Inheritance Cycle/Characters

Characters from  include:

Eragon
The main protagonist, a poor farmboy who becomes the first Dragon Rider in over a century. Initially wanting merely to survive and get vengeance on the Ra'zac, he gradually becomes more and more involved with the war between the Empire and the Varden.


 * Anti-Hero: Largely a Type III, but has moments of Type IV by Brisingr, and becomes moreso in Inheritance.
 * BFS: In earlier publications.
 * Bow and Sword in Accord
 * A Boy And His Dragon
 * Butt Monkey
 * Character Development: Eragon slowly shifts away from a bland Audience Surrogate to...well, YMMV:
 * Eragon's world view regarding religion is touched upon. At first he's drawn in by rather simplistic Hollywood Atheism, but decides not to rule anything out when he meets something that seemed to qualify as a "god". At the end, he falls firmly on the side of agnosticism, of the "If he's out there, he'd better have a good excuse" type.
 * He grows more obviously bloodthirsty and vicious in battle as the series goes on, either due to Saphira's influence, or becoming desensitized due to war. Notably, he doesn't actually seem to realize it happening.
 * Cool Sword: Zar'roc. Later
 * Cloudcuckoolander: It doesn't show up very often, but he has a seven-year-old's fascination with Squick which slowly morphs into a rather dark Nightmare Fetishism
 * Constantly Curious
 * Dragon Rider
 * Drama-Preserving Handicap: For a while in Eldest,  gives him seizures at inopportune times thanks to its magical nature, having.
 * Farm Boy
 * Fatal Flaw: Arrogance, according to him. While it shows up in spots throughout the stories, Eragon fears its corrupting influence in the future and lets that inform his decisions later in the series.
 * Flaming Sword:
 * Full Potential Upgrade: An inversion of sorts. Because Eragon learned to fight with an unbreakable weapon, he has a bad habit of blocking attacks with the edge of the blade rather than the flat, which leads to him quickly ruining any normal weapon.
 * Genre Savvy: While not especially savvy in general, in Inheritance, he's very much aware of Pride Before a Fall regarding his own flaws, and takes some impressive steps to avert it.
 * Heart Is an Awesome Power:
 * Nonverbal magic is so ridiculously dangerous that even the most powerful magicians only use it for the smallest of spells, since those are low risk. It's a party trick, for those who know it.
 * Humble Hero: He tries to play the part, even making plans to return and rebuild his hometown as per Hero's Journey. It's subverted when he decides that humility isn't really in his character, and after all he'd seen and done, he'd never be satisfied with something so mundane as settling down again.
 * Idiot Hero: He gets better about it, but traits remain all through the series, as he's struggling to learn everything he needs to know to be a Dragon Rider. Their training usually takes DECADES.
 * 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.
 * Reality Ensues: That said, it's also explicitly shown that it's nowhere near enough to match any experienced Rider or elf, and inferior to actually learning over decades like he normally should have been doing.
 * Jumping Off the Slippery Slope: In a moment of Properly Paranoid, Eragon decides that this would be way, way too easy for him to do. So he automatically shuts down any offers of Kingship or long term authority.
 * Magic Knight
 * Moral Dissonance: He's very brutal in battle, and has moments of untoward viciousness. Other moments, such as his judgment of Sloan, remain Base Breakers among much of the fandom.
 * Necessarily Evil: In his mind, all of his lapses and killings are justified because he's fighting an immortal Evil Overlord, and no amount of slaughter or mayhem that he causes could be worse than what Galbatorix would cause. He still angsts quite a bit over this though.
 * Nightmare Fetishist: At one point fantasizes without much irony about having an apple tree planted over his grave, so that his family would partake of his corpse every time they ate from it. Yum. Similar examples abound throughout the books.
 * Not So Different: Elva points out to Eragon that some of his actions aren't so different from the kind Galbatorix would take. “That way lies the depraved pleasure of controlling others for your own pleasure. Galbatorix would approve.”
 * Notably, Eragon specifically avoids (or at least tries to)
 * Eragon isn't so different from Murtagh either. Eragon denies this when Murtagh mentions it at the end of Eldest, but in Brisingr, Eragon coldly terminates the life of a young, conscripted soldier who was begging for mercy with the same emotionless justification that Murtagh used after killing the slaver Torkenbrand in the first book. "He was a threat."
 * Parental Abandonment:
 * Power Strain Blackout: Prone to fainting after using magic, at least at first.
 * Simple Staff: Uses one in Brisingr for awhile, but soon becomes frustrated with it.
 * Thou Shalt Not Kill: In the first book, he goes out of his way to avoid killing humans, limiting his violence to urgals. In Eldest, however, he drops the policy and starts killing any human associated with the Empire without mercy.
 * Took a Level in Badass: Considering he plans to take out old man Galbatorix himself only a few years after becoming a Rider himself...
 * Walking the Earth:
 * What Have I Become?: Has a few of these moments now and then.
 * What the Hell, Hero?: He is on the receiving end of it twice in Eldest and three times in Brisingr.
 * Walking the Earth:
 * What Have I Become?: Has a few of these moments now and then.
 * What the Hell, Hero?: He is on the receiving end of it twice in Eldest and three times in Brisingr.

Roran
Eragon's cousin, initially a farmboy. Later, after his betrothed, Katrina, is kidnapped by the Empire and his village condemned, he becomes determined to lead his people to safety and fight Galbatorix.


 * And This Is For: When he
 * Asskicking Equals Authority: A combination of asskicking and charisma turns him into the unofficial leader of Carvahall, and later gains him a position in the Varden..
 * Atop a Mountain of Corpses: In Brisingr, after single-handedly killing nearly 200 men in battle.
 * Badass Normal: He makes a name for himself in battle alongside Dragon Riders, elves, and other magically enhanced beings.
 * Bad Dreams: The (many) men that he's killed continue to haunt him.
 * Beard of Sorrow: . Becomes a Badass Beard after her rescue.
 * Butt Monkey
 * Charles Atlas Superpower: Seems to be the physically strongest un-enchanted human in the story. Strong and fast enough that he can duel with a fencer with a warhammer and wards. And in fact faster than that, since his general strategy is to outdraw his opponent and break his arm or wrist.
 * Despair Event Horizon:
 * The Determinator: How else do you slay almost 200 soldiers single-handedly?
 * Cranked Up to Eleven when he
 * Drop the Hammer: Becomes his favored weapon in Eldest, based on inspiration he took from one of Brom's stories, that of a reluctant warrior who was forced to take up arms, and went into battle armed only with a hammer. He also appreciates its simplicity. No complex parrying, just bash their faces in!
 * Farm Boy: Initially, but like Eragon, he moves away from it.
 * Genius Bruiser: He shows cunning, intelligence, leadership abilities, and charisma as well as skill in battle. Eragon praises Roran over himself for his ability to lead the villagers of Carvahall over the ominous Spine.
 * Good Is Not Nice
 * Gray Eyes
 * Heroes Want Redheads
 * Heroic Resolve: He has a lot of it, and needs every bit of it.
 * Hero Insurance: Averted in that Roran is well aware of the damage he is doing to probably innocent people along the way, and tries to avoid doing more damage than he has to.
 * I Did What I Had to Do
 * Lightning Bruiser: He seems to be faster than most swordsmen with his hammer, which would mean he would win any duel by default.
 * Never Learned to Read
 * Psychic Static: He focuses on his memories of Katrina, making his mind impenetrable to psychics, though sudden sounds prove to be a weakness of his.
 * Rousing Speech: Apparently this guy's talent is leadership.
 * Shoot the Dog: Burning the docks at Teirm, resulting in the destruction of the property of countless innocent people.
 * Simple Staff: Has one, which he eventually gives to Eragon.
 * Supporting Leader
 * Took a Level in Badass: In Eldest.
 * 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 doesn't particularly approve of Eragon's actions in the first book, and partially blames him for the death of his father, Garrow. This is particularly apparent when they finally meet back up in Eldest.

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


 * Averted. Eragon wants to
 * Cool Old Guy
 * Constantly Curious: Oromis says that Brom was this way when he was young.
 * 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
 * : Not revealed until long after he's dead and buried, however.
 * Magic Knight
 * Old Master
 * 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.
 * The Storyteller: While living in Carvahall.
 * Tragic Hero: Destiny made sure that he failed in nearly everything important in his life, except for.
 * You Killed My Father:
 * He also killed Morzan, Murtagh's father. Despite this, Murtagh bore no ill will towards Brom for the action, given that his father was a very abusive one (having received a roping scar that was implied to be from his sword) and acknowledged that Morzan fully deserved to die.
 * 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.
 * The Storyteller: While living in Carvahall.
 * Tragic Hero: Destiny made sure that he failed in nearly everything important in his life, except for.
 * You Killed My Father:
 * He also killed Morzan, Murtagh's father. Despite this, Murtagh bore no ill will towards Brom for the action, given that his father was a very abusive one (having received a roping scar that was implied to be from his sword) and acknowledged that Morzan fully deserved to die.
 * You Killed My Father:
 * He also killed Morzan, Murtagh's father. Despite this, Murtagh bore no ill will towards Brom for the action, given that his father was a very abusive one (having received a roping scar that was implied to be from his sword) and acknowledged that Morzan fully deserved to die.

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. Later revealed to be


 * Abusive Father: He had one, as the scar on his back will attest to.
 * Ancestral Weapon:
 * Anti-Hero: Type III. His willingness to kill is a sharp contrast with Eragon in the first book.
 * Badass
 * Badass Normal: He's Eragon's equal in swordfighting (and later becomes his superior), an excellent archer, and he even manages to temporarily destroy Durza.
 * Badass Abnormal
 * Bow and Sword in Accord
 * Dark and Troubled Past
 * 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.
 * Fatal Flaw: An unwillingness to face his problems.
 * Foil: to Eragon
 * Generation Xerox
 * 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.
 * : He's able to
 * In the Blood: The reason the Varden doesn't trust him.
 * Missing Mom: She died when he was a child.
 * Parental Substitute: Tornac played this role to him.
 * Psychic Block Defense: It's very hard to get into his mind.
 * Scars Are Forever: Has a huge one on his back.
 * : At the end of Inheritance, he effectively says this
 * Shoot the Dog: He will not hesitate to.
 * Spanner in the Works:
 * Star-Crossed Lovers:
 * : Even at the end of the story,
 * Missing Mom: She died when he was a child.
 * Parental Substitute: Tornac played this role to him.
 * Psychic Block Defense: It's very hard to get into his mind.
 * Scars Are Forever: Has a huge one on his back.
 * : At the end of Inheritance, he effectively says this
 * Shoot the Dog: He will not hesitate to.
 * Spanner in the Works:
 * Star-Crossed Lovers:
 * : Even at the end of the story,
 * : At the end of Inheritance, he effectively says this
 * Shoot the Dog: He will not hesitate to.
 * Spanner in the Works:
 * Star-Crossed Lovers:
 * : Even at the end of the story,

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: Averted, 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, though.
 * Affably Evil: He speaks to  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.
 * Beard of Evil: This is one of his few distinguishing physical characteristics.
 * Big Bad
 * The Chessmaster
 * Combat Pragmatist: The ends justify the means in his book.
 * Dragon Rider
 * The Emperor
 * Evil Overlord
 * Fantastic Nuke:
 * Rage Quit
 * Genre Savvy: We learn in Inheritance that he took loyalty oaths in the Ancient Language not just from his officials and soldiers but from a random swath of peasants as well, making any occupation of Imperial territory a very problematic affair tying up a large number of troops.
 * The Ghost: Despite being the Big Bad, he doesn't appear in person until Inheritance.
 * Groin Attack: How he killed Vrael, the last leader of the Dragon Riders.
 * Kick the Dog:
 * Large Ham: In the movie.
 * Light Is Not Good:
 * Magic Knight
 * Names to Run Away From Really Fast
 * Orcus on His Throne:
 * Royals Who Actually Do Something: According to him, he was spending most of his time trying to enchant currency to defeat counterfeiting. Apparently, the counterfeiters were really damn tenacious. He claims that administrative issues like that took up way more time than being evil ever could.
 * Sorcerous Overlord
 * Ultimate Evil: See The Ghost above, except when the he appeared in the movie which proved the presense of this trope in action. The fact that his most trusted servants tend to be the most reviled creatures in universe in their own right, and seem to have chosen for precisely that reason, doesn't hurt either.
 * Utopia Justifies the Means: His favourite argument to persuade people to obey him.
 * Villainous Breakdown/Villainous BSOD:
 * Villainous Valor: As he points out, it is the Varden who are attacking him, and he is merely defending his domain.
 * Well-Intentioned Extremist: He can be argued as such.
 * Weaksauce Weakness:  To his credit, however, the sheer amount of power and wards he had set up were making it really difficult to exploit.
 * With Great Power Comes Great Insanity: He also claims that the Riders were holding back Alagaesia by suppressing all technological and magical discoveries in order to preserve their own power base.
 * With Great Power Comes Great Insanity: He also claims that the Riders were holding back Alagaesia by suppressing all technological and magical discoveries in order to preserve their own power base.

Ajihad
The leader of the Varden.


 * Badass Beard
 * Bald Black Leader Guy
 * Bald of Awesome
 * Rebel Leader
 * Rebel Leader
 * Rebel Leader

Nasuada
Ajihad's daughter, heir, and eventual successor.


 * Badass Normal
 * The Determinator: Demonstrated in the Trial of the Long Knives.
 * Lady of War
 * Rebel Leader
 * Please Don't Leave Me:.
 * 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 instant economic collapse, but desperate times...)
 * Reasonable Authority Figure: Notably, she never abuses the oaths of absolute loyalty Eragon has sword to her, on the several occasions she could benefit from doing so - although Saphira was likely more than enough reason not to even if she wanted to.
 * The Stoic: In public.
 * Ship Tease: With both Eragon and Murtagh.
 * Star-Crossed Lovers:
 * Token Minority: She's black in a fantasy world that seems to be based on Viking society. Brisingr eventually explains this by having tribes of "dark-skinned" people living in Surda.
 * The Woman Wearing the Queenly Mask: Technically not a queen, but it fits her situation nicely.

Angela
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  It is never specified whether it's simply a blade made from Unobtainium or enchanted. Angela isn't talking though.
 * Alchemy: Her type of magic relies mostly on herbs and potions.
 * Badass Bookworm
 * Beware the Nice Ones: She's fairly polite, if brutally honest, but perfectly willing to poison the Empire's soldiers.
 * Blade on a Stick / Double Weapon: She won it in a game with a dwarf priest.
 * Bunny Ears Lawyer: About as eccentric as they come, but still highly valued by the Varden for her skills and power.
 * Cloudcuckoolander
 * Combat Pragmatist: She's not above poisoning the enemy's food supply.
 * 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.
 * Fortune Teller
 * Frogs and Toads: She tries to prove that toads do not exist, only frogs.
 * 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.
 * Joss Stone: In the movie.
 * Minored in Asskicking
 * Older Than They Look: She's hinted at this.
 * Plucky Comic Relief
 * 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 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.
 * Write Who You Know: She's based on the author's sister.

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.


 * Anti-Hero: Type 3.
 * A Wizard Did It: Eragon did it. That's how she got her powers.
 * Big Eater: Her powers take a toll on her energy.  Being forced to grow up so quickly probably has something to do with it, too.
 * Blessed with Suck: Eragon's intended blessing ends up being a torturous curse...which eventually turns into Cursed with Awesome once
 * Cast from Hit Points: As of Brisingr,
 * Character Development: After Eragon gets the courage to stand up to her, she becomes less self-obsessed.
 * Creepy Child
 * 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, she finds that knowing exactly what is going to hurt someone can be a handy ability to have.
 * Dark Magical Girl
 * Deadpan Snarker
 * The Empath
 * Facial Markings: A silver mark on her forehead that Saphira gave to her.
 * Freudian Excuse: She already has it, but hasn't really gone against Eragon or the Varden. Yet.
 * Good Is Not Nice
 * Little Miss Badass
 * Little Miss Snarker
 * Manipulative Bastard
 * Mind Rape: What she's been going through every day, with most of the people around her not even 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.
 * "No. Just... No" Reaction: Her reaction when Nasuada
 * Won't Work On Me
 * Plot-Relevant Age-Up: The only real explanation given is "So I grew bigger."
 * Purple Eyes
 * Took a Level in Badass: Goes from a defenseless baby to a Little Miss Badass with empathetic powers in the span of a few months.
 * 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. Does it again to Eragon when
 * Wise Beyond Their Years
 * Younger Than They Look
 * Your Approval Fills Me with Shame: Invoked by her against Eragon, when she tells him that Galbatorix would approve of his actions.

Jeod
A scholar and friend of Brom.


 * Badass Bookworm
 * Retired Badass: He's had quite his share of adventures with Brom.
 * Royal Rapier
 * The Smart Guy

King Orrin
King of Surda, a supporter of the Varden.


 * 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.
 * Eccentric Millionaire: A relatively mild example—he uses his wealth as king to fund the many scientific experiments that are his hobbies.
 * Took a Level in Jerkass: In Inheritance.

Sloan
Carvahall's butcher, and father of Katrina.

""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.""
 * Anti-Villain
 * Jerkass
 * Knight Templar Parent
 * Overprotective Dad: Where matters of dating are concerned. Also isn't thrilled about her traveling into the Spine, but that's Justified since her mother died there.
 * Papa Wolf: Does NOT want anything to hurt his daughter.
 * Knight Templar Parent
 * Overprotective Dad: Where matters of dating are concerned. Also isn't thrilled about her traveling into the Spine, but that's Justified since her mother died there.
 * Papa Wolf: Does NOT want anything to hurt his daughter.

The Twins
Two bald and rather nasty magicians who have served the Varden for many years.


 * Bald of Evil
 * Black Magic
 * Creepy Twins
 * The Dog Bites Back
 * Drill Sergeant Nasties
 * Jerkasses
 * Manipulative Bastards
 * Mind Probe
 * Mind Rape
 * No Name Given: They're just "the Twins".
 * 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.
 * Single-Minded Twins
 * Small Name, Big Ego
 * Smug Snake
 * Synchronization
 * Token Evil Teammates: Within the Varden.
 * Twin Telepathy
 * Smug Snake
 * Synchronization
 * Token Evil Teammates: Within the Varden.
 * Twin Telepathy

Lord Barst
He was 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:
 * Amulet of Concentrated Awesome: His
 * Authority Equals Asskicking: Lord Barst. Justified because Galbatorix magically increased his asskicking powers due to his authority.
 * The Brute
 * Genius Bruiser
 * Hero-Killer
 * The Juggernaut
 * One-Man Army
 * One-Scene Wonder

Tenga
A reclusive hermit who lives and studies magic at a deserted elven outpost. Angela remembers him as her mentor.


 * Badass: He wields magic that Eragon considers extremely dangerous, such as casting magic without the Ancient Language, casually.
 * Badass Bookworm: He owns several compendiums of the Ancient Language, which are considered to be rare and a great treasure.
 * Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass: To Eragon's surprise.
 * Fantastic Science: Several of the questions that he preoccupies himself with answering are implied to involve this.
 * The Hermit
 * Mundane Utility: Being able to cast magic without the Ancient Language means 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.
 * One-Scene Wonder
 * The Professor
 * Wacky Wayside Tribe
 * Wizard Beard: A particularly long and impressive one.

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.
 * Blasphemous Boast: When flying, she occasionally dares "whatever gods there might be" to challenge her, because she sees herself as just that awesome. Eragon notes that dragons are susceptible to flattery,
 * Blue Eyes
 * Badass: Is considered as such, even for a dragon. For instance, all her training and experience is in open air combat, but she proves to be just as much, if not more dangerous on the ground.
 * Bond Creature
 * Breath Weapon
 * Egg McGuffin: Spends some time as one in the first book.
 * : Or rather,
 * Intellectual Animal
 * Our Dragons Are Different
 * Plot-Relevant Age-Up: In the movie, she inexplicably grows from the size of a dog to a fully-grown dragon literally in a matter of seconds. Perhaps it was dragon magic.
 * Sapient Steed
 * Sociopathic Hero: She ultimately displays a fondness for killing, and prefers killing live prey over eating plain meat. She claims that if Eragon were more like her then everybody would be scared to death of them, and is probably right.
 * Soul Jar: Her.
 * Telepathy: Her main form of communication.

Thorn
A red dragon bonded to


 * Anti-Villain: In the same way as.
 * The Chew Toy: A non-humourous example, as Eragon notes. Of the major characters, Thorn is likely more The Woobie than anyone else.
 * 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.
 * Mighty Glacier: Compared to Saphira, however, he's slower and less graceful, but has thicker, stronger limbs.
 * Names to Run Away From Really Fast
 * Red Eyes, Take Warning
 * Ship Tease: With Saphira in Inheritance
 * Younger Than They Look: He has physically matured beyond his young age due to Galbatorix's magic.
 * Younger Than They Look: He has physically matured beyond his young age due to Galbatorix's magic.

Glaedr
An ancient gold dragon bonded to


 * Eyes of Gold
 * Handicapped Badass: He is missing a leg.
 * Heroic BSOD: Spends much of Inheritance in the grips of depression, unwilling to talk.
 * May–December Romance: What Saphira wants with him, but he isn't so enthusiastic.
 * Old Master
 * Soul Jar:.

Shruikan
Galbatorix's black dragon, stolen from the Riders.


 * 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.
 * Blue Eyes
 * Creepy Blue Eyes
 * Icy Blue Eyes
 * The Brute
 * : Courtesy of
 * Giant Flyer: And easily the biggest one that's appeared in the series.
 * Woobie, Destroyer of Worlds: The dragon has heavily suffered under its enslavement of Galbatorix, with its sanity having been so depleted that, should it be allowed to, it will destroy the entire planet simply because of its pain and anger. In fact, Elva heavily suggests that the only way to "help" Shruikan is to put him out of his misery.

The third dragon egg in Galbatorix's possession,


 * :  Though not for life and actually only a few months unless something amazing happens.
 * Vocal Dissonance: Has a surprisingly deep voice, even deeper than Glaedr and.
 * Vocal Dissonance: Has a surprisingly deep voice, even deeper than Glaedr and.

Arya
The elf ambassador and the guardian of Saphira's egg for fifteen years. Also secretly


 * Action Girl: She's held up as this 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: Her movie incarnation had reddish gold hair, while the Arya in the books is dark haired.
 * Ambadassador
 * . On the other hand, she is an elf, and admits the elves have some individuals who are more skilled.
 * Beauty Is Never Tarnished: She is heavily bruised and injured after her torture in Gil'ead, but is still beautiful, and Eragon heals her shortly after.
 * Bow and Sword in Accord
 * Determinator: More of a female version of this than a Plucky Girl, given her utter grimness in personality and complete lack of emotional warmth, at least initially.
 * Damsel in Distress: Spends much of Eragon as one. She seems to resent the label.
 * Distracted by the Sexy: Has this effect on Eragon, and she deliberately plays on this when sparring with him.
 * Dude, She's Like, in a Coma: Eragon has this reaction while Arya is unconscious.
 * 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.
 * Good Is Not Nice: She definitely isn't.
 * Green Eyes
 * Hair-Trigger Temper: She's very easy to tick off or offend, so Eragon has to walk on eggshells while talking to her.
 * Hell-Bent for Leather: Black leather
 * Heroic Resolve
 * Hot Chick with a Sword
 * Lady of War
 * Letting Her Hair Down: When she arrives in Ellesmera, she takes the leather band out of her hair, starts wearing dresses, relaxes, and becomes quite a bit less tense and cold. (But still is.) This trend inches along a bit as the series continues.
 * Lightning Bruiser
 * Love Interest: for Eragon
 * May–December Romance: With Eragon. The main reason why she doesn't  want to have a relationship with him is because he hasn't lived to anywhere near her lifespan yet, although his life expentancy is just as high.
 * Really Seven Hundred Years Old: Just over a hundred. Looks like she's in her early twenties.
 * Single Tear: When Eragon dreams of her in her cell, she sheds a single shining tear.
 * Sociopathic Hero: She calls out Eragon for being too merciful and not displaying enough ruthlessness towards the enemy.
 * There Is Another:
 * The Southpaw: She seems to favour her left hand for fighting.
 * The Stoic: She is never not restrained. It seems to be a fundamental part of her identity.
 * Sugar and Ice Personality
 * Single Tear: When Eragon dreams of her in her cell, she sheds a single shining tear.
 * Sociopathic Hero: She calls out Eragon for being too merciful and not displaying enough ruthlessness towards the enemy.
 * There Is Another:
 * The Southpaw: She seems to favour her left hand for fighting.
 * The Stoic: She is never not restrained. It seems to be a fundamental part of her identity.
 * Sugar and Ice Personality
 * Sugar and Ice Personality

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.


 * Dragon Rider
 * Gray Eyes
 * Handicapped Badass: He has somehow been crippled so that he can't use powerful spells. He also has a mysterious illness which causes him sudden and intense bouts of pain, momentarily incapacitating him.
 * Old Master
 * Really Seven Hundred Years Old: A staple of his race.
 * Retired Badass:
 * Warrior Poet
 * Warrior Poet
 * Warrior Poet

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 Yet Impractical: She strongly advises against such designs, as a weapon that looks awesome but doesn't fulfill it's purpose is ugly to her eyes.
 * Awesome Yet Practical: She specializes in making things of this description.
 * Badass
 * The Blacksmith
 * 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
 * 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 metal working. 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
 * Grumpy Old Woman
 * 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.
 * 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, however.
 * 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:
 * Polyglot: She can speak the Ancient Language, the human language, and the dwarvish language.
 * Really Seven Hundred Years Old: Really over 2700 years old.
 * Restraining Bolt: She can no longer forge weapons because of her oath..
 * Screw You, Elves: A really rare instance where the person calling out the elves is an elf themselves. 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!"
 * Ultimate Blacksmith
 * 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 Islanzadi
Queen of the Elves, and


 * Authority Equals Asskicking: She holds her own against Lord Barst for longer than anyone else.
 * The High Queen
 * Really Seven Hundred Years Old: Like all elves.
 * Really Seven Hundred Years Old: Like all elves.

Blödhgarm
The leader of a group of twelve spellcasters who were sent to help Eragon.


 * Beast Man
 * Eyes of Gold
 * Smells Sexy

Orik
The dwarf prince, nephew of King Hrothgar, and a friend to Eragon.


 * An Axe to Grind / Drop the Hammer: His weapon is an axe, while he later.
 * Boisterous Bruiser
 * Manly Tears: When
 * Our Dwarves Are All the Same
 * Parental Abandonment: They died of an illness when he was young.
 * Reasonable Authority Figure: Seems to be very progressive compared to other dwarves, and is in general a lot more level headed than he seems.
 * Royal Blood
 * True Companions: Eragon considers him to be his brother. By dwarven law they are adopted family.
 * You Killed My Father: He has this vendetta towards  who killed

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


 * Adaptation Dye Job: For the movie, where his white hair and beard become brown.
 * Badass Beard
 * Badass Grandpa: He's old even by the standards of dwarves, who live longer than humans, but can still kick ass on the battlefield.
 * Drop the Hammer: He wields Volund, the hammer passed down through the dwarven kings for thousands of years.
 * Parental Substitute: To Orik.
 * Reasonable Authority Figure
 * Reasonable Authority Figure

Durza
A Shade, once a nomadic orphan who learned sorcery, now a powerful ally of Galbatorix.


 * Attack Its Weak Point: His heart.
 * : In the first book.
 * The Dragon
 * Evil Redhead
 * Hoist by His Own Petard: This is the reason why he is a Shade: Some bandits killed a sorcerer who was implied to be a foster father to him, and as revenge attempted to summon spirits to destroy the bandits. Unfortunately, he hadn't learned to master the spells to control them yet, and they turned on him.
 * Lightning Bruiser
 * Magic Knight
 * Monster Sob Story
 * Not Quite Dead: When lethally wounded, he'll just respawn somewhere else, unless you stab him in the heart.
 * Red Eyes, Take Warning
 * Not Quite Dead: When lethally wounded, he'll just respawn somewhere else, unless you stab him in the heart.
 * Red Eyes, Take Warning

The Ra'zac
The last of a nearly extinct species who preyed on humans for food, now serving as the king's personal dragon hunters.


 * Exclusively Evil: Their species are human predators, apparently.
 * Bizarre Alien Biology:
 * Black Cloak
 * Cassandra Truth:
 * Female Monster Surprise: One of them is revealed to be female, while the other's gender is not disclosed.
 * Giant Flyer: They ride huge winged creatures called Lethrblaka, which are their parents and adult form.
 * Hero-Killer: Their official job is to hunt dragons and dragon riders for King Galbatorix.
 * I Have Your Wife: They abduct
 * In the Hood
 * Last Of Their Kind
 * Lightning Bruiser
 * The Lethrblaka are the parents of the humanoid Ra'zac
 * 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.
 * Punctuation Shaker
 * Snake Talk
 * 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.
 * Punctuation Shaker
 * Snake Talk

Solembum
A werecat, and companion to Angela.


 * Creepy Child: As a human.
 * Deadpan Snarker
 * Knife Nut: His favored weapon in human form is a small black dagger.
 * Mind Screw: He possesses knowledge whose origin he can't tell.
 * Non-Human Sidekick
 * Our Werebeasts Are Different: The books describes werecats not as shapeshifting humans, but as a separate magical species. 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

Nar Garzhvog
An Urgal chieftain who joins the Varden with much of his race.


 * Authority Equals Asskicking: Among Urgals, it really does.
 * Genius Bruiser
 * Our Orcs Are Different: Not exactly, but Urgals are close enough to orcs for it to count.
 * Proud Warrior Race Guy
 * Reasonable Authority Figure: Surprisingly, he is among the most reasonable of the rebel army's leaders.