- "The sky was extraordinarily dark - a blue that was almost black. When you had seen that sky you wondered that there should be any light at all."
- ― (Chapter 4) [src]
The World of Charn is the general name given for a world separate from Earth and Narnia, but whose actual name remains unknown. The name "Charn" comes from the world's capital city.
Description[]
It was once a world accessible from the Wood Between the Worlds, but the pool dried up when the world ended. It is important both as the birth-world of the Empress Jadis, the last ruler of the Empire of Charn (and later the White Witch of Narnia), and as the subject of a cautionary history concerning the eventual ends of unrestrained corruption.
Other places indicated to be of the World of Charn, besides the city of Charn, included Felinda, Sorlis, and Bramandin. All were mentioned by Jadis as examples of those who had tried to resist the might of Charn's Empire and failed.
Everything known about the world came from the brief accidental visit by the human children, Digory Kirke and Polly Plummer, from Earth, and from Aslan's brief comments and warning concerning its history and ultimate fate.
The sun of Charn was old, red and far larger than the Earth's sun, and the sky was so dark blue that it was nearly black. When asked, Jadis said, "It always been so ... At least, for hundreds of thousands of years," further indicating that Charn had had an immensely long history, far longer than that of worlds such as Narnia (approximately two and a half millennia), or of recorded Earth history at the time of Kirke and Plummer's visit (between five and ten millennia). Also in the sky was a single bright, celestial object that hung left to the sun. It may have been a distant moon, another planet, or another nearby star.
The air of the world was thin and cold, and there was no water visible since the river of the city of Charn had dried up. Before Jadis destroyed all the world's life, however, it had had a different appearance: according to her own description, it had, within her own lifetime, teemed with life and activity.
Charn once supported a vast civilisation of humanoids of an unknown species that had an average height of seven feet tall, and believed to have giantish heritage, though they were much smaller than true giants. It is possible the people of this world were a hybrid species of giants and Jinns, the latter giving some of them, such as Jadis, a magical ability which was, however, only found in those of royal blood, though it was mentioned that magic was somewhat common in Charn. The royals, however, were obviously the most powerful of all.
The Hall of Images of past rulers in the royal palace indicated that Charn originally began with a golden age of wisdom and benevolence, but eventually turned away into corruption, cruelty and evil. Apparently, Jadis was the nadir of this degeneration, as her appearance is the most intimidating of all. Aslan calls Charn "accursed" and a "strong and cruel empire".
The ruins of the city of Charn itself, which the children landed in, stretched to the horizon, "as far as the eye could see".
The explanation for everything that the children saw is that all life across the entire world was destroyed in a single petulant act of supremely dark magic, the utterance of the Deplorable Word, by Jadis. It is unknown how long ago this occurred before Digory and Polly's visit, but long enough for stone palaces to fall down and stone statues to erode away. Perhaps this was long enough for the great river of Charn to dry up, or perhaps this was an ecological consequence of the destruction of life.
By the time of their visit, the planet was a dead and sterile world, in which the only living thing was Jadis herself. She had placed herself in magical suspended animation in the palace, awaiting possible rescue by chance visitors from other worlds. Jadis placed herself on a stone throne at the end of a long line of figures of other seated royals, in a chamber called the Hall of Images.
During their accidental visit, Digory succumbed to curiosity or magic, and rang a magical bell that woke Jadis. She was then able to leave Charn with him and Polly.
Some time after the children and Jadis had left (we don't know how long because of the time difference between worlds), the world of Charn was destroyed, "as if it had never been", the natural end for a lifeless world with a dying sun, and the consequence of the evil committed by the Charn civilization.
In the Wood Between the Worlds, Aslan showed Digory and Polly a cratered grass thicket that once held the pool where the magical portal to Charn had been. He told them of Charn's fate, and warned that a similar fate could befall Earth if "tyrants who care no more for joy and justice and mercy than the Empress Jadis" acquired power similar to that of the Deplorable Word. "Let the race of Adam and Eve take warning."
Trivia[]
- Throughout the entire book series, Charn (whether the city, its people or the entire world) is the only place verbally cursed by Aslan.
- The description of the rulers of Charn being initially wise and benevolent, but later becoming corrupted, cruel and evil, creates a parallel with Númenor from J. R. R. Tolkien's works, where the inhabitants of Númenor were initially wise and benevolent, but later became corrupted and evil, resulting in the destruction of their realm by the Valar, as punishment for the Númenoreans' evil deeds.
- Presumably, all the good that ever existed in Charn is now part of Aslan's country.