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{{Short description|Fictional Character}}
{{unreferenced|date=December 2010}}
{{notability|date=February 2022}}
<!-- Image with inadequate rationale removed: [[Image:Taran.jpg|thumb|200px|Taran and his companion [[India]] as pictured on the cover of ''[[Taran]]''.]] -->
{{Infobox character
| name = Taran
| series = [[The Chronicles of Prydain]]
| image = Taran-The High King-Dell Laurel Leaf (1980).jpg
| caption = Taran, from the cover of the 1980 [[Laurel-Leaf Books|Laurel-Leaf]] edition of ''[[The High King]]''.
| first = ''[[The Book of Three]]'' (1964)
| last = ''[[The Foundling and Other Tales of Prydain]]''
| creator = [[Lloyd Alexander]]
| voice = Grant Bardsley
| title = Assistant Pig-Keeper<br>High King of Prydain
| spouse = [[Princess Eilonwy|Princess Eilonwy of Llyr]]
| relatives =
}}


'''Taran''' is a fictional character in ''[[The Chronicles of Prydain]]'' series, as well as in the [[The Black Cauldron (film)|film]] and [[The Black Cauldron (video game)|game]] named after the second novel, ''[[The Black Cauldron (novel)|The Black Cauldron]]''.
'''Taran''' is a fictional character from [[Lloyd Alexander]]'s ''[[The Chronicles of Prydain]]'' series of novels. Serving as the series's central protagonist, he is first introduced as the assistant pig-keeper at [[Caer Dallben]] charged with the care of [[Hen Wen]], the oracular white pig. With dreams of becoming a great hero, over the course of the series, his character matures as he is drawn into the war against [[Arawn Death-Lord]].


During his journey, he befriends [[Princess Eilonwy]], a young girl his age, [[Fflewddur Fflam]], a wandering bard and minor king, [[Gurgi]], a wild creature between animal and man, and the dwarf [[Doli (fictional character)|Doli]]. Upon the conclusion of the series, Taran is crowned High King of Prydain and marries Eilonwy.
==Profile==
Taran is a young man in late adolescence, who lives with the Enchanter [[Dallben]] and [[Coll (character)|Coll]], the aged warrior. He is charged with taking care of the oracular pig [[Hen Wen]] and throughout the series is known under the title of Assistant Pig-Keeper.


==Fictional biography==
Taran's age is never given at any time in the series, though at the outset he seems to be approximately fourteen years old. The readers are also never given any indication as to the character's appearance, and as a result, he has been depicted in many different ways. In the [[Disney]] film ''[[The Black Cauldron (film)|The Black Cauldron]]'', he is shown as a red-haired, brown-eyed youth who spends a great deal of time staring out of windows and daydreaming; he is voiced by [[England|British]] actor [[Grant Bardsley]].
===Background and characteristics===
Taran is a young man in late adolescence, who lives with the enchanter [[Dallben]] and the aged warrior [[Coll (character)|Coll]]. He is charged with taking care of the oracular pig Hen Wen and throughout the series is known under the title of Assistant Pig-Keeper.

Taran's age is never given at any time in the series, though at the outset he seems to be approximately fourteen years old. The readers are also never given any indication as to the character's appearance, and as a result, he has been depicted in many different ways. In the animated film ''[[The Black Cauldron (film)|The Black Cauldron]]'', he is shown as a red-haired, brown-eyed youth who spends a great deal of time staring out of windows and daydreaming; he is voiced by British actor Grant Bardsley.


Taran is headstrong and courageous, though occasionally foolhardy, and harbors an intense desire to prove his worth and heroism through noble acts. Indeed, much of the series centers on Taran's search for his own worth.
Taran is headstrong and courageous, though occasionally foolhardy, and harbors an intense desire to prove his worth and heroism through noble acts. Indeed, much of the series centers on Taran's search for his own worth.


===''The Chronicles of Prydain''===
==Character history==
Taran was a [[Child abandonment#Child abandonment in literature|foundling]] discovered by Dallben the Enchanter amongst the slaughter on a battlefield. Dallben brought the baby to be raised and educated at the small hamlet of [[Caer Dallben]], where he would be protected by Dallben, the famed enchanter, and Coll, an aged warrior turned farmer. As Taran grew up he became restless and longed for adventures beyond the borders of Caer Dallben. His time would eventually come when, just after being granted the position of Assistant Pig-Keeper to [[Hen Wen]], Dallben's oracular pig (actually a name Coll conceived for the job that had been Taran's for some time), the animal escapes her enclosure. Taran follows her and soon finds himself caught up in an epic struggle that will determine the fate of the land of Prydain.
Taran was a [[Child abandonment#In literature|foundling]] discovered by Dallben the Enchanter amongst the slaughter on a battlefield. Dallben brought the baby to be raised and educated at the small hamlet of [[Caer Dallben]], where he would be protected by Dallben, the famed enchanter, and Coll, an aged warrior turned farmer. As Taran grew up he became restless and longed for adventures beyond the borders of Caer Dallben. His time would eventually come when, just after being granted the position of Assistant Pig-Keeper to [[Hen Wen]], Dallben's oracular pig (actually a name Coll conceived for the job that had been Taran's for some time), the animal escapes her enclosure. Taran follows her and soon finds himself caught up in an epic struggle that will determine the fate of the land of Prydain.


During his adventures he is befriended by the great Prince [[Gwydion]]. When the two are captured by the Enchantress Queen [[Achren]], he meets (and eventually falls in love with and marries) the [[Princess Eilonwy]]. With her help, he helps to free the ancient, magical sword [[Dyrnwyn]] from Achren's clutches, an event that will set in motion the war that could bring about the defeat of Arawn, the Death Lord. Taran is assisted in his quest by many friends, including the self-styled Bard [[Fflewddur Fflam]], the shaggy creature [[Gurgi]], and the stalwart dwarf warrior [[Doli (fictional character)|Doli]].
During his adventures he is befriended by the great Prince [[Gwydion]]. When the two are captured by the Enchantress Queen [[Achren]], he meets the [[Princess Eilonwy]]. With his help, she frees the ancient, magical sword [[Dyrnwyn]] from Achren's clutches, an event that will set in motion the war that could bring about the defeat of Arawn, the Death Lord. Taran is assisted in his quest by many friends, including the self-styled Bard [[Fflewddur Fflam]], the shaggy creature [[Gurgi]], and the stalwart dwarf warrior [[Doli (fictional character)|Doli]].


Taran's adventures see him leading armies against the Death Lord, Arawn, meeting a trio of witches, attempting to rescue the kidnapped Eilonwy and finally struggling to come to terms with his own past. Eventually he proves his worth, both as a soldier and a man, and helps to defeat Arawn in pitched battle. After Arawn is defeated, most of Taran's companions decided to journey to the Summer Country where they will be granted eternal youth and happiness. Taran, however, makes the difficult decision to stay in Prydain and rebuild the land that was nearly destroyed by Arawn. Dalben warns Taran that he is giving up eternal happiness for a difficult life that might end without anyone ever acknowledging his efforts, but Taran remains steadfast in his decision. It is only after this that Dallben and Gwydion reveal to him that he has earned not only his honor, but also the title of High King of Prydain. Taran, it turns out, has fulfilled an old prophecy from ''The Book of Three'' which stated that someone of unknown birth would eventually rise up, defeat a serpent (Arawn, Death-Lord of Annuvin implied), choose a kingdom of sorrow over a kingdom of happiness, and thereby prove his worth as the next High King. Taran, the only survivor of a long-past battle, has done just that. With Eilonwy as his Queen, Taran assumes the throne and rules with justice and wisdom until the end of his days.
Taran's adventures see him leading armies against the Death Lord, Arawn, meeting a trio of witches, attempting to rescue the kidnapped Eilonwy and finally struggling to come to terms with his own past. Eventually he proves his worth, both as a soldier and a man, and helps to defeat Arawn in pitched battle. After Arawn is defeated, most of Taran's companions decided to journey to the Summer Country where they will be granted eternal youth and happiness. Taran, however, makes the difficult decision to stay in Prydain and rebuild the land that was nearly destroyed by Arawn. Dalben warns Taran that he is giving up eternal happiness for a difficult life that might end without anyone ever acknowledging his efforts, but Taran remains steadfast in his decision. It is only after this that Dallben and Gwydion reveal to him that he has earned not only his honor, but also the title of High King of Prydain. Taran, it turns out, has fulfilled an old prophecy from ''The Book of Three'' which stated that someone of unknown birth would eventually rise up, defeat a serpent (Arawn, Death-Lord of Annuvin implied), choose a kingdom of sorrow over a kingdom of happiness, and thereby prove his worth as the next High King. Taran, the only survivor of a long-past battle, has done just that. With Eilonwy as his Queen, Taran assumes the throne and rules with justice and wisdom until the end of his days.


An interesting point in all the trials that Taran must overcome in his life until he becomes High King is that he always has to "let something go", In the first book he must quit his own quest to save Hen Wen so that he can alert the Sons of Don; in the second book he has to let go of a magical brooch that granted him "wisdom" to have the Black Cauldron, and later he has to let go the honor of capturing the Black Cauldron so that he can transport it to be destroyed. In the third book he must give up Eilonwy, although only temporarily while she is fostered in a foreign royal court, and in the fourth book, he gives up his quest to learn of his parentage. In the last book there is a moment he has to choose between completing his mission and his search for Eilonwy; and there is his monumentous decision of giving up eternal life in order to rebuild Prydain.
An aspect of all the trials that Taran must overcome in his life until he becomes High King is that he always has to "let something go". In the first book he must quit his own quest to save Hen Wen so that he can alert the Sons of Don; in the second book he has to let go of a [[Magic (paranormal)|magical]] [[brooch]] that granted him "wisdom" to have the Black Cauldron, and later he has to let go the honor of capturing the Black Cauldron so that he can transport it to be destroyed. In the third book he must give up Eilonwy, although only temporarily while she is fostered in a foreign royal court, and in the fourth book, he gives up his quest to learn of his parentage. In the last book there is a moment he has to choose between completing his mission and his search for Eilonwy; and there is his momentous decision of giving up eternal life in order to rebuild Prydain.


==Adaptations==
Like many figures in the series, Taran's name is derived from the [[Mabinogion]], where he is named as the father of a man named Glineu. ''Taran'' is the Welsh word for thunder, and may be related to the Gaulish god [[Taranis]].
===Film===
*Taran (voiced by Grant Bardsley) appears in the 1985 [[Walt Disney Animation Studios|Disney]] animated film ''[[The Black Cauldron (film)|The Black Cauldron]]'', a loose adaptation of [[The Book of Three|books one]] and [[The Black Cauldron (novel)|two]].


==References==
==In Disney Version==
*Alexander, Lloyd (1964) ''The Book of Three''
{{Infobox character
*Alexander, Lloyd (1965) ''The Black Cauldron''
| name = Taran
*Alexander, Lloyd (1966) ''The Castle of Llyr''
| creator = Lloyd Alexander
*Alexander, Lloyd (1967) ''Taran Wanderer''
}}
*Alexander, Lloyd (1968) ''The High King''
In the 1985 Disney animated film [[The Black Cauldron]], Taran is the protagonist of the film, as in the novel series. Physically, he is portayed similarly to how he is in the novel series, as an adolescent boy with brown-reddish hair, a tall average frame, and brown eyes.

== Sources ==
*{{cite book|editor1=Becker, Audrey L. |editor2=Noone, Kristin |editor3=Palumbo, Donald E.|author=Hicks, Jeff |date=2011|title=Welsh Mythology and Folklore in Popular Culture: Essays on Adaptations in Literature, Film, Television and Digital Media|chapter-url= https://books.google.com/books?id=ohqKnFU-kSsC&pg=PA176 |publisher=[[McFarland & Company|McFarland]]|chapter=Loosely Based: The Problems of Adaptation in Disney's ''The Black Cauldron'' |isbn=978-0786461707|series=Critical Explorations in Science Fiction and Fantasy|volume=33|via=[[Google Books]]}}
*{{cite journal |author=Butchart, Liam |year=2019 |title="What Man Am I?" The Hero's Journey, the Beginning of Individuation, and Taran Wanderer |journal=Mythlore: A Journal of J.R.R. Tolkien, C.S. Lewis, Charles Williams, and Mythopoeic Literature |volume=38 |issue=1 |publisher= Southwestern Oklahoma State University|issn= 0146-9339|url=https://dc.swosu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2417&context=mythlore }}
*{{cite book|author=Carr, Marion|date=1971|title=Classic Hero in a New Mythology|publisher=[[The Horn Book Magazine]]|pages=508–13|volume =37}}
*{{cite book|author=Davis, Amy M.|date=2014|title=Handsome Heroes & Vile Villains: Men in Disney's Feature Animation|chapter-url= https://books.google.com/books?id=0OQoCAAAQBAJ&pg=PA41 |publisher=[[Indiana University Press]]|chapter=Disney Films 1967-1988: The "Middle" Era |isbn=978-0-861-96907-4|via=[[Google Books]]}}
*{{cite book|author=Filmer-Davies, Kath|date=1996|title=Fantasy Fiction and Welsh Myth: Tales of Belonging|chapter-url= https://books.google.com/books?id=vCaxCwAAQBAJ&pg=PA67 |publisher=[[Palgrave Macmillan]]|chapter=The Place of the Pig-Keeper |isbn=978-0-333-65029-5|via=[[Google Books]]}}
*{{cite book|author=Fisher, Margery|date=1975|title=Who's who in Children's Books: A Treasury of the Familiar Characters of Childhood|publisher=[[Holt, Rinehart and Winston]]|isbn=978-0030150913|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/whoswhoinchildre00fish|author-link=Margery Fisher}}
*{{cite book|editor1=Nelson, Claudia |editor2=Morris, Rebecca |date=2014|title=Representing Children in Chinese and U.S. Children's Literature|chapter-url= https://books.google.com/books?id=AuPsCwAAQBAJ&pg=PA99 |publisher=[[Routledge]]|chapter=Lloyd Alexander's Chronicles of Prydain: Imaging the American Child through a British Lens|isbn=978-1472424211|series=Studies in Childhood, 1700 to the Present|via=[[Google Books]]}}
*{{cite journal |author1=Patterson, Nancy-Lou |author2=Urrutia, Benjamin |author1-link=Nancy-Lou Patterson|year=1986 |title=Reviews |journal=Mythlore: A Journal of J.R.R. Tolkien, C.S. Lewis, Charles Williams, and Mythopoeic Literature |volume=12 |series=4 |issue=46 |publisher= Southwestern Oklahoma State University|issn= 0146-9339|url=https://dc.swosu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1685&context=mythlore }}
*{{cite journal |author=Torrance, E. Paul |year=1971 |title=Identity: The gifted child's major problem |journal=[[Gifted Child Quarterly]] |volume=15 |issue=3 |pages=147–155|publisher=147-155 |doi=10.1177/001698627101500301 |s2cid=146444219 }}
*{{cite book|author=White, Donna R.|date=1998|title=A Century of Welsh Myth in Children's Literature|chapter-url= https://books.google.com/books?id=yDVykkOOP6QC&pg=PA104 |publisher=[[Greenwood Press]]|chapter=Chronicles of Prydain |isbn=0-313-30570-6|via=[[Google Books]]}}
*{{cite book|author=White, Donna R.|date=1991|title=The Mabinogi in Children's Literature: Welsh Legends in English-language Children's Books|publisher=[[University of Minnesota]]}}


==External links==
{{The Chronicles of Prydain}}
{{The Chronicles of Prydain}}
{{Authority control}}


[[Category:Prydain characters]]
[[Category:The Chronicles of Prydain characters]]
[[Category:Disney's The Black Cauldron characters]]
[[Category:Fictional kings]]
[[Category:Fictional kings]]
[[Category:Fictional orphans]]
[[Category:Fictional Welsh people]]
[[Category:Fictional princes]]
[[Category:Literary characters introduced in 1964]]
[[Category:Fictional sword fighters]]
[[Category:Orphan characters in literature]]
[[Category:Child characters in literature]]
[[Category:Teenage characters in literature]]
[[Category:Fictional characters introduced in 1964]]
[[Category:Characters in American novels of the 20th century]]
[[Category:Disney characters]]

Revision as of 16:55, 14 August 2023

Taran
The Chronicles of Prydain character
Taran, from the cover of the 1980 Laurel-Leaf edition of The High King.
First appearanceThe Book of Three (1964)
Last appearanceThe Foundling and Other Tales of Prydain
Created byLloyd Alexander
Voiced byGrant Bardsley
In-universe information
TitleAssistant Pig-Keeper
High King of Prydain
SpousePrincess Eilonwy of Llyr

Taran is a fictional character from Lloyd Alexander's The Chronicles of Prydain series of novels. Serving as the series's central protagonist, he is first introduced as the assistant pig-keeper at Caer Dallben charged with the care of Hen Wen, the oracular white pig. With dreams of becoming a great hero, over the course of the series, his character matures as he is drawn into the war against Arawn Death-Lord.

During his journey, he befriends Princess Eilonwy, a young girl his age, Fflewddur Fflam, a wandering bard and minor king, Gurgi, a wild creature between animal and man, and the dwarf Doli. Upon the conclusion of the series, Taran is crowned High King of Prydain and marries Eilonwy.

Fictional biography

Background and characteristics

Taran is a young man in late adolescence, who lives with the enchanter Dallben and the aged warrior Coll. He is charged with taking care of the oracular pig Hen Wen and throughout the series is known under the title of Assistant Pig-Keeper.

Taran's age is never given at any time in the series, though at the outset he seems to be approximately fourteen years old. The readers are also never given any indication as to the character's appearance, and as a result, he has been depicted in many different ways. In the animated film The Black Cauldron, he is shown as a red-haired, brown-eyed youth who spends a great deal of time staring out of windows and daydreaming; he is voiced by British actor Grant Bardsley.

Taran is headstrong and courageous, though occasionally foolhardy, and harbors an intense desire to prove his worth and heroism through noble acts. Indeed, much of the series centers on Taran's search for his own worth.

The Chronicles of Prydain

Taran was a foundling discovered by Dallben the Enchanter amongst the slaughter on a battlefield. Dallben brought the baby to be raised and educated at the small hamlet of Caer Dallben, where he would be protected by Dallben, the famed enchanter, and Coll, an aged warrior turned farmer. As Taran grew up he became restless and longed for adventures beyond the borders of Caer Dallben. His time would eventually come when, just after being granted the position of Assistant Pig-Keeper to Hen Wen, Dallben's oracular pig (actually a name Coll conceived for the job that had been Taran's for some time), the animal escapes her enclosure. Taran follows her and soon finds himself caught up in an epic struggle that will determine the fate of the land of Prydain.

During his adventures he is befriended by the great Prince Gwydion. When the two are captured by the Enchantress Queen Achren, he meets the Princess Eilonwy. With his help, she frees the ancient, magical sword Dyrnwyn from Achren's clutches, an event that will set in motion the war that could bring about the defeat of Arawn, the Death Lord. Taran is assisted in his quest by many friends, including the self-styled Bard Fflewddur Fflam, the shaggy creature Gurgi, and the stalwart dwarf warrior Doli.

Taran's adventures see him leading armies against the Death Lord, Arawn, meeting a trio of witches, attempting to rescue the kidnapped Eilonwy and finally struggling to come to terms with his own past. Eventually he proves his worth, both as a soldier and a man, and helps to defeat Arawn in pitched battle. After Arawn is defeated, most of Taran's companions decided to journey to the Summer Country where they will be granted eternal youth and happiness. Taran, however, makes the difficult decision to stay in Prydain and rebuild the land that was nearly destroyed by Arawn. Dalben warns Taran that he is giving up eternal happiness for a difficult life that might end without anyone ever acknowledging his efforts, but Taran remains steadfast in his decision. It is only after this that Dallben and Gwydion reveal to him that he has earned not only his honor, but also the title of High King of Prydain. Taran, it turns out, has fulfilled an old prophecy from The Book of Three which stated that someone of unknown birth would eventually rise up, defeat a serpent (Arawn, Death-Lord of Annuvin implied), choose a kingdom of sorrow over a kingdom of happiness, and thereby prove his worth as the next High King. Taran, the only survivor of a long-past battle, has done just that. With Eilonwy as his Queen, Taran assumes the throne and rules with justice and wisdom until the end of his days.

An aspect of all the trials that Taran must overcome in his life until he becomes High King is that he always has to "let something go". In the first book he must quit his own quest to save Hen Wen so that he can alert the Sons of Don; in the second book he has to let go of a magical brooch that granted him "wisdom" to have the Black Cauldron, and later he has to let go the honor of capturing the Black Cauldron so that he can transport it to be destroyed. In the third book he must give up Eilonwy, although only temporarily while she is fostered in a foreign royal court, and in the fourth book, he gives up his quest to learn of his parentage. In the last book there is a moment he has to choose between completing his mission and his search for Eilonwy; and there is his momentous decision of giving up eternal life in order to rebuild Prydain.

Adaptations

Film

References

  • Alexander, Lloyd (1964) The Book of Three
  • Alexander, Lloyd (1965) The Black Cauldron
  • Alexander, Lloyd (1966) The Castle of Llyr
  • Alexander, Lloyd (1967) Taran Wanderer
  • Alexander, Lloyd (1968) The High King

Sources

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