кгамул
Urdu کحمال
Uyghur كھامۇل
Uzbek Кҳамул (Cyrillic) Khamul (Latin)
Yiddish כאַמול

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 The Lord of the Rings, The Fellowship of the Ring, Book One, Chapter IV: "A Short Cut to Mushrooms"
  2. Unfinished Tales, Part Three: The Third Age, IV: "The Nazgûl Hunt for the Ring"
  3. 3.0 3.1 The Lord of the Rings, Appendix B: The Tale of Years (Chronology of the Westlands), "The Great Years"
  4. Unfinished Tales, Introduction, Part Three, IV: "The Hunt for the Ring"
  5. 5.0 5.1 Unfinished Tales, Part Three: The Third Age, IV: "The Hunt for the Ring", Notes
  6. The Lord of the Rings, The Return of the King, Book Five, Chapter VI: "The Battle of the Pelennor Fields"
  7. The Lord of the Rings, The Return of the King, Book Six, Chapter III: "Mount Doom"
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