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Calormen
Calormen
from Wikipedia
Calormen
The Chronicles of Narnia location
Created byC. S. Lewis
GenreChildren's fantasy
In-universe information
Other nameCalormene Empire
TypeEmpire
Ruled byTisroc
Ethnic groupCalormenes
LocationNarnia (world)
LocationsTashbaan (capital)
CharactersRabadash, Aravis, Emeth
CurrencyCrescent

In C. S. Lewis's Chronicles of Narnia series of novels, Calormen (/kəˈlɔːrmən/) is a large country to the southeast of Narnia. Lewis probably derived its name from the Latin calor, meaning "heat".[1] When using the name as an adjective or an ethnonym, Lewis spelled the name with an 'e' at the end: a Calormene (/kəˈlɔːrmən/) soldier; "The Calormenes have dark faces and long beards."

Narnia and Calormen are separated by the country of Archenland and a large desert. In The Horse and His Boy, Calormen is described as being many times the size of its northern neighbours, and it is implied that its army is always either conquering more land or keeping down rebellions, in wars with which neither Narnia nor Archenland are involved. The border of the Calormene Empire extends from the Western Mountains to the Great Eastern Ocean. The Calormene capital is Tashbaan, a large walled city located on an island hill at the mouth of a river and close to the northern desert.

History

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The country of Calormen was first mentioned by Lewis in a passing reference in chapter 2 of Prince Caspian, though in the first edition it was spelt Kalormen. He first wrote about Calormene characters in the subsequent Voyage of the Dawn Treader, though neither of these is their first chronological appearance in the series. They are presented with the following words: "The Calormenes have dark faces and long beards. They wear flowing robes and orange-coloured turbans, and they are a wise, wealthy, courteous, cruel and ancient people". As narrated in that book, after the Telmarine kings cut Narnia off from the sea, the Lone Islands—though in theory remaining a Narnian possession—fell into the Calormene sphere of influence, becoming a major source of slaves for Calormen and adopting the Calormene Crescent as the islands' currency. After Caspian the Seafarer restored Narnian rule and abolished slavery in the islands, there was some apprehension of Calormen resorting to war to regain its influence there. The book's plot then moves away and it remains unknown whether such a war took place. However, Lewis later placed Calormen at the focus of The Horse and His Boy—set a thousand years earlier, at the time of High King Peter.

The origins of Calormen and the Calormenes are not made clear during the Chronicles. According to the Narnian timeline published by Walter Hooper, Calormen was founded by Archen outlaws, who traveled over the Great Desert to the south some 24 years after Archenland's founding. In an alternative theory, Calormen was founded by people accidentally crossing into Calormen from our world through a Middle Eastern portal (similar to the English wardrobe in The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe), which was subsequently lost or destroyed, preventing their return. The Calormenes speak a flowery version of the standard English favoured by both human and animal Narnians, which might support this argument; however, Jadis also speaks English. The reason for the ancient Arabian, Persian, Moorish, Mughal, and Ottoman Turkish aspects of Calormene culture, or the origin of their religion, was not satisfactorily explained, but stand in strong counterpoint to the largely European, Anglo and Greco-Roman (and Christian) aspects of Narnia and Archenland.

Throughout the times covered by the Chronicles of Narnia, Calormen and Narnia maintain an uneasy, albeit generally peaceable, coexistence. The Horse and His Boy and The Last Battle contain plot lines that focus on Calormen, while some of the other books have peripheral references. In The Horse and His Boy the main characters (one a young member of the Calormene nobility) escape from Calormen to Archenland and Narnia whilst the Calormene cavalry under Prince Rabadash attempts to invade Narnia and capture the Narnian Queen Susan for his bride. The rather small (200 horse) Calormene invasion force is rebuffed at the gates of the Kingdom of Archenland. In The Last Battle, there is a reference to King Erlian having fought a war with the Calormenes. King Tirian is—until the events narrated in the book—at peace with them, and some level of trade and travel exist between Narnia and Calormen. The Narnian King maintains a supply of Calormene armour and weapons for the purpose of conducting undercover operations in their country—suggesting a kind of cold war.

Calormenes are described as dark-skinned, with the men mostly bearded. Flowing robes, turbans and wooden shoes with an upturned point at the toe are common items of clothing, and the preferred weapon is the scimitar. Lavish palaces are present in the Calormene capital Tashbaan. The overall leitmotif of Calormene culture is portrayed as ornate to the point of ostentation. The people of Calormen are concerned with maintaining honour and precedent, often speaking in maxims and quoting their ancient poets. Veneration of elders and absolute deference to power are marks of Calormene society. Power and wealth determine class and social standing, and slavery is commonplace. The unit of currency is the Crescent. Narnians hold Calormenes in disdain for their treatment of animals and slaves. Conversely, Calormenes refer to the human inhabitants of Narnia as "barbarians". All of this appears quite consistent with the Osmanli Turkish Ottoman Empire (1299-1923), its known and purported splendor, rigid class structure, and the always-volatile relationship with many of its European neighbors.

The ruler of Calormen is called the Tisroc and is believed by the Calormene people to have descended in a direct line from the god Tash, whom the people worship in addition to other gods and goddesses. The illustrations of Tash, a vulture headed god, by Pauline Baynes appear to be inspired by Hindu as opposed to Islamic imagery, with multiple arms and a distinct resemblance to the ancient Indian deity Garuda. Calormenes always follow a mention of the Tisroc with the phrase "may he live forever". Ranking below the Tisroc are his sons (princes), a Grand Vizier, and the noble classes, who are addressed as Tarkaan (male) and Tarkheena (female). The nobility have a band of gold on their arm and their marriages are usually arranged at a young age. Beneath them are soldiers of the empire's vast army, merchants, and the peasantry, with slaves being the lowest rung on the social ladder. The Calormene leaders are portrayed as quite war-like, and the Tisrocs generally seem to have a wish to conquer the "barbarian" lands to their north - to some degree deterred, however, by the magical reputation of the countries, their various rulers and their being known to be under the protection of Aslan. Significantly, the final, successful invasion of Narnia by the Calormene military, which precipitates the end of the Narnian universe, was conducted in close cooperation with the appearance of the false Aslan and the proclamation that Aslan and Tash are one and the same.

Calormene social and political institutions are depicted as essentially unchanged between the time of The Horse and His Boy and The Last Battle—more than a thousand years, in which Narnia has profoundly changed several times. This is clearly an artifact of the order in which C. S. Lewis wrote and published the stories, with the two stories above and The Magician's Nephew which also references ancient Mesopotamian civilisation in its depiction of Queen Jadis and Charn, appearing last three of the seven.

When at the end of The Last Battle the characters cross into the Real Narnia and find there the counterparts of all the places they had known in the destroyed Narnia, there is a reference to a counterpart of Calormen being also there to its south, complete with the capital Tashbaan—presumably without the nastier aspects of Calormene culture, but this is not discussed in detail.

Tashbaan

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The capital of Calormen is the walled city of Tashbaan, situated on a river mouth located on the southern verge of the great desert dividing the empire from the northern states of Narnia and Archenland.

Tashbaan is described as one of the wonders of the world.[2] The city is a hot and crowded place, though with fine streets, magnificent palaces, and gardens. It is built on a natural slope, rising to the palace of the Tisroc and the great Temple of Tash at the pinnacle of the hill. The palace of the Tisroc is referred to as being magnificent beyond description and opens onto gardens that run right down to the river wall. Tashbaan is surrounded by a strong wall that rises out of the water and is reached by long bridges from both banks, providing the only place where crossing the great river of Calormen is possible for many miles. The banks of the river are lined with gardens and country houses. The Tombs of the Ancient Kings, believed by the Carlomenes to be haunted, lie directly across the river from Tashbaan, on the edge of the desert.[3]

Calormene Poetry

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The poetry of Calormen is prolix, sententious, and moralizing.[4] Quotations from Calormen poets are often quoted as proverbs. These include such as the following:[5]

Application to business
is the root of prosperity
but those who ask questions
that do not concern them
are steering the ship of folly
towards the rock of indigence.

Natural affection is stronger than soup
and offspring more precious than carbuncles.

He who attempts to deceive the judicious
is already baring his back for the scourge.

Swords can be kept off with shields
but the Eye of Wisdom pierces through every defence.

Deep draughts from the fountain of reason are desirable
in order to extinguish the fire of youthful love.

Calormenes disparage Narnian poetry, contending that it is all about things like love and war and not about useful maxims, but when the Calormen-raised Cor and Aravis first hear Narnian (or Cor's native Archenlandish) poetry they find it much more exciting. Calormen also prizes the art of story-telling, which, according to Lewis, forms part of the education of the nobility. The talking horse Bree, though not fond of most things Calormene, thoroughly enjoys a story told in Calormene style by Aravis. He also has the habit of rolling like inarticulate Calormene horses.

Concepts of freedom and slavery

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In The Horse and His Boy, Lewis uses the cultural settings of Narnia, Archenland, and Calormen to develop a theme of freedom in contrast to slavery.[6] Lewis depicts the Calormene culture as one in which a primary guiding principle is that the weak must make way for the strong:

For in Tashbaan there is only one traffic regulation, which is that everyone who is less important has to get out of the way for everyone who is more important; unless you want a cut from a whip or a punch from the butt end of a spear.[7]

He also reveals the motivation for Calormene attempts to invade Archenland and, ultimately, Narnia, as a refusal to abide the thought of free countries so close to the border of the Calormene empire, as illustrated by this speech given by the Tisroc:

"These little barbarian countries that call themselves free (which is as much to say, idle, disordered, and unprofitable) are hateful to the gods and to all persons of discernment."[8]

In contrast, the kings and queens of Narnia and Archenland, as rulers of free people, hold themselves responsible for the well-being of their subjects. As King Lune tells Shasta/Cor:

"For this is what it means to be a king: to be first in every desperate attack and last in every desperate retreat, and when there's hunger in the land (as must be now and then in bad years) to wear finer clothes and laugh louder over a scantier meal than any man in your land."[9]

Accusations of racism

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C. S. Lewis has been accused of racism, particularly in his depiction of the Calormenes. In the Companion to Narnia, the Catholic theologian Paul F. Ford wrote "C. S. Lewis was a man of his time and socioeconomic class. Like many English men of this era, Lewis was unconsciously but regrettably unsympathetic to things and people Middle Eastern. Thus he sometimes engages in exaggerated stereotyping in contrasting things Narnian and things Calormene. He intends this in a broadly comic way, almost vaudevillian. But in our post-September 11, 2001, world, he would, I am sure, want to reconsider this insensitivity."[10] Outspoken atheist critic and novelist Philip Pullman[11] has called the Chronicles of Narnia "blatantly racist"[12] and in an interview with The Observer, criticised the film adaptation of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe by saying the books contained "a peevish blend of racist, misogynistic, and reactionary prejudice".[13]

Calormenes live south of a desert, wear turbans and pointed shoes, their noblemen are called Tarkaans (similar to the medieval Central Asian title tarkhan), they are armed with scimitars, and their money is called "crescents".

Of Lewis, Kyrie O'Connor writes: "In his time, people thought it was amusing to make fun of other cultures. We don't. Read the stories, ask questions, and remember that the person who wrote this story was altogether too human."[14] Claims of racism can be seen as countered by Lewis's positive portrayal of two Calormenes and the lack of racism shown to them by Narnian nobility.[15] Lewis writes in The Last Battle that those who worship Tash and who are virtuous are in fact worshipping Aslan, and those who are immoral and who worship Aslan are in fact worshipping Tash:

I and [Tash] are of such different kinds that no service which is vile can be done to me, and none which is not vile can be done to him.[16]

In foreign languages

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In the Russian translation of the Narnia books, Calormen is known as "Tarkhistan" (Тархистан), as a reference to the Tarkaan nobles and its Turkish and Persian cultural influences.

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Calormen, formally the Calormene Empire, is a fictional empire in C. S. Lewis's series, portrayed as a vast, ancient realm situated far to the south of Narnia along a coastal creek of the sea, encompassing semi-arid landscapes and serving as a hub of hierarchical, slave-holding society under the rule of the Tisroc. The empire's capital, Tashbaan, stands as an opulent, bustling city of dusty streets, grand palaces, and teeming markets, reflecting a culture steeped in formal poetic discourse, curved swords, flowing robes, and devotion to the inexorable war-god Tash depicted with a vulture's head. In the series' narratives, particularly and , Calormen emerges as an expansionist power, launching military campaigns northward to conquer Archenland and Narnia, embodying themes of imperial ambition and rigid authoritarianism in contrast to Narnia's emphasis on and talking beasts. Its society features noble Tarkaans overseeing slaves and grand viziers, with everyday life marked by the scents of onions, , and spices, underscoring a stratified order where personal freedom is curtailed in favor of loyalty to the divine and the throne. While Lewis draws on amalgamated historical influences for Calormen's customs, modern academic critiques often frame its depiction through lenses of , though primary textual evidence prioritizes narrative contrasts in and over such interpretations.

Geography and Setting

Location and Physical Description

Calormen occupies a vast expanse south of the Great Desert, a formidable arid barrier that isolates it from the northern realms of Archenland and Narnia. This positioning underscores its role as a expansive , extending southward into undefined territories and eastward to the Bight of Calormen along the Great Eastern Ocean, forming a significant maritime frontier. The terrain predominantly features hot, dry plains and scrublands, reflective of its equatorial proximity within the Narnian world, with sparse vegetation adapted to aridity. Intermittent rivers, such as the River Calormen flowing westward to eastward just south of the , enable oases, irrigated farmlands, and pockets of lush vegetation, mitigating the otherwise harsh environment. This semi-arid character starkly contrasts the cooler, temperate forests and rivers of Narnia, emphasizing geographical and climatic divergence central to Lewis's narrative world-building. Pauline Baynes' 1972 map of Narnia and surrounding countries integrates Lewis's textual descriptions, positioning Calormen as a sprawling southern domain bounded westward by mountain ranges and featuring key passes, thereby visualizing the empire's scale relative to northern lands.

Tashbaan as Capital

Tashbaan, situated on an island formed by the bifurcation of a broad river at the northern edge of Calormen, served as the imperial capital and administrative center of the Tisroc's domain. The city encompassed a natural hill rising in terraced layers of densely packed buildings, enclosed by high walls punctuated with towers, which overlooked both the flowing river—facilitating maritime trade—and the adjacent great desert pass leading northward. This positioning enabled efficient oversight of commerce via riverine ports crowded with vessels from distant lands and controlled access to overland routes across the desert, underscoring its role in sustaining Calormen's expansive economic and expansionist ambitions. At the summit stood the grand palace of the Tisroc and the towering Temple of Tash, crowned by a silver-plated dome that caught the sunlight, symbolizing the fusion of autocratic rule and religious authority atop the urban sprawl. The city's labyrinthine layout featured narrow, zigzag streets and steep steps flanked by citrus trees, weaving through a mosaic of roof gardens, pillared colonnades, balconies, minarets, and battlements that created a visually imposing skyline. Lower districts teemed with porters, water-sellers, soldiers, beggars, and slaves amid pervasive odors of garlic, onions, refuse, and unwashed multitudes, reflecting a stratified society where deference to superiors dictated public movement. Nearer the palace, broader avenues boasted palm-shaded arcades, statues, and refined spectacles, hosting merchants, poets, and dignitaries from across known realms, which amplified Tashbaan's function as a nexus for diplomatic intrigue, lavish banquets, and cultural display under the Tisroc's patronage. As the pulsating heart of Calormene power, Tashbaan exemplified imperial grandeur laced with hierarchical rigidity, where public spaces reinforced the Tisroc's dominion through enforced protocols and the omnipresence of enforcers, while its riverine and desert-adjacent vantage sustained the flow of , slaves, and exotic goods essential to the realm's opulent yet coercive order. The city's relentless bustle—marked by dust, noise, and ceaseless human traffic—contrasted its external splendor, embodying the tensions of a engineered for control and spectacle rather than egalitarian vitality.

Government and Society

Political Hierarchy and Tisrocs

The political hierarchy of Calormen centers on the Tisroc, the hereditary emperor who wields absolute authority over the empire's vast territories. Addressed formally as "Tisroc (may he live forever)," the ruler commands unwavering obedience from subjects, nobles, and officials alike, with decisions , diplomacy, and internal affairs emanating directly from the imperial court in Tashbaan. This monarchical structure emphasizes divine legitimacy, as the Tisroc is regarded as favored or descended from Tash, the paramount deity whose inexorable will underpins imperial decrees and ambitions. Supporting the Tisroc are key figures such as the Grand Vizier, a high-ranking advisor who participates in confidential deliberations on state matters, and hereditary nobles titled Tarkaans, who function as provincial governors, estate holders, and administrative overseers. Tarkaans maintain feudal-like domains but remain subordinate to central edicts, forming a layered that executes the emperor's policies without independent veto power. Succession follows dynastic , passing to the eldest son upon the incumbent's death, as seen when Prince Rabadash ascended to become Tisroc after his father's passing, subsequently earning the epithet Rabadash the Peacemaker for his restrained rule. Governance mechanics reveal a penchant for calculated intrigue at the apex, where the Tisroc navigates court politics through indirect counsel and feigned acquiescence to princely schemes, ensuring long-term stability amid potential rivalries. This contrasts with Narnia's decentralized model, where monarchs rely more on personal from semi-autonomous lords rather than a rigidly bureaucratic apparatus centered in the capital.

Slavery and Hierarchical Order

In Calormene , slavery formed the base of a rigidly stratified , with slaves owned by nobles for domestic service, transportation, and laborious tasks essential to elite lifestyles. Slaves commonly carried litters for high-ranking Tarkheenas, as seen in Tashbaan where four bearers transported noblewomen through crowded streets, while upper slaves managed horses and other property under threat of severe punishment including beatings, burning, and prolonged deprivation. Ownership extended to attempting purchases of individuals like the boy Shasta, whose adoptive fisherman father valued his labor at fifteen crescents, highlighting slaves' role in fisheries and menial coastal work akin to bondage. The social structure ascended from slaves to free commoners, then to nobility comprising Tarkaans—great lords who commanded deference and held titles—and Tarkheenas, noblewomen of comparable status who wielded over inferiors. At the pinnacle stood the Tisroc, the eternal ruler invoked with "may he live forever," advised by viziers such as the Grand Vizier who knelt in obeisance during councils with princes like Rabadash. This pyramid enforced absolute deference, with Tarkaans like Anradin or Ahoshta exemplifying noble privilege in owning slaves and plotting imperial affairs. Commoners risked enslavement for offenses, while captives from conflicts or trades bolstered the slave class, as Calormenes imported from regions like the Lone Islands to meet demands. Manumission appears exceedingly rare in depictions, with prolonged servitude eroding slaves' autonomy, as noted in accounts of those who, upon release, struggled with initiative due to habitual subjugation. Harsh maintained order, such as flogging a household slave for her mistress's deception, underscoring slaves' expendability in upholding hierarchical stability. Economically, slave labor underpinned noble opulence and imperial sustenance, enabling Tarkaans' wealth accumulation through and without explicit free labor alternatives detailed, thus facilitating Calormen's expansive domain from arid coasts to inland estates. This system paralleled historical empires reliant on coerced work for and , though Lewis portrays it as normative without direct moral evaluation in structural terms.

Customs and Daily Life

Calormenes dressed in elaborate, class-distinctive attire, with common men wearing long robes, turbans, beards, and wooden shoes turned up at the toes, while nobles and Tarkaans donned silken turbans—often feathered or jeweled—with , curving scimitars, brass-studded shields, and lances. Elite males like Prince Rabadash carried ivory-sheathed scimitars alongside their turbans. Daily routines in cities such as Tashbaan centered on vibrant markets teeming with water-sellers, sweetmeat vendors, porters, soldiers, and beggars, alongside the use of litters borne by slaves for transport and the herding of donkeys by peasants. Public baths held cultural prominence, with luxurious facilities available for cleansing and social refreshment. formed a structured social tradition, formally taught and employed in narrative exchanges among individuals. Hospitality customs required hosts to provide shelter and sustenance to travelers, as demonstrated when a offered to an arriving Tarkaan despite limited means. Feasts featured opulent dishes including lobsters, salads, stuffed with almonds and truffles, melons, and wine, served amid gatherings in urban settings. Among the elite, marriages were arranged by families, as in the case of noblewomen betrothed to older Tarkaans for political or economic gain, with harems maintained in noble households featuring female attendants. Women adhered to veiling and subordinate roles in society, yet displayed agency in exceptional circumstances, such as Aravis's flight from an imposed union to the elderly Ahoshta Tarkaan, executed by disguising herself and traveling independently.

Religion and Culture

Worship of Tashbaan

In Calormen, the worship of Tash, the chief deity among a polytheistic pantheon, centers on rituals invoking dominion, war, and inexorable fate, with Tash depicted as a vulture-headed, four-armed harbinger of death whose statues adorn temples throughout the empire. Calormenes frequently invoke Tash in oaths and exclamations such as "Tash the inexorable" or "Tash preserve us," reflecting a that emphasizes fear and submission to his cruel authority. Temples dedicated to Tash exist in every major city, including the grand silver-roofed structure at the pinnacle of Tashbaan, the capital named in his honor, where idols and altars facilitate communal and elite rituals. Practices include ritual human sacrifices, portrayed as feeding Tash's demand for blood from his people, particularly in times of extreme devotion or crisis, underscoring the religion's association with violence and hierarchical control. Priests and ruling Tisrocs, who claim descent from Tash, wield influence over policy by interpreting his will, integrating religious authority with imperial expansionism. During the events depicted in , Calormene leaders under Rishda Tarkaan attempted by proclaiming "Tashlan," a fabricated union of Tash with , the lion-god of Narnia, to deceive followers into and conquest under false prophecy. This contrasts sharply with Aslan's monotheistic sovereignty, as Tash manifests as a real demonic entity—skeletal and terrifying—rather than a mere idol, highlighting the narrative's portrayal of Tash worship as idolatrous submission to a malevolent force opposed to truth and freedom.

Poetry, Literature, and Arts

Calormene poetry is depicted as verbose and hyperbolic, often extolling themes of beauty, love, imperial glory, and moral maxims through elaborate rhetoric. C.S. Lewis portrays it as prolix and sententious, filled with "choice apophthegms and useful maxims" recited in courts to affirm hierarchical virtues and the Tisroc's supremacy, serving as a tool for cultural and propagandistic reinforcement. This style contrasts with Narnia's plainer expressions, emphasizing rhetorical flourish over simplicity, as seen in verses praising natural motifs like roses and nightingales to evoke sensual splendor amid the empire's opulence. Literature in Calormen centers on as a esteemed , taught from childhood akin to formal in essay composition elsewhere, prioritizing captivating narratives—true or fabricated—over grammatical precision or factual fidelity. Such tales, disseminated orally and in tomes, glorify conquests, Tisrocs, and Tash's favor, embedding imperial within epic sagas of battlefield heroism and divine mandate, thereby sustaining societal order and expansionist zeal. Visual and architectural arts integrate literary elements, with grand palaces and monuments adorned in motifs echoing poetic —ornate carvings of gods, heroes, and floral emblems that propagandize Calormene supremacy through aesthetic excess. These forms underscore a cultural in craftsmanship, where artifice amplifies the empire's self-image, though Lewis implies an underlying decadence in their ornate detachment from moral candor.

Philosophical Concepts Including Freedom

In the portrayal of Calormene thought within C.S. Lewis's Chronicles of Narnia, liberty is conceptualized not as an inherent good but as a potential disruptor of cosmic and social harmony, especially when extended to those deemed unfit by hierarchical standards. Obedience to the divine will of Tash and the earthly authority of the Tisroc is presented as the pathway to true fulfillment and stability, where individual desires yield to the greater order of creation. This perspective frames submission as liberating the soul from the chaos of self-will, aligning personal purpose with the inexorable structure of power and fate. A central exemplar appears in The Last Battle, through the Calormene warrior Emeth, whose lifelong devotion to Tash embodies rigorous adherence to perceived moral duty over personal autonomy. Emeth recounts serving Tash "all my days, believing him to be the lord of the world," driven by a quest for truth that prioritizes dutiful obedience above independent inquiry or rebellion against established norms. Aslan validates this integrity, stating, "All the service thou hast done to Tash is accepted as service done to me," underscoring that authentic submission to an ultimate authority—regardless of its nominal object—attains transcendent purpose, whereas unchecked freedom risks moral aimlessness. This hierarchical implies a causal mechanism for societal endurance: by constraining liberty among inferiors, Calormen averts the anarchy that arises when base impulses override disciplined roles, thereby sustaining long-term prosperity under elite guidance. Lewis depicts this as a foil to Narnian , where Calormene stability derives from enforced rather than voluntary , critiquing liberty's perils through the lens of ordered despotism's apparent efficacy. Such views echo broader reflections that genuine consists in alignment with objective good, not to pursue whims, positioning Calormene resignation as a distorted echo of virtuous restraint.

Military Organization

Structure of the Army and Tarkaan

The Calormene maintained a professional standing force designed for sustained , drawing from a large population to emphasize numerical superiority and rigid discipline over individual initiative. Commanded by tarkaans—hereditary noble lords who functioned as field officers and regional governors—the mirrored Calormen's stratified , with flowing upward from conscripted slaves and peasants to the Tisroc. Tarkaans typically led personal contingents of 50 to 100 mounted warriors or , scalable to larger host units through alliances among nobles, rewarding valor with land, slaves, or elevated status to incentivize expansion. Infantry formed the core, organized into disciplined phalanxes armed with curved scimitars for close combat, composite bows for ranged volleys, and shields for formation defense; these troops, often slaves or lowborn levies, prioritized massed charges and barrages to overwhelm foes. units, mounted on sturdy desert-bred , provided mobility for flanking maneuvers, while chariots—drawn by pairs of and crewed by archer-driver teams—served as shock weapons in open terrain, though less emphasized than in earlier eras. War elephants, equipped with howdahs carrying archers or commanders, added psychological terror and trampling power against unarmored lines, though their maintenance demanded significant logistical support from the empire's resources. This structure fostered a culture of hierarchical obedience, where tarkaans enforced drills and punishments to maintain cohesion, enabling coordinated advances across vast distances but vulnerable to disruption of command chains or unsuited to heavy elements like . Rewards for battlefield success reinforced the system's expansionist , with captured territories supplying fresh slaves to replenish ranks and fund further campaigns.

Expansionist Campaigns

Calormen's imperial doctrine emphasized territorial expansion southward into desert fringes and northward toward temperate borderlands, driven by the need for additional resources, cultivable land, and enhanced prestige for the Tisroc. The empire's vast extent, encompassing arid southern wastes to the urban centers of Tashbaan, reflected centuries of such campaigns, which consolidated control over diverse terrains and populations. This growth was underpinned by economic imperatives, including the extraction of and expansion of the slave economy to fuel military endeavors and administrative apparatus. The Tisroc justified northward ambitions ideologically, decrying the persistence of independent realms like Narnia as an existential irritation that overshadowed his rule, and strategically as gateways to further dominion. was portrayed as fulfilling a divine imperative under Tash, with rulers invoking the deity's "inexorable" strength for martial success, framing subjugation of "barbarian" freedoms as harmonious with cosmic order. Campaign strategies integrated brute force with cunning, employing massed and for decisive assaults, prolonged sieges to break resistant strongholds, and opportunistic alliances—such as proposed royal marriages—to soften targets prior to . Terror tactics, including the intimidation of populations through displays of overwhelming might, complemented these approaches, deterring and accelerating surrenders in newly acquired provinces.

Role in the Narnian Chronicles

Events in The Horse and His Boy

In The Horse and His Boy, Calormen serves as the primary antagonistic empire, with its internal hierarchies and expansionist ambitions driving the central conflict. The narrative opens with Shasta, a fisherman's adopted son in a remote Calormene village, fleeing northward on Bree, a captured Narnian treated as a mere beast of burden under Calormene customs that deny agency to talking animals. Concurrently, , a noblewoman's daughter from the Calormene , escapes an to the elderly Tarkaan Ahoshta, imposed after her stepmother's scheme to relegate her to ; Aravis had previously ordered the beating of her slave girl for minor disobedience, reflecting the empire's stratified social order where slaves face routine . Aravis rides Hwin, another Narnian enslaved similarly to Bree, after the mare dissuades her from following the slave's death. The fugitives converge near Tashbaan, Calormen's opulent capital, where Shasta and Bree enter the gates amid scenes of imperial grandeur, including the Tisroc's vast palace with its columned courts and the ominous Temple of Tash adorned with bird-headed idols. Tashbaan bustles with slaves bearing litters for veiled noblewomen, poets reciting verses in praise of the Tisroc, and merchants trading spices and silks, underscoring the empire's wealth derived from conquest and tribute, yet juxtaposed with underlying cruelty, such as the casual whipping of draft animals and humans alike. Aravis, concealed in the opulent home of her friend Lasaraleen Tarkheena—a chattering aristocrat focused on fashions and gossip—overhears a pivotal council between the Tisroc and his eldest son, Prince Rabadash. Rabadash, inflamed by rejection from Queen Susan of Narnia during her visit to Tashbaan, urges an immediate invasion to seize her and conquer the northern realms, proposing to exploit a temporary peace by posing as a diplomatic envoy to Cair Paravel before striking Archenland's unguarded southern border at Anvard. The Tisroc, feigning reluctance while secretly approving, assents to mobilizing 200 calvary and 4,000 foot soldiers under Rabadash's command, framing the assault as a swift, opportunistic raid to preempt any northern alliance. Alerted to the plot, reunites with Shasta and the horses, and the group flees Tashbaan across the desert, pursued by a (later revealed as providential) and Rabadash's . Rabadash's forces, comprising Tarkaan-led warriors on swift horses and armed with curved swords and bows, launch a surprise dawn assault on Anvard, scaling cliffs and breaching outer defenses in an attempt to capture Lune and secure a foothold for further northern incursions. The invasion falters due to Archenland's timely fortifications, reinforcements from Narnia's Edmund and Queen Lucy arriving via ship, and Shasta's inadvertent warning role as he is mistaken for the Archenland prince. Rabadash, in rash pursuit, leaps prematurely from a wall and is incapacitated, leading to the rout of Calormene troops who retreat southward amid heavy losses, marking a humiliating check to the empire's ambitions.

Involvement in The Last Battle

In The Last Battle, Calormene forces launch a decisive of Narnia, exploiting internal divisions sown by the ape Shift's of impersonating to demand obedience from the Talking Beasts. Led by the tarkaan Rishda, who conspires with Shift to fabricate the hybrid deity "Tashlan"—a fusion of the Calormene god Tash and the Narnian lion —the invaders justify their aggression as fulfillment of divine prophecy, tricking many Narnians into passivity or collaboration. This ruse allows Calormen to rapidly overrun defenses, capturing the stable at Lantern Waste as a symbolic seat of false authority and seizing Cair Paravel, Narnia's royal seat, thereby establishing across the realm. The Calormene army, organized in disciplined ranks of , , and war elephants, engages in brutal suppression of resistance, with Rishda directing operations to consolidate gains while concealing the deception from his own troops by attributing successes to Tash's favor. King and a small band of loyalists, including remnants of the Old Narnians, mount guerrilla counterattacks, but the invaders' numerical superiority—bolstered by coerced Narnian labor and the cult's —initially prevails, leading to widespread enslavement and of Narnian lands. , a Calormene under Rishda known for his unwavering devotion to Tash and strict adherence to warrior honor, participates in these campaigns, viewing the conquest as a sacred duty against "demons" like the free Talking Animals. As the conflict escalates, the Tashlan fraud collapses when true appears, summoning Tash to devour Shift and exposing Rishda's treachery; the tarkaan flees into the , where he meets a genuine Tash and meets his end in terror. Calormene forces face annihilation in the ensuing apocalyptic battle, with 's judgment separating the faithful from deceivers, faithful Narnians entering a renewed eternal realm while unrepentant invaders, including most Calormenes, are cast into as the old world dissolves in fire. , entering the in pursuit of truth and expecting Tash, instead encounters , who affirms that the captain's sincere pursuit of goodness—despite worshiping the wrong deity—was reckoned as service to the true , granting him entry to 's ; this outcome illustrates Lewis's of grace recognizing innate amid cultural , distinct from collective Calormene .

Broader Historical Context

Calormen's origins lie in the centuries immediately following Aslan's creation of Narnia, when human outlaws from the newly established kingdom of Archenland fled southward across the great desert, founding a theocratic under a Tisroc who instituted the worship of Tash as its central deity. This migration, occurring around the 2nd century after Narnia's founding, marked the inception of a society distinct from northern human settlements, with early settlers adapting to the arid southern landscapes to establish the ancient city of Tashbaan as their capital. The empire's development proceeded gradually over hundreds of years, characterized by incremental territorial consolidation through military campaigns, administrative centralization, and cultural entrenchment of hierarchical norms under successive Tisrocs, who ruled as semi-divine figures embodying Tash's will. By the Narnian time, Calormen had achieved significant expansion, extending influence westward to colonize regions like Telmar and solidifying its identity as a sprawling dominion with a storied lineage of rulers predating later figures such as the unnamed Tisroc of the mid-11th century. Relations with Archenland evolved into a pattern of uneasy proximity, wherein Calormen exerted pressure through border skirmishes and diplomatic overtures, effectively positioning the smaller realm as a contested rather than a formal , though repeated expansionist designs underscored persistent subjugation ambitions. Culminating in the eschatological unraveling of the Narnian world in 2555 years after creation, Calormen's imperial framework dissolved amid Aslan's final , which eradicated the old order—including its armies and hierarchies—in a cataclysmic renewal that paralleled earlier divine interventions, affirming a cyclical of rise, , and redemptive destruction inherent to the world's metaphysical structure. In the ensuing true Narnia, devoid of partitioned empires or idol-worshipping tyrannies, individual souls from Calormen faced personal reckoning, with the realm's collective edifice consigned to oblivion as part of the broader unmaking.

Literary Analysis

Real-World Inspirations

Calormen's depiction incorporates elements from the , particularly in its imperial administration, military hierarchy, and urban grandeur. The capital Tashbaan, with its 365 streets radiating from a central temple complex, evokes the structured layout of Ottoman , including domed palaces and minarets that Lewis associated with Eastern despotism through historical texts like Edward Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the , which detailed Byzantine-Ottoman interactions. Tarkaan lords, elite commanders bearing curved scimitars and overseeing slave armies, parallel Ottoman pashas and their forces, reflecting the empire's expansionist campaigns across and the from the 14th to 19th centuries. Additional influences stem from Persian and ancient Near Eastern cultures, evident in Calormene attire such as turbans, flowing robes, and wooden worn by viziers, which mirror Sassanid Persian nobility and Achaemenid administrative styles documented in Herodotus's Histories. The emphasis on under Tisroc rulers, coupled with practices like harems and ritual to Tash, draws from accounts of Persian satrapies and Carthaginian (Phoenician-derived) customs in classical sources, blending with exotic opulence to contrast Narnia's feudal freedoms. Lewis, steeped in such histories as an classicist, composite these without intending strict historical mapping, as he noted in essays like "On Stories" that fantasy synthesizes real cultural motifs for imaginative ends rather than didactic allegory. The Calormenes' ornate, proverbial speech and narrative flourishes also reflect , a collection Lewis admired for its Eastern fairy-tale structure, incorporating viziers, genies, and moralistic tales into Calormen's worldview of fatalism and hierarchy. This literary influence, prevalent in 19th- and early 20th-century British editions, informed the empire's portrayal as a stagnant foil to Narnia's vitality, aligning with Edwardian Orientalist views of post-Ottoman decline amid World War I's collapse of caliphates in 1918 and the Turkish Republic's founding in 1923. Travelogues by explorers like , which Lewis encountered in his voracious reading, further shaped sensory details such as spicy cuisine and intrigue, grounding the fiction in empirical observations of Near Eastern societies without endorsing modern .

Theological and Moral Symbolism

Calormen's centers on the of , depicted as an inexorable, skeletal embodying cruelty, , and unyielding demand, standing in stark to Aslan's embodiment of sacrificial and grace. This portrayal underscores Lewis's view of pagan as a system of rigid and legalistic that fosters rather than liberation, as evidenced by Calormene practices including and the institutionalization of under divine sanction. The Tisroc's court s and poetic invocations to Tash prioritize hierarchical submission and conquest, reflecting a causal link between false gods demanding absolute without mercy and the resulting tyrannical social order, where moral worth is measured by utility to the state rather than inherent dignity. In , the false syncretism of "Tashlan"—merging Tash and —exemplifies how idolatrous compromise corrupts truth, yielding moral confusion, exploitative alliances, and intensified enslavement, as false inevitably bears fruit in ethical decay absent grace's transformative power. Lewis illustrates through Calormen's expansionist ethos, where rejection of the true divine order manifests in dehumanizing conquests and caste rigidity, positing that societies divorced from transcendent goodness devolve into predation justified as fate. The character , a devout Calormene officer whose honorable service to Tash stems from a sincere pursuit of and , receives Aslan's acceptance upon , revealing that authentic striving aligns with divine regardless of cultural , thus affirming objective truth over relativistic equivalence of faiths. This exception—framed as akin to or rare virtuous —rejects cultural determinism, emphasizing that goodness, though imperfectly apprehended, originates from and returns to the true , while insincere under false gods leads to perdition. Lewis thereby critiques any notion that systems are interchangeable, grounding salvation in heart-aligned truth rather than doctrinal alone.

World-Building Achievements

Calormen's world-building excels in crafting a vivid, self-contained society through sensory and architectural details that evoke grandeur and livability. The capital Tashbaan is portrayed as "one of the ," featuring orange and lemon trees, roof-gardens, balconies, deep archways, pillared colonnades, spires, battlements, minarets, and pinnacles, which immerse readers in a bustling, opulent environment of terraced buildings, fountains, and crowded streets filled with vendors and nobles in litters. These elements, combined with daily life sensory cues like the scents of , refuse, and scented oils, alongside sounds of horns and , create a tangible allure that contrasts with underlying rigidities, allowing readers to appreciate the society's appeal on its own terms. A coherent hierarchical structure underpins this immersion, with nobles as Tarkaans and Tarkheenas, an emperor titled the Tisroc, and customs including , arranged marriages, and rituals like walking backwards before royalty or invoking prosperity maxims such as "Application to is the of ." These practices logically shape character motivations, enabling empathy for individuals like noble daughters resisting betrothals to viziers, as the social framework provides credible internal tensions without reducing the culture to . Formal , delivered in elaborate apophthegms and taught narrative styles, further textures the society, reflecting a valued intellectual tradition that integrates with courtly life and proverbs. Geographical realism bolsters consistency, as the vast desert acts as a natural barrier limiting Calormen's expansion northward, causally explaining sporadic rather than constant incursions into neighboring realms and tying environmental factors to historical dynamics. Religious elements, centered on deities like Tash with vulture-headed iconography and rituals invoking divine favor for conquest, link belief to societal expansionism and obedience, forging causal chains that enhance narrative depth without caricature. This integration contributes to Narnia's overall texture, presenting Calormen as a foil whose internal logic amplifies the series' exploration of contrasting civilizations.

Reception and Interpretations

Initial and Scholarly Reception

Upon its publication in , The Horse and His Boy expanded the Narnian world with Calormen, an empire depicted through vivid, culturally distinct elements that reviewers integrated into praises of Lewis's imaginative scope for young readers. Scholarly analyses have since emphasized Calormen's role in Lewis's mythopoetic construction, serving as a deliberate contrast to Narnia's of liberty and divine order. In examinations of the series' world-building, Calormen functions as an imperial foil, embodying conquest, , and rigid against Narnia's monarchic harmony and monotheistic undertones. Andrew Howe's study describes the Calormenes as a "sinister and conquest-driven " that underscores threats to Narnian freedom, aligning with thematic use of opposing societies to illuminate and theological principles. This binary, rooted in broader myth-making, has garnered appreciation in fantasy for enriching cultural depth and causal realism in narrative contrasts. Long-term academic reception values Calormen's invention for enabling explorations of providence and identity, as seen in Shasta's journey from its domains to Narnia, without which the series' ethical foils would lack such tangible otherness.

Controversies on Cultural Portrayal

Critics have accused C.S. depiction of Calormen of and , arguing that its portrayal of a polytheistic, slave-holding with Middle Eastern-inspired —such as turbans, curved swords, and dark-skinned inhabitants—stereotypes Eastern cultures as inherently cruel and despotic, contrasting them unfavorably with the heroic, European-like Narnians. Such claims often frame Calormene traits like to Tash and imperial expansionism as veiled attacks on non-Western peoples, projecting modern racial sensitivities onto Lewis's mid-20th-century text. Defenders counter that Lewis's focus is ideological, targeting the causal consequences of and tyranny rather than or skin color, as evidenced by positive Calormene attributes including poetic sophistication, codes of honor, and extended to strangers. The character of in exemplifies this non-racial approach: a devout Calormene loyal to Tash is ultimately accepted by not for but for his sincere pursuit of truth and moral integrity, underscoring Lewis's theological view that virtue transcends national or ethnic boundaries and rejecting deterministic racial hierarchies. Lewis drew Calormen's societal features—, eunuchs, and stratified hierarchies—from historical empires like the Persian, Assyrian, and Ottoman, which empirically practiced such systems, including ritual sacrifices akin to Tash's demands, reflecting a realist portrayal of how polytheistic worldviews historically enabled moral abuses rather than fabricating ethnic villains. These accusations frequently overlook Lewis's explicit critiques of elsewhere in the series, where Narnian characters exhibit only as a flaw to be condemned, and impose anachronistic lenses that prioritize cultural equivalence over causal analysis of belief systems' effects on behavior. Scholarly and media critiques advancing orientalist charges often originate from institutions exhibiting systemic left-leaning biases, which undervalue theological motivations and historical precedents in favor of relativist interpretations that conflate depiction with endorsement. Lewis's letters and essays reveal no intent to demonize races but to allegorize the spiritual bankruptcy of , a theme rooted in his where moral outcomes stem from worship's object, not geography or appearance.

Adaptations and Contemporary Discussions

The BBC's 1988–1990 television miniseries adaptations of omitted , prioritizing The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, Prince Caspian, The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, and due to production constraints and focus on core narratives involving the Pevensie children. Similarly, Walden Media's live-action film trilogy (2005–2010), directed by and , covered only the first three published volumes, excluding Calormen entirely as it centered on Narnian-centric plots without the southern empire's invasion elements from . Radio dramatizations have featured Calormen more directly, including 4's 1994 full-cast production of , which depicted the slave markets and Tarkaan nobility, and Focus on the Family's 2000 audio theatre version emphasizing the cultural clashes. Stage adaptations, such as those by and Patrick Robbin, have occasionally included excerpts but remain limited in scope and production. As of October 2025, Netflix's rebooted franchise, directed by with an initial release planned for 2026, begins production without confirmed inclusion of Calormen-specific stories, reportedly starting with or a restructured chronology rather than publication order. Producer plans outline an eight-film series potentially extending into the 2040s, leaving room for later adaptations of or , where Calormen's militaristic expansionism plays a pivotal role. Contemporary discussions among fans and cultural commentators highlight apprehensions over fidelity to portrayal of Calormen as a hierarchical, slave-dependent society contrasting Narnia's freedoms, fearing alterations for modern sensibilities that could soften its critique of and . Figures like have urged the C.S. Lewis estate to intervene against perceived "woke" revisions, citing risks such as gender-swapped roles or diluted moral binaries that undermine the original's allegorical intent. Post-2020 analyses balance calls for inclusivity with defenses of causal depictions—rooted in historical inspirations like Ottoman and Persian empires—insisting adaptations preserve the integrity of cultural and ethical oppositions without sanitization. These debates underscore a broader push for source-accurate renderings amid industry trends toward revisionism.

References

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