The Lord of the Rings Wikia notes the following about Mordor following Sauron's defeat:
After the ultimate defeat of Sauron, Mordor became mostly empty again as the orcs inside it fled or were killed. Crippled by thousands of years of abuse and neglect, but capable of sustaining life, the land of Mordor was given to the defeated foes of Gondor as a consolation, as well as to the freed slaves of Nurn who were formerly forced to farm there to feed the armies of Mordor.
Besides the Nurn, who else received ownership of Mordor following the War of the Ring? As well, was Mordor ever decontaminated, or was it just too poisonous and toxic after thousands of years of evil to ever be recultivated?
I'm looking for a canon answer, meaning the actual novels or any of J.R.R. Tolkien's supplemental books, papers, or letters.
Answer
The canon source is, I believe, taken from a preliminary draft of The Steward and The King chapter of RotK.
A notable visitor to Minas Tirith among the many embassies that came to the King is found in A:
... and the slaves of Mordor he set free and gave them all the lands about Lake Nurnen for their own. ...
This was not rejected on the manuscript, but it is not present in B.
A is the preliminary draft, whereas B is the fair copy. The extract from Morgoth's Ring, Vol 9 of the History of Middle-Earth.
I cannot find any other canon references for what happened to Mordor after Sauron's overthrow, as to who else was granted ownership or what state Mordor was in other than the areas surrounding Mount Doom, which would have been devastated by its eruption.
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