Drúedain
Template:Short description Template:Use British English Template:Infobox fictional race The Drúedain are a fictional race of Men, living in the Drúadan Forest, in the Middle-earth legendarium created by J. R. R. Tolkien. They were counted among the Edain who made their way into Beleriand in the First Age, and were friendly to the Elves. In The Lord of the Rings, they assist the Riders of Rohan to avoid ambush on the way to the Battle of the Pelennor Fields.
The Drúedain are based on the mythological woodwoses, the wild men of the woods of Britain and Europe; the Riders of Rohan indeed call them woses.<ref name="Shippey 2005"/><ref name="The Ride of the Rohirrim" group=T/>
Names and etymology

The Fight in the Forest
by Hans Burgkmair, c. 1500
Within Tolkien's fiction, the Drúedain call themselves Drughu. When the Drúedain settled in Beleriand, the Sindarin Elves adapted this to Drû (plurals Drúin, Drúath) and later added the suffix -adan "man", resulting in the usual Sindarin form Drúadan (plural Drúedain).<ref name="UT Druedain" group=T>Template:Harvnb, "The Drúedain"</ref> Tolkien also used the form Drûg, with a regular English plural Drûgs.<ref name="UT Druedain" group=T/> Drughu became Rú in Quenya, with the later suffixed form Rúatan (plural Rúatani).<ref name="UT Druedain" group=T/> The Orcs called the Drúedain Oghor-hai.<ref name="UT Druedain" group=T/> John S. Ryan, writing in Mallorn, notes that Tolkien also uses the forms "Drúadan Forest" (the home of the Woses) and "Drúwaith-laur" (the Dru-folk's ancient wilderness).<ref name="Ryan 1983">Template:Cite journal</ref>
The word used for the Drúedain by the Rohirrim during the Third Age is represented by Tolkien as Púkel-men.<ref name="The Muster of Rohan" group=T>Template:Harvnb, Book 5, ch. 3, "The Muster of Rohan".</ref><ref name="UT Druedain" group=T/> This includes the Old English word pūcel "goblin, troll", which survives in Shakespeare's Puck in A Midsummer Night's Dream, and in two forms in Kipling's Puck of Pook's Hill.<ref name="Clark Hall Puck">Template:Cite book</ref> Ryan adds that the word survives in English placenames such as Puckshot in Surrey, Pock Field in Cumberland, Puxton, Puckeridge, Pokesdown, Pockford, Pucknall, and perhaps Pucklechurch. Ryan suggests that the Púkel-men may derive from a combination of "Proto-Celts, Druid-figures, or ... roadside fertility deities". Ryan notes Christopher Tolkien's statement that the name Púkel-men is "also used as a general equivalent to Drúedain".<ref name="Ryan 1983"/>
In Westron, the Common Tongue of western Middle-earth, the Drúedain were called the Wild Men, or the [Wood-]Woses:<ref name="The Ride of the Rohirrim" group=T>Template:Harvnb, Book 5, ch. 5, "The Ride of the Rohirrim"</ref>
The Tolkien scholar Tom Shippey, a philologist like Tolkien, notes that the office at Leeds University which both men used (at different times), is near Woodhouse Moor, which, as "would not have escaped Tolkien", is a modern misspelling of Wood-Wose, Old English wudu-wāsa. Clark Hall renders this word as "faun, satyr".<ref name="Shippey 2005">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Clark Hall Wood-Wose">Template:Cite book</ref>
Description
The Drúedain somewhat resemble Dwarves in stature and endurance; they are stumpy, clumsy-limbed with short, thick legs, and fat, "gnarled" arms, 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, lank hair. They had no hair lower than the eyebrows, except for a few men who had a tail of black hair on the chin. They were short-lived and had a deep hatred of Orcs.<ref name="The Ride of the Rohirrim" group=T/> They had certain magical powers and sat still in meditation for long periods.
History
The Drûgs were the first to migrate from Hildórien, the land where the race of Men awoke in the east of Middle-earth. Initially they headed south, into Harad, but then they turned north-west, becoming the first Men to cross the great river Anduin.<ref group=T>Template:Harvnb, part 4 ch. 1</ref> Many of them settled in the White Mountains, where they were the first people.
Some of the Drúedain continued north-west, settling in Beleriand. A band of them lived there in the First Age, in the forest of Brethil among the Second House of Men, the Haladin, whence the Elves came to know and love them. Aghan the Drûg is a protagonist in "The Faithful Stone", a short story set in Beleriand in the First Age.

Although a number of the Drúedain came with the Edain to Númenor, they had left or died out before the Akallabêth, as had the Púkel-men of Dunharrow. At the end of the Third Age the Drûgs still lived in the Drúadan Forest of the White Mountains, and on the long cape of Andrast west of Gondor. The region north of Andrast was still known as Drúwaith Iaur, or "Old Drûg land".
The term Púkel-men used by the Rohirrim was also applied to the statues constructed by the Drúedain to guard important places and homes;<ref name="The Muster of Rohan" group=T/> some evidently had the power to come to life.<ref name="Faithful Stone" group=T>Template:Harvnb, "The Drúedain: The Faithful Stone"</ref> Because of their ugly appearance and frightening statues the Drúedain were feared and loathed by other Men of the region; they were considered little better than Orcs, and there was much enmity between those peoples.
Nevertheless, the Drúedain of Ghân-buri-Ghân's clan came to the aid of the Rohirrim during the War of the Ring. A large company of Orcs had been sent to the Drúadan Forest to waylay the host of Rohan as it made its way to the aid of Gondor. It was the "woodcrafty beyond compare"<ref name="The Ride of the Rohirrim" group=T/> Drúedain who held off the Orcs with poisoned arrows whilst they guided the Rohirrim through the forest by secret paths.<ref name="The Ride of the Rohirrim" group=T/> Without their help the Rohirrim would not have arrived at the Battle of the Pelennor Fields, and Sauron would likely have triumphed. This action earned the Drúedain the respect of other Men, and King Elessar granted them the Drúadan Forest "forever" in thanks.
Analysis

Ghân-buri-Ghân is perceived as a "leftover," a prehistoric type of human surviving in the modern world. Like the rest of his people, Ghân has a flat face, dark eyes, and wears only a grass skirt.<ref name="The Ride of the Rohirrim" group=T/><ref name="Flieger 2003"/><ref name="Smith 2002">Template:Cite book</ref> He is seen as a good man with a kind of primitive nobility, a classic example of the noble savage.<ref name="Rutledge 2004">Template:Cite book</ref> He is by no means stupid, and he "refuses to be patronized."<ref name="Stanton 2002">Template:Cite book</ref> Susan Pesznecker describes the "Wodwoses", including Tolkien's, as a variant of the medieval Green Man, which she calls "a Pagan symbol of fertility and rebirth".<ref name="Pesznecker 2007">Template:Cite book</ref>
The medievalist and Tolkien scholar Verlyn Flieger comments that the Wild Man "is infantile". Ghân-Buri-Ghân talks "like a Hollywood Tarzan" using short broken phrases like "Wild Men live here before Stone-houses" and "kill orc-folk".<ref name="Flieger 2003">Template:Cite book</ref> She compares him with the "Wild Hobbit"<ref name="Flieger 2003"/> Gollum, who is psychotic, haunted by voices, and who uses "baby-talk", like "cruel little hobbitses": in her view, the Wild Man is "evolutionarily regressive", whereas Gollum is "psychologically regressive".<ref name="Flieger 2003"/>
Adaptations
Ghân-buri-Ghân is featured in the promotional expansion card set of The Lord of the Rings Trading Card Game<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and in the Lord of the Rings board game. The image for the latter was designed by the Tolkien illustrator and concept designer John Howe.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>