Edits
I encourage you to make less, but high quality edits.
Please try to avoid generalizations. If someone uses a chariot at a specific point in time in combination with cavalry to a certain effect, it does not mean that it is a fact that this combination was used at other times with the same effect. For example while the chariots in the battle known as the disaster of the Morannon are identified to be chariots of the Wainriders, the cavalry is not identified as only being the cavalry of the Wainriders, because there is a statement that the force also consisted of allies from Khand. Avoid stating it like a fact that there were chariots with Easterlings during the War of the Ring when this is just something seen by Frodo in a vision on the Seat of Seeing and could be a vision of the past, the present, a certain future or a possible future. My general advice is to be precise and to state the year and even the date of an event (when it is known) and the context in order to avoid extrapolating/generalizing and to avoid embellishing.
I noticed that in your edits you added or left references to LOTR that did not include a page number for the 50th anniversary edition or did not include some other subdivision of a section of an appendix of LOTR that makes it easier for readers to find the passage that is referenced without having to read the entire chapter or section of an appendix. If you do not have an edition of LOTR with page numbers that are compatible with the page numbers of the 50th anniversary edition, Hammond & Scull's The Lord of the Rings - A Readers's Companion quotes the page numbers from the 50th anniversary edition and can be used to look up the page numbers in conjunction with the passage from LOTR. There are e-books of LOTR whith page numbers for the 50th anniversary edition in the index that can be used to identify the page number of a passage. The subdivision of Appendix A for the Lists of Kings, Chieftains and Stewards, Eriador, Gondor, The Tale of Aragon and Arwen, The House of Eorl or the Kings of the Mark with their lists of Kings from certain Lines, Durin's Folk and the Lines of the Dwarves of Erebor, often have factual subdivisions of entries (paragraphs) that cover a certain King or Steward. Citing them in a reference makes it easier for a reader to find the information, especially if the readers does not have an edition of LOTR with page numbers from the 50th anniversary edition. Akhôrahil (talk) 15:28, 24 January 2025 (UTC)