Dagmor was the name of the sword that belonged to Beren, in the First Age.[1]
History[]
As a lone outlaw in Dorthonion, Beren carried Dagmor throughout his many journeys.[1] It is presumably lost after his death.
Etymology[]
The name Dagmor may from the Sindarin words dag ("slay") and môr ("dark, darkness").[2]
In other versions[]
The sword's name was not mentioned in The Silmarillion; it is only mentioned in The Lay of Leithian in The Lays of Beleriand.
Translations[]
Foreign Language | Translated name |
Amharic | ዳግሞር |
Arabic | داغمور |
Armenian | Դագմոր |
Belarusian Cyrillic | Дагмор |
Bengali | ডাগমার |
Bulgarian Cyrillic | Дагмор |
Chinese | 达格墨 |
Georgian | დაგმორი |
Greek | Δαγμορ |
Gujarati | ડાગમોર |
Hebrew | דאגמור |
Hindi | डग्मोर |
Japanese | ダグモール |
Kannada | ಡಾಗ್ಮೋರ್ |
Kazakh | Дагмор (Cyrillic) Dagmor (Latin) |
Korean | 다그 모어 |
Kyrgyz Cyrillic | Дагмор |
Macedonian Cyrillic | Дагмор |
Mongolian Cyrillic | Дагмор |
Nepalese | डग्मोर |
Persian | داگمور |
Punjabi | ਡਗਮਰ |
Russian | Дагмор |
Sanskrit | दग्मोर् |
Serbian | Дагмор (Cyrillic) Dagmor (Latin) |
Sinhalese | ඩග්මෝර් |
Tamil | டாகுமோர் |
Telugu | డాగ్మోర్ |
Ukrainian Cyrillic | Даґмор |
Urdu | داگماور |
Uzbek | Дагмор (Cyrillic) Dagmor (Latin) |
Yiddish | דאַגמאָר |
Named weapons of Middle-earth | |
---|---|
Hobbits | Barrow-blades • Sting |
Dwarves | Durin's Axe • Orcrist |
Servants of Evil | Grond (battering ram) • Grond (hammer) • Morgul-knife |
Elves | Aeglos • Anglachel • Anguirel • Angrist • Aranrúth • Belthronding • Dailir • Glamdring • Orcrist • Ringil |
Men | Andúril • Dramborleg • Black arrow • Dagmor • Gúthwinë • Gurthang • Herugrim • Narsil • Red Arrow |
References[]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 The History of Middle-earth, Vol. 3: The Lays of Beleriand, III: "The Lay of Leithian"
- ↑ The History of Middle-earth, Vol. V: The Lost Road and Other Writings, Part Three: "The Etymologies"