Edain
In the fiction of J. R. R. Tolkien, the Edain (Quenya: Atani) were those Men which made their way into Beleriand in the First Age, and were friendly to the Elves.The Sindarin word Edain, singular Adan (Quenya Atani, Atan) literally meant Second People, and originally referred to all Men, but later it only applied to the Men of Beleriand and their descendants.
They were divided in three large houses, or tribes:
- The people of Bėor: they were dark-haired and stoutly built, and most resembled the Noldor of all Elves. They were first found by Finrod Felagund, Lord of Nargothrond, and under his guidance later made their way to to the lands of the Noldorin lords Amrod and Amras, in a place later known as Estolad, the Encampment. They remained loyal to the House of Finarfin, and later settled in the lands of Dorthonion.
- The people later known as the Haladin. They were a reclusive folk, dark-haired but smaller in stature than the Bėorians. They kept seperate from the other Men, and later got permission to settle in the forest of Region, part of Doriath. They mostly kept out of the wars.
- The Tribe of Marach, later best known as the House of Hador. They were tall and golden-haired, and most resembled the Vanyar of all Elves. They were a very numerous and war-like tribe, and the Laiquendi Elves of Ossiriath feared them. They later settled in Hithlum by way of Estolad. They were loyal to Fingolfin.
The Bėorians were nearly wiped out by Morgoth, and the remainder of its people merged with the Hadorians to become the Nśmenoreans. It would seem the Haladin were completely wiped out, or at least disappeared as a seperate people.
When the Nśmenoreans returned to Middle-earth in the Second Age, they encountered many Men which were obviously related to the Atani: they classified these Men as Middle Men, and established friendly relations with them. Examples are the Rohirrim, the Men of Dale, and the Breelanders.
Other Men, such as the Dunlendings, were not recognised as Middle Men because they were related to the Haladin rather than Bėorians or Marachians, and they were hostile to Nśmenor.
A fourth kind of Men came with the Second House, and called themselves Drūg. This name was adopted in Sindarin as Drśedain: Drūg+Edain. They were an alien folk to the other Men: a bit like Dwarves in stature and endurance, stumpy, clumsy-limbed (with short, thick legs, and fat, "gnarled" arms), had broad chests, fat bellies, and heavy buttocks. According to the Elves and other Men, they had "unlovely faces": wide, flat, and expressionless with deep-set black eyes that glowed red when angered. They had "horny" brows, flat noses, wide mouths, and sparse, lanky hair. They had no hair lower than the eyebrows, except for a few men who had a tail of black hair on the chin. No Drūg made it to Nśmenor, as they were probably wiped out along with the Haladin, but the Woses of Ghan-buri-Ghan were related to the Drūg, as were the extinct Pśkel-men of Dunharrow. At the end of the third age the Drūg still lived in the Drśadan Forest of the White Mountains, and at the long cape of Andras west of Gondor. The region north of Andras was still known as Drśwaith Iaur, or "Old Drūg land".
In Celtic mythology, Edain an alternate name for Epona.