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Inheritance Cycle
(aka: The Inheritance Cycle)

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Main Characters

    Eragon 
The central protagonist, whose story illuminates the world.

Eragon is a humble farmboy who stumbles across a dragon egg in the second chapter of the first book. When it hatches for him, he becomes the first new Dragon Rider in a century, and the best hope for overthrowing the evil King Galbatorix, who unfortunately retaliates by sending assassins who kill his uncle and burn down his home. From that time on, Eragon becomes a sworn enemy of the Empire, devoted to overthrowing it both to protect his family and liberate the races of Alagaesia.

While the character is openly a bit of a riff on older, more popular works, both his world and he himself are interesting enough to stand out. Readers experience the world primarily through his eyes, and through them explore themes of power, responsibility, and the reality of things like selective magical power and immortality. While he's not perfect - he's prone to Heroic Self-Deprecation and flights of fancy you'd expect from a kid his age - he ultimately proves dedicated to protecting his dragon, keeping his oaths, and fulfilling his potential to be the best of what the Dragon Riders once were.


  • Adaptation Dye-Job: In the books, Eragon has brown hair and eyes. In the film, he has blond hair and blue eyes.
  • Age Lift: He starts out fifteen in the book, but is seventeen in the film.
  • All-Loving Hero: Besides the Ra'zac and Galbatorix, he bears no genuine hate towards anyone and loves being friends with people. His community likes him, the other races like him, Saphira loves him, and the biggest problem he has is guilting himself over things he can't control.
  • Ancestral Weapon: Averted. He initially believes Zar'roc is one when he learns that his mother was Morzan's wife, but it turns out Brom is his father instead. He briefly expresses interest in acquiring Brom's Rider sword for his own, but he's informed that it was lost during the War and is either buried on some forgotten battlefield or in Galbatorix's treasury as a spoil of war.
  • Audience Surrogate: As the primary POV character, and one who's grown up in an isolated town with little education, he often needs concepts or places explained to him, allowing the reader to be filled in as well.
  • Bash Brothers: Forms this with Saphira, Murtagh, Arya, Orik, and anyone else in his orbit.
  • Blue Is Heroic: He tends to be associated with the color blue; his dragon has blue scales and he later gets a blue sword that bursts into blue flames. In general, the color of a rider's magic will reflect the color of their dragon.
  • Bond Creatures: Forms this with Saphira after touching her after she hatched, as all dragon riders do. He gains her capacity for magic and mind-reading, and the two form a strong mental link that leaves them bonded emotionally and spiritually for life. From then on, the two are always assumed to be together, and are only separated when one of them is captured, they're undertaking a battle plan, or on rare occasions needed in separate locations, which they always hate. The two deeply love each other and are mainly motivated by the thought of what will happen to them if they're taken by the enemy.
  • Bow and Sword in Accord: He's a confident archer for hunting or combat, and becomes a skilled swordsman over the course of the first book. His bow gets broken in the second book, but he gets another one later from the queen of the elves, which works very well.
  • A Boy and His X: A Boy and His Dragon.
  • Cain and Abel: His relationship with Murtagh.
  • Conspicuous Gloves: While traveling incognito in the earlier books, he wears a set of gloves to hide the gedwëy ignasia on his palm.
  • Cool Sword: He starts out with Zar'roc, a Dragon Rider's longsword with a blood-red blade that as part of the package is forged from indestructible metal, will never dull, and can cut through most forms of magical enchantments. He loses it at the end of Eldest to Murtagh, who claims it as his own inheritance since it was his father's sword and he is a Dragon Rider himself now, and spends a good chunk of Brisingr having to make do with otherwise "normal" swords like a well-made falchion, though he ends up breaking them. By the third act of the book, he forges his own blue Rider sword, Brisingr, with all the same properties as Zar'roc plus the handy ability to ignite on command.
  • Dragon Rider: He is the first of a new generation after Galbatorix tried to wipe out all the others.
  • Fantastic Racism: He struggles with hating Urgals - the equivalent of orcs in this world - as most humans in his community do. However, he grows out of it by the third book.
  • Farm Boy: He starts out working on his uncle's farm.
  • Flaming Sword: Has a knack for doing this starting in the first book, where he ignites Zar'roc with flames before stabbing Durza through the heart. His proper Rider sword Brisingr can do this on command simply by speaking its name.
  • Healing Hands: Ends up employed as a healer whenever he's amongst humans after the first book. He mentions reading extensively about how to do it well, and from the third book on frequently takes time to do healing work for war injuries and illnesses. While such scenes aren't typically described in detail, he always describes them as very satisfying.
  • Heroic Ambidexterity: After breaking his wrist in the first book, he trains to fight with his left instead and gets very competent.
  • Heroic Bastard: At first, and a major source of angst early on, feeling discarded by his mother and not entirely embraced by his uncle.
  • Heroic Self-Deprecation: While not an especially depressed person, he's still a sensitive young man going through a lot and having a lot expected of him, and is prone to blaming himself (or letting himself be blamed) for things that aren't necessarily his fault, and can even be reliably controlled by invoking alleged guilt on him, as Nasuada, Roran, and Elva all do at various times.
  • Honor Before Reason: As soon as he reaches rebel forces, every interest possible starts trying to make him swear oaths of loyalty to them, and he ends up bonded to the Varden, the dwarves, and the elves to various extents, and trying to navigate them all without proving false.
  • Hollywood Atheist: His internal monologue in the first book shows him to be already resistant to the notion of gods based primarily on how much suffering the Empire inflicts on its citizens. When he starts training with the atheistic elves it solidifies into a worldview. His opinions on the issue are largely intractable even as he becomes more broad-minded in other respects, though unlike Arya he doesn't pick fights with the Dwarves over it.
  • Humble Hero: Being raised on a farm by his straightforward aunt and uncle gives him a strong sense of community and hard work that prevents him from having a big head. While he has opportunities to flex his power and near-endless lists of people trying to flatter him hard, he generally maintains a respectful and helpful demeanor to everyone. He also realizes he has to stay humble just to keep Saphira from becoming unbearable.
  • Idiot Hero: He's sharp about what he needs to know, but has occasional lapses in judgement. On one occasion, after seeing many examples of elf self-modification, he sees his friend Arya from across the room in disguise as a human, and thinks about how crazy it is that this random woman looks so much like her.
  • Instant Expert: In less than a year, he masters sword-fighting, learns how to read, and becomes fluent in the Ancient Language. While it's not as difficult as some may claim he is explicitly noted to be an abnormally fast learner. Saphira's youth probably helps, as while Eragon's mind is past that kind of developmental stage, hers is well-suited to gleaning new information and actively supplementing Eragon's learning. However, it's subverted in that it's explicitly shown to be nowhere near enough to match any experienced Rider or elf, and inferior to learning over decades like he normally should have been doing.
  • Jumping Off the Slippery Slope: Worries about this, since his power is so singular. In general, though, he's good at avoiding it, if only because he needs to stay stable to keep Saphira in check.
  • Living Forever Is Awesome: This becomes a vague plot point in Brisingr, when Eragon realizes he has become immortal. Instead of angsting about it, he decides to look for a wife among the elves because they are all immortal. Good thing he's already head over heels for Arya.
  • Living MacGuffin: Being the first new dragon rider means that whichever side gets him has the power to dominate all the others, and it's made even worse when it's revealed his is the last female dragon, meaning the entire future of the race rests on her. From the time Saphira hatches, he's essentially on a deadline to either kill Galbatorix or become his thrall.
  • Magic Knight: All riders can automatically use magic, and most were trained as warriors. Since he's growing up during wartime and all alone, he's immediately trained extensively in both, and by the end of the first book can navigate a battlefield with a lot of confidence.
  • Manly Tears: Frequently, especially in the first book. Since he's usually losing loved ones to violence, it's understandable.
  • Master Swordsman: Zig-zagged throughout the series. In the first book he gets tutored by the master Brom, and ends up good enough that regular mooks or even elite mooks are no issue, but heavyweights like Durza still beat him easily. In the second book he trains heavily with skilled elven swordsman and gets very good, possibly enough that he could give Durza real trouble. But in the final book, he spars with the true elite of the elves, which are probably at Durza-level... and loses nine times out of ten. A chapter is dedicated to him pondering this during training, and ultimately deciding he still has years more of training if he wants to truly get as good as he can.
  • Meaningful Name: He shares his name with the first Dragon Rider, which Brom says can't be a coincidence. Eragon is the first of the new Dragon Riders. His name is also one letter off from "dragon", which Christopher Paolini stated was how he came up with the name.
  • Named After Somebody Famous: After the first Eragon, who was the first Dragon Rider. In the second book he gets to see a rendering of him made by the dwarves, which he posed for personally.
  • Never Learned to Read: He and Roran were never taught to read as children; Garrow knew how to read but didn't think teaching them was worth it. This ends up temporarily forcing Brom to stall his plans in Tierm so he can teach Eragon to read himself.
  • Parental Abandonment: Eragon lost his mother Selena after she gave birth to him. He didn't know who his father was, as she died without telling anyone.
  • Playing with Fire: Has a fondness for fire magic, as it both looks very cool and is frequently good for combat. His first spell is setting his arrow on magical fire, he sets his sword on fire on occasion, and he's fond of light spells that take the form of magical fire. Fitting for a dragon rider.
  • Power-Strain Blackout: He blacks out when he first casts magic without understanding its energy demands. While it doesn't happen again, he's frequently at risk of it in the later books, since magic involves using the body's own energy.
  • Spider-Sense: His shining palm - the mark he got from bonding with his dragon - itches whenever danger is imminent. While he never notices it in the early books (the text notes it but he doesn't) he's gotten wise by the last book and starts relying on it when he's anticipating a sudden attack. Since it's usually only a second or two in advance, it's not reliable enough to sniff out danger, but still better than nothing.
  • Took a Level in Badass: Is essentially taking a LONG list of these from the second his dragon hatches, and near-everyone he meets is invested in it happening. At one point he laments being trained to be a badass specifically, wanting to move beyond just warfare and fighting, but Arya points out that they have to prioritize right now, and that he can learn how to be a scholar or artist after Galbatorix is defeated.
    • While traveling with Brom for most of the first book, he learns swordplay and magic enough to defeat him in a sparring session left-handed, which Brom implies is something very rare. By book's end he's confident fighting in pitched battles.
    • He trains with the elves for most of the second book, and gets sword training, extensive magical training, extensive mental magic training, and a lot of conventional education. By the second book's end he fights all day, can protect his friends magically, and can jump into a fight with another dragon rider after all that without hesitation.
    • In the third book, he gets a little more training from his teachers and gets a lot more battle experience, giving him more strategic skill.
    • By series' end, he's implied to be competitive with even the strongest magicians, and in the top few thousand when it comes to fighting skill.
  • Unfinished, Untested, Used Anyway: It's frequently pointed out by his teachers that since Galbatorix won't rest until Eragon is either dead or on his side, the good guys are going to have to skip huge chunks of his training to get what he needs to know, but that he's still the best chance they've had in a hundred years.
  • Vetinari Job Security: Nasuada notes more than once that she can't punish him with conventional army discipline, because punishing him with a whipping or imprisoning would ruin his value as a figurehead.
  • What Measure Is a Mook?: Struggles with this frequently, as he's tormented by the lives he's taken and indeed, how much he's asked to take them. Killing the animalistic Urgals is easy in the first book, but by the third he's become friends with one, and killing humans starts out uncomfortable and then becomes outright unpleasant.
  • What the Hell, Hero?: He is on the receiving end of it twice in Eldest and three times in Brisingr.
  • World's Strongest Man: Needs to be at least in the neighborhood of this to compete with Galbatorix, and starts getting competitive towards it in the fourth book.
  • Wrecked Weapon: The inevitable result of him using non-Rider swords, as since he's trained with and used to indestructible weapons paired with his supernatural strength, he can easily snap regular weapons especially when he forgets about the fading strength of any enchantments he puts on them. This nearly gets him killed when a falchion he was using breaks when he accidentally hits a stone wall while fending off an assassination attempt.
  • Youngest Child Wins: He's the younger of his mother's sons and got the better deal.

Humans

Carvahall

    Roran 

Eragon's older cousin, and the series Deuteragonist. While he doesn't get chapters of his own in the first book, he becomes so in the second when the Ra'zac return to Carvahall and initiate a siege. Realizing they have few options, Roran eventually leads the remaining villagers across the continent to the resistance, where they join the Varden. As more of his life is stripped away from him, he becomes dedicated to only three things - protecting his beloved fiancee Katrina, protecting the village and father's memory, and getting back at the Empire for threatening them.

While Eragon is The Chosen One and a Magic Knight, Roran is in contrast an Everyman and Barbarian Hero. While a lot of the protagonists over time begin to have priorities related to politics or magic or racial loyalties, Roran's priorities remain the same - he must protect his family. And as the least-empowered protagonist, he's extra motivated to find ways to come out on top.


  • Asskicking Leads to Leadership: A combination of asskicking and charisma turns him into the unofficial leader of Carvahall, and later gains him a position as an officer in the Varden. Throughout, he wins respect through his leadership and his own ability as a warrior.
  • Barbarian Hero: Reflects many of the classic tropes. Roran is not educated. He's not well-traveled. He's not trained in combat. And he lacks the ability to use magic in any capacity, despite trying to awaken it in later books. He's frequently facing people better-equipped, more skilled, and more magically-powerful. But he comes out on top because he's determined, extraordinarily strong, very good at making battlefield deductions, and not intimidated by any of the enemy's advantages.
  • Beard of Sorrow: He grows one in the second book, but it becomes a conventional beard after things take a turn for the better in the third book.
  • The Determinator: In planning or combat, when he sets his sights on something, he doesn't give up.
    Katrina was in danger, and he was invincible. Shields crumpled beneath his blows, brigandines and mail split under his merciless weapon, and helmets caved in.
  • The Bus Came Back: He returns in "Eldest" after not being seen for the majority of the first book.
  • Farm Boy: Initially, but like Eragon, he moves away from it because he had to. It's also noted that he's better at farming than Eragon and noticeably more muscular, even after Eragon gains his elf-like strength upgrade.
  • Genius Bruiser: As befits a Barbarian Hero, he's a strong and skilled fighter, but also a keen planner who's very good at on-the-fly plans and the Sherlock Scan.
  • Handicapped Badass: Gets maimed by the Ra'zac in the second book and loses some arm mobility until Eragon heals it in the third book.
  • Heroic Resolve: He has a lot of it, and needs every bit of it.
  • Indy Ploy: Very good at forming battle plans on the fly, in addition to conventional long-term plans.
  • Made of Iron: Starting in the second book.. At one point he takes fifty lashes for insubordination, when men have been known to die from forty.
  • Missing Mom: Roran's mother Marian died of an illness sometime before Eragon found Saphira's egg.
  • Mr. Fanservice: Big time. The wiki for the site actually describes in his template that he is "handsome" and has "big muscles".
  • Never Learned to Read: His father, who did know how to read, considered learning to read a waste of time. He indicates some desires to try to learn later on in the series because it's holding him back in advancing ranks in the Varden, yet it never really seems to come up again. (It's implied that most villagers in Carvahall don't know how.)
  • The Resenter: Spends the majority of Eldest feeling this way towards Eragon. He knows deep down that Eragon didn't mean any harm, but on some level he still partially blames him for the death of Garrow, and is angry at Eragon for running off to parts unknown afterwards. Once Roran and Eragon reunite near the end of the book, they're able to talk through it.
  • Rousing Speech: Apparently this guy's talent is leadership. He delivers at least three speeches throughout the series that inspire a large group of people to action. Played for laughs, though, in one instance in which the villagers of Carvahall expect him to give him one of these after a group of them try to rebel against traveling on barges, only for him to declare simply "It's this or walk" and then go to bed.
  • Shirtless Scene: He gets several. Arguably this becomes Fan Disservice after he suffers A Taste of the Lash.
  • The Unfettered: He'll do anything to save Katrina, and, to a lesser extent, defeat Galbatorix.
  • Wartime Wedding: To Katrina, although they were already engaged beforehand.
  • What the Hell, Hero?: He partially blames Eragon for the death of his father, but he cools off after getting to tell him off in Eldest, and the two regain their warm dynamic.

    Katrina 
Sloan's daughter, and Roran's girlfriend and later wife.
  • Arranged Marriage: Not to anyone specific, but she mentions to Roran that her father is pressuring her to marry someone he approves of.
  • Damsel in Distress: She is kidnapped by the Ra'zac in Eldest. Thankfully she doesn't seem to have endured the horrific tortures that Arya and Nasuada endure during their captivities.
  • Dating What Daddy Hates: She gets engaged to Roran behind her father's back. He is not happy when he finds out. Roran himself isn't really a bad guy and treats Katrina well, but he isn't able to provide for her financially and Sloan also has a beef with his family, which worsens after Carvahall gets attacked.
  • Did They or Didn't They?: It's implied she may have slept with Roran in Eldest. Later confirmed when she is pregnant in the next book.
  • Happily Married: To Roran as of Brisingr.
  • Missing Mom: Her mother died in an accident in the Spine when she was a baby, which causes her father to be overprotective of her.
  • My Girl Back Home: For Roran when he joins the Varden.
  • Nice Girl: She's generally a sweet girl with no glaring negative traits.
  • Satellite Love Interest: To Roran; pretty much her entire character revolves around her relationship with him.
  • Secret Relationship: She's initially in one with Roran because Sloan wouldn't approve; he hopes that if he can get a good job to provide for her, then Sloan will give them his blessing to marry.
  • Teen Pregnancy: She's revealed to be a few months pregnant in Brisingr and would be seventeen, at the most.
  • What the Hell, Hero?: She is furious at Nasuada for sentencing Roran to be whipped fifty times for insubordination, even though he did it to ensure the Varden won. She only softens towards her when Nasuada promotes Roran to commander for his feats.

    Sloan 
Carvahall's butcher, and Katrina's father.
  • Anti-Villain: He may be a self-centered Jerkass, but he at least is shown to care about his daughter…a little too much.
  • Blood Knight: When he actually gets in a fight, he's clearly enjoying himself as shown when he finds himself facing a soldier attacking Carvahall, he laughingly asks "Shall I gut and hamstring you?"
  • Death by Adaptation: The Ra'zac torture him to death in the film.
  • Even Evil Has Loved Ones: The one redeeming quality he displays throughout the series is his love for his daughter.
  • Eye Scream: The Ra'zac pecked out his eyes. Eragon tells him that if he rehabilitates himself, the elves will heal him.
  • Face–Heel Turn: He betrays Carvahall to the Ra'zac.
  • I Did What I Had to Do: He invokes this trope in an attempt to justify his decision to betray Roran and the rest of Carvahall. According to him, he did it only to keep Katrina safe. Eragon quickly dismisses his claims. Whether he is sincere he is about it or not, his actions were clearly more out of his Control Freak tendencies. No one can deny that for him Katrina's safety was his top priority, but his stubbornness, as well as his deep grief over Ismira's death, prevented him from realizing in time that if he wanted Katrina not to leave him, he should never have put his feelings before hers.
  • Jerkass: He's antagonistic towards Eragon and Roran, to the point of selling out the village to the Empire in exchange for his daughter's safety. The Ra'zac screw him over.
  • Knight Templar Parent: He was willing to sell out his fellow villagers to the Empire to protect his daughter. It backfired horribly.
  • Laser-Guided Karma: He first sold out Eragon and then his fellow villagers to the empire simply to save his own skin, murdered a fellow villager to prevent him from sounding the alarm, gets betrayed and captured himself as a result when the Ra’zac try to take Katrina with them, is tortured and has his eyes pecked out, gets Mind Raped by the first person he betrayed, is cursed to never be part of his daughter’s life in any form for his remaining years, forced to dwell in a place he can never leave, knowing his daughter was living a full and happy life without him. What he wanted more than anything was for Katrina to be safe by his side. She did end up safe, and even happy, but away from him. In other words, he wanted to avoid the tragedy of losing someone he loved, after his wife's death, and thanks to his mistakes, he ended up losing everything else for nothing.
  • Papa Wolf: He does not want anything to hurt his daughter, and is willing to kill people to make sure this doesn't happen.
    "They'll never get Katrina. Never, even if I must skin the lot of them, or fight a thousand Urgals and the king to boot. I'd tear the sky itself down and let the Empire drown in its own blood before she suffers so much as a scratch."
  • Too Dumb to Live: He thought that Ra'zac were better than Carvahall as long as this meant Katrina still under his control and have the two of them away from the Spine. Too bad that Raz'ac are... well... Raz'ac.
  • Why Did It Have to Be Snakes?: He's terrified of the Spine mountain range, mostly because his wife fell to her death in the mountains.

    Horst 
Carvahall's blacksmith. Married to Elain and father of Albriech, Baldor, and Hope.
  • Burly Blacksmith: He's the town blacksmith in Carvahall and a giant of a man, with a shaggy black mane and beard — the narration tends to bring up his huge muscular arms and thick neck a lot when describing him. He can be terrifying when pressed to defend his family and town, but is also a thoughtful, gentle man by nature and often serves as the town's emotional rock, especially after the townsfolk have to flee their homes in the second book.
  • Demoted to Extra: Horst is a fairly prominent supporting character in the books, but only gets a couple scenes in the film and a single line in each scene.
  • Gentle Giant: Horst is a big, hulking man with a soft heart. Piss him off though and, well… the results speak for themselves.
  • Parental Substitute: To Eragon and Roran after Garrow is killed. He first offered to house Eragon after Garrow's death, does the same for Roran and Katrina after Sloan throws her out, and later stands in for Garrow at Roran and Katrina's wedding in Brisingr.

    Garrow 
A farmer, Roran's father, Eragon's uncle, and Selena's brother.
  • Anti-Education Mama: Garrows never taught his son Roran and his nephew Eragon how to read, even though he himself knew how to read.
  • Cruel and Unusual Death: The Ra'zac used seithr oil to torture him, then blew his home to pieces with him still inside, leaving him lingering for days before he died.
  • Hidden Depths: According to Brom, Garrow knew how to read, a rarity for common folk. He just didn't consider it a skill worth passing down to his son and nephew.
  • Nephewism: He and his deceased wife Marian raised Eragon alongside Roran after Selena left Eragon with them. Eragon thinks of Garrow as his real father instead of Morzan when he believed Morzan sired him.
  • Plot-Triggering Death: His murder at the Ra'zac's hands is the direct cause of Eragon's journey.

Varden

    Brom 
An old storyteller in Carvahall and a friend of Eragon's, who finds out about Saphira and asks to accompany them on their journeys. Later revealed to be a Dragon Rider whose dragon was killed during the Fall. He founded the Varden in the years following Galbatorix's rise to power and is determined to bring Galbatorix down.
  • Came Back Wrong: Discussed. Eragon wants to use the Eldunarí to resurrect him at the end of Inheritance but they warn him that they will probably never be able to restore his mind. He decides that it's not meant to be and just carves a new epitaph for him. They also make the very good point that they aren't neurologists and would probably fry his brain in the process.
  • Character Tics: Brom had a couple strange habits while young, like knocking on a door frame while entering/exiting a room.
  • Constantly Curious: Oromis says that Brom was this way when he was young.
  • Cool Old Guy: He's far older than he looks, but still possesses supernatural powers from when he was a Dragon Rider.
  • Cool Sword: When he was a dragon rider, he owned a sword called Undbitr; like Zar'roc, it was made from brightsteel and was also blue. It’s unknown what happened to it, exactly, as it was said to be lost during the fall of the riders. Christopher Paolini had teased it appearing in book 4, but strangely it doesn’t, and none of the material following the series to date has elaborated on it.
  • Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass: At first glance he's just an eccentric old man. But Eragon soon finds out that he's a master swordsman, magic-user, and former Dragon Rider.
  • Deathbed Confession: His status as a Rider is not revealed until he is dying.
  • Despair Event Horizon: At first, he's so driven to get revenge on Morzan that he doesn't realized he's crossed it. Once he's killed Morzan, he spends the rest of his life consumed by grief.
  • Dragon Rider: He is one of the last true Dragon Riders of the old generation.
  • Expy: He's basically Obi-Wan Kenobi; a former Dragon Rider/Jedi who was best buds with Morzan/Anakin until he betrayed them, goes into hiding in a backwater town to watch over Eragon/Luke where he's regarded as an oddity, introduces Eragon/Luke to the ways of the Dragon Rider/Jedi, then dies protecting him as they're trying to rescue a princess shortly before the climax. One of the only major differences is that it turns out Brom is Eragon's real father after having an affair with his late mother; funnily enough, in Revenge of the Sith it's implied via subtext that Anakin thinks Obi-Wan and Padmé were having an affair, though this isn't actually the case.
  • Heroic Sacrifice: He sacrifices himself saving Eragon from the Ra'zac.
  • Incompletely Trained: Thanks to his dragon dying when Brom was young and the Riders being destroyed very soon afterwards, Brom never received or learned the full breadth of his abilities as a Rider.
  • It's Personal with the Dragon: Had a long and bitter feud with Morzan due to being his Evil Former Friend and the death of Brom's dragon. It culminated in the hunt for Saphira's egg, ending in a duel where Brom killed Morzan and his dragon.
  • Luke, I Am Your Father: It turns out that he's Eragon's biological father, though it's not revealed until long after he's dead and buried; Brom knew Eragon was his son all along, but only confided in Saphira and told her not tell Eragon until the time was right.
  • Magic Knight: Brom is a former Dragon Rider, and thus a skilled swordsman as well as a magic-user.
  • The Mentor: He travels with Eragon while teaching him magic and swordplay. Plus how to read.
  • Mentor Occupational Hazard: Ends up getting killed by the Ra'zac.
  • The Mourning After: Admits while dying that he never stopped grieving for his own dragon.
    Brom: Even now I still grieve for my Saphira, and hate Galbatorix for what he took from me.
  • Offscreen Moment of Awesome: He's personally responsible for the deaths of more than half of the Forsworn. He killed three of them in single combat. Without a dragon.
  • Old Master: An elder Dragon Rider who serves as Eragon's first teacher in swordsmanship and magic.
  • Papa Wolf: Sacrifices his life for his son Eragon.
  • Prequel: Paolini has expressed interest in writing a fifth book which would tell his and Jeod's backstory, as well as detailing the Fall of the Riders.
  • Rebel Leader: Brom founded the Varden to oppose Galbatorix and led the group for a few years before resigning so he could devote his time to revenge on the Forsworn.
  • Retired Badass: Losing his wife, after already having lost his dragon, Saphira (the elder), means two lost soul mates. It's remarkable (as per Arya) that he even survived such losses.
  • Roaring Rampage of Revenge: Brom's entire life since the Fall of the Riders has been a campaign against Galbatorix, specifically against the Forsworn and Morzan most of all.
  • Stealth Mentor: His story of Gerand, a warrior who used a hammer in combat, inspired Roran to take up the hammer when he had to fight.
  • The Storyteller: While living in Carvahall. At first, Brom insists on accompanying Eragon and Saphira because, as storyteller, he wants to see where Eragon's journey will lead. It turns out that he has deeper reasons.
  • Tragic Hero: Destiny made sure that he failed in nearly everything important in his life, except for killing Morzan.
  • Vengeance Feels Empty: He kills Morzan to avenge his dragon, but this ends the days of the Dragon Riders and he comes to Eragon's village with the shame of it.
  • Weak, but Skilled: Brom believes in the value of intelligence over strength and typically beat opponents because he was smarter than them. Case in point his campaigns against the Forsworn, where he killed three of them in single combat without the aid of a dragon.
  • You Killed My Father:
    • He is motivated to kill Galbatorix because he is responsible for the death of Brom's dragon. Brom himself later becomes this sort of motivation to Eragon.
    • He also killed Morzan, Murtagh's father. Despite this, Murtagh bears no ill will towards Brom for the action, given that his father was very abusive (Murtagh's scar, for instance, comes a sword blow his father gave him) and acknowledges that Morzan fully deserved to die.

    Ajihad 
The leader of the Varden.
  • Badass Normal: We mostly get impressions of his fighting ability secondhand, but he very notably came close to killing Durza, a feat which is said to be all but impossible for an ordinary human.
  • Bald of Authority: He is bald and the leader of the Varden.
  • Black Dude Dies First: Not the first death in the series, but the first death in the second book.
  • Defector from Decadence: A former vassal of one of the Forsworn before breaking his magical bonds and joining the Varden.
  • Dropped a Bridge on Him: A sudden Urgal ambush at the beginning of the second book takes him out. He goes out swinging, though, killing all of his attackers before he dies.
  • Rebel Leader: He is the leader of the Varden, a rebel group.
  • Sudden Sequel Death Syndrome: He dies at the beginning of the second book.
  • We Hardly Knew Ye: Despite the last act of the first book setting him up to be a major character, he doesn't even survive the first chapter of the second.

    Nasuada 

The daughter of Ajihad, the initial leader of the Varden. When he's killed at the start of the second book, she becomes a surprise candidate to succeed him and eventually does. While she's very young - implied to be less than twenty-five - she proves to be an exceedingly capable and shrewd operator who realizes the Varden will never get a better chance to overthrow Galbatorix than right now, and initiates a campaign to invade the Empire that unfolds over the course of the next three books.

She becomes a character with chapters of her own in the second book and receives the third-most chapters of the cast. Through her, we see the world's themes of political intrigue and the wider games of nations being played out around Eragon's journey. And while she's a politician first and foremost, she forms surprising bonds with select members of the cast...


  • Action Girl: While her ability is primarily political, she fights in the battles alongside everyone else and is implied to have a fair amount of confidence.
  • Altar Diplomacy: Stays away from regular dating because she expects she'll need to marry for political reasons at some point. More than once, she notes that King Orrin of Surda would be a logical choice of marriage partner considering their alignment with the Varden, but she also thinks they're simply too different to work out that way.
  • Benevolent Boss: While she has friction with Eragon on occasion, she's overall very understanding towards him and does her best to help him do what he thinks is best while still balancing the Varden's interest.
  • Black Boss Lady: She's black and the leader of the Varden after Ajihad's death.
  • Improperly Paranoid: Her concerns that Orrin might try to usurp her position as the leader their joint armed forces are initially almost completely unfounded. He is shown to have no ambitions other than being her equal on political matters, and defers to her in battle without question. Her fear that he might undermine her authority arguably leads her to push him further away and cut him out of important decisions, which does eventually lead Orrin to challenge her over the Broddring crown.
  • Lady of War: She is both elegant and fierce, which she proves in single-handedly devising a way to up the Varden's finances and by completing the Trial of the Long Knives.
  • Post Modern Magic: She is trying to find ways to make magic work within civilized society. For instance, using magic to make lace, which normally takes massive amounts of work and thus fetches a high price. Instant war funds. (Also imminent economic collapse, but desperate times...)
  • Reasonable Authority Figure: Patient, intelligent, decisive, courageous, and willing to listen to everyone around her. While she has occasional arguments with people she's generally very fair and very respected.
  • Rebel Leader: The second leader of the Varden we see during the series, although several are alluded to beforehand.
  • Star-Crossed Lovers: With Murtagh. Unfortunately, she's a queen (by the end), and Murtagh has way too many people hating him for it to ever work.
  • Supporting Leader: Her main role, juggling Eragon and the Varden and the dwarves' interests and Surda's interests in an attempt to keep them together long enough to overthrow Galbatorix.

    Elva 
An orphaned baby girl who Eragon blessed in Tronjheim. However, due to a mistake in grammar, she ended up being cursed to feel all the pain around her and try to protect others.
  • Big Eater: Her powers take a toll on her energy. Both before Eragon modified them, when resisting them made her physically ill, and afterward, see Cast from Hit Points. Also, feeling others' pain wears her out, even if she isn't compelled to help them. Being forced to grow up so quickly probably has something to do with it, too.
  • Blessed with Suck: Eragon's intended blessing ends up as a torturous curse...which eventually turns into Cursed with Awesome once Eragon removes her compulsion to help people.
  • Blue-and-Orange Morality: The result of essentially being a baby with above-average intelligence. Angela notes that no one bothered to teach her morality because she's compelled by magic to act altruistically, but once she's freed from that compulsion, she'll have to be taught from scratch.
  • Cast from Hit Points: As of Brisingr, Elva has permanently sacrificed part of her physical stamina in order to never have to feel the urge to help anyone ever again.
  • Character Development: After Eragon gets the courage to stand up to her, she becomes less self-obsessed.
  • Cousin Oliver: A rare sinster example. She's a completely out-of-place child latched onto a war party, but that's entirely the result of an enchantment being mistakenly placed on her as a baby. She's pretty bitter about the situation and would herself like to be just about anywhere else.
  • Creepy Child: She's eerie and goes out of her way to creep people out.
  • Creepy Good: She is an infant with violet eyes and an adult's voice in a child's body, which scares the hell out of many adults. She is (ostensibly) on the good side, but she isn't above using her power of knowing what someone's future pain is, someone's fears, or hopes for manipulation of powerful people for her own benefit.
  • Cursed with Awesome: She can foretell the actions of her enemies, and knows exactly what to do to cause them the most pain. After Eragon makes an alteration to the spell to remove her need to sacrifice herself for others, she finds that knowing exactly what is going to hurt someone can be a handy ability to have.
  • Deadpan Snarker: She's developed a morose sense of humor as a result of her curse.
  • The Dreaded: She scared the hell out of nearly everyone who met her. Even Galbatorix is implied to fear her and her powers, if the decision of silence her the very second he met her and keep her that way the whole time is of any indication.
  • The Empath: She can sense the pain of others as though she herself was experiencing it, and trying to suppress it makes her ill.
  • Facial Markings: She has a silver mark on her forehead that Saphira gave to her.
  • Freudian Excuse: Her fate is forced on her accidentally by Eragon, and being in the midst of the Varden means that she's constantly suffering because of it. A point is made that a pretty substantial effort is going to be needed to prevent her from growing up evil because of it.
  • Good Is Not Nice: She's acerbic towards everyone and not afraid to use her powers to manipulate people into giving her what she wants.
  • Little Miss Badass: She may only look like a child, but she can handle herself in a fight by literally talking her enemies into surrendering.
  • Little Miss Snarker: Despite her childlike appearance she has a macabre sense of humour and isn't afraid to verbally lambaste people who annoy her.
  • Manipulative Bastard: She not above using her powers to sense what causes people emotional pain, then using it to blackmail them.
  • Mark of the Supernatural: Her violet eyes and the silver mark on her forehead signify her mystical nature.
  • Mind Rape: What she's been going through every day, with most of the people around her not aware of how much pain their everyday lives are causing her.
  • My Sensors Indicate You Want to Tap That: She's aware of Eragon's feelings for Arya and how much he hates it that she rejects him, thanks to her powers.
  • My God, What Have I Done?: Elva is left a sobbing wreck after Eragon rips into her over the fact that her refusal to help them scout a secret tunnel into Dras-Leona got one of his elven guards, Wyrden, killed by a booby trap in the tunnel and nearly got him and Arya torn apart by Ra'zac hatchlings. Elva is completely broken when Eragon bluntly tells her Wyrden's blood is on her hands, since her abilities could have forewarned them of the trap.
  • "No. Just… No" Reaction: Her reaction when Nasuada tries to convince her to keep her curse for the good of the Varden.
  • Non-Indicative Name: Despite being named "Elva", she is human.
  • No-Sell: A strategy proposed in the earlier books was using her to anticipate Galbatorix's every move. While Elva's powers do assist in getting the party to Galbatorix, once they're actually there it proves moot because he knows the name of the Ancient Language.
  • Plot-Relevant Age-Up: Her curse compels her to help people, and she couldn't help people as an infant, so the curse made her grow until she could help people.
  • Super-Empowering: Eragon used the ancient language to bless her; her powers came from a grammatical error in the phrasing he used.
  • Took a Level in Badass: Goes from a defenseless baby to a Creepy Child with empathetic powers in the span of a few months.
  • Vocal Dissonance: She has the voice of an adult (the voice of an adult's pain and experience), although it's implied this eventually goes away.
  • What the Hell, Hero?: When she meets Eragon, she makes very clear that she isn't too pleased with his actions in turning her into what she is, though she also tells him that she knows he didn't mean any harm. Does it again to Eragon when he tries to forcibly remove her powers.
  • Wise Beyond Their Years: As a result of her curse, she has the mentality of a world-weary and somewhat nihilistic adult.
  • Younger Than They Look: She's technically a baby, though her curse caused her to age up.
  • Your Approval Fills Me with Shame: Invoked by her against Eragon, when she tells him that Galbatorix would approve of his actions.

    King Orrin 
The king of Surda and a supporter of the Varden.
  • A Hero to His Hometown: Orrin has definitely earned the love of his people and the undying loyalty of his men (whom he leads personally into battle). This does not translate well to the rest of the Varden’s allied forces, however, and he is often dismissed in favour of Nasuada.
  • Cowardly Lion: He is one of the few characters who are described as being genuinely afraid in battle (most notably in the fight against the laughing dead). He is still at the head of every charge.
  • Cynicism Catalyst: In Inheritance, the death of one of his childhood friends at the hands of an Imperial civilian motivated by hatred of the Varden's alliance with the Urgals makes Orrin a lot harder and colder.
  • Drowning My Sorrows: In Inheritance, he starts drinking more under the stress of the war, including during important meetings.
  • Dude, Where's My Respect?: Asks this of the Varden in Inheritance, resentful at being treated like a lieutenant in their army rather than the king of the nation they're using as a home base.
  • Eccentric Millionaire: A relatively mild example — he uses his wealth as king to fund the many scientific experiments that are his hobbies.
  • Honor Before Reason:
    • In Eldest, he puts Nasuada and the Varden in a difficult position because he refuses to allow their men to plunder farms in the Empire.
    • In Inheritance, he has a plan to send an envoy to Galbatorix, try to negotiate a peace agreement, and tell him the Varden's position. Because to do otherwise would be discourteous.
  • Jerkass Has a Point:
    • He raises the issue that the Varden's alliance with the Urgals might be doing more harm than good. The age-old hatred and distrust of Urgals is allowing Galbatorix to frame the Varden in a negative light and Imperial cities choose to fight to the bitter end rather than surrender to forces allied with what they see as monsters, so Orrin has a point.
    • He's also got a point that Nasauda is frequently excluding him from meetings and withholding information that he has a right to know.
  • Made of Iron: Downplayed. Orrin is among the most chronically injured characters (at least of those who cannot heal themselves instantly with magic), and has been shown to go on fighting with injuries that should logically at least incapacitate him. In Inheritance, he even survives getting shot in the chest point blank with a crossbow. However, all those wounds do have consequences, and he also spends a good amount of time getting put back together by healers.
  • Long-Haired Pretty Boy: He is one of the few male characters whose good looks are repeatedly brought up (along with Murtagh and Roran) and he is described as having “shoulder-length hair”.
  • The Philosopher King: What he would like to be, anyway. Orrin is extremely gifted at natural sciences and implied to be well-versed in history and literature (he sometimes uses quotes from in-universe literature or tales, such as when comparing Eragon to "Moratensis emerging from his fountain"). Unfortunately, his times are not well suited for such rulers, and he chafes under having to be a warrior instead (although he turns out to be surprisingly good at that as well).
  • Religious Bruiser: Orrin brings up the gods more often than any other member of the main cast of characters, possibly only rivalled by Orik. They are not casual exclamations, either – his views on justice and kingly duties especially are informed by a sincerely held belief that he answers to Angvard (the god of death), and all his actions as king will be judged after he dies.
  • Royals Who Actually Do Something: Played with. He leads his subjects in battle, but also has a tendency to shirk his duties as king because he'd rather be studying natural philosophy.
  • Science Hero: He tries for this, claiming that his experiments have the potential to be useful against the Empire. However, none of his tinkering has any apparent practical application; he's just looking for a way to take his mind off the stress of running a country. Admittedly some of his experiments are rather dangerous; in Eldest, Nasuada accidentally dips one of her sleeves into a compound that turns out to be an acid.
  • Ship Tease: With Nasuada. For all their disagreements and later rivalry, he is horrified whenever she finds herself in danger and actually begs her not to participate in the Trial of Long Knives so as not to put herself through unnecessary pain. Nasuada even privately considers marrying him at one point, although she ultimately decides that they're too different to work as partners.
  • Took a Level in Badass: Not that he wasn't already a capable warrior, but he grows a lot more serious and pragmatic over the course of Brisingr.
  • Took a Level in Jerkass: In Inheritance the stress of war causes him to become increasingly dissatisfied with and antagonistic towards the Varden.
  • Warrior Prince: Not by choice, since he loathes war and was reluctant to join forces with the Varden. Once he does take to the field, however, he acquits himself extremely well as a battle commander.
  • The Wrongful Heir to the Throne: In a blink-and-you'll-miss it throwaway line, it is revealed that he is actually descended from Thanebrand, the second-ever king of the Broddring Kingdom, which arguably makes him the rightful king of the Empire. When the time comes to decide who should rule after Galbatorix, everyone agrees that Nasuada would be a better choice.

    The Twins 
Two bald magicians who have served the Varden for many years. They are actually spies for the Empire, and later turn on their former comrades.
  • Adapted Out: They don't appear in the film proper, but appear in deleted scenes.
  • Ax-Crazy: When Eragon sees them on the side of Galbatorix in Eldest, they seem to get a kick out of gleefully killing those they once fought alongside.
  • Bald of Evil: Both of them are bald and malicious. It later turns out they were spies for the Empire.
  • Bald Mystic: Both bald and both skilled in Dark Magic.
  • Black Magic: Like most of the Emperor's servants, they're particularly skilled in Dark Magic.
  • Character Death: They're both beaten to death by Roran.
  • Creepy Long Fingers: Creepy Twins with long fingers.
  • Creepy Twins: They're twins, and they're exceedingly creepy.
  • The Dividual: Absolutely nothing distinguishes one twin from the other, to the point of deceiving most people (including Ajihad) into believing that they don't have any names at all.
  • Double Agent: They're actually Imperial magicians working undercover.
  • Drill Sergeant Nasty: They're given the task of interrogating people, and they make sure to cause as much discomfort as possible.
  • Evil Genius: To Galbatorix, as they appear to be his chief magicians.
  • Jerkass: Even when they're ostensibly on the side of good, they're complete assholes to everyone who will let them get away with it.
  • Laser-Guided Karma: Their deaths in part come about because Murtagh, a man who they Mind Raped and then kidnapped in order to bring back to Galbatorix to be magically enslaved, saw Roran coming up behind them and chose not to warn them in time.
  • Manipulative Bastard: No one in the Varden is any the wiser about their true loyalties. They get so far into the organization that they're in charge of all of the group's magic users and are permitted to invade the minds of anyone they wish.
  • Mind Probe: They are tasked with interrogating prisoners by reading their minds.
  • Mind Rape: When interrogating people, they go out of their way to cause discomfort and pain.
  • Mission Control: During the Battle of Tronjheim, the Twins are in constant mental communication with Eragon, sending him wherever he was needed up until he faces Durza. This winds up taking a darker meaning when it turns out the Twins were in league with Galbatorix and cut off the connection so Durza could capture him.
  • The Mole: They're spies for the Empire.
  • No Name Given: They conceal their names from seemingly everyone, both because names have power, and because they view just about everyone around them as unworthy of even hearing their names.
  • Power Levels: Stronger than most magicians in the Varden and the Empire, but still not as strong as Eragon, Arya, Murtagh, or one of the other major players in the setting.
  • Purple Is Powerful: Both are the strongest magicians among the Varden and wear purple robes.
  • Single-Minded Twins: They act as though they were one person.
  • Small Name, Big Ego: They're a pair of relatively minor magicians, but from the way they act, you'd think they were God's gift to magic. It's thrown into sharp relief once Eragon takes over training the Varden's magicians, as they're shown to be pitifully trained, largely ignorant of the Ancient Language, and have a grammatical error in their group name.
  • Smug Snake: They treat Eragon with contempt, despite the fact that he's already more skilled with magic than they are when he shows up. They quickly shut up when Arya proves herself more powerful than they are.
  • Token Evil Teammate: Within the Varden. They later reveal their true colors and allegiance to the Empire.
  • Twin Telepathy: There appears to be some kind of mental link between the two of them, such that when one dies, it seriously pains the other.

    Trianna 
A young sorceress from Surda who becomes the leader of the Varden's magicians when the Twins defect to the Empire.
  • The Charmer: Eragon is instantly taken with her when they first meet. His internal monologue notes that he hates saying no to her because of how friendly and courteous she is. Saphira quickly intervenes, suspecting that Trianna's sincerity is in question.
  • Combat Medic: She self-describes as a battle-mage, but was a healer before she learned her sorcery.
  • Normal Fish in a Tiny Pond: She's clearly the most powerful of the Varden's magic users, but as Eragon quickly discovers when he sets out to train them, that's really not saying much. Compared to the Empire's magicians and all of the elves, she's practically a novice.
  • Odd Friendship: With King Orrin. The two conduct experiments in natural philosophy together on their downtime.
  • Small Name, Big Ego: She's somewhat vain and arrogant due to her status in the Varden, and is rather annoyed when Eragon takes her position before the Battle of the Burning Plains. She scoffs at taking orders from a relative newcomer to the art, nevermind that, Incompletely Trained as he is, Eragon is her superior by far.
  • Weak, but Skilled: Like most of the Varden's magicians she can't do much, but makes the most of it through ingenuity.

Broddring Empire

    King Galbatorix 
A former Dragon Rider who rose up against the others and overthrew them, now the King of the former Broddring Kingdom, and the Empire he formed from it.
  • 0% Approval Rating: Played straight amongst the Varden, but averted amongst the general populace; he has some very loyal subjects who do like him because he made humans, rather than elves, the dominant race in Alagaesia. His general corruption means most people do hate him.
  • Action Bomb: At the climax of the series, he casts a spell that makes him go boom. It converts his entire mass into energy, given that the direct translation of the spell is "be not" and 200+ pounds of supervillain has to go somewhere, which equals a five kiloton detonation.
  • Affably Evil: He speaks to Oromis through Murtagh in Brisingr, and seems quite polite and sane. At least until Oromis tells him where to shove his talk. Then he loses the Affable part. In Inheritance, he's back to being affable again.
  • Age Without Youth: Downplayed. Dragon Riders are immortal and eternally young unless they die by violence or poison, but Galbatorix, having lost his original dragon, ages faster than a normal Dragon Rider to the point where he looks like a middle-aged man rather than a young one.
  • Ax-Crazy: While he seems to have settled down the axe since his wars against the Riders, and his late goals make him pass for a wise if strict ruler, he is still definitely nuts, and he shows it occasionally.
  • Badass in Charge: Evilness aside, he's considered a very good warrior, and DID beat the reigning leader of the riders in single combat, as well as likely countless other riders. Yes, he kicked Vrael in the fork of the pants, but that's hardly dirty in a life-or-death fight.
  • Beard of Evil: This is one of his few distinguishing physical characteristics.
  • Better to Die than Be Killed: Between being stabbed in the gut by Eragon and being besieged by all the bad feelings he caused, he casts a self-destruct spell rather than fall in battle.
  • Big Bad: His actions and desire for power drive the main conflict of the series and caused most of the backstory as well.
  • The Chessmaster: His war with the Varden has mostly been a plan to manuovre them into a vulnerable position.
  • Combat Pragmatist: The ends justify the means in his book. Not only does he use every dirty trick in the book against the Varden, but the whole reason he's king in the first place is because he doesn't mind hitting below the belt in a fight.
  • The Corruptor: Persuaded most of the Forsworn to join him, bringing them over to his side through promises of power and revenge.
  • Death Seeker: In his backstory, Galbatorix traveled months to return to the Dragon Riders after his dragon was killed and would blindly attack any creature he came across, but was too skilled to be defeated and became so terrifying that all fled from him.
  • Defeat Equals Explosion: Invoked. Upon being subject to all the emotions he inspired in others during his rule, he uses a spell to convert his entire body into energy, creating a massive explosion that levels his throne room.
  • The Dictatorship: What his rule essentially amounts to in practice and inception. After forming a powerful bloc of riders that were competitive militarily, then overthrowing the main riders - who were essentially the UN/World Security Council of this world - he slew the king of the elves, then the king of the humans, and consolidated both of their territories into The Empire. Since then he has ruled as a supreme executive, dispatches secret police in the form of the Ra'zac, cultivates a corp of magicians to combat threats, and has all his key employees swear loyalty to him personally that they can never revoke. And since he's immortal, it works much better (or worse) than regular dictatorships.
  • Dragon Rider: A Rider who turned against the rest.
  • Dystopia Is Hard: When finally encountered in the last book, he claims that most of his job is just handling administrative issues and - more importantly - trying to figure out how to make humanity more competitive magically.
  • The Emperor: He rules over most of the western lands with an iron fist.
  • Even Evil Has Loved Ones: Played With in regards to his Dragons.
    • It was the loss of his dragon, Jarnunvösk, that kicked off Galbatorix's Start of Darkness. While his empathy for others is normally quite low, the sadness he felt for Jarnunvösk was real and his grief for her permanently changed him.
    • His betrayal of the Riders was in part because he felt he was entitled to a new dragon. His treatment of his second dragon, Shruikan, is especially cruel and a twisted reflection of the loving bond most Riders are supposed to share.
  • Evil Cannot Comprehend Good: He loses because he never considered just how devastating the emotional pain of everyone he's ever hurt would be if he felt it and didn't think to ward against attacks like that.
  • Evil Is Hammy: In the movie. In the books, when he finally shows his face, he moves back and forth between this and Cold Ham.
  • Evil Mentor: For Morzan, teaching him dark spells that should never have been revealed.
  • Evil Overlord: He established his empire by force.
  • Evil Redhead: Is described as having reddish hair, making him the only one with that color besides Katrina.
  • Fantastic Nuke: Literally. He tries to pull a Taking You with Me after Arya kills Shruikan and Eragon forces him to feel each of his subjects' agony from his rule, so he pulls the same trick that was used on Vroengard. It's powerful enough to render the entire underground section of Uru'baen uninhabitable for a long period of time.
  • Fantastic Racism: Heavily invested in the pro-human arguments of this world, as it gives him excuse for his position. The elves are bloated philosophers with no empathy for humans, the dwarves are dumb craftsmen obsessed with themselves, the Urgals are savage animals, and humans are underdogs stuck between all of them, deserving of respect and competitive levels of magical skill, which Galbatorix conveniently is the only one capable of providing.
  • Faux Affably Evil: Everyone who shares space with him describe him as suave, charismatic, and alluring at first. But when things don't go his way, he becomes violent and angry and literally murderous, no matter who he's talking to.
  • Foil: To Eragon.
    • Both came from simple backgrounds and were thrown into the world of dragons unexpectedly. But Eragon took pity on a baby Saphira, decided to raise her, and treated her like a person, and knows if he lost her replacing her would be impossible emotionally and physically. Galbatorix, on the other hand, felt so entitled to and dismissive of his own dragon that he ignored the laws of magic to demand a new one. And when he wasn't granted it, he KIDNAPPED a helpless baby Shruikan and magically tortured him into compliance.
    • Where Galbatorix forces everyone around him to do his bidding, Eragon is decidedly NOT at the top of the totem pole, and more importantly, is willing to LISTEN to people even though he DOES have phenomenal cosmic power compared to them.
    • Perhaps most importantly, we know nothing about Galbatorix's family or friends, and it's suggested he didn't have a lot. But Eragon grew up with an aunt, uncle, cousin, and community who all loved him and instilled a strong moral code.
  • The Ghost: Despite being the Big Bad, he doesn't appear in person until Inheritance.
  • Groin Attack: This is how he killed Vrael, the last leader of the Dragon Riders. Kicked him in the crotch, then beheaded him.
  • Hero Killer: Takes control of Murtagh and Thorn at the end of Brisingr and uses them to kill Oromis and Glaedr.
  • Immortality: Due to being a Dragon Rider, he is immune to aging and disease, though he does seem to have aged a little, appearing middle-aged.
  • Immortal Ruler: A huge problem, as it creates an effectively eternal reign. Notably, the human kingdom before him did NOT have immortals in leadership, and the elves, while also retaining a monarchy, have such a sparse and decentralized government that the monarch does maybe five important things, most of them ceremonial. A human immortal in the human system has made what amounts to dictatorship where the dictator will never die, and the results are as bad as they sound.
  • Kick the Dog:
    • Enslaving Shruikan, which was his first evil act beyond the pale. Shruikan was only a baby when he kidnapped him, and then he used magic to FORCE him to obey. Since dragons have roughly human intelligence - though accelerated development - this was essentially child slavery.
    • One of his long list of achievements is torturing Nasuada by having Murtagh burn her with hot irons, tormenting her with illusions (that could cause pain), and allowing his miniature Eldritch Abominations to feed on her.
    • He heavily tortured Murtagh both mentally and physically. Nasuada believes Murtagh's tortures to be worse than her own.
    • Ordered an entire village destroyed and its population massacred just because it was the closest settlement to the site of an ambush of his troops, and there were rumours (nothing concrete) that the villagers had supplied the rebels.
  • Let's You and Him Fight: Murtagh mentions that Galbatorix frequently encouraged infighting between the Forsworn, both for his own amusement and to stop them from banding together to overthrow him.
  • Light Is Not Good: When finally confronted, he uses Vrael's Rider sword, and Umaroth, Vrael's dragon, was white. The sword's original name fits Light Is Good, but Galbatorix gives it a new, more sinister name. Eragon thinks the new name fits it better.
  • Magic Knight: Like all Dragon Riders, he's a skilled swordsman and magic-user.
  • Meaningful Name: His name means "big king" in Welsh.
  • My God, What Have I Done?: Galbatorix is ultimately defeated when Eragon and the Eldunarí backing him force him to feel the agony of all his victims. "What have you done? What have you done?
  • Orcus on His Throne: Justified, as he is trying to find the name of the Ancient Language. It's also noted in Inheritance that he wanted to fight the Varden at their weakest, so letting them pull an All Your Base Are Belong to Us was intentional.
  • The Paragon Always Rebels: As a young Dragon Rider, he was accomplished in all manners of using spells and combat, making him prideful and arrogant. This, combined with the loss of his dragon and convincing himself that the Riders had caused her death, led to the fall of the Riders.
  • Royals Who Actually Do Something: Although a self-made royal, he technically counts.
  • Secret-Keeper: He was one of the few among the Broddring Empire who knew of Murtagh's existence.
  • Shoot the Messenger: Murtagh mentions that Galbatorix ripped the head off the man who told him the Ra'zac were dead.
  • Sorcerous Overlord: He's a powerful Dragon Rider who rules over the Broddring Empire.
  • Start of Darkness: Losing his dragon in an ambush by Urgals. In Brom's story, this was the point where "the seeds of madness were planted."
  • Super-Strength: Apparently can rip heads off, if what he did to a messenger is true.
  • Taking You with Me: He attempts to kill his enemies with a Fantastic Nuke spell at the end.
  • Textual Celebrity Resemblance: Although probably unintentional, Galbatorix's physical description from the books strongly echoes a young and more corpulent Christopher Lee.
  • Unseen No More: He's frequently mentioned, but he never makes an appearance until the end of the final book.
  • The Usurper: Galbatorix's first act after destroying the Riders was to fly to Illirea, depose and murder King Angrenost, ruler of the Broddring Kingdom at the time, and and proclaim himself king.
  • Utopia Justifies the Means: His favourite argument to persuade people to obey him.
  • Villainous BSoD: He suffers a mental breakdown after being magically forced to experience all the pain and grief caused by actions.
    Galbatorix: What have you done? What have you done! [...] You will not get the better of me, boy. You... will... not.... I... shall... not... give... in... (screams in rage) No! I didn't.... Make it stop! Make it stop. The pain... [...] The voices... the voices are terrible. I can't bear it... pain... so much pain. So much grief... make it stop! Make it stop!
  • Villainous Valor: Even when he's surrounded and on the brink of defeat by Varden forces, he pulls a Taking You with Me rather than surrender.
  • Visionary Villain: Galbatorix has grand plans for ushering Alagaesia into an era of peace and prosperity. Too bad he uses such brutal means to achieve his ends...
  • Weak Sauce Weakness: He had no idea that non-verbal magic was possible. Eragon just so happens to be competent at it. To his credit, however, the sheer amount of power and wards he had set up were making it really difficult to exploit.
    • He ultimately loses simply because Eragon casts a very simple-in-form empathy spell that has a catastrophic effect.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: He can be argued as such. He believes that magicians need to be restricted by law, as otherwise they have any normal person at their mercy, a belief that Nasuada comes to share. A good intention to start from, but...
  • With Great Power Comes Great Insanity: On the one hand, his insanity comes from the loss of his dragon, which weakened him considerably. On the other hand, he wouldn't have snapped as hard as he did had he not fallen from the pinnacle of power that he did, and consolidating his power over the continent has only continued to erode his sanity.
  • You Have Outlived Your Usefulness: This is implied to be why Galbatorix allied with the Urgals in Book I; when Eragon later questions why he would ally with the creatures who killed his beloved first dragon, Oromis speculates that Galbatorix probably intended to use the Urgals to destroy his enemies like the dwarves and elves, then annihilate the Urgals when they'd broken themselves fighting for him.

    Morzan 
The first of the Forsworn and Galbatorix's right-hand man before the story started. Murtagh is his son.
  • Abusive Parents: He threw his sword at Murtagh's back, leaving him permanently scarred.
  • The Alcoholic: Had a drinking problem and was drunk when he threw his sword at Murtagh.
  • Arch-Enemy: To Brom, of the We Used to Be Friends variety. Of all the things Brom did against the Empire like founding the Varden and masterminding the deaths of most of the Forsworn, the one thing he wanted most was to kill Morzan for betraying the Riders and killing Brom's dragon.
  • Asskicking Leads to Leadership: Given the infighting amongst the Forsworn, Morzan likely lived the longest because he was the strongest.
  • Bling of War: Known for wearing very shiny armor, as if he wanted people to know who and where he was.
  • Broken Pedestal: For Brom. Brom looked up to him when they were Oromis' students and was angrier than most when Morzan turned traitor.
  • The Bully: According to Oromis, Morzan mistreated Brom in all sorts of ways while they were under Oromis' tutelage.
  • Cool Sword: He was the first wielder of Zar'roc, the sword that Eragon uses for most of the first two books.
  • Curtains Match the Window: Halfway considering his heterochromia; Morzan was described as having black hair and a black eye.
  • Didn't Think This Through: Oromis mentions that while he could devise the most cunning of spells, he would leave a crucial detail out. He also never considered that his abusive treatment of Selena and their son might cause her to fall out of love with him and be willing to start undermining him.
  • Domestic Abuse: Towards Selena, particularly after Murtagh was born. His treatment of her and Murtagh eventually drove her to have an affair with Brom.
  • The Dragon: He was Galbatorix's first right-hand man.
  • Dragon Rider: Morzan rode an unnamable dragon which had red scales (which matches Zar'roc); both were killed in Brom's final duel with Morzan.
  • Dumb Muscle: He's described as being "strong in body, but weak of mind".
  • Evil Former Friend: To Brom while they were pupils of Oromis, with a layer of Broken Pedestal thrown in for good measure.
  • Evil Laugh: Sounded like he was in pain whenever he laughed.
  • Eviler than Thou: Discussed in his article on The Wiki; it's suggested that Morzan was more evil than Galbatorix because he chose evil of his own volition rather than being driven mad by grief like Galbatorix was.
  • Face–Heel Turn: Was persuaded to turn to Galbatorix's side very early on in the latter's quest for power.
  • Fallen Hero: The leader of the Forsworn, a whole group of Fallen Heroes. Admittedly he wasn't much of a hero in the first place due to his unpleasantness.
  • Fingore: He lost the tip of one of his fingers at one point. This has given rise to a belief among fans that Morzan grew up as a thief before joining the Riders given that the punishment for thieving was the loss of fingers or even hands.
  • Icy Blue Eyes: Icy Blue Eye, that is; he had heterochromia, with one eye being blue and the other black, and he had the cold and ruthless personality to match.
  • Jerkass: Morzan was an unpleasant bully before joining Galbatorix and remained as such while he served the King.
  • Last of His Kind: By the time of his final duel with Brom, Morzan was the last remaining Forsworn.
  • Luke, I Might Be Your Father: Near the end of Eldest, Murtagh reveals that he (Murtagh) and Eragon have the same mother Selena, suggesting that Morzan is Eragon's father. This is a revelation so devastating that Eragon refers to himself as "Son of None" for most of the third book. Plus, given that one of the Inheritance Cycle's primary criticisms is that it's so derivative of Star Wars, this could have well been the case until The Reveal late in the third book that Brom was Eragon's father.
  • Posthumous Character: He's been dead for some fifteen years by the start of the books. Despite this status, he left a large mark on the backstories of several of the main characters, most notably Brom (as his Arch-Enemy), Murtagh (literally), and even Arya (after Brom killed Morzan, Arya volunteered to be the egg's courier).
  • A Pupil of Mine Until He Turned to Evil: Morzan was trained by Oromis alongside Brom before joining Galbatorix.
  • A Sinister Clue: Eragon sometimes imagines the ruthless and cruel Morzan as wielding Zar'roc left-handed.
  • The Sociopath: Everything described about Morzan's personality depicts him as a deeply unpleasant and egotistical man who was still good at manipulating others and thought little of committing violence on a whim. Specifically he mainly saw Selena's love for him as something he could control and a useful tool that was hard to use against him.
  • Strong Family Resemblance: Galbatorix says he strongly resembles Murtagh, his son.
  • Token Minority: Morzan is the only known human Forsworn identified in the Cycle. This ended with the publication of Murtagh, which mentions a second one, Saerlith.
  • You Killed My Father: Morzan is personally responsible for the death of Brom's dragon, fuelling his decades-long vendetta against Morzan.

    Lord Barst 
An Imperial general known for his cunning and prowess in battle.
  • Achilles' Heel: For bonus points in Irony, it's his own Amulet of Concentrated Awesome: Roran finally kills him when he cracks the Eldunarí stored within Barst's armour.
  • Amulet of Concentrated Awesome: His Eldunarí embedded in his breastplate, and the source of his extraordinary power.
  • Carry a Big Stick: He wields a hefty mace in combat, and kills Queen Islanzadí by breaking her neck with it.
  • Genius Bruiser: In addition to his immense battle prowess, he's known as one of Galbatorix's most cunning generals.
  • Hero Killer: In his case, he kills the elf queen.
  • The Juggernaut: It takes literally hundreds of soldiers just to slow him down. And even then, they have to use siege engines and the combined power of some of the Varden's heaviest hitters to bring him down.
  • One-Man Army: The assault on the imperial capital grinds to a halt because Barst is destroying the attacking army all by himself.

    The Forsworn 
13 Dragon Riders who turned traitor and joined Galbatorix. Morzan was the first and last of them.
  • 13 Is Unlucky: There were 13 of them and bad news for anyone in the vicinity (including each other).
  • Ambition Is Evil: Some of the Forsworn joined Galbatorix out of a desire for power.
  • Dark Action Girl: Formora was a female Elven Forsworn.
  • Dumb Muscle: Enduriel was described as particularly unintelligent to the point that his dragon was smarter than he was. The Forsworn's dragons as a whole became this over time as they lost their sense of self after losing their names.
  • Dwindling Party: Murtagh describes the Forsworn dying over time from a variety of causes: murdered by the Varden, infighting, overuse of magic. By the time he was born there were only five left, three when Morzan was sent to chase down Saphira's egg, and finally Morzan himself was the last remaining when he faced Brom in their final duel.
  • Equal-Opportunity Evil: The Forsworn included both humans and elves of both sexes in their ranks.
  • Fallen Hero: All of them are former Dragon Riders who joined Galbatorix.
  • Fascist, but Inefficient: Some of the Forsworn killed each other through infighting encouraged by Galbatorix, both for his own amusement and to stop them potentially banding together to overthrow him.
  • Name Amnesia: The Forsworn's dragons were subjected to a magic ritual by the rest of the dragon race where they were stripped of their names; they couldn't even use pronouns. The mental trauma of this eventually caused them to devolve into little more than mindless beasts with several going completely insane, which helped contribute to the Forsworn's deaths over the course of the Empire's lifespan since it further crippled their effectiveness.
  • Posthumous Character: All of them are dead by the time of the first book.
  • Revenge: Some of the Forsworn joined Galbatorix to take revenge for perceived wrongs.
  • Small Role, Big Impact: Kialandí and Formora were responsible for torturing Oromis and maiming Glaedr; the former case led to Oromis's death at the end of Brisingr.

Others

    Angela 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/angela_90.jpg
A herbalist, fortune teller, and witch who always seems to know what is happening, and where things are going to be happening.
  • Absurdly Sharp Blade: In Inheritance, Angela's sword Tinkledeath, a blade which embodies the essence of sharpness, literally allowing it to cut through anything non-magical without even creating friction or resistance, it just slides through. It is never specified whether it's simply a blade made from Unobtainium or enchanted. Angela isn't talking.
  • Ambiguously Human: There's more textual evidence suggesting she isn't human than is otherwise.
  • Badass Bookworm: Skilled with magic and fighting.
  • Beware the Nice Ones: She's fairly polite, if brutally honest, but perfectly willing to poison the Empire's soldiers.
  • Bunny-Ears Lawyer: About as eccentric as they come, but still highly valued by the Varden for her skills and power.
  • Cloud Cuckoolander: She's highly eccentric, but that augments her prowess and adds to her mystique.
  • Combat Pragmatist: Her major contribution to the climatic battle of Eldest is poisoning a good chunk of the enemy's food supplies.
  • Delighting in Riddles: In Inheritance, she basically admits that she's being cryptic for the sake of being cryptic:
    "Really, you ought to pay better attention to what's going on around you. Otherwise, someone's liable to stick a knife in you when you're not looking. And then whom would I exchange cryptic remarks with? Go on, ask me another question. I'm rather enjoying this game."
  • Double Weapon: She has a hûthvír, a staff with a blade on each end, which she won in a game with a dwarf priest.
  • The Dreaded: When the Twins see her coming and cower, you know Angela is one of these. Made even more obvious when she absolutely terrifies the high priest of Helgrind when she tells him who she is. The reader mostly doesn't find out why.
  • Eccentric Mentor: She is quirky but also very wise, and gives Eragon many helpful pieces of advice.
  • Fortune Teller: Her occupation when Eragon first meets her. She still dabbles in it later on in the series.
  • Honor Before Reason: Defied. During Eldest, she sneaks into the enemy's camp and poisons every source of food or water she can get her hands on. While she takes no pleasure in it, she also flat-out states that she'd rather commit a dishonorable act than die in the upcoming battle.
  • I Just Like Saying the Word: She tends to like playing with words such as "flaccid".
  • Improbable Weapon User: When the Varden were ambushed at night, she fought off soldiers in her nightwear with a pair of giant wool combs.
  • Inexplicably Awesome: Apparently she needs to keep some secrets for herself, but damn it woman can't you at least reveal SOMETHING about why you're so damn awesome at everything!?
    • In the afterwords of Inheritance Christopher Paolini admits that no matter what he revealed about Angela, it would only detract from her awesomeness, but if you're curious you can always ask his sister, Angela, if she can reveal something about the herbalist.
    • One fan theory is that Angela is none other than the Soothsayer. If this is true then she is neither Elf nor Dwarf. This means that she very well could be human, or descended from the Grey Folk.
  • Minored in Ass-Kicking: She's a capable physical fighter if need be.
  • Older Than They Look: She's hinted to be far older than she looks.
  • Plucky Comic Relief: One of her major roles is to lighten the mood with her eccentricity.
  • Shout-Out: At the end of Inheritance, she starts to say "Raxacoricofallapatorius," but realizes the reference would be lost on Eragon. Even better, Word of God pointed out it's possible she actually is The Doctor.
  • Third-Person Person: In the movie.
  • Wild Mass Guessing: Due to her mysterious origin, she elicits quite a lot. The most popular one seems to be that she's the Soothsayer and a descendant of the Grey Folk (according to Paolini, pure-blooded Grey Folk do not exist anymore, while it was said that some took mates among other races). This would explain her affinity for nonverbal magic and long life span.

    Murtagh 
A solitary, traveling young man that does not give his loyalty to either the Empire or the Varden, disdaining both. He meets Eragon on the road and becomes a traveling companion. He's later revealed to be Morzan's son, first and last of the Forsworn, and the destined partner of the red dragon egg still in Galbatorix's possession.
  • Abusive Parents: His father was one, as the scar on his back will attest to.
  • Ancestral Weapon: In the second book, he takes Zar'roc from Eragon, claiming that it's his inheritance. Technically he's right, as it belonged to his father.
  • Anti-Hero: His willingness to kill is a sharp contrast with Eragon in the first book.
  • Anti-Magic: The second to figure it out, after Galbatorix. He later teaches it to Eragon in a moment of camaraderie.
  • Anti-Villain: As Galbatorix's vassal, Murtagh doesn't necessarily want to commit atrocities, but being sworn into the king's service through magic leaves him little choice.
  • Badass Normal: He's Eragon's equal in swordfighting (and later proves his superior), an excellent archer, and he even manages to temporarily destroy Durza. He turns into a Empowered Badass Normal later on.
  • Bow and Sword in Accord: Like Eragon he fights with a sword and a bow.
  • Brought Down to Badass: Following Inheritance, his relinquishment of the Eldunarí in his possession also Nerfs his physical prowess, though he's still a skilled Magic Knight who knows the Word.
  • Cain and Abel: Galbatorix forces him to be the Cain to Eragon's Abel, but Murtagh's popularity and sympathetic motives means that many fans see it as the other way around.
  • Character Tics: Murtagh has a particular Weapon Twirling, which Eragon uses to identify him when they meet as foes on the battlefield at the end of the second book.
  • Combat Pragmatist: In combat, Murtagh goes straight for the kill, which is a key reason why he's more deadly than Eragon.
  • Cool Sword: He takes Zar'roc from Eragon at the end of Eldest as he views it as some twisted "inheritance" from his father Morzan, especially now that he is a Dragon Rider too with a dragon whose scales match the blade.
  • Dark and Troubled Past: Grew up with Morzan as his father and ended up running away from home.
  • Dating Catwoman: As he and Nasuada are trapped on opposite sides of the war and he later becomes an outlaw, they never actually get to the 'dating' part.
  • Determinator: During their final sword fight, Eragon tries to figure him out, and realizes that he can't possibly defeat Murtagh in a fair fight, because Murtagh not only outclasses him in swordsmanship, but is so driven and determined that winning the fight could never mean as much to Eragon as to Murtagh, even if his life is on the line.
  • Distressed Dude: In Eldest, he is kidnapped and taken to Galbatorix, who uses his True Name to enslave him. He doesn't actually manage to break free until the third act of Inheritance.
  • The Dragon: After his Face–Heel Turn he becomes Galbatorix's right hand.
  • Dragon Rider: He bonds with a male red dragon named Thorn.
  • Drowning My Sorrows: Takes to doing this in Inheritance, after Galbatorix forces him to torture Nasuada. She mentions that when he comes to visit her, he's sometimes drunk and confides in her about his Dark and Troubled Past. By Murtagh he's kicked the habit, refusing to start drinking again even in similarly stressful situations.
  • Evil Counterpart: To Eragon. He too is a young dragon rider of the new generation, and he and Eragon are close in age. However, Murtagh is in service to the evil King Galbatorix, while Eragon is fighting for the Varden.
  • Face–Heel Turn: He's abducted by traitors in the Varden and taken to Galbatorix, who forces him to become his slave. It never took.
  • Fatal Flaw: His anger, which fuels his desire to strike back at the world, and was also what led him to kill Hrothgar.
  • Foil: To Eragon. Eragon is a naive farmboy who becomes a Dragon Rider by circumstance and is fighting for revenge and to protect his friends. Murtagh is a world-weary Defector from Decadence who was forced into becoming a Dragon Rider and has to serve as a soldier for The Empire because he has no other choice.
  • Forced into Evil: Galbatorix uses his and Thorn's True Names to force him to swear an oath of loyalty to him. It's later also implied that Galbatorix threatened to harm Thorn unless he caved, and confirmed in Murtagh. The result leaves little choice but to serve Galbatorix. In some moments, he uses use loopholes in Galbatorix's orders to get out of committing villainy. When he manages to change his True Name he is quick to turn on Galbatorix and helps the protagonists to defeat him.
  • Generation Xerox: Eragon claims he's "become his father" when he ends up as Galbatorix's lieutenant, but unlike Morzan Murtagh isn't doing so willingly and switches sides the moment he's able to. He takes after his mother quite a bit though; both reluctantly served the Empire, got redeemed by love, managed to change their True Names and promptly took advantage of this to screw over the Empire.
  • Genius Bruiser: When traveling with Eragon, he often suggests plans and maneuvers that even Saphira admits are smarter than Eragon's, spends his leisure time reading in Tronjheim, and all in all is a very intelligent character in addition to his deadly combat skills.
  • Good All Along: He never actually does turn to villany, he's just resigned himself to being Galbatorix's slave because he doesn't see any way out. Once an opportunity to get free presents itself, he takes it.
  • Guile Hero: Becomes this in Murtagh. While very powerful even without his Eldunarí, Murtagh defeats more enemies with his wits and creative uses of magic than with direct force.
  • Hero Killer: He's able to defeat several powerful characters including Hrothgar and all the Dwarven magicians during his tenure as Galbatorix's servant, though this is later revealed to be due to the Eldunarí (gem stones that contain the souls of deceased dragons and greatly enhance power) that Galbatorix gives him to use.
  • King Incognito: Being Morzan's son, he's technically the highest ranking nobleman in the country short of Galbatorix himself. Unfortunately, that status comes with being a virtual slave to the king, so he's on the run from it.
  • Like Father, Unlike Son: Despite their physical resemblance and the claims of some other characters that they're similar, Murtagh isn't overtly cruel like Morzan.
  • Lima Syndrome: He casts spells that prevent Nasuada from feeling pain during her torture while in Galbatorix's prison. It's strongly indicated his growing affection for her helps him to change his True Name and make a Heel–Face Turn.
  • Long Lost Sibling: Neither of them knew they had a sibling. He has the same mother as Eragon. While they initially believe that they share the same father as well, it turns out they don't.
  • Love Redeems: It is his feelings for Nasuada that allow him to change his True Name, and thus turn against Galbatorix.
  • Magic Knight: As a Dragon Rider, he surpasses Eragon for a time.
  • Mirror Character: Eragon and Murtagh are both young dragon-riders who are even half-brothers (and thought to be full brothers for a significant chunk of the series). Murtagh is forced into an oath because of his father and winds up following a similar path while Eragon swears fealty to Nasuada of his own free will and takes after his own genetic father, but they have similar skill sets and even use matching swords for dragon riders. Word of God has it that if Saphira hadn't hatched for Eragon, she likely would have for Murtagh—and dragons are picky about finding proper riders in this world.
  • Missing Mom: She died when he was a child.
  • Nice Job Fixing It, Villain!: Murtagh's Loophole Abuse to get out of taking Eragon captive at the end of Eldest leaves him and Saphira free to help Roran track down and kill the Ra'zac. When he and Eragon clash for the first time in Brisingr, Murtagh mentions that Galbatorix savagely tortured him and Thorn when he learned the Ra'zac had been slain, since had Murtagh obeyed his orders and taken Eragon and Saphira prisoner, the creatures would still be alive.
  • Not in This for Your Revolution: Very reluctantly agrees to go to the Varden with Eragon, Saphira, and Arya in order to get the antidote for Arya's poisoning, as he knows the Varden will react badly when they find out about his parentage.
  • Parental Abandonment: Murtagh lost both his parents by the time he was four; his father Morzan was slain by Brom and his mother Selena died of an unknown ailment shortly afterward.
  • Parental Substitute: Tornac, his servant, was the closest thing to an actual parental figure he had in the absence of Selena and Morzan being who he was. In addition to teaching young Murtagh swordplay, he took care of him and taught him how to be a man.
  • Powered by a Forsaken Child: The Eldunarí are the only thing that allows him to physically match Eragon, and his were taken from rather young dragons.
  • Pragmatic Hero: He's pragmatic to the point of ruthlessness, which causes a bit of tension between him and Eragon when Murtagh callously executes a defenseless enemy.
  • Psychic Block Defense: Even before becoming a Dragon Rider, Murtagh is naturally skilled at blocking mental attacks; only Galbatorix got past them, and only by threatening Thorn's life. This ability of his is put to the ultimate test in Murtagh where Bachel's repeated mental attacks and torture temporarily render him insane, but he still refuses to swear loyalty to her even in his zombified state, rebuilds his mind bit by bit, and beats her in the rematch.
  • Punch-Clock Villain: Even after having clashed with Eragon, resented Eragon for having things easier, and at times genuinely wanted to kill Eragon, when free of his bonds one of the first things he does is to teach Eragon the very valuable and dangerous Name of All Names and take his leave as a brother.
  • Redemption Earns Life: He goes into self-imposed exile after his Heel–Face Turn.
  • Scars Are Forever: Has a huge one on his back where his father threw his sword at him when he was three.
  • Screw This, I'm Outta Here!:
    • In his backstory, upon learning just how Ax-Crazy Galbatorix really is, he refused to serve him and fled the capital. Eragon and co meet him while he's on the run.
    • At the end of Inheritance, he effectively says this to the Empire, the Varden, and the whole continent.
  • Shoot the Dog: He will not hesitate to, initially contrasting him with Eragon until the latter's Character Development.
  • Sins of Our Fathers: He is treated with suspicion and derision by the Varden for being the son of Morzan, even though by his own admission he despised his father and was abused by him.
  • Spanner in the Works: Managed to learn the Name of Magic, which ended up giving Eragon an opening.
  • Star-Crossed Lovers: By the end of the series he has this dynamic with Nasuada, but unfortunately Murtagh must leave as he is technically a war criminal.
  • Stronger Sibling: Even at the end of the story, Eragon believes him to be a better fighter.
  • Tall, Dark, and Handsome: Described as such.
  • Tempting Fate: Much of Murtagh involves him seeking out one of the very dangerous places that Umaroth explicitly warned him would be beyond even his ability to survive. To Murtagh, that just means the place is extra suspicious and merits an investigation.
  • Took a Level in Jerkass: As a villain he treats Eragon with much more contempt.
  • Tragic Villain: He's forced into serving the Empire, despite having done everything possible to avoid it.
  • Troubled, but Cute: He's said to be "strikingly handsome" and has a fair amount of emotional baggage and unresolved personal issues.
  • The Un-Favorite: Upon learning that he and Eragon have the same mother, Murtagh thinks that Selena liked Eragon better because it was him she took away to be raised in a safe and loving home by Garrow and his family, while Murtagh was left stuck with an abusive father and Galbatorix, who attempted to corrupt him. However, given that Morzan rarely let Selena see Murtagh without his permission and it was his birth that reportedly changed her for the better, it's clear how this wasn't the true: when Selena found out who Brom truly was and fell in love with him, she had the chance to escape with him, but refused to do so immediately, in part because she wanted to redeem her actions as Morzan's Hand by helping the Varden, but especially because she refused to leave Murtagh behind; the reason Murtagh was not saved as well was only because neither Serena nor Brom had the chance to do so in time.
  • Villainous Lineage: The reason the Varden don't trust him is because he's the son of an evil Dragon Rider. He does end up becoming Galbatorix's right-hand man, but not by choice and he's never truly evil.
  • Walking the Earth: His ultimate fate. He and Thorn leave for an unknown destination, resolving that they might return when the world will appear as a less hateful place to them.

    Jeod 
A scholar and friend of Brom's.
  • Adapted Out: He was cut out of the film.
  • Badass Bookworm: He's a scholar, but can fight and has a rapier.
  • Hidden Depths: The end of Eldest reveals he knows the Ancient Language.
  • May–December Romance: His wife's age is not known, but at least, she looks much younger than him.
  • Out of Focus: After Eldest, he falls out of focus as a supporting character.
  • Retired Badass: He's had his share of adventures with Brom before the series started.
  • Royal Rapier: His signature weapon, which he stands by despite Brom deriding it.
  • The Smart Guy: He's a merchant with a keen eye for business, though he hit a spell of bad luck.

    Tenga 
A reclusive hermit who lives and studies magic at a deserted elven outpost. Angela remembers him as her mentor.
  • Badass Bookworm: He owns several compendiums of the Ancient Language, which are considered to be rare and a great treasure.
  • Fantastic Science: Several of the questions that he preoccupies himself with answering are implied to involve this.
  • The Hermit: He lives by himself in a ruined elven tower in the middle of the plains, where he studies magic in isolation from society.
  • Mundane Utility: Being able to cast magic without the Ancient Language means that he can easily light his cookfires with a twitch of his hand. Tenga also uses an abandoned elven outpost as his hermit cabin, and grows vegetables in the soil around it.
  • Older Than They Look: He looks fairly old, but he would have to be near to immortal to have taught Angela. In fact, Angela believed him already dead by the time Eragon mentioned him to her.
  • The Professor: Of magic, which he taught to Angela.
  • Wacky Wayside Tribe: Eragon encounters him while travelling. The encounter has no bearing on the plot other than a bit of comic relief.
  • Wizard Beard: A particularly long and impressive one.

    Selena 
Eragon's mother, sister to his uncle Garrow and aunt to Roran. She left Eragon with her brother shortly after he was born and disappeared, never to be heard from again. It's later revealed she was Morzan's wife and personal spy and assassin, known as the Black Hand, before switching allegiance to Varden, and Murtagh's mother as well.
  • Aerith and Bob: Out of all her family members, she has the most normal-sounding name (for comparison, her brother's name is Garrow, her nephew's name is Roran and her son's name is Eragon).
  • All Girls Want Bad Boys: She became infatuated with Morzan when he visited Carvahall and left with him, seeing him as a chance to get away from her boring life as a farmer. However, she started to go off him when she realized just how bad he could be.
  • Awful Wedded Life: Her marriage to Morzan became increasingly unbearable, especially after their son was born. Her husband took him away from her shortly after his birth and only rarely let her see him, using him to control her. It's implied he did other things to control her as well and her love for him was soon eroded, though he was apparently unaware of this.
  • Connected All Along: It's revealed at the end of Eldest that she is Murtagh's mother as well as Eragon's, and was Morzan's wife. Brisingr reveals that she was also Brom's lover.
  • Daddy Had a Good Reason for Abandoning You: It turns out she left Eragon with his aunt and uncle because she needed to return home to be with Murtagh and to prevent Morzan from growing suspicious of her whereabouts. She presumably intended to come back for Eragon, but she fell deathly ill on the road home and died a few weeks later.
  • Dark Action Girl: She was reportedly well-trained in combat and described as wearing bracers on her arms and carrying blades on her waist.
  • Defecting for Love: After falling in love with her, Brom revealed his true identity to Selena. Having fallen for him too, Selena chose to ally herself with the Varden and worked as one of their spies.
  • Deliver Us from Evil: It's believed by a few characters that the birth of her son Murtagh was the catalyst for her becoming a kinder and more moral person.
  • Double Agent: She was Morzan's spy until she secretly switched sides and began spying on him for the Varden.
  • The Dreaded: She had quite a fearsome reputation amongst the Varden; Jeod even claims he was more afraid of her than Morzan.
  • From Nobody to Nightmare: She went from a farmer's daughter living a simple life in Carvahall to one of Morzan's most feared and deadly agents and a formidable mage.
  • Heel–Face Turn: She eventually turned against Morzan and secretly began feeding top secret intel about him and the Empire to the Varden.
  • High-Heel–Face Turn: She was the only prominent female villain allied with the Forsworn and the only one who turned good.
  • The Lost Lenore: She's revealed to be this for Brom.
  • Love Makes You Evil: She became Morzan's Black Hand in order to prove her love and devotion to him.
  • Love Redeems: Giving birth to her son Murtagh reportedly triggered a Heel Realization in her and she began to see the error of her ways and turn against Morzan. After falling in love with Brom, her True Name changed and she made a full Heel–Face Turn, spying on Morzan for the Varden.
  • My Secret Pregnancy: Both her pregnancies were this. When he learned she was pregnant with Murtagh, Morzan had Selena spirited away to his castle to give birth in secret and then gave Murtagh to nursemaids so his enemies could never use his son against him. Upon learning she was pregnant with Eragon, who was fathered by Brom, Selena secretly returned to Carvahall to give birth and gave Eragon to her brother and sister-in-law to raise.
  • Parental Abandonment: She left Eragon with his uncle Garrow and aunt Marian soon after he was born for unknown reasons and left, never to return. It later turns out that she did this to protect him from the Empire and died before she ever had a chance to come back.
  • Parental Favoritism: Upon learning that Eragon is his brother, Murtagh comes to believe that Selena liked Eragon better because she took him away and let him grow up in a warm and loving home with her family, while he was left with his abusive father Morzan and the manipulative Galbatorix. However, given that Selena had only limited access to Murtagh thanks to Morzan and that it's believed it was in fact Murtagh's birth that saw her start to become a better person, it's unclear how true this is.
  • Posthumous Character: It's presumed she is dead after being absent from Carvahall for fifteen years and it's later confirmed she died not long after Eragon was born.
  • Red Baron: During her tenure as Morzan's spy and assassin, she was known as the Black Hand.
  • Secret Relationship: She had one with Brom, resulting in her falling pregnant with Eragon.
  • Sympathetic Adulterer: She was still married to Morzan when she had a relationship with Brom. Given that this is Morzan, and that it's implied he was abusive to her — and was definitely abusive to their son — she's presented sympathetically.
  • Take Care of the Kids: The last thing she told Garrow was to look after her son.
  • Took a Level in Kindness: Brom and Jeod's descriptions of her character are quite different, with Brom describing her as a very compassionate and dignified woman who always helped those less fortunate, while Jeod describes her as being "utterly ruthless, devoid of either pity or compassion". Brom didn't meet Selena until after she'd given birth to Murtagh, at which point she had begun to despise Morzan and her relationship with Brom changed her further, so we can assume she developed into a much kinder and more selfless person.
  • Unholy Matrimony: She was Happily Married to Morzan and was his loyal right-hand woman... for a time.
  • Villainesses Want Heroes: She ended up falling in love with Brom and had a Heel–Face Turn after learning he was a former Dragon Rider and the leader of the Varden.
  • Walking Spoiler: Her character is very spoiler-heavy in regards to certain revelations about Eragon and Murtagh.

    Teenage girl and Woman 
A wandering teenage girl and woman whom Eragon blesses.
  • The Cameo: They're briefly seen in Inheritance at the battle, unharmed. The blessing really worked.
  • Hero of Another Story: Angela is reading their fortune when Eragon meets them. She calls them "pilgrims on their own quest", but refuses to elaborate any further.
  • No Name Given: They choose not to give their names, as names have power.

Dragons

    As a Whole 
Ancient, powerful and nearly-extinct winged reptiles.
  • The Ageless: Dragons never die of old age, and can live potentially forever if they aren't killed.
  • Breath Weapon: They can breathe fire.
  • Our Dragons Are Different: The typical fantasy version — four-legged, bat-winged, highly intelligent fire-breathing reptiles. They can perform unpredictable and potent magical feats in times of high emotion. Bonded dragons can psychically talk to their partners. Wild dragons are intelligent, but have no civilization. Their eggs normally remain dormant until conditions are favorable for hatching, but the ones given to the Riders are enchanted so that they only hatch when they contact the person who they will bond with. A bonded dragon becomes gentler and more civilized, even as the rider becomes more fierce. They also have a type of crystalline Soul Jar in their chests.
  • Pride: Dragons tend to be incredibly arrogant, both in terms of physical vanity and in regards to seeing themselves as better than other beings.
  • Soul Jar: Dragons naturally grow a crystalline organ, named an Eldunarí, within their chests. If this organ is regurgitated while the dragon is alive, then when they die their consciousness becomes stored within it, allowing them to live on after their bodily death.
  • Stronger with Age: Dragons never enter decrepitude, instead growing stronger and bigger as they age — and since they live until they're killed, they can grow very big and very strong.
  • Telepathy: Most dragons communicate psychically to their Riders.
  • That's No Moon: The oldest dragons grew so large that they could be mistaken for hills.
  • Unskilled, but Strong: Dragons are capable of performing feats of magic of such scale they might as well be miracles. Unfortunately, dragons are incapable of using the Ancient Language to cast magic and can only use the wordless variation that is entirely dependent on their intentions and mindset at the time, the results are often unpredictable based on that, and they can't even access their innate magic save in specific circumstances often brought about by strong emotions.

    Saphira 
Eragon's dragon. After being held in Galbatorix's treasury for many years, she was stolen by the Varden and eventually ended up in Eragon's hands.
  • The Ace: Is considered naturally talented for a Dragon.
  • Awesome Ego: Is generally very smug about being so much stronger and more dangerous than everyone else, but gets away with it because at the end of the day she is a dragon.
  • Blasphemous Boast: When flying, she occasionally dares "whatever gods there might be" to challenge her.
  • Blue-and-Orange Morality: Being a dragon gives her a certain distance from most races, and she's very willing to kill or disregard others in a way others aren't. A lot of Eragon's more stable qualities come from simply wanting to balance out her more savage qualities.
  • Blue Is Heroic: She has blue eyes and scales, and is bonded to The Hero, Eragon.
  • Bond Creature: She is mystically connected to Eragon.
  • Breath Weapon: Like all dragons, she can spit a jet of magical fire.
  • Egg McGuffin: Spends some time as one in the first book.
  • Fourth-Date Marriage: Or rather, First Date Mating With Fírnen, Arya's dragon.
  • Intellectual Animal: She has an intellect that matches humans, but is in every other way a large carnivorous animal, taking joy in eating animals alive, for example.
  • Mama Bear: She often flies into a rage whenever Eragon is hurt or in danger.
  • Mayfly–December Romance: She has a one-sided attraction to Glaedr, who is over 800 years older than her.
  • Morality Pet: She and Eragon serve as each other's. One of the reasons he rebels is because he knows she'll be painfully enslaved if they're caught.
  • Meaningful Name: Her name sounds rather like "sapphire" and she has blue scales. Her name was also that of Brom's dragon who was killed during the Fall of the Riders.
  • Our Dragons Are Different: She's symbiotically bonded to a human, and has random bursts of reality-warping magic.
  • Sapient Steed: She's sentient and serves as Eragon's mount.
  • Smug Super: Knows she's one of the most powerful creatures on the continent and isn't afraid to remind people about it. About the only time she shows worry for herself in a fight is against another dragon.
  • The Smurfette Principle: The only female dragon alive, which is a plot point as she's the only hope to revive the dragons.
  • Teacher/Student Romance: She develops a one-sided crush on Glaedr almost immediately after meeting him. He never return her affections, though.
  • Telepathy: Her main form of communication.

    Thorn 
A red dragon bonded to Murtagh.
  • Anti-Villain: In the same way as Murtagh. He was born in Galbatorix's castle and both he and Murtagh are forced to serve Galby through magic and torture, even though they hate it.
  • Butt-Monkey: A non-humourous example, as Eragon notes. Of the major characters, Thorn is likely more The Woobie than anyone else. It is noted that Galbatorix uses magic to make him grow much more rapidly than is natural, giving him the body of a mature dragon while his mind is still that of a hatchling.
  • Hidden Depths: The one time Eragon communicates with him, he seems to be gentle and soft-spoken, with a "musical" voice.
  • Lightning Bruiser: He continually grows stronger and faster very quickly, as Glaedr discovers. Compared to Saphira, however, he's slower and less graceful, but has thicker, stronger limbs.
  • Meaningful Name: Murtagh names him Thorn as he will "be a thorn in the side of all [their] enemies". He certainly proves to be this for the Varden.
  • Only Friend: To Murtagh after he's Forced into Evil. Murtagh clearly loves Thorn and only submitted to Galbatorix because he couldn't bear him harming his dragon. Thorn is Murtagh's only true companion and comfort during this time, and vice versa.
  • Powered by a Forsaken Child: Eldunarí again. They give him power comparable to Saphira, despite only being a few days old.
  • Red Eyes, Take Warning: His eyes are the same colour as his scales, and he is antagonistic for the majority of the series.
  • Ship Tease: With Saphira in Inheritance. He survives, but it doesn't happen.
  • Trauma Button: Enclosed spaces. Due to his captivity in youth, Thorn is extremely claustrophobic. He conquers this fear to come to Murtagh's aid.
  • Younger Than They Look: He has physically matured beyond his young age due to Galbatorix's magic.

    Glaedr 
An ancient gold dragon bonded to Oromis.
  • Cultured Badass: He is a dragon, with all the fierceness that that implies. He is also extremely knowledgeable about history, philosophy, natural sciences and, through his link to Oromis, even swordsmanship.
  • First Love: To Saphira, though unfortunately for her, he doesn't return her feelings.
  • Former Teen Rebel: Glaedr at one point mentions having once having broken off a mountaintop in a rage when he was much younger.
  • Handicapped Badass: He's missing a leg.
  • Heterosexual Life-Partners: With Oromis, arguably to an even greater degree than the rest of the Dragon Riders in the series, possibly due to how long the two have been bonded. In chapters written from Glaedr's point of view, Oromis is literally referred to as partner-of-his-life-Oromis.
  • Heroic BSoD: He spends much of Inheritance in the grips of depression, unwilling to talk due to the death of Oromis.
  • May–December Romance: What Saphira wants with him, but he isn't so enthusiastic.
  • Meaningful Name: "glæd" is Old English for either "glad" or, more fittingly, "bright"
  • Mentor Occupational Hazard: Alongside Oromis, the two run afoul of Murtagh and Thorn, who kill both rider and dragon.
  • Old Master: He's the oldest surviving dragon aside from Shruikan, who is in no condition to mentor anyone.
  • Rejected Apology: Downplayed when Murtagh apologizes for killing Oromis. Glaedr knows full well that Murtagh was being controlled by Galbatorix at the time and states he isn't interested in seeking revenge, but admits that he still can't forgive Murtagh for killing his rider.
  • Sensitive Guy and Manly Man: The Manly Man to Oromis' Sensitive Guy. Even discounting those attributes that are necessitated by one being a dragon and the other an elf, Glaedr is much more direct and blunt than his partner. He is also extremely protective of Oromis, angrily growling at Eragon when the latter accuses Oromis of betraying his trust (and almost draws a sword at him), all the while Oromis himself seems to prefer to remain seated and calmly discuss and deconstruct the reasons behind Eragon's anger.
  • Soul Jar: He resides in one because of his physical death by the end of Brisingr.
  • Spared, but Not Forgiven: After all is said and done, he tells Murtagh that while he cannot forgive him for killing Oromis, he understands that Galbatorix was controlling Murtagh to do it and he has no interest in seeking revenge.
  • Supernatural Gold Eyes: They match his golden scales.

    Shruikan 
Galbatorix's black dragon, stolen from the Riders as a child.
  • Ax-Crazy: As a result of a hundred years of abuse, he's gone completely insane. His eyeballs are literally shuddering with insanity.
  • Breath Weapon: During his debut in Inheritance, he breathes a jet of flames as wide as a river and several kilometers long.
  • The Brute: His mind's been twisted by magic, so he's nothing more than a mindless powerhouse that serves as Galbatorix's attack dog.
  • Creepy Blue Eyes: Most shown dragons usually have eyes close to the color of their skins, but Eragon is surprised to see that Shruikan's aren't Black Eyes of Evil but instead a piercing blue. Which arguably makes it even worse when he gets a full look at them and sees the Ax-Crazy within.
  • Dark Is Evil: Subverted. He has black scales, but it's rather implied that he was a benevolent dragon before Galbatorix drove him insane and he's only a villain because of Galby.
  • Eye Scream: In the final battle, courtesy of Arya wielding the Dauthdert.
  • Giant Flyer: And easily the biggest one that's appeared in the series.
  • Kaiju: Shruikan is ENORMOUS, and the narration shows this surprisingly well. Eragon at first mistakes smaller portions of his body (neck, hind foot, wing fold) for larger parts (main body, shin, entire wing).
  • Meaningful Name: His name is similar to "shuriken", Japanese weapons also known as throwing stars or ninja stars.
  • Mercy Kill: By the time the main characters finally come face-to-face with Shruikan, Elva flat-out states that giving him one of these is the only way to alleviate his suffering. He receives one after Galbatorix's death.
  • Woobie, Destroyer of Worlds: The dragon has heavily suffered under his enslavement under Galbatorix, with his sanity having been so depleted that, should he be allowed to, he would destroy the entire planet simply because of his pain and anger. In fact, Elva heavily suggests that the only way to "help" Shruikan is to put him out of his misery. This status is also why the dragons didn't subject Shurikan to the same ritual that stripped the Forsworn's dragons of their names, as he was an unwilling victim of Galbatorix rather than a willing participant in his crimes.

    Umaroth (major spoilers for Inheritance
The dragon bonded to Vrael, who was the leader of the dragon riders before they fell. Revealed in the fourth book to be one of the Eldunarí hidden in Vroengard and accompanies Eragon to the final showdown.
  • Big Good: When he was Vrael's dragon. And again as an Elundari
  • Light Is Good: Was white and was the leader of the original Dragon Riders' dragons.
  • Mentor Archetype: Not as much as Glaedr, but it's still there
  • Mr. Exposition: Gives Eragon all the information he needs about the Vault of Souls and what's hidden there.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: He would not have hesitated to let Galbatorix kill the two child hostages had Eragon not stopped him.

    Fírnen (major spoilers for Inheritance
The third dragon egg in Galbatorix's possession, he becomes Arya's dragon and Saphira's mate for the short time she and Eragon remain in Alagaesia.
  • Fourth-Date Marriage: With Saphira, although not for life and actually only a few months before she and Eragon depart.
  • Second Love: He becomes this to Saphira.
  • There is Another: His is the last unhatched egg, and serves as a backup plan for both the Varden and Galbatorix in case their respective dragons should fall in battle.
  • Vocal Dissonance: He has a surprisingly deep voice for such a young dragon, even deeper than Glaedr and the Eldunarí.
  • Walking Spoiler: To a greater extent than any of the other dragons listed here, as he only hatches at the very end of the main series, radically altering the context of several characters' relationships with one another.

    Valdr (major spoilers for Inheritance
An ancient wild dragon, who's among the Eldunarí in the Vault of Souls. He's the oldest dragon among them.
  • Cloud Cuckoolander: This seems to be the case with most old dragons. It's not that they're insane, but the time they've had to reflect on so many things leaves what they say nearly impenetrable, along with the fact that they're mostly senile leaving what is understandable behind winding Rambling Old Man Monologue. For example, he gives Eragon some advice that sounds close to just rambling about butterflies, but circumstances unfold so that Eragon understands Valdr's actually very useful advice.
  • Mentor Archetype: He frequently gives advice to Eragon, although the latter has trouble deciphering it.

Elves

    As a Whole 
Highly reclusive humanoids who live in Du Weldenvarden, a great forest in the north.
  • The Ageless: Elves never die of old age, and can live potentially forever if they aren't killed. This isn't an innate trait for them, notably — they used to be as mortal as anyone else, and only became immortal after their magical alliance to the dragons.
  • Hypocrite: It has been stated multiple times that elves don't trust humans anymore after Galbatorix's betrayal, however they conveniently forget that many of the Forsworn were elves.
  • Our Elves Are Different: They're largely the modern fantasy kind, being immortal, wiser, faster, stronger and more beautiful than the other races, highly skilled at magic, and native to an isolationist forest kingdom.

    Arya 
The elf ambassador and the guardian of Saphira's egg for fifteen years.
  • The Ace: She's a skilled warrior, magic user and ambassador.
  • Action Girl: She's held up as an incredibly powerful warrior, is shown to take on urgals, and with some help from Eragon and Saphira, kills a shade at the end Brisingr. She's also Eragon's technical superior in swordsmanship.
  • Adaptation Dye-Job: Arya in the books is black-haired and has "tawny" skin. Her movie incarnation had reddish gold hair and white skin.
  • All Love Is Unrequited: Eragon falls in love with Arya pretty much instantly, but Arya ignores Eragon's romantic interest in her and then rejects him outright in Eldest. He manages to patch things up enough for them to be friends again, but never gets over his feelings for her. Her rejection is fairly justified, as her previous romantic partner was killed recently (at the beginning of the first book) and she's put off by how shallow and childish Eragon's crush seems to be.
  • Aloof Dark-Haired Girl: She has black hair and comes across as quite haughty and cold, even by elf standards. In the third book, it is noted that much of this is due to the trauma of her capture and torture at the beginning of the series.
  • Ambadassador: Quickly proves herself one of the strongest fighters around.
  • "Ass" in Ambassador: From the perspective of the dwarves, for being chronically tardy and often arguing with their high priest about the dwarves' religion when she visits their cities.
  • Badass in Distress: She spends much of Eragon locked up in a cell or unconscious after being captured and tortured by Durza. She seems to resent the Damsel in Distress label.
  • Beauty Is Never Tarnished: Is mentioned to have been beaten, whipped, cut, and burned with hot irons among other tortures by Durza and repeatedly brought to the brink of death at Gil'ead, and Eragon, Saphira, and Murtagh are horrified by the full extent of her injuries when they see them, but Eragon's POV mentions she still looks beautiful "underneath the disfiguring marks". He and Saphira spend hours healing the worst of Arya's injuries to save her life and she has to be healed again at the Varden, but by the time she's awake again to come find him, Eragon notes that there are no marks or scars left from over her torture.
  • Bow and Sword in Accord: She fights using both a bow and a sword, and is superhumanly proficient with both.
  • Determinator: Saphira calls her "dragon-blood-elf-Arya" in reference to her overall tenacity. In the first book, Durza tortures her daily for information, nearly to the point of insanity, but she refuses to speak. After she is rescued, she continues to participate in dangerous assignments alongside Eragon.
  • Distracted by the Sexy: Has this effect on Eragon, and she deliberately plays on this when sparring with him.
  • Dragon Rider: The last of the three dragon eggs, the green one, does in fact hatch for her. His name is Fírnen.
  • Dude, She's Like in a Coma: Eragon has this reaction while he's healing the unconscious Arya in the first book.
  • Elemental Motifs: Elves culturally have great love and respect for nature, their capitol city is in a forest, and its citizens live in magically-sculpted living trees. Fittingly Arya, the first elf introduced and the most prominent one, wears leather (animal skin), has brown skin, green eyes, green magic, and a pine needle Signature Scent to evoke nature and woodland imagery.
  • Elves vs. Dwarves: She has a lot of disputes with the dwarves, especially since her position means she has to travel among them quite often.
  • Emotionless Girl: Of the repressed variety. To be fair, even when she does open up, she seems to be naturally restrained.
  • First Love: To Eragon. Make that only love, as well.
  • Girl of My Dreams: Eragon first sees her in a dream while she's imprisoned and soon becomes infatuated with her.
  • Hair-Trigger Temper: It is noted that she becomes quite tense and irascible while preparing to meet with her estranged mother, so Eragon has to walk on eggshells while talking to her.
  • Hell-Bent for Leather: Most of her clothes are made of black leather.
  • Heroic Resolve: Durza does his utmost to break her, but she refuses to reveal so much as a single piece of information even when she's beginning to hallucinate from endless torture.
  • The High Queen: Succeeds her late mother after several months of political debate.
  • Jail Bait Wait: By the end of the last book is willing to consider a romantic relationship with Eragon, but after 5-10 years.
  • Lady of War: She's a graceful fighter.
  • Letting Her Hair Down: When she arrives in Ellesmera, she takes the leather band out of her hair, starts wearing clothes that aren't just black, and relaxes a bit. However, it's not until the third book that she starts being nicer to Eragon.
  • Lightning Bruiser: As an elf, she is faster and far more durable than a human.
  • May–December Romance: With Eragon. The main reason why she doesn't initially want to have a relationship with him is because he hasn't lived to anywhere near her lifespan yet, although his life expectancy is just as high. It's eventually clear that she is in fact interested in Eragon, but is uncomfortable with their age differences- while he is considered an adult by human standards, elves age much more slowly and still consider him to be little more than a child.
  • Mercy Kill: Despite the usual elvish reverence for life and nature, Arya shoots dead a gyrfalcon that couldn't fly with this rationale, saying it was too injured for her to heal and killing it with an arrow saved it from a longer, more miserable death. Again despite the elves' reverence for dragons, in the fourth book Arya is the one to deal the killing blow to the Ax-Crazy dragon Shruikan while Saphira and Thorn pin him down; even if they kill Galbatorix, Elva had confirmed Shruikan is too far gone from his pain and madness to be saved.
  • Peerless Love Interest: To Eragon. She's a stunningly beautiful and powerful elf princess, while he's a teenage Farm Boy turned Dragon Rider in training. He becomes infatuated with her after seeing her in a dream and goes to a lot of effort to rescue her in the first book. He also doggedly pursues her affections in the second book. This is actually deconstructed to an extent, as Arya rather brutally dismisses Eragon's feelings as a childish crush; she is decades older than him (though she doesn't look it) and so thinks of him as little more than a child, they barely know each other and she detests the way he idealizes her, (including putting her on a pedestal and focusing only on her beauty). It's not until they spend some more time together and Eragon matures a bit that she starts reciprocating his feelings, though even then she suggests they wait until he's older before attempting a relationship.
  • Really 700 Years Old: Just over a hundred. Looks like she's in her early twenties.
  • Rebellious Princess: She became the ambassador of her people against her mother's disapproval, to the point of being estranged from her for seventy years.
  • Royals Who Actually Do Something: Daughter of the queen and a formidable fighter, as well as the elven ambassador. She actually invokes this intentionally, as she tells Eragon that the elves do not choose leaders who are unwilling to put themselves in danger for the sake of their people.
  • Signature Scent: She's described as smelling like crushed pine needles.
  • Single Tear: When Eragon dreams of her in her cell, she sheds a single shining tear. It's not until the third book that she actually really cries.
  • Statuesque Stunner: She's taller than most human men.
  • The Stoic: She is never not restrained. It seems to be a fundamental part of her identity.
  • Sugar-and-Ice Personality: Initially cold and stoic, she softens and opens up some by the third book.
  • There is Another: Guess who gets to become Dragon Rider #3? Downplayed in that it doesn't actually happen until after the main fight is over.

    Oromis 
Also known as the Mourning Sage and the Cripple-Who-Is-Whole, Oromis is a mysterious and powerful individual who reaches out to Eragon and encourages him to go to the elves for further training. Oromis is the last of the old riders, still alive, but severely crippled and no longer the rider that he once was.
  • Adapted Out: He never appears in the film, probably because the films became a Stillborn Franchise.
  • Berserk Button: While he's very difficult to anger, he becomes absolutely furious when he learns that Eragon and Saphira aren't keeping their minds linked at all times, like they're supposed to. He reacts similarly when Eragon seriously argues for wiping out the entire Urgal race and says that they'd do the same to humans or elves if the situation was reversed.
  • Blue Blood: It rarely comes up, but Oromis was actually born into one of the elven noble families.
  • Brutal Honesty: He may be polite about it, but if he feels there is a mistake to be corrected, he will not mince words to spare anyone's feelings, from his apprentice to his queen.
Oromis: "You have been blind to the world, Islanzadí, and lax upon your throne."
  • Career-Ending Injury: Two of them, actually. He suffers both from a curse inflicted by Kialandí that cuts him off from magic and a formerly-latent ailment that he was born with (and which Kialandí's curse awakened), which causes painful fits that leave him temporarily defenseless.
  • Color-Coded Eyes: His gray eyes are of a more mystical variety than Roran, as he's an elf, hermit, magician, and philosopher.
  • Cool Sword: His Rider Sword is known as Naegling, and is gold like his dragon Glaedr. Oromis stored whatever magic he could spare into the gem at the pommel. In the real world, Næġling is the name of the sword wielded by the hero Beowulf.
  • Don't Call Me "Sir": He insists on Eragon calling him "master" during his apprenticeship instead of "elda", even though the latter is a term of respect. He's remains patient when Eragon makes the mistake, though, and is fine when other characters refer to him as "elda".
  • Dragon Rider: His dragon is Glaedr.
  • Handicapped Badass: He has somehow been crippled so that he can't use powerful spells, and giving him an illness which causes him sudden and intense bouts of pain, momentarily incapacitating him.
  • Last of His Kind: In more ways than one. After Brom's death, he is the last of the old Dragon Riders, but he also mentions he is the "last scion of House Thrándurin", which was presumably wiped out when Galbatorix destroyed Luthivíra, the city where Oromis was born.
  • Meaningful Name: In Medieval Latin, ōrum means "gold", which is the colour of both his dragon and his blade.
    • His name also bears striking resemblance to the vala Oromë (or Arômêz in his native language) from The Silmarillion, who, much like Oromis, is usually kind and gentle, but dreadful in anger. Also notable is that one of Oromë's epithets is "the Great Rider".
  • Mentor Occupational Hazard: He eventually emerges from seclusion to help the elves, but runs afoul of Murtagh, who's possessed by Galbatorix during their duel.
  • My Greatest Failure: Considers Morzan to be one. Oromis was his teacher, but failed to notice the depth of Morzan's growing evil or steer him toward a better path.
  • Old Master: He's the last surviving Dragon Rider of the old guard, and he was a mentor to them as well.
  • Only Sane Man: Implied to have been this among the elder Riders at the time of the Fall. Only him and Glaedr took the threat of Galbatorix seriously.
  • O.O.C. Is Serious Business: He is normally calm and collected and never shows fear even when talking about his own impending demise. The look of "pure horror" he gets upon hearing about Eragon's blessing of Elva is the first clue that something has gone horribly wrong.
  • Really 700 Years Old: A staple of his race. He is 800 years old, making him about as old as the human civilization in Alagaësia.
  • Retired Badass: Before he was crippled (right before, actually), he managed to, within a fraction of a second, deconstruct his and Glaedr's entire physical selves and reform them outside of the magical barriers holding them in place.
  • Warrior Poet: He's a retired Dragon Rider who spends his days in retirement writing poetry.
  • Who Wants to Live Forever?: Downplayed. Oromis is never shown to consider immortality a bad thing, but for a naturally immortal elf, he is remarkably at peace with only having a few months left to live.
  • Your Days Are Numbered: As elves are intrinsically tied to magic, his ailment (which partially severed his ties to its flow) would eventually kill him. Judging by what he tells Eragon on the topic, it is safe to assume that he would not have lived for much longer even if he had survived his battle with Murtagh and Thorn.

    Rhunön 
The greatest elven smith, who forged the swords that were presented to the Riders. Rhunön is one of the very oldest of all elves, still remembering the time before the Dragon Riders, before elves were even immortal.
  • Awesome, but Impractical: She strongly advises against such designs, as a weapon that looks awesome but doesn't fulfill its purpose is ugly to her eyes.
  • Brutal Honesty: She is, and seems to approve of this from others. She mentioned that she rather liked Brom when he was a young trainee because "he was a rude one" who "said what he meant and wasted no words."
  • Bunny-Ears Lawyer: She's very eccentric by elven standards, but as Arya points out, her eccentricities are well tolerated on account of her being the greatest smith who has ever lived.
  • Deadpan Snarker: The only time she's not giving Eragon cheek is when she's explaining how to smith a sword, and even then she's pretty snarky about it.
  • Elemental Crafting: Brightsteel > all other metals. She won't even consider making a Rider's sword from anything less.
  • Elves vs. Dwarves: Inverted. Rhunön actually seems to really like dwarves; she first learned smithing from them, can speak their language fluently, and remembers a legendary dwarf as her mentor. When she first sees Orik, she immediately greets him in Dwarvish and invites him to her house to discuss metalworking. In fact, given her disgust with the rest of her race, she can sometimes seem more like you'd expect a dwarf to be portrayed than an elf.
  • Forging Scene: When she and Eragon forge his sword.
  • Grumpy Old Man: She's very cantankerous and considers it her right to be grouchy.
  • I Gave My Word: To never make a weapon again. It goes to show how she views things when her oath, to her, really meant that her hands would never make another weapon.
  • Loophole Abuse: She gets around a magic oath never to forge another sword by possessing Eragon and having him do it. She tells off Eragon for asking too many questions about it, because it only works if she herself believes that it doesn't count.
  • Magic Knight: In addition to being a smith and a warrior, she is also powerful in magic. She prefers to use her powers as little as possible, however, as she sees fulfilling tasks with magic makes life meaningless and robs her of the pleasure of it.
  • My Greatest Failure: Galbatorix's use of one of her blades.
  • My Species Doth Protest Too Much: She does not fit the mold of the traditional elf. She is one of the few who lived before the elves gained their immortality.
  • The Napoleon: Shorter and ruder than other elves.
  • Never Mess with Granny: She may be older than the oaks, but she is still fit and skilled enough to stand toe-to-toe with Eragon in a sword fight.
  • People Puppets: How she forges Eragon's new sword; she possesses him and makes his body do the forging.
  • Restraining Bolt: She can no longer forge weapons because of her oath. This does not extend to controlling someone else to let them make their own with her expertise and methods.
  • Screw You, Elves!: A really rare instance where the person calling out the elves is an elf herself Rhunön does not approve of what her race has become, and thinks that they were better off before they became ageless and refined.
  • The Stoic: Defied by her. She criticizes the rest of the elves for acting like they have "no more emotion than a marble statue!"
  • Time Abyss: She's one of the oldest living elves, and even predates the war between the elves and the dragons, which makes her roughly 2,700 years old. Compared to her, even Oromis (who is repeatedly called "ancient" in the narration) might as well be a child.
  • Ultimate Blacksmith: She is the one who forged the magical swords wielded by the Dragon Riders.
  • Ye Goode Olde Days: She bemoans the end of the days when elves used to act like humans and other normal beings. She is one of the last elves alive who is old enough to have lived in that time.

    Queen Islanzadí 
The Queen of the Elves, and Arya's mother.
  • Achilles in His Tent: She's completely cut off the elves from the outside world out of spite after the Fall of the Riders. Oromis calls her out on this, asking how many thousands of people have died just because the elves sat around and did nothing to stop Galbatorix. And Arya's decision to actually pitch in with the war effort ruins their relationship.
  • Can't Argue with Elves: She has the attitude more than just about every elf in the books, which rubs a lot of people — even other elves — the wrong way.
  • Death Equals Redemption: Arya doesn't fully forgive her mother for her banishment until Islanzadí receives a fatal blow from Barst.
  • The High Queen: The queen of the Elves, considered to be the most intimidating of the rulers shown and held in near-mythical reverence by most of the world. Subverted, in that despite her beauty and majesty, she has very real flaws that become apparent the more time Eragon spends in her company.
  • My God, What Have I Done?:
    • Her reaction in the first book when she believes that Arya has been killed before they could reconcile.
    • Gets it again big time in the second book when she learns that Arya was alive the whole time, and that her own refusal to listen to the Varden's messengers kept her from learning that fact earlier.
  • Neutral No Longer: From Eldest onward, she and the elves are fully engaged in the war against Galbatorix.
  • Parents as People: Her spiteful treatment of Arya is what caused their 70-year estrangement. The first thing she does when they meet again is acknowledge this and beg for Arya's forgiveness.
  • Parental Abandonment: She opposed Arya's decision to join the Varden, so much so that she banished her from Ellesmera. She regretted the decision immediately, but couldn't take it back.
  • Really 700 Years Old: Like all elves, she is ancient.
  • Royals Who Actually Do Something: She heads off to the front lines to fight alongside her people.
  • Sacrificial Lion: Her death is a major Oh, Crap! moment for the Varden, the biggest hint they have that Lord Barst is not fucking around.

    Blödhgarm 
The leader of a group of twelve spellcasters who were sent to help Eragon.
  • Beast Man: He transformed himself into an anthropomorphic creature with features from a wide variety of animals. According to him, this best reflects his current idea of what is beautiful.
  • Loincloth: The only clothing he wears. The rest is covered by a pelt of blue fur.
  • Smells Sexy: He emits a pheromonal musk that gets nearby women hot and bothered. It's implied that he does this voluntarily because he likes the way it smells, as it only seems to affect human women.
  • Supernatural Gold Eyes: His eyes are yellow, emphasizing both his magical nature and bestial appearance. Apparently, they're (literally) the eyes of an eagle.

    Vrael 
The last leader of the Dragon Riders before their fall. Bonded to Umaroth.
  • Cool Sword: Wielded the sword Islingr, made of brightsteel like the other swords of the Riders and colored white to match his dragon. Galbatorix took it for his personal use after killing him.
  • Groin Attack: Galbatorix kicked him "in the fork of his legs"
  • Off with His Head!: Galbatorix decapitated him at the end of their final duel.
  • Old Master: Vrael was older than Oromis and the best warrior among the Riders.
  • Posthumous Character: He's been dead for 100 years.
  • Rank Scales with Asskicking: Vrael was the only Dragon Rider who could best Galbatorix and the Forsworn and would have killed him if not for a moment of hesitation.

Dwarves

    As a Whole 
Mildly reclusive humanoids who live beneath the Beor Mountains.
  • Elective Monarchy: The Dwarves elect their kings among the heads of their clans. Midway through Brisingr, Eragon is chosen to oversee the election of the Dwarven king as a representative of the Varden.
  • Our Dwarves Are Different: Short, proud, bearded, mountain-dwelling, fond of hammers and axes, masters of crafts and creators of grandly decorated cities, as is usual. They have a few quirks beyond that, however: they're a polytheistic and devoutly religious people, have some cities underground and also some aboveground — even with a Lampshade Hanging when Eragon is surprised to find that dwarves have open surface cities and a dwarf tells him that they like the open air as much as anyone else — and have seven toes, and two dwarves hold a bet on whether or not humans actually have only five. According to history, they are the oldest sapient race, and lived in Alagaësia before the elves or humans arrived. When Eragon asks Orik how dwarves know the language of humans, Orik explains that the Common Tongue is actually the dwarven language.
  • Sacred Hospitality: Dwarves take the rights of guests seriously and it is custom for the host to eat first to prove that the food is not poisoned. The largest factor in exiling Az Sweldn rak Anhûin is because they attempted to murder Eragon despite his status as an envoy from the Varden.
  • Underground City: Downplayed. Some dwarf cities are built underground, either as tunnel systems or within large underground spaces. Others, however, are out in the open air.

    Prince Orik 
The dwarf prince, nephew of King Hrothgar, and a friend to Eragon.
  • Adapted Out: He does not appear in the film.
  • Ancestral Weapon: He eventually inherits Volund, the hammer of the dwarven kings.
  • Boisterous Bruiser: He's an eager fighter who's free with his passions, says what's on his mind, and loves his mead.
  • Manly Tears: He cries when Hrothgar is killed.
  • Parental Abandonment: They died of an illness when he was young, so his uncle adopted him.
  • Perfectly Arranged Marriage: He's betrothed to Hvedra, who manages his clan's affairs. The two are absolutely enamoured with one another, to the point where Eragon finds it a bit difficult to watch.
  • Reasonable Authority Figure: Seems more proactive and willing to compromise compared to other dwarves, and is in general a lot more level-headed than he seems.
  • Royal Blood: He's related to King Hrothgar, and eventually becomes king himself.
  • Screw the Rules, I'm Doing What's Right!: His first action in the entire series is to open the doors to Farthen Dûr to allow Eragon, Murtaugh, Saphira and Arya to enter against the Twins' orders. Ajihad chastises him and removes him from any military action under his command, but acknowledges that Orik did the right thing.
  • True Companions: Eragon considers him to be his brother. By dwarven law, they are adopted family.
  • Weapon-Based Characterization: His primary weapon is an axe, as is tradition for fantasy dwarves.
  • You Killed My Father: He has this vendetta towards Murtagh, who killed Orik's uncle and foster father, Hrothgar.

    King Hrothgar 
The king of the dwarves and an ally of the Varden.

    Gannel 
The chief priest of the Dwarven religion and the leader of the Dwarven clan Quan.
  • Badass Preacher: He's primarily a priest but he's also an incredible warrior, even by dwarven standards. He's first introduced singlehandedly defeating three younger dwarves in combat. At the same time.
  • Exotic Weapon Supremacy: He's deadly in combat in part because he wields the hûthvír, a double-ended staff-sword that only Dwarven priests (and Angela) are trained to use in combat.
  • High Priest: Of the Dwarves. Much like the classic example, the office is implied to be hereditary, like all of the other clan chiefdoms.
  • Magic Knight: In addition to his prowess as a warrior, Gannel is one of the most skilled Dwarven magicians shown.
  • Mistreatment-Induced Betrayal: It's implied that the reason he votes for Nado to be the next king — and by extension, the withdrawal of the Dwarves from the war effort — is because of the routine disrespect for Dwarven traditions shown by Arya and the other elves.
  • Mr. Exposition: Gannel is tasked with tutoring Eragon on Dwarven customs and tradition when the latter is adopted by Hrothgar into his clan. Most of the information the reader gets on Dwarves comes from him.
  • The Rival: He briefly throws his hat in the ring to become king, posing a pretty significant threat to Orik's attempt at the throne. He quickly withdraws and supports Nado instead.
  • Small Role, Big Impact:
    • Eragon meets him briefly at the beginning of Eldest, whereupon Gannel gifts Eragon with a small necklace that prevents scrying. This prevents Galbatorix (and, as it turns out, Murtagh) from tracking Eragon's movements and learning about Oromis' existence.
    • Gannel is a background character for most of the election for king, but because he's the head of the Quan clan, he wields an enormous amount of influence. Orik notes that it's extremely rare for a candidate not selected by the Quan to win an election.
  • We ARE Struggling Together: Despite their respective roles, Gannel and Arya are constantly at odds with each other due to the latter's insistence on ridiculing the Dwarven religion every time they meet. This is implied to be why Gannel ultimately votes to withdraw support from the Varden and the elves.

    Vermûnd 
The leader of a Dwarven clan known as Az Sweldn rak Anhûin, or The Tears of Anhûin.
  • Aggressive Categorism: Az Sweldn rak Anhûin holds a grudge against all Dragon Riders, regardless of whether or not they supported Galbatorix. Vermûnd, as the leader of the clan, is no exception.
  • Arc Villain: For the Dwarven election in Brisingr, as his racism drives him to order Eragon's death.
  • Color-Coded for Your Convenience: Purple. Vermûnd and his clan are primarily identified by wearing purple, as well as amethyst jewelry mined from their lands. This is what pegs Vermûnd as the perpetrator behind the attempt on Eragon's life.
  • Didn't Think This Through: His assassination attempt on Eragon is full of bad ideas, chief among them the angry dragon coming after them for revenge.
    Hadfala: What did you think to accomplish, besides our doom, by killing Eragon? Even if the Varden could unseat Galbatorix without him, what of the sorrow the dragon Saphira would rain down upon us if we slew her Rider? She would fill Farthen Dûr with a sea of our own blood.
  • Rejection Ritual: After his attempt on Eragon's life is discovered, Vermûnd (and even most of his clan) is subjected to a ritual known as vargrimstn, where the exiled is treated as if they do not exist. Eragon considers this a Fate Worse than Death. The clan itself would not be accepted back into Dwarven society until they replaced Vermûnd, who becomes an exile among them.
  • Revenge Before Reason: Let his and his clan's pathological hatred of dragons and Riders overcome his reason and try to assassinate Eragon.
  • This Is Unforgivable!: Is told that while his clan may yet redeem themselves, he'll remain an outcast from Dwarven society until the day he dies.
  • Threat Backfire: Vermûnd threatens that if any clan tries to rebuke his with words or swords, Az Sweldn rak Anhûin will treat it as an act of war...only for Orik to burst out laughing and agree that the other clans will do nothing. When Vermûnd questions why that is amusing, Orik replies that they'll do nothing...including having nothing to do with Az Sweldn rak Anhûin, refusing to trade or even interact with them.
  • Un-person: Becomes this after he tries to have Eragon killed.

    Nado 
The leader of the Dwarven clan Knurlcarathn, and a rival of Orik.
  • Arc Villain: Alongside Vermûnd as the antagonist of the Dwarven election arc in Brisingr. When Vermûnd is banished, Nado takes center stage.
  • Everyone Has Standards: Despite his dislike of Eragon and the Varden, he votes to banish Vermûnd and his clan for their attack on Eragon.
  • Know When to Fold 'Em: He eventually concedes the election and joins the other Dwarven clan leaders in proclaiming Orik king.
  • The Rival: To Orik as they campaign to be elected king.
  • Team Switzerland: Nado is public about his dislike of the Varden and by extension the Elves. So if he becomes King, he intends to pull the Dwarves' support.
  • Villainy-Free Villain: Nado doesn't really do anything villainous, it's more the idea of losing the Dwarves as allies that makes him a threat.

    Íorûnn 
The leader of the Dwarven clan Vrenshrrgan, also known as the War-Wolves.
  • Amazonian Beauty: The head of the most militarily-powerful of the Dwarf clans, and is apparently stunningly beautiful even by human standards.
  • Animal Motifs: Wolves, like the rest of her clan. They're named after a particularly large and powerful species of wolf, and she wears a wolf-head helmet as part of her armor.
  • Comic-Book Fantasy Casting: Word of God says that she's intended to look like Mae West.
  • Elite Army: Clan Vrenshrrgan as a whole are considered an elite military force, even among the dwarves. They're particularly noteworthy in being the only clan whose primary vocation appears to be as soldiers.
  • Enlightened Self-Interest: She supports Orik out of a genuine belief that he was the best candidate to be king of the Dwarves, but Orik notes that she'll probably expect to be rewarded with a high position in his council.
  • Genius Bruiser: In addition to being one of the finest warriors among the dwarves, she's the most cunning of the dwarf clan chiefs by far.
  • Hidden Depths: She's regarded as devious, power-hungry, and after the throne for selfish reasons, until it's her turn to speak. She gives a stirring speech in favor of supporting the war effort against Galbatorix and shows that she's far more astute about the political realities of the war than she had let on.
  • Lost in Translation: She's openly flirting with Eragon in most of their interactions, but does so via Dwarven cultural references that Eragon doesn't understand.
  • The Tease: She's not shy about her interest in Eragon, much to Orik's amusement. Eragon notes that speaking to Íorûnn is extremely awkward because she refuses to show any restraint in flirting with him, and she's admittedly very attractive
  • Wild Card: No one knows where her ultimate loyalties lie in the clansmeet. She's the only clan chief who insists on maintaining her bid to be queen even after it's obvious that she won't win, and shows no sign of changing this until the last possible moment. She ultimately declares for Orik, being the deciding vote in his favor.

Others

    Durza 
Durza, born Carsaib, is a Shade — a sorcerer whose body is possessed by evil spirits. The main antagonist of the first book, he hunts Eragon and captures and tortures Arya while under Galbatorix's command.
  • Adaptation Dye-Job: His eyes aren't red in the film, but they are an unnatural pale color.
  • Adaptational Villainy: The film version lacks book Durza's Freudian Excuse and Tragic Monster nature, not only loyally carrying out Galbatorix's wishes without any inclination of wanting to betray him, but visibly enjoying inflicting pain and cruelty upon others.
  • Alas, Poor Villain: He dies just after Eragon discovers he was a Tragic Monster and Eragon later admits that he wasn't evil by choice.
  • And I Must Scream: As a Shade, his body is inhabited by evil spirits.
  • Attack on the Heart: His heart is his only weak point, and Eragon is only able to kill him by stabbing there.
  • Bad Boss: At the end of the prologue, he kills his Urgal subordinates when they fail to get the egg.
  • Black Speech: Occasionally (mostly for swearing) speaks in "a wretched language only he knew," likely Demonic.
  • Climax Boss: He's the main antagonist of the first book.
  • Composite Character: In the film, he takes the Ra'zac's role as the character who kills Brom.
  • Curtains Match the Window: Is an Evil Redhead with red eyes.
  • Dark and Troubled Past: Lost his parents, then his foster father, and tried to avenge his death by summoning powerful spirits to kill the bandits responsible of it, only for the spirits to prove too powerful for him to handle and take control of his body.
  • Death of Personality: Durza may still retain Carsaib's memories, but Carsaib himself is nothing but a physical shell for the three spirits making up the "Durza" identity to interact with the world.
  • Disc-One Final Boss: He's the main antagonist of the first book, and is killed by the end of it.
  • The Dragon: He was Galbatoix's lieutenant following his loss of Morzan, but is the Big Bad of the first book and the movie.
  • Duelling Scar: Durza doesn't have one, but his sword possesses a long scratch on it after a previous duel with Ajihad.
  • Evil Redhead: He has red hair, and is possessed by evil spirits.
  • Evil Wears Black: Wears black clothes when meeting Eragon in Gilead, and his final appearance has him wearing black armour.
  • Freudian Excuse: Was once a normal boy. His parents were killed by bandits after the family was chased from their village. He was taken in by Haeg, a sorcerer. But Haeg was later killed by bandits and, while trying to avenge him, Carsaib summoned spirits that were too powerful for him to handle. They turned on him and took over his body, turning him into a human shell for them to possess.
  • For the Evulz: He used magic to turn a normal fish into a terrifying, man-eating lake monster, and then left it to torment the locals apparently just for the fun of it. Murtagh and Thorn are left wondering what other such horrors he might have left lying around the world.
  • The Heavy: The main villain for the first book/the film while his master Galbatorix stays behind the scenes.
  • Hoist by His Own Petard: Became a Shade after summoning spirits that he was ultimately unable to control.
  • Humanoid Abomination: Like all Shades, he's a human shell possessed by spirits.
  • Killed Mid-Sentence: Well, temporary death since only a stab through the heart can permanently kill a Shade, but Durza suffers a temporary banishment when Murtagh shoots him in the head with an arrow while Durza was in the middle of mocking him for only tagging him in the shoulder with the first shot while pulling it out.
  • Lean and Mean: He's a tall thin man who is a Humanoid Abomination.
  • Lightning Bruiser: He's far faster and stronger than a normal human.
  • Magic Knight: He's a skilled sorcerer, as well as proficient with a cursed sword.
  • Many Spirits Inside of One: "Durza" is a group of powerful spirits inhabiting the body of the sorcerer Carsaib.
  • Muscles Are Meaningless: He's described as having a lean runner's build, but is much stronger then he would appear.
  • Not Quite Dead: When lethally wounded, he'll just respawn somewhere else, unless you stab him in the heart.
  • Obviously Evil: Has red eyes, pale skin, and dresses in black. Eragon even wonders why the soldiers of Gilead didn't kill him the moment they saw him.
  • Our Vampires Are Different: It might just be a rumor, but he's rumored to drink blood.
  • Posthumous Character: In Murtagh, his previous actions cast a shadow over the story. He's the one who cursed the massive pike in Gil'ead, and is revealed to have had contact with the Dreamers.
  • Red and Black and Evil All Over: As a result of being an Evil Redhead with red eyes who is always shown wearing black.
  • Red Eyes, Take Warning: Has red eyes, which indicates that he's not really human anymore.
  • Scary Teeth: Just to add to his inhuman appearance, his teeth are filed into points. From what we see from other Shades, this is not something that happens to all of them, meaning Durza did this intentionally.
  • The Starscream: When he has Eragon imprisoned in Gil'ead, he subtly implies he'd like to join forces to overthrow Galbatorix. Nothing ultimately comes of it, and he may have simply been trying to lull Eragon into a false sense of security.
  • Torture Is Ineffective: Tortures Arya over a period of about six months, both for information and for the enjoyment of the evil spirits that inhabit him. He nearly drives her insane in the process, but fails to extract any useful information.
  • Villain Protagonist: He is the viewpoint chapter for the prologue.

    Varaug 
A Shade created by the Imperial defenders of the city of Feinster as a last ditch attempt to drive back the Varden besieging the city.
  • Attack on the Heart: Just like all Shades, stabbing the heart is the only way to kill him. Instead of Eragon though, it's Arya who does the deed this time.
  • Ax-Crazy: In comparison to Durza, Varaug is just a rabid monster who only wishes to kill.
  • Contrasting Sequel Antagonist: A rabid, psychotic beast in contrast to the intelligent and calculating Magic Knight that was Durza.
  • Decapitated Army: While Varaug wasn't in command of Feinster's defence, his death is what finally drives the Imperial troops to surrender.
  • Evil Redhead: Like all Shades. The man who is possessed by the spirits to make Varaug had brown hair, making the hair color change a result of the possession.
  • Final Boss: He's the last foe the heroes face in the third book.
  • From Nobody to Nightmare: Varaug was created from a regular old Mook that the mages chose to be the host for the various spirits.
  • Godzilla Threshold: Why he was created; with the city of Feinster about to fall to the Varden's siege, Galbatorix ordered the mages he put in charge of the city's defence to create a Shade to repulse the attackers (seemingly not caring such a monster could quite easily decimate the defences instead of bolstering them).
  • Healing Factor: Shown to have one when Arya breaks his arm while trying to stop his Neck Lift. The first time she breaks his arm, it pops back together and he lifts her higher.
  • Living Weapon: All he's meant to be.
  • Many Spirits Inside of One: He's implied to be possessed by dozens of evil spirits, hence why he's more powerful than Durza.
  • Neck Lift: He hauls Arya off the ground by the neck when he's introduced. She only gets out of it by snapping Varaug's arm, and it takes a couple tries.
  • Not in This for Your Revolution: Unlike Durza, who nominally fought for the Empire, Varaug is heavily implied to care nothing for the Empire or the Varden, and is only interested in killing anything in his path.
  • Put Them All Out of My Misery: The spirits within him imply they're prepared to kill every and anything in their path in retaliation for their incarceration in a human shell.
    Varaug: You will all die for imprisoning us in this cold, hard clay!
  • Red Eyes, Take Warning: Has blood-red eyes like all Shades.
  • Strong, but Unskilled: The multiple spirits within him make him far more powerful than Durza, who only had around three or so spirits, but their continual fighting with each other for control over their host, in contrast to Durza whose spirits seemed to be working in harmony, make Varaug leave openings that Eragon and Arya exploit.
  • Third-Person Person: He frequently refers to himself in plural, presumably because he's possessed by dozens of evil spirits.
    "Our name is Varaug. Fear us."
  • This Cannot Be!: His last act is a scream of thwarted rage when stabbed in the heart.

    Ra'zac 
The last of a nearly extinct species who preyed on humans for food, now serving as the king's personal dragon hunters.
  • Alien Blood: The Lethrblaka have bluish-green blood.
  • Always Chaotic Evil: Their species are human predators, apparently.
  • Bad Boss: The Ra'zac are just as ruthless with the soldiers under their command as they are with regular villagers, as they kill two of their own men for fleeing a battle (in the first case) and speaking against them (in the second case).
  • Bizarre Alien Biology: The Giant Flyers they ride are the next stage in their life cycle. When the Ra'zac reach maturity, they shed their humanoid shells like a pupa and grow out their wings, as well as getting much larger. They also no longer have a protective shell, but in return their skin is noted to be much tougher (though not as much as dragon scale).
  • Black Cloak: They wear black cloaks to disguise their true appearances when among humans.
  • Bludgeoned to Death: One of them gets completely smashed with several blows from Roran's hammer.
  • Brother–Sister Incest: The Ra'zac are the offspring of the Lethrblaka, and they themselves have offspring.
  • Captain Ersatz: They're very heavily based on the Nazgûl. Far-ranging minions of the Big Bad, poisonous breath, Black Cloak outfits, even Giant Flyer mounts. However, rather than being wraiths, they look more like anthropomorphic weevils.
  • Cassandra Truth: The last adult Ra'zac to die tries to tell Eragon that Galbatorix has nearly found the name of the Ancient Language. Downplayed in that it didn't exactly try to clear up what it meant by "the true name."
  • Cool Sword: The Ra'zac use ancient, leaf-bladed swords, which are heavily implied to have been enchanted, possibly stolen from Elves.
  • Disc-One Final Boss: Killed early in the third book when Eragon and Roran come to Helgrind to rescue Katrina.
  • Dying Curse: The last Ra'zac curses Eragon shortly before their final duel, screaming for him to find no home or peace of mind and to leave his land of birth forever.
  • Female Monster Surprise: One of them is revealed to be female, while the other's gender is not disclosed (but presumably male).
  • Giant Flyer: They ride huge winged creatures called Lethrblaka, which are their parents and adult form, that are comparable in size to dragons.
  • The Heavy: In the second book, they attack Carvahall throughout the book, prompting Roran to take everyone from the village and leave to join the Varden.
  • Hero Killer: Their official job is to hunt dragons and dragon riders for King Galbatorix.
  • Humanoid Abomination: They aren't very natural, and don't seem to fit with anything in any of the fantasy mythos that Inheritance draws from. They are humanoid enough to pass for men when heavily disguised, but they upgrade to Animalistic Abominations when they mature.
  • I Have Your Wife: They abduct Katrina and her unborn child, but she's rescued. They are themselves enslaved by Galbatorix by means of him holding their eggs hostage.
  • Impromptu Tracheotomy: The Ra'zac who isn't killed by Roran is stabbed in the throat by Eragon.
  • Insectoid Aliens: Think a creature that looks like a humanoid weevil or weta and you're in the ballpark.
  • In the Hood: They wear hooded cloaks when around people.
  • It Can Think: The Lethrblaka are said to be as intelligent and cunning as a dragon, albeit a cruel, psychotic one. Which makes sense, given they're the mature form of the Ra'zac, which are fully capable of planning and even human speech, though no Lethrblaka is actually seen speaking.
  • Karmic Death: They're killed off by the son and the cousin of the man they killed and the survivors of the village they destroyed. It also exterminates their race.
  • Last of His Kind: They are presumed to be the last of their kind, as Oromis states the Riders did their best to exterminate the Ra'zac when they realised how great a threat the creatures were to Alagaesia's human population. This is ultimately averted when the cult of Helgrind uses several of their spawn to attack Eragon and Arya in Inheritance and Galbatorix claims that there were more. They are never found by the end of the book, leaving a possible Sequel Hook. In Murtagh, Murtagh finds a Ra'zac egg in Gil'ead, but doesn't recognise it and leaves it alone, cursing himself when he learns the truth for not destroying it.
  • Lightning Bruiser: They are stronger than humans, which are implied to be their natural prey.
  • Mix-and-Match Critters: Insectoid Aliens but also with beaks.
  • Monster Is a Mommy: The Lethrblaka are the parents of the humanoid Ra'zac and the Ra'zac themselves are the parents of a clutch of eggs in Galbatorix's possession.
  • Nice Job Fixing It, Villain!: While they are very dangerous adverseries, quite a few of their actions resulted in this trope:
    • They killed Garrow in their search for Saphira's egg. While Eragon never really liked the empire, the Ra'zac killing his uncle took his attitude from indifference to It's Personal levels.
    • When they come back to Carvahall to find Roran, they do nothing to endear themselves to the people there, the soldiers they bring cause a lot of needless damage to the village, they don't bother hiding that they ate a dead villager, and they pretty much laugh on demands for compensation. Enough villagers get so fed up that they drive the Ra'zac and their soldiers away.
    • After the previous event, they threaten the entire village (most of which had nothing to do with it) that they will be killed if they don't turn over Roran, or being sold into slavery if they do. With the choice between death or A Fate Worse Than Death, the entire village decides they've got nothing to gain by giving into the demands.
  • Poisoned Weapons: They coat their arrows and blades in Seithr oil, which dissolves living flesh.
  • Precursor Killers: Oromis states that it may have been the Ra'zac and Lethrblaka that destroyed so much of the humans' ancient homelands that they decided to flee across the sea from war and plague.
  • Prehistoric Animal Analogue: Artistic depictions of their adult form resemble a Pteranodon crossed with a dragon.
  • Psychic Block Defense: The Ra'zac are naturally shielded from mental powers, making them very good foes for Dragon Riders and why Galbatorix sends them to investigate claims about Dragon Riders.
  • Punctuation Shaker: The name of the juvenile form of the species. Interestingly, the adult form, which are even more disturbingly alien by comparison, lack this. It's not clear if this is intentional.
  • Scam Religion: Presumably they started the religion at Helgrind, which gives them a regular source of food without them having to hunt.
  • Sinister Schnoz: Their beaks, both in their juvenile and adult forms.
  • Snake Talk: One of them speaks with a sibilant affliction.
  • Super-Strength: Each can hoist a human up by the throat and throw projectiles unnaturally long distances, as shown in the second book when one throws a vial blowing up several villagers.
  • To Serve Man: They prey on humans. It's stated that they evolved specifically to hunt humans, with Oromis likening it to how an osprey is perfectly evolved to hunt fish. During Eldest, Quimby, Carvahall's brewer, is killed in a bar fight and the Ra'zac take his body. When it's recovered, all that's left of him is bones, with obvious signs of being chewed on (such as the marrow being consumed).
  • Weakened by the Light: The Ra'zac are afraid of the sun as it burns their eyes and skin.
  • Why Did It Have to Be Snakes?: The Ra'zac cannot swim and are thus terrified of deep water.

    Solembum 
A werecat, and companion to Angela.
  • Creepy Child: His human form is a child with cat's eyes, cat fangs, and catlike mannerisms. Eragon admits to being a bit unnerved when he sees it for the first time.
  • Deadpan Snarker: He's very sarcastic, as befitting a cat.
  • Non-Human Sidekick: He accompanies Angela wherever she goes.
  • Our Werebeasts Are Different: The books describes werecats not as shapeshifting humans, but as a separate magical species that can shift between feline and humanoid forms. He has Cute Little Fangs in human form.
  • Telepathy: Main form of communication as a cat. Although he doesn't communicate with humans much.
  • Voluntary Shapeshifting: He can transform from a felid to a human form and back again.

    Urgals 
A species of large horned humanoids who live in warlike tribes. They originally came from Alalëa, the homeland of the elves, whom they followed across the seas. They became widespread in Alagaësia, but were eventually driven to the edges of civilization after a series of wars. At the start of the trilogy, they have been drafted as shock troops and enforcers by Galbatorix.
  • Alien Blood: They have black blood.
  • Always Chaotic Evil: Discussed. They seem like this in the first book, and are considered to be merciless monsters by the other races, but they are afterwards shown to have their own nuanced religion, culture, and art, and their own capacity for restraint and cooperation. They're not inherently evil, but "merely overfond of war". Many of the characters openly express skepticism that the Urgals will ever truly move beyond this perception, since their culture relies so much on martial achievements, but others point out that if they don't let them try while their leaders are willing to then they'll have no chance at all.
  • Horned Humanoid: They have massive ram-like horns, and their name for themselves, Urgralgra, means "the horned ones".
  • Our Orcs Are Different: Urgals are tribal, large, and barbaric humanoids whom other races view as monsters, raiders, and despoilers. In Eldest, they prove to be more civilized and honorable than they originally seemed, and ally with the Varden against Gallbatorix. They do not have tusks, but have fur and horns, and also come in an oversized variety called Kull. They originated in the continent of Alalëa, like the elves did, and followed them across the sea when the elves came to Alagaësia. In the modern day, they mostly live in the wildernesses of the Spine mountains.
  • Proud Warrior Race: Their society, social standing, and code of honor are based on feats of combat, and they're frequently in conflict with the other races due to their aggressivness.

    Nar Garzhvog 
An Urgal chieftain who joins the Varden with much of his race.
  • Asskicking Leads to Leadership: This is how Urgal leadership works, and as the greatest chief he's even more impressive than usual. Amongst other things, in his traditional coming of age hunt he killed a cave bear with his bare hands.
    "Most do not try to kill a cave bear. Most hunt wolves or mountain goats. That is why I became war chief and others did not.”
  • The Comically Serious: Is funny in a wry sort of way, and especially when he has to travel with Eragon a few days.
    "The dwarves have the same number of toes as you do."
    "I did not know that. I have never wanted to look at the feet of a dwarf.”
  • Frontline General: Although he's the Urgals' greatest war chief — though admittedly not head of their non-military government - he still fights in the front lines and never hesitates to take a risk.
  • Genius Bruiser: Probably the smartest one we see, which befits his status as a leader. When Eragon travels with him he ends up learning a lot.
  • Honor Before Reason: He insists on being the Kull who escorts Eragon to Farthen-Dure in the third book, arguing that Eragon's importance merits his presence. This also lets them bond and gain a mutual rapport.
  • Large and in Charge: He's a Kull, making him much larger than normal Urgals.
  • The Lost Lenore: In his introductory scene, he mentions his broodmate — his wife — was among those sent to treat with Galbatorix after the Urgals lost the first book's battle, and that she never came back.
  • My Species Doth Protest Too Much: Downplayed. He's not ashamed of Urgal culture, but he is a realist who knows that they need to change their standing if they're going to survive in this multi-species world. He even explains it in counter — the Urgals have actually grown a lot without the Riders fighting them, to the point that their numbers are too great. Their having to change is actually a result of too much success!
  • Reasonable Authority Figure: Surprisingly, he is among the most reasonable of the rebel army's leaders. He's fully aware that the world is changing and the Urgals need to change with it if they're going to survive past the war, and he approaches the Varden for alliance talks with the intentions of getting more land for his people so that their species can grow safely and hopefully avoid further wars in the future.
  • What Measure Is a Mook?: When Eragon brings up the village he found slaughtered by Urgals in the first book (which included killed children and babies), Garzhvog fires back that his father took him to Urgal villages where the humans had done the exact same thing.

Alternative Title(s): The Inheritance Cycle, Eragon

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