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Indor was an Edain man of Dor-lómin, possibly of some importance.

He and his daughter Aerin were closely related to Húrin Thalion. His fate is unknown, but he was presumed dead by FA 495 when Túrin, the son of Húrin, returned to Dor-lómin.[1]

In other versions[]

In earlier accounts, Indor was the son of Fengel, father of Peleg and grandfather of Tuor. However, J.R.R. Tolkien later gave this role to Galdor.[2]

Translations[]

Foreign Language Translated name
Amharic ኢንዶር
Arabic ىندور
Armenian Ինդոր
Assamese ইন্দোৰ
Belarusian Cyrillic Індор
Bengali ইন্দোর
Bulgarian Cyrillic Индор
Dari یندور
Georgian ინდორი
Greek Ινδωρ
Gujarati ઈન્દોર
Hebrew אינדור
Hindi इनडोर
Kannada ಇಂದೋರ್
Kazakh Индор (Cyrillic) Ïndor (Latin)
Kyrgyz Cyrillic Индор
Macedonian Cyrillic Индор
Malayalam ഇൻഡോർ
Marathi इंदूर
Mongolian Cyrillic Индор
Nepalese इन्दोर
Pashto یندور ?
Persian یندور
Sanskrit ईन्दोर्
Serbian Индор (Cyrillic) Indor(Latin)
Sinhalese ඉන්ඩෝර්
Tajik Cyrillic Индор
Tamil இந்தூர்
Tatar Индор
Telugu ఇండోర్
Ukrainian Cyrillic Індор
Urdu انداور
Uzbek Индор (Cyrillic) Indor (Latin)
Yiddish ינדאָר

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 The Children of Húrin, Narn i Chîn Húrin, The Tale of the Children of Húrin, XII: "The Return of Túrin to Dor-lómin"
  2. The History of Middle-earth, Vol. IV: The Shaping of Middle-earth, chapter I: "Prose Fragments Following the Lost Tales"
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