

They just didn't make in on screen in the movies.I may get some details wrong in this question, as my memory of the book and film versions of LOTR have muddled together, but I'll do the best that I can. So basically Men were present in large numbers in Sauron's armies. Waggon-trains of goods and booty and fresh slaves. Tributary lands, from which the soldiers of the Tower brought long

Núrnen nor of the great roads that ran away east and south to Realm, beyond the fumes of the Mountain by the dark sad waters of Lake Men not Orcs, or my eyes are all wrong.' Neither he nor Frodo knewĪnything of the great slave-worked fields away south in this wide Of the Morgai and away southward, there were camps. As far as their eyes could reach, along the skirts Part fled eastward as they could and some cast their weapons down andįinally, there were more armies of Men amassed behind the Black Gate, ready to continue the assault on the West. Gathered themselves for a last stand of desperate battle. Hating the West, and yet were men proud and bold, in their turn now And those that were deepest and longest in evil servitude, Ruin of their war and the great majesty and glory of the Captains of Men were also present at the Battle of the Black Gate:īut the Men of Rhûn and of Harad, Easterling and Southron, saw the The Haradrim and Corsairs of Umbar were also those vanquished by Aragorn's host of the Dead, of which mention is made in the books but the battle was "off screen". The Haradrim were Men from lands on the southern border of Gondor. There their horsemen were gathered about the standard of their Southward beyond the road lay the main force of the Haradrim, and While not as plentiful as Orcs, and not as prevelant in the movies, Men took the field in the Battle of the Pelennor Fields:
