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Heirs of Durin

~ Thorin Oakenshield and Allies

Heirs of Durin

Tag Archives: rings of power

Essay: The Great Rings Part III – The Last of the Seven

01 Sunday Dec 2013

Posted by D.J. in Discussion, Gandalf, Hobbit book, Hobbit movie, News, Thorin, Thrain

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

dol guldur, dwarves, essay, gandalf, rings of dwarves, rings of power, saruman, sauron, spoilers, the one ring, thorin, thrain

Note from D.J. – I am posting this on behalf of Ori’s Quill.  I’ve made some minor additions and edits, mostly updating information about Thrór’s ring seen in An Unexpected Journey, speculation about Thráin’s reappearance in Desolation of Smaug, and the details of Thráin surrendering the Ring to Sauron, but the majority remains Ori’s Quill’s creation.
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The Last of the Seven
by Ori’s Quill and Dark Jackal

This is part three of the trilogy that connects the Concerns of the White Council, The Rings of Power and the Heirs of Durin with the One Ring to rule them all. A strong emphasis will be placed on the works of Professor Tolkien, but there are events in this essay that may unfold in the films Desolation of Smaug and There and Back Again.

The Ring of the Heirs of Durin

dwarf lords

Tolkien writes the following of the Rings of the Dwarves: “Possessors of the Ring (of the seven) did not display or speak of it, and seldom surrendered it until death, so that others did not know for certain where it was bestowed” – Return of the King, Appendix A. This passage is important in understanding more of Dwarrow culture. Like the bearers of the three, the ring bearers of the seven kept their precious treasures hidden and bore them in secret. To openly reveal the secret was to violate the sacrosanct tradition that all bearers, both Elf and Dwarf, strictly observed.

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The seven Dwarf Lords claiming their Rings – from The Fellowship of the Ring

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Close-up of a dwarf ring in Fellowship of the Ring.

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Thrór ‘s ring from An Unexpected Journey

It is now known (thanks to Weta Workshop) that Thrór openly wears a Ring of Power in An Unexpected Journey, for in several scenes, he bears a ring of gold with very similar designs along the side as the Rings of the Dwarf Lords.

Thror ringNestled amid the elaborate rings that barnacled his broad fingers was a single blue-gemmed band of gold, exquisitely wrought and possessing a power beyond even the Dwarf Lord’s ken. This gift and heirloom was no mere trinket, but one of the Seven rings of Power given to the Dwarf Lords. [Description from Weta’s replica of Thror’s ring]

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By wearing the ring openly, Thrór is violating that sacrosanct rule observed by several generations of Dwarves. But then a sickness was developing in him, a sickness of the mind, and we know that “where sickness thrives, bad things will follow” – Bilbo, An Unexpected Journey.

We know Sauron sought and obtained at least two other Rings of the Dwarves. In Part II, The Rings of Power, there was a discussion of the possible ways in which Sauron could have gotten them. There is speculation that he acquired the Rings of the Firebeards and/or the Broadbeams when Khazad-dûm was attacked in the year 1980 of the Third Age. Also there is speculation that when Sauron fled east in the year 2063 he may have acquired one or two from the lines of the Stiffbeards, Blacklocks or the Stonefoots. Once he obtained two of the Rings, Sauron was determined to acquire the Ring of the Heirs of Durin.

Thrór was the bearer of the Ring that Durin III received in the year 1500 of the Second Age. The Ring was Thrór’s greatest treasure even above the Arkenstone. After the sack of Erebor in the year 2770 T.A., Thrór lead his people in exile. During this time, Thrór became restless, and anxious to wander. He felt an unexplained need to travel, to journey to places far in search of treasure. Now described as old, poor and desperate, he makes a decision to abandon the exiles of Erebor. Appendix A states “He was a little crazed, perhaps with age and misfortune, and a long brooding on the splendor of Moria…or the Ring…was turning to evil.” We see evidence of this craziness in An Unexpected Journey, when Thrór paces about manically counting the gold amassed in Erebor. It is a dragon sickness brought on by the power of the Ring.thrwc

Before he secretly departed, Thrór gave Thráin the Ring of Durin’s line. He declares to Thráin “This may prove the foundations of a new fortune for you yet, though that seems unlikely. But it needs gold to breed gold.” Thrór then takes his companion Nár and goes to Khazad-dûm in the year 2790 T.A. Entering the Hollin gate (see the Rings of Power) Thrór is then killed by Azog.

4th

Nar at the Gate of Moria, by Tulikoura

Fast forward 228 years. By the time of the Council of Elrond, in the year 3018 T.A., all races were given news that Sauron had obtained the last of the seven. One of the members of that Council, for those who have not read the book, was Glóin. There is a discussion about the Seven Rings. It is feared that Sauron is gathering them. Glóin comments:
“The Seven are lost to us if Balin has not found the Ring of Thrór, which was the last; naught has been heard of it, since Thrór perished in Moria. Indeed, I now reveal that it was partly in hope to find the Ring that Balin went away.” -Glóin, The Fellowship of the Ring

Because Thrór never discussed the Ring passing to Thráin prior to going away to Khazad-dûm, the Dwarves could only speculate that the Ring disappeared in Moria. Glóin continues:
“Then about a year ago a messenger came…from Mordor…He asked urgently concerning hobbits, of what kind they were, and where they dwelt.” And finally to obtain and surrender Bilbo’s ring for “it is but a trifle that Sauron fancies…Find it and the three rings that the Dwarf-sires possessed of old shall be returned to you.” – The Fellowship of the Ring

This declaration from Glóin confirms that Sauron has possessed the final Ring of the seven. How Sauron acquires the last of the seven is revealed in The Quest of Erebor in the Unfinished Tales. Gandalf explains that when in the dungeons of Dol Guldur, he came across a witless, demented dwarf, broken and insane. Gandalf said the following:

“I understand now that I had heard the last ravings of Thráin II, though he could not speak his own name nor his son’s…he said he possessed a Ring. Nearly all of his ravings were of that: the last of the seven.”

The Resurrection of the Necromancer

“Without the ruling ring of power, the seven are of no value to the enemy.”

As speculated at the end of the essay Concerns of the White Council, with this statement Saruman is attempting to downplay a heretofore unspoken concern.  The Extended Edition of An Unexpected Journey reveals the missing piece of the puzzle. He is replying to Gandalf’s questions about the last Dwarf Ring:

“Does it not worry you that the last of the Dwarf rings should simply vanish, along with its bearer?  Of the seven Dwarf rings, four were consumed by dragons. Two were taken by Sauron before he fell in Mordor. The fate of the last Dwarf ring remains unknown.  The ring that was borne by Thrain.” – Gandalf, An Unexpected Journey (Extended Edition)

gandalf ee

Saruman counters with this statement:
“Without the ruling ring of power, the seven are of no value to the enemy. To control the other rings he needs the One.  And that ring was lost long long ago.  It was swept out to sea by the waters of the Anduin.” – Saruman, An Unexpected Journey (Extended Edition
)

This is a significant clue as to how important acquiring the remaining seven Rings of Power is to Sauron. Recall Saruman’s maleficent ways. Perhaps he is already under the spell of Sauron when he declares this statement to the White Council. It is through his mendacious intention that he misleads the Council when they suspect that Sauron is attempting to collect the seven. For if their theory was confirmed, the Council would have aided Thorin and Company and attacked Dol Guldur sooner.

Why would Sauron desire the seven? He needed their power to regain the One. What happens after their acquisition is crucial to understanding why he wants the last of the seven. Each time Sauron acquires a Ring, it is a catalyst for other events to happen. Recall the chain of events that occurred when it was speculated that Sauron received the other two Rings of the Dwarves. Around the time of the Balrog invasion in Khazad-dûm, the Witch-king appears at Mordor and summons the rest of the Nazgûl. The forests of Greenwood the Great begin their disease process, the genesis of Mirkwood (this is the beginning of the ‘Dark Days’ that Haldir mentions in Fellowship). Then, 403 years later from the east Sauron returns, perhaps after acquiring another Dwarrow ring. “Sauron returns with an increased strength to Dol Guldur”- Return of the King Appendix A. Around this same time, Orcs assault Celebrían and she is wounded by the Morgul blade.

Also around this time, Déagol finds the One Ring and is murdered by Sméagol. The Ring of Power is then perceived. There is an action and a reaction. Sauron acquired two of the Seven, and at each time frame, he grows in strength and malice, and other more powerful events take place.

We have witnessed this pattern again all throughout An Unexpected Journey. Think back to Concerns of the White Council. Greenwood the Great is renamed Mirkwood. Huge Ungoliant spawned spiders emerge. Orcs of Gundabad are attacking in a very bellicose nature. Trolls are invading farms and villages. A mysterious blade appears, that of the Witch-king of Angmar, and an even more mysterious sorcerer emerges in Dol Guldur. There can be only one conclusion. Sauron acquired the last of the Seven!

Thráin the Insane

And what do we know of the unfortunate Dwarven Ring bearer? Thráin is revealed very little in An Unexpected Journey.wctr2

First seen to the right of Thrór, clad in red, inspecting the soldiers and jewelers, and then in the great halls of Erebor, he is the dignified Dwarf with the facial tattoos and a missing eye. Later we see him to the left of Thorin as they charge Smaug during the Sack of Erebor.

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Weta Concept art

He is wounded, and Thorin carries him out as they flee. At the Battle of Azanulbizar he fights by his father Thrór’s side. Then he disappears “driven mad by grief. He went missing. Taken prisoner or killed…” – Balin, An Unexpected Journey.  That is all that we see of the Heir of Durin with the piercing blue eyes like that of his father and that of his son.

9thThankfully, Tolkien’s writings about Thráin supply what we need to know about this proud Dwarf. Born in the year 2644 of the Third Age, and named Thráin (which means “yearner” in Old Norse) he is father to Thorin Oakenshield, Frerin and Dís (she is the only female Dwarf named in any of Tolkien’s work), and he is also the grandfather to Fíli and Kíli.

During the Sack of Erebor, Thráin and Thrór escaped through the secret exit that Thorin would later seek on the Quest. In chapter one of The Hobbit, Thorin explains “The few of us that were outside and wept in hiding and cursed Smaug; and there we were unexpectedly joined by my father and my grandfather with singed beards. They looked very Grim but they said very little. When I asked how they had got away, they told me to hold my tongue, and said that one day in the proper time I should know.” The singed beards and the exiting of a secret door imply that Thrór and Thráin became trapped, most likely battling Smaug.

Later in exile, with Thráin by his side, Thrór leads his “small company of their kinsmen and faithful followers” south. After many years, Thrór passes the Ring of the line of Durin to Thráin and leaves secretly for Khazad-dûm.

It was during this time in Dwarrow history that Thráin becomes the leader he was groomed to be. After the murder of his father by Azog the Orc, Thráin rallies all the Dwarves of Middle-earth (something Thorin failed to do in his Quest of Erebor) to avenge the death and mutilation of his father. This mustering took three years to organize. It is the first time in the history of Middle-earth that all the Dwarves come together to fight united. Their loyalty to Thráin, the Heir of Durin, and his father stoked the fire of rage they felt “for this dishonour to the heir of the Eldest of their race filled them with wrath.”

thrain__son_of_thror_by_cfgriffith-d6m1aep

Thrain, Son of Thror, by CFGriffith

What followed was war. The War of the Dwarves and the Orcs lasted from 2793-2799 T.A. Both sides showed no mercy. The zenith of the war was fought in the Battle of Azanulbizar (we see a scene of this battle in An Unexpected Journey. In the battle, Thrór is still alive; he and Thráin and Thorin fight side by side until Azog kills Thrór and decapitates him.) In Tolkien’s account Thráin led the first assault, and continued to fight despite being wounded in his leg and losing an eye. Azog and the Orcs lost the battle but at a great price to the Dwarves. Frerin, Thorin’s younger brother was killed as well as Fundin, father of Balin and Dwalin (perhaps this is why we see Balin openly weeping in An Unexpected Journey) and Nain III, father of Dain II who we will meet in There and Back Again.dbwc

Of Thorin: “It is said that Thorin’s shield was cloven and he cast it away and he hewed off with his axe a branch of an oak and held it in his left hand to ward off the strokes of his foes, or to wield as a club. In this way he got his name.” – Appendix A.

After the battle of Moria, Thráin asks Thorin if he would help lead the exiles to the Ered Luin in search of mining opportunities. Thorin’s response: “To the anvil. The hammer will at least keep the arms strong, until they can wield sharper tools.” So Thráin together with Thorin establish a new colony in the Blue Mountains and the colony prospers for many years. Like his father before him, Thráin develops an unexpected desire to wander. When Thráin left on the 21st of April in the year 2841 T.A., he takes with him a small select party including Balin and Dwalin, leaving Thorin to rule the new founded colony. Four years later, he disappears while camping at the edges of Mirkwood.

dol_guldur_by_tituslunter-d5o8puf

Dol Guldur, by TitusLunter

When Thráin disappears, he is captured and imprisoned in the dungeons of Dol Guldur. What happens to him there in the pits is similar to what happens to Gollum when he is captured and brought to Mordor. Both individuals are tortured.  In the upcoming film Desolation of Smaug it is almost certain that major revisions to Thráin’s story will be revealed.  Evidence from the teaser trailer and video logs show that Gandalf will meet Thráin at Dol Guldur, but in the present time (the presence of Glamdring proves this).  This means that the map and key were passed from Thráin to Gandalf in some alternate way than described in the books, and before Thráin disappears, since Gandalf does not know what happened to him after he disappeared (for a summary of the importance of these two items to the fate of Middle-earth read On the Finding of Thror’s Map and the Key to the Lonely Mountain by Tedoras).

wctr

A description from a newly released figure “Thrain the Broken” by GamesWorkshop shows us the sad state of our mighty Dwarf father: Thrain is a broken husk – captured and barely able to remember his name, let alone his proud history and heritage. He is still dangerous, however, for deep in his damaged mind lie the instincts of a proud Dwarf warrior.

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GameWorkshop model Thrain stalking Gandalf in Dol Guldur, image by CRTraylor

As a consequence of these alterations to the timeline, the significance of the Ring of Power may or may not be the same as it is in the text. Hopefully all will be revealed in the next week with the premiere of the second film.

Returning to the books, we know several key facts about Dwarves. They are known to be a tough race and difficult to tame. Seemingly cut from stone when created by Aulë, they have qualities of endurance and resist domination. For this reason, they are not easily turned to evil. Their weakness is their coveting of treasure, in particular metals and precious gems. Dwarves will guard their treasure with the utmost care and reserve, and never surrender it unless broken or killed.

Once Thráin was captured by Sauron it would be a simple enough task to take the Ring by force (and indeed to take the map and key as well), but Rings of Power were created to be dominated. To murder a ring bearer means losing that power. This might explain why Sauron will not murder Thráin.  It is more likely his long captivity and torment were meant to break down his resolve until he became a minion of Sauron, or willingly gave up the Ring.  Tolkien does not specify what actually happened to cause the breaking of Thráin’s mind. In The Hobbit, Gandalf finds Thrain witless and wandering in Sauron’s dungeon, but does not mention the ring (the concept of the rings was not fully developed at the time). This evolved into the mention in The Fellowship of the Ring that “it was taken with torment” and in Appendix A “Thrain was tormented and the ring was taken from him before he died”, but no specifics are given. It is only in The Unfinished Tales that Gandalf elaborates slightly on the final battle of Thrain:

It was nine years after Thráin had left his people that I found him, and he had then been in the pits of Dol Guldur for five years at least. I do not know how he endured so long, nor how he had kept these things hidden through all his torments. I think that the Dark Power had desired nothing from him except the Ring only, and when he had taken that he troubled no further, but just flung the broken prisoner into the pits to rave until he died. A small oversight; but it proved fatal. Small oversights often do.

It is clear from Unfinished Tales that he is “broken” mentally and physically, but does he lose his sanity because the Ring is simply taken from him after Sauron failed to bend his will? Or is it because Sauron finally succeeds, and Thráin surrenders the Ring himself, but goes insane for having lost his most valued possession?  It may seem like splitting hairs over the matter, but it would give us insight into the endurance of Dwarves, and whether or not they were capable of resisting the most acutely focused efforts of Sauron. Unfortunately Thráin loses either way.  Gandalf once explained to Frodo the dire consequences of trying to take the One Ring by force:
“You see? Already you too, Frodo, cannot easily let it go, nor will to damage it.  And I could not “make” you—except by force, which would break your mind.” – The Fellowship of the Ring. 

Of course, it is doubtful the rings affect Dwarves the same as hobbits, and the One is not the same as one of the seven (one should remember that unlike Bilbo and the One, the Dwarves would willingly, and without a Wizard’s encouragement, pass on their rings to their heirs), so it is hard to compare the two, but one wonders if Gandalf had Thráin’s fate in mind when he spoke of this.

Thráin was one of the greatest Dwarves of Middle-earth, father of our hero Thorin Oakenshield. He was tortured for five years to the point of insanity because he would not reveal or surrender his Ring, the last of the seven. Having a high endurance, a propensity to guard his treasure, and a rancor of evil tidings, he was tortured not only by Sauron’s forces, but also the mental dragon sickness imposed on him by the Ring, impossible to imagine, and impossible to endure.

He finally breaks. Sauron acquires the last of the Seven.

Thrain Moria

Behind-the-scenes of the Battle of Moria, from the Extended Edition

***


Bibliography

Carpenter, Humphrey. J.R.R. Tolkien, A Biography. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 2000.

Falconer, Daniel. The Hobbit, An Unexpected Journey. Chronicles II Creatures and Characters. New York: Harper Design, 2013.

Works of J.R.R. Tolkien:

The Lord of the Rings. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1994.

Works of J.R.R. Tolkien and Douglas A. Anderson:

The Annotated Hobbit. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 2002.

Works of J.R.R. Tolkien and Christopher Tolkien:

The Return of the Shadow. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1988.

The Treason of Isengard. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1989.

The Silmarillion. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 2001.

Tyler, J.E.A. The Complete Tolkien Companion. New York: Thomas Dunne Books, 1976.

lordoftheringswiki.com, thrainsbook.net, thorinoakenshield.net, tolkiengateway.net

Movie Sources:

Jackson, P. (Director). (2001). The Fellowship of the Ring. United States: New Line Cinema

(2012) An Unexpected Journey. United States: New Line Cinema/Warner Brothers

Illustration Sources:

Falconer, Daniel. The Hobbit, An Unexpected Journey. Chronicles II Creatures and Characters. New York: Harper Design, 2013.

deviantart.com, lotrwiki.com, thorinoakenshield.net, tolkiengateway.net, tumblr.com

Photoshop assistance: Kelly Ramage

Additional Research: Dark Jackal at thorinoakenshield.net

Essay: The Great Rings Part II – The Rings of Power

14 Tuesday May 2013

Posted by Ori's plume in Discussion, Hobbit book, Hobbit movie, Thorin

≈ 38 Comments

Tags

dragons, essay, necromancer, one ring, rings of dwarves, rings of elves, rings of men, rings of power, saruman, sauron, thorin, thrain, tolkien

The Rings of Power
By Ori’s Quill

This is part two of the trilogy that ties in the Concerns of the White Council, with the power of the Great Rings, and in a future essay will connect the Heirs of Durin with the Lord of the Rings. Those who have not read the books will find this information vital in understanding what may happen in the The Desolation of Smaug and There and Back Again. Those who have read the books might benefit from a review of this information and find some facts intriguing. The essay will demonstrate how Tolkien’s writings are preserved in the movie versions, but again will point out discrepancies. There may be spoilers depending on how much you already know.

The Ring of Tolkien

The fall of 1937 was an important time for Professor Tolkien. Having just completed The Hobbit that spring, and the book ready for publication on the 21st of September, he had set in his head a second novel, about Hobbits, and had already begun the first chapter titled A Long Expected Party (this compliments the first chapter of The Hobbit titled An Unexpected Party). By December of that year, he had completed five different drafts of chapter one. Here we can see Tolkien struggle. He wanted a maturity to his writing, to incorporate the spectacular mythologies brewing in his head that he wrote as early as 1917 when recovering from trench fever and grief of the death of his best friends killed in battle in World War I. He thought of dragon sickness, of Bilbo longing for adventure. But he did not want to write another children’s novel. The story started, stopped, started, stopped, and by 1938 he had drafted seven chapters. Yet still, Tolkien had no sense of connection, of direction. He wrote “The sequel to The Hobbit has remained where it stopped. It has lost my favor, and I have no idea what to do with it.”

Then it came to him. In his scribbled outlines he wrote: “Bilbo’s ring proved to be the one ruling Ring – all others had come back to Mordor: but this one had been lost.” Humphrey Carpenter sums it up best:

“The one ruling ring that controlled all others; the ring that was the source and instrument of the power of Sauron, the Dark Lord of Mordor; the ring that must be carried by hobbits, or else the whole world will come under Sauron’s domination. Now everything fell into place, and the story was lifted from the ‘juvenile’ level of The Hobbit into the sphere of grand and heroic romance. There was even a name for it: when next he wrote about it to Allen & Unwin (his British publishing company), Tolkien referred to it as “The Lord of the Rings”.

The Power of the One

There is a great importance in understanding what the Ruling Ring of Power can do. It is crucial. For without such knowledge, one cannot understand the relationship between Thorin Oakenshield and The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings. We are all familiar with the qualities of the One Ring. It is a Horcrux (I know, wrong story. But the term fits nicely here). Tolkien writes “he let a great part of his own former power pass into it”. It assured that Sauron could live for eternity through evil domination of others.

The One Ring was made by Sauron in the fires of Orodruin in the year 1600 of the Second Age. This location, so far east from Elves and Men, enabled Sauron to practice the darkest sorceries and fashion the Ruling Ring. Sauron was also a shape shifter. Through his sorcery he took up a new form, revealing the true nature of his evil self.

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Because a part of Sauron lived inside the Ring, it is an active controller. It manipulated Isildur, later betraying and having him murdered. The manipulation of Isildur prevented the Ring from destruction at Mount Doom. This assured that Sauron could return. But the Ring made a critical mistake then by having Isildur murdered, for when it slipped off his hand, it slipped into obscurity for thousands of years and could not find a bearer to bring it back to its master. Never again would it take the life of the ring bearer.

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It briefly ensnares Déagol and then Sméagol, driving him to murder and insanity. And for four hundred years, the Ring gets stuck in Gollum’s cave. Both in book and movie, the Ring abandons Gollum as he “twisted that nassty young squeaker” goblin. It realizes that Gollum won’t parcel it back to Sauron. It senses a new bearer, a bearer that will bring it closer to its master. That bearer is Bilbo, who just happens to be on the way to Mirkwood, home of Sauron as the Necromancer. The Ring chose Bilbo. It was intended, no accident, and contrary to the depiction in the Fellowship movie.

We then see Bilbo, using the Ring playfully to achieve his tasks. Consider this: Is the Ring using him? Did the Ring lure Bilbo to ask “What have I got in my pocket?” Bilbo was stammering for a riddle, “he scratched himself, he pinched himself; still he could not think of anything” and accidently brushes against the Ring in search for one. “What have I got in my pocket?” The question assured that Bilbo won the contest, though technically it was not a riddle that Bilbo asks.

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As he tries to escape Gollum’s assault, the Ring slips onto Bilbo’s finger, thereby guaranteeing safe passage out of the cave. But an even bigger picture emerges. The Ring is on the way to its master waiting in the darkness of Mirkwood. The Ring seems to be controlling the outcome of events.

Fortunately, the plan is spoiled. Bilbo, Thorin, and Company get past the Necromancer, as we will see in the Desolation of Smaug. How they make it past is speculated at the end of the essay Concerns of the White Council. But they are able to continue their Quest to Erebor, though hindered by other events along the way.

A clever reader may ask, “Might Smaug be capable of devouring the Ring, like the lessor Rings of the Dwarves?” The answer is no. Tolkien writes in Fellowship: “It has been said that dragon-fire could melt and consume the Rings of Power, but there is not now any dragons left on earth in which old fire is hot enough; nor was there ever any dragon, not even Ancalagon the Black [see the essay Concerns of the White Council about him], who could have harmed the One Ring, the Ruling Ring, for that was made by Sauron himself.” The Great Ring cannot be harmed by Smaug, which is a good thing, because such an outcome could never produce the great sequel The Lord of the Rings.

We all know that Bilbo returns to the Shire after the Quest (sorry if I spoiled the ending but it is implied in the title There and Back Again). Then the Ring slowly takes hold of him, to dominate. In Fellowship, Bilbo becomes “thin and stretched”, manic and agitated. He wants to roam, and has an obsession with the Ring. In the book, he describes himself trying to put it away, trying to forget about it, and then taking it back out again. He says it needs looking after. The Ring of Power seems to be controlling him. It has dominated his very thoughts, and is manipulating poor Bilbo.

Think back to the Long Expected Party. What if Bilbo never put the Ring on? Would Gollum have been lured to Mordor? Would then the Nazgûl not have been released? Would Orodruin have erupted? The very innocent action of startling stupid Hobbits of the Shire by disappearing set other actions in motion, thereby summoning the Nazgûl to bring the Ring back to its master. The Ring, it seems, is the controller.

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Then finally we see Frodo, in his naiveté, take up the burden of ring-bearer (once again, did he make the choice, or did the Ring?) in the Council of Elrond. Is it chance, coincidence, or is the Ring summoning Frodo to take it to Mordor? For eventually Frodo succumbs. The Ring takes him, and had not Sam and Gollum altered the course of events, the Ring would have succeeded in returning to its master.

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The Great Ring, the manipulator, the dominator, the chess player. For that is what the Great Ring is. It controls, moving our heroes in place like pawns to be slaughtered.

The Lesser Rings of Power

It might surprise fans who have not read the books that the lesser Rings of Power were made by Elves and not Sauron. The Silmarillion accounts the forging of the Rings of Power by the High Elves of Ost-in-Edhil, in Eregion under the supervision of Sauron who at that time was considered an ally and valued for his knowledge and smithing skills.

“They took thought, and they made Rings of Power. But Sauron guided their labours, and he was aware of all that they did; for his desire was to set a bond upon the Elves and to bring them under his vigilance. Now the Elves made many rings; but secretly Sauron made One Ring.”

This somewhat contradicts the Fellowship movie, which depicts Sauron gifting the Rings to the Elves, the Dwarves, and Men.

The Nine, The Seven, The Three, The One and The One?

As fans of the movies and the books, we are all aware of the Nine Rings of Men, the Seven of the Dwarves, the Three of the Elves, and the One.

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Few of us are aware that there is another Ring, dominated by the One. It is not Aragorn’s ring, known as the ring of Barahir, which he bore and is mentioned in the movie Two Towers and Appendix A of Fellowship.

It is a surprising yet obvious fact that the Ring in question was created in the Third Age and its bearer is Saruman. In reading the Council of Elrond in the Fellowship of the Ring, Gandalf explains his long disappearance and detainment. He rode to Orthanc to seek Saruman’s council. Gandalf says “I rode to the foot of Orthanc, and came to the stairs of Saruman…he wore a ring on his finger…” Saruman himself declares “For I am Saruman the Wise, Saruman the Ring-maker, Saruman of Many Colors.”

How can Saruman have a Ring of Power? He openly declares that he made the Ring himself, but how is this dominated by the One? The answer lies in the Palantír, one of the lost Seeing-stones, as read in Concerns of the White Council. This Palantír enables Sauron to control Saruman like a puppeteer

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controlling a puppet. Saruman was a vested scholar in Ring lore, spending much time studying the history, myths and legends. This was his undoing. Sauron could easily persuade him to make a Ring and thereby be dominated. So Sauron is using Saruman as another avenue in obtaining the Great Ring. And if Saruman wants the Ring for himself, Sauron has other means of controlling him. In the book The Two Towers, when Sauron appears to Pippin in the Palantír he declares “Tell Saruman that this dainty (a hobbit) is not for him. I will send for it at once.” In other words, Saruman has no chance of obtaining the Ring. Sauron knows completely what Saruman is planning, and will send the Nazgûl to retrieve the Ring should he obtain it.

The Nine Rings of Men

Both the movies and Tolkien account for nine kings receiving the Rings of Power. After that time, Tolkien writes, there were many battles fought especially in the realm of Eriador. The Númenoreans, of the line of Aragorn, became divided and rebellions and upheavals were the zeitgeist of the times. That was when the race of Men was at its most low.

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Tolkien gives a date of 2251 of the Second Age when Middle-earth is first plagued by the Nazgûl. Of the nine kings, slowly wariness took over and they succumbed not only to the domination of the Great Ring, but they remained undying. (This contradicts a scene we may see in the Desolation of Smaug, in which Gandalf and Radagast go to investigate the nine tombs of the High Fells. If you are undying, how can you have a tomb? See Concerns of the White Council.) Slowly the nine kings faded and became invisible permanently, and served Sauron forever. For over three thousand years, Sauron commanded the Nazgûl. Their actions were entirely based on his will and domination.

The Three Rings of the Elves

We know of the other Rings of Power the following facts: That each had their own precious or semi-precious gem attributed to them. While the Nine Rings of Men and the Seven Rings of the Dwarves are not described, we do have a description of the Three. There is Vilya, the Ring of Air, whose ring bearer was originally Gil-galad and then he passed the Ring to Elrond. The stone attributed to the Ring is a blue sapphire. The next, Nenya the Ring of Water, whose bearer is Galadriel, has a white diamond. Finally, there is Narya the Ring of Fire, with a red stone, perhaps a ruby. Its original bearer was Círdan, the Shipwright. Its final bearer is a bit of a

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surprise for those not familiar to the books, especially The Silmarillion. For in that book it is mentioned that Mithrandir was the last to bear Narya. He bore the ring in secret and swore never to mention his bearing, but it explains why in the movie Gandalf sets sail with Frodo, Bilbo, Elrond, Galadriel (all ring bearers) and Celeborn (contradictory to Tolkien’s writing, for Celeborn remained in Middle-earth and settled in the southern woods and renamed them East Lórien) at the end of the movie Return of the King.

Of the Three, there is evidence of domination; though their bearers have a stronger resistance to the Ruling Ring. The reason for this was that Sauron never made the Three. They were forged to enable the Elves to heal and preserve. They were created by Celebrimbor in the realm of Eregion in the year 1590 of the Second Age. It would take Sauron another ten years to forge the One. By 1693, the three were hidden. In Fellowship, it is written “The Three, the fairest of all, the Elf-lords hid from him, and his hand never touched or sullied them.” The Silmarillion continues that as soon as Sauron put on the Great Ring, the Elves perceived his domination, and promptly removed their Rings from their fingers, thereby reducing the dominating power of the One.

In year two of the Third Age, when Isildur is murdered, and the Ring passed out of all knowledge, the three Rings of the Elves were temporarily released from its dominion. Elrond confirms this in the Council in Fellowship. This is why we see Galadriel actually wearing Nenya in the movie Fellowship. She is able to bear the Ring without Sauron’s oppression.

The Seven Rings of the Dwarves

Originally, Tolkien only created two lines of Dwarves, but later changed that in the 1966 revision of The Lord of the Rings. We lack a historical account of all of the seven founding fathers, but Tolkien names the lines as the Longbeards (Durin’s line), Firebeards, Broadbeams, Ironfists, Stiffbeards, Blacklocks and Stonefoots. Each family line received one of the Seven. The Longbeards or Sigin-tarâg founded the Dwarf colonies of Gundabad and Khazad-dûm and later founded Erebor, as well as colonies in the Ered Mithrin and the Iron Hills. The Firebeards and the Broadbeams founded the colonies of Tumunzahar (Nogrod in Sind.) and

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Gabilgathol (Belegost in Sind.) in the Ered Luin. The Ironfists, Stiffbeards, Blacklocks and Stonefoots went north and east, and are no longer mentioned in any of Tolkien’s works.

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Tolkien writes that Durin III was the first Dwarf to receive one of the Seven in the year 1500 of the Second Age. He was king of Khazad-dûm. His grandfather, Durin the Deathless (who eventually did die at a very ripe old age) was the first of the line of Durin, and founded the kingdom of Khazad-dûm. Durin III had forged a great friendship with the High Elf Celebrimbor, who made the Three Rings of the Elves. The Elves of Eregion, as the realm was known, and Khazad-dûm both prospered as a great trade network was created between the two.

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A little trivia, if I may. Celebrimbor, for those who read the books, was also partially responsible for creation of the western door of Khazad-dûm, known as the Hollin gate. He drew the signs on the door, while Narvi the Dwarf carved them out using cirth ithil, moon runes. The seven stars above represent the seven lines of the Dwarves with the central star above the crown being Durin’s. The crown itself is a depiction of an image that Durin the Deathless saw when he gazed into Kheled-zâram (Mirror-mere) and saw on his head a crown flanked by the seven stars.  Below that is the hammer and anvil, a symbol of the House of Durin. These are flanked by the trees of the High Elves and the large central star is the House of Fëanor, maker of the three silmarilli in the First Age. Celebrimbor was Fëanor’s grandson, like Durin III was Durin I’s grandson. Unlike the door of Erebor, which requires a key, the door of the Hollin gate needs none. You only need to speak ‘friend’ to enter.

It has been commented in both The Silmarillion and the Fellowship, that the Seven Rings of the Dwarves were either destroyed or taken by Sauron. How were they destroyed? By dragons, including Glaurung the Great (See Concerns of the White Council). Appendix B of Return of the King comments: “The Dwarves hid themselves in deep places, guarding their hoards, but then evil began to stir again and dragons reappeared, one by one, their ancient treasures were plundered and they became a wandering people.” A total of four Rings were consumed by Dragons. The Silmarillion states “soon he (Sauron) will be too strong for you even without the Great Ring, for he rules the Nine and of the Seven, he has recovered three.” Fellowship also confirms this: “Seven the Dwarf-kings possessed, but three he has recovered, and the others the dragons have consumed.”

The question is: from which of the three Dwarf lines did Sauron recover the three? Recall that the Firebeards and the Broadbeams founded the colonies of Gabilgathol and Tumunzahar in the Ered Luin. (This is the same Ered Luin that Thráin and Thorin lead the exiles to after the sack of Erebor. Also recall in Concerns of the White Council, that the king of Gabilgathol, Azaghâl, came to the aid of the sons of Fëanor to battle Glaurung the Great:

Image  Glaurung the Golden by Lynton Levengood

“In a fit of rage, Glaurung turned on the Dwarf-king, Azaghâl and crawled over him, crushing him to death, but not before Azaghâl plunged a knife in the fire-drake’s belly. Glaurung fled but the wound he received from Azaghâl was not a mortal wound.”)

What we learn of Gabilgathol and Tumunzahar in The Silmarillion is that both Dwarf cities suffered from massive flooding during the fall of Beleriand and were partially destroyed. The exiled peoples wandered and then migrated to Khazad-dûm, and later the Iron Hills, and settled with Durin’s folk. The flooding occurred in the First Age, an age prior to the creation of the Seven Rings, so Sauron could not have acquired the Rings then.

However, in 1980 of the Third Age, a Balrog appears in Khazad-dûm, slaying Durin VI, and the Dwarves of Khazad-dûm fled. We know that the heirs of Durin retained their Ring, but it is possible that Sauron acquired the Rings of the Firebeards and the Broadbeams at this time. Unfortunately, Tolkien’s account of that particular event is not recorded, so this can only be speculated.

Another possibility of how Sauron acquired two of the Rings is during the year 2463 of the Third Age. In Concerns of the White Council, there was an account of Sauron fleeing east to avoid being revealed to the Council too soon: ‘The Council sought clarification on the origins of the Necromancer, some suspecting that Sauron had in fact returned. Their inquiry proves futile, as Sauron senses their approach and retreats east.” It can be speculated that during his time east, Sauron may have encountered the descendants of the Stiffbeards, Blacklocks and Stonefoots. He could have acquired the two Rings during this time too, but again it can only be speculated as Tolkien never discloses how Sauron collects the two Rings of the Dwarves.

Thráin, Thorin and the Last of the Seven Rings of the Dwarves

In part three of this trilogy, we will explore more of the Rings of the Dwarves, how the Ring of the line of Durin is passed to Thráin from Thrór, but not to Thorin from Thráin, and finally how Sauron acquired the third Ring of the Dwarves. We will also explore the ensuing dragon sickness that overcomes Thrór, Thráin and Thorin. It all ties in with the Concerns of the White Council and The Rings of Power. It will explain the rise of the Necromancer and connect Thorin Oakenshield to the One Ring to rule them all.

I leave you to ponder this quote of Gandalf, for it reveals much:

“Nearly all of his ravings were of that:
The last of the Seven“.

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Thrain the Insane



Bibliography

Literary Sources:

Carpenter, Humphrey. J. R. R. Tolkien, A Biography. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 2000.

Works of J.R.R. Tolkien:

The Lord of the Rings. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1994.

Works of J.R.R. Tolkien and Douglas A. Anderson:

The Annotated Hobbit. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 2002.

Works of J.R.R. Tolkien and Christopher Tolkien:

The Return of the Shadow. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1988.
The Treason of Isengard. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1989.
The Silmarillion. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 2001.

Tyler, J.E.A. The Complete Tolkien Companion.  New York: Thomas Dunne Books 1976.

lordoftheringswiki.com, thrainsbook.net, thorinoakenshield.net, tolkiengateway.net

Movie Sources:

Jackson, P. (Director). (2001). The Fellowship of the Ring. United States: New Line Cinema

(2002) The Two Towers. United States: New Line Cinema
(2003) The Return of the King. United States: New Line Cinema
(2012) The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey. United States: New Line Cinema/Warner Brothers

Illustration Sources:

deviantart.com, lotrwiki.com, rebrick.lego.com, thalion.ovh.org, thorinoakenshield.net, tumblr.com, tolkiengateway.net, vilya.altwevista.org

Map taken from: J.R.R. Tolkien. The Lord of the Rings. New York: Houghton Mifflin 1994.

Photoshop Assistance: Kelly Ramage

Additional Research and Technical Assistance: Dark Jackal at thorinoakenshield.net

Essay: The Great Rings Part I – Concerns of the White Council

27 Saturday Apr 2013

Posted by Ori's plume in Discussion, Hobbit book, Hobbit movie, News, Thorin

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desolation of smaug, dol guldur, dragons, dwarves, elrond, essay, galadriel, gandalf, hobbit trailer, necromancer, one ring, radagast, rings of power, saruman, sauron, smaug, spoilers, thorin, thrain, white council

Concerns of the White Council
By Ori’s Quill

This essay is an analysis of the concerns of the White Council that is featured in An Unexpected Journey. It is one of a three part trilogy that shows the evolution of the Necromancer’s rise to power, and in the future essays explains the connection between Thorin’s ancestors and the One Ring. It is also an attempt to reconcile the literary works of J.R.R. Tolkien and An Unexpected Journey, but also to point out the discrepancies. There are a few small “spoilers” that will not be labeled. Some things will be revealed to fans of the movies that may not have read The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings, and other literary works of Professor Tolkien, while fans of Tolkien may be reminded or even enlightened while reading this essay. There is a map at the end of the essay to reference if you like.

The History of the White Council of Tolkien

The White Council is formed in the year 2463 of the Third Age shortly after the Peaceful Watch ends. Lady Galadriel founds the Council after dark shadows start to grow out of Dol Guldur, and could be sensed in Lórien.

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Originally Gandalf was recommended as the leader of the Council, but he sternly declines the appointment, citing his need to remain nomadic and refusal to a summons. It is agreed then that Saruman would head the Council, though he accepts begrudgingly, being a second choice to Mithrandir. Other members are Radagast the Brown, and Elrond of Rivendell. The Silmarillion mentions that others of the Eldar are also in the Council, but their names are not mentioned, nor the regions they dwelt in. The Council sought clarification on the origins of the Necromancer, some suspecting that Sauron had in fact returned. Their inquiry proves futile, as Sauron senses their approach and retreats east. The Council does not meet again for 388 years.

The Council reforms in 2851. This was the year after Gandalf enters the fortress of Dol Guldur. There he discovers Thráin in the dungeons, and learns that Sauron is in fact the Necromancer gathering the Seven Rings, and is searching for the One Ring. Thráin dies and Gandalf barely escapes with his life. Gandalf calls for action of the White Council sensing the time had come for an attack, but his recommendation to assault Dol Guldur is denied by Saruman. At the time, Saruman’s decision not to act seems surprising, but slowly he is succumbing to the Ring, and wants to buy some time so he can search the Gladden Fields in the hopes of finding the Ring himself.

In 2941, the Council meets again (This is the same year that Thorin and Company begin their quest to reclaim Erebor). Saruman agrees to an assault of Dol Guldur, but only because he suspects that Sauron is searching the Gladden Fields too. Their attack proves futile, as Sauron has moved and enters again into Mordor the following year.

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The White Council by Alan Lee

Twelve years later, in the year 2953 of the Third Age, the White Council meets for the final time. The seduction of the Ring causes Saruman to lie and say that it had passed into the sea. The Council disbands, and Saruman retreats to Mount Fang in Nan Curunír, claims Orthanc as his own, and prepares for war. He dispatches spies to Bree, and the Shire, and watches Gandalf’s moves very closely.

The White Council of An Unexpected Journey:

Radagast’s Account of the Emergence of Mirkwood

Radagast the Brown, or Aiwendil in Quenya, dwells in the region of Rhosgobel, on the borders of the Anduin and the forest of Greenwood. Because of Radagast’s deep connection with all beasts living, he becomes highly sensitized to the slow decay that begins to form around the majestic forest of Greenwood.

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Radagast the Brown by Frank Victoria

Now Greenwood, or Greenwood the Great, is the greatest forest of Middle-earth. It encompasses a vast span over four hundred miles long and two hundred miles wide. Over two-thirds of the realm of Rhovanion, it comprises. To the west is the Great Anduin, and south-east is Mordor. It is the primary home of the Sindar, also known as Wood-elves. Their love of the mortal land of Middle-earth almost caused their extinction during the Battle of Dagorlad (3434 SA), known as the last alliance of men and elves, the epic battle in which Sauron lost his Ring by the hand of Isildur with his father’s sword, Narsil. After the battle, what was left of the Sindar return to Greenwood under the leadership of Thranduil, settling in the north-east along the Forest River. There they live in relative peace, delighting in the beauty of the forest, though a foreboding darkness seems to grow.

In Greenwood’s southern most region is the site of Dol Guldur, the Hill of Sorcery. Dol Guldur is built atop Amon Lanc. It is built in secret by evil forces under Sauron’s command in the beginning of the Third Age. The location is spitefully chosen! Amon Lanc, during the Second Age, was the home of Oropher, one of the Sindar who emigrated east after the fall of Morgoth in the First Age. Oropher was Thranduil’s father, and he was killed during the Battle of Dagorlad fighting Sauron.

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Image of Dol Guldur on Amon Lanc from An Unexpected Journey

How very cruel it is that Dol Guldur is being built on Amon Lanc, Oropher’s home, while Oropher’s body lay in the marshes of Dagorlad. (It is around this time that the five great Istari first appear in Middle-earth. Three of these wizards became members of the White Council: Saruman, Gandalf and Radagast. The two wizards vaguely mentioned in An Unexpected Journey are Alatar and Pallando, and were said to travel into the far east of Middle-earth beyond Rohûn.)

It is because of the building of Dol Guldur, and the growing shadow shrouding it, that Greenwood becomes Mirkwood. A foreboding comes to Rhovanion. Darkness permeates the forest due to the dense canopy. The trees became diseased, and the air stagnant and suffocating. Little water can be found, and where there is water, it is black and enchanted. A mighty and beautiful forest injected with a carcinogenic plague and its filthy byproducts.

Into mirkwood

Into the Mirkwood by Thalion

A big concern that Radagast has is the spiders and their horrible webs. “A spawn of Ungoliant or I’m not a wizard” – An Unexpected Journey. Ungoliant was the greatest of spiders from the First Age, being created out of the Darkness when Middle-earth was taking form. Melkor used her to destroy the sacred Trees of the Valinor. Later she sought dark remote areas and mated with lesser beings to produce a great amount of offspring. Shelob, of Cirith Ungol, was one of Ungoliant’s offspring, and she in turn produced offspring of her own that migrated from Cirith Ungol into the north and south sections of Mirkwood. Their network of webs created an even darker foreboding, as they poisoned their prey and hung them in the forest canopy.

Trolls of the Ettenmoors Raiding Villages

Trolls, according to Tolkien, were first created during the First Age at the time of Great Darkness, when all the light of Valar, Illuin and Ormal was destroyed by Melkor. It is because they were created in darkness, that trolls have sensitivity to sunlight, and turn to stone as read in The Hobbit, and seen delightfully in An Unexpected Journey. Morgoth, during the end of the First Age used trolls for his invasion of Beleriand. After Morgoth’s defeat, the trolls suffered great losses, and were slow to reproduce (could it be their cooking?) Retreating to the region of the Ettenmoors, south of Angmar, trolls were no longer a concern to the kind races of Middle-earth. That is why Gandalf and Thorin are perplexed at their appearance in Journey. Thorin: “Since when do Mountain Trolls venture this far south?” Gandalf: “Ooh, not for an Age. Not since a darker power rules these lands. They could not have moved in daylight”.

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William, Tom and Bert from An Unexpected Journey

The investigation of the Troll-hoard reveals actions of malfeasance. Coins, treasure, weaponry and such are revealed in the trove, in particular, Orcrist and Glamdring. It is curious that such prestigious swords end up in the hands of trolls. The swords were war booty during the First Age after the fall of Gondolin. How the swords got there is a mystery, but it proves that Bert, Bill and Tom were up to mischief and conducting raids at night.

(Later in the Two Towers and the Return of the King, Tolkien and Jackson introduce a more aggressive race of trolls known as Olog-hai. These trolls are stronger, have a harder endurance, and could tolerate daylight without being turned to stone. We first see them in the Battle of Pelennor Fields, pushing large battle towers to the walls of Minas Tirith.)

Invading Orcs from Gundabad

Gandalf’s concern about the attack of an orc pack riding Gundabad wargs is also addressed. Gundabad is a mountain region in the north at the apex of the Misty Mountains, adjacent to Angmar. In the days of the Eldar, Mount Gundabad was the resting place of Durin the Deathless, the oldest father of the Dwarves, and ancient ancestor of Thrór, Thráin and Thorin. Durin slumbered many years in Gundabad, under the enchantment of Aulë, creator of the Dwarves. “Then Aulë took the seven fathers of the Dwarves and laid them to rest in far-sundered places.” – The Silmarillion. When Durin awoke, he founded a kingdom in Gundabad, until the colony was attacked by orcs migrating from the destroyed realm of Angband during the Second Age.

By the Third Age, Gundabad became known as an orc capital, and was commanded by Azog. Gundabad remained the capital until the year 2799 when during War of the Dwarves and Orcs, the Dwarves sacked Gundabad to avenge the killing and beheading of Thror. The Dwarves also held Gundabad as a sacred place that had been spoiled by the orc takeover in the Second Age. But because Mount Gundabad was occupied with orcs for so long, it remained by reputation, an evil and sinister place.

There is a distinct difference between Gundabad wargs featured in An Unexpected Journey and the wargs of the Lord of the Rings movie trilogy. Gundabad wargs have a more bellicose nature, appear more wolf-like, and are specifically bred in Gundabad. Little is known of them except their aggressive pugnacious behavior and servitude to the Orcs of Gundabad and their king Azog. (In the book The Hobbit, the wargs assist the goblins but are not under their servitude.)

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Gundabad Warg Scout by Gus Hunter

By contrast the wargs of The Lord of the Rings, known as the wolves of Isengard, were used in organized attacks by Saruman. “He has taken Orcs into his service, and Wolf –riders, and evil Men.” – The Two Towers. According to Tolkien, all orcs have a disdain for sunlight, but in An Unexpected Journey and Two Towers daylight does not deter them. But orcs and wargs are to be feared regardless of day or night. “The wolf that one hears is worse than the orc that one fears. But where the warg howls, there also the orc prowls.” – The Fellowship of the Ring.

Fear of Smaug’s Power to be Unleashed

Another concern of Gandalf is the idea that Smaug may be turned to aide Sauron. He presents this to the White Council, explaining that “if he should side with the enemy, a dragon could be used to terrible effect” – An Unexpected Journey. The effect he mentions is this. The north-east during this time is very weak. With the city of Dale razed, Erebor guarded by Smaug, and the Ered Mithrin’s reputation of having potentially more dragons in the region of Withered Heath, it would be very easy for an invasion with dragons into the realms of Rhovanion, Lórien and Rohan. Gandalf is convinced that Sauron has returned, and knows that this invasion is a strong possibility with virtual impunity from any organized resistance.

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Conversation with Smaug by J.R.R.Tolkien

The use of dragons in such an invasion is a highly justifiable concern, for Middle-earth had a history of such evil tidings in the past. Dragons had long plagued Middle-earth, particularly the race of Dwarves, even before the Sack of Erebor. Dáin I, father of Thrór, was ruler in the realm of the Ered Mithrin (Grey Mountains), the location of which was Withered Heath. “But there were dragons in the wastes beyond; and after many years they became strong again and multiplied, and they made war on the Dwarves and plundered their works.” – Return of the King, Appendix A. The Dwarves abandoned the Ered Mithrin after Dain I was slain with his son, Frór, and Thrór led the remaining Dwarves back to Erebor. But the history of Dwarves and dragons goes back even further.

There was Glaurung the greatest and most feared dragon of the First Age. He was bred by Morgoth, Sauron’s leader, and was unveiled during the Battle of Sudden Flames. At Morgoth’s command was “Glaurung, the Golden, father of dragons, in his full might; and in his trains were Balrogs and behind them came the black armies of the Orcs in multitudes such as Noldor had never seen or imagined” – The Silmarillion. The Great Worm was inexperienced, though powerful, and was eventually beaten off by Fingon.

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Glaurung by Ted Nasmith

Glaurung the Fire Drake would again return two hundred years later, on command of Morgoth, during the Battle of Unnumbered Tears, otherwise known as Nirnaeth Arnoediad. Glaurung had matured at this point, and proved a fierce adversary. Elves and men both perished as they fought him until at last, the Dwarves of Gabilgathol, a Dwarf-city in the Ered Luin, came to their aid. The Dwarves, it was said, wore armor more resistant to the fire of the dragon and assailed him at close range. As they surrounded him, their battle axes hit their mark. In a fit of rage, Glaurung turned on the Dwarf-king, Azaghâl and crawled over him, crushing him to death, but not before Azaghâl plunged a knife in the fire-drake’s belly. Glaurung fled, but the wound he received from Azaghâl was not a mortal wound.

Glaurung later returned, and used powerful spells and bewitched the children of Húrin in vile and incestuous ways. As he wormed his way towards the last free hold of Middle-earth, he received a mortal wound from Turambar (Túrin) wielding the Black Thorn of Brethil, a black sword of Nargothrond.

glaurung the golden

Glaurung the Golden – by Lynton Levengood

Another of the Great Worms of Middle-earth was Scatha the Worm, who also served Morgoth in the First Age. He fled to Ered Mithrin after the War of Wrath. Known to plague both men and Dwarves in the Northern Wildlands, he was slain in the year 2000 of the Third Age. (Some Trivia: One of the finds from Scatha’s hoard was the Horn of Rohan that Eowyn presents to Merry Brandybuck for his heroic deeds in the Battle of Pelennor Fields. Another bit of trivia: It is speculated that Glamdring, Orcrist, and Sting also came from this hoard as Scatha took part in the razing of Gondolin).

Finally, there is Ancalagon the Black. This great dragon was the first winged dragon Middle-earth had seen. Unleashed under Morgoth’s command as a last defense, Ancalagon proved a very mighty foe. He was extremely large, with a tremendous wing span. When at last he was slain by Eärendil, with aid from the Eagles of Manwë, and fell from the sky, the impact of his carcass shattered the mountain range of Thangorodrim, near Angband.

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Scatha – by Scatha-the-Worm, and Ancalagon the Black – by Daniel Govar

The Mystery of the Morgul Blade

The appearance of the Morgul Blade completely baffles and terrifies members of the White Council. While Saruman dismisses its appearance as simply a “dagger from a bygone age” and is not proven to be a Morgul Blade, Elrond, Galadriel and Gandalf see darker implications. They are perplexed, as the sword was buried with the Witch-king of Angmar, in the “High Fells of Rhudaur. Deep within the rock they buried him…in a tomb so dark…it would never come to light” – Galadriel, An Unexpected Journey. Elrond goes on to explain the impossibility of those tombs being opened, and are protected by a powerful spell.

The resurrection of the Morgul Blade was of great concern for both Galadriel and Elrond, for they both suffered personally from its effects. The power of the Morgul Blade is not to kill, but to force its victims to succumb to the will of Sauron. Galadriel’s daughter, Celebrian was the wife of Elrond, and bore him two sons, Elladan and Elrohir as well as a daughter, Arwen Undómiel (future wife of Aragorn). As she journeyed to Lórien, her party was assaulted by Orcs at Caradhras (Barazinbar to the Dwarves, Redhorn Pass in the Common Speech) and she was taken prisoner. Elladan and Elrohir rescued her, but not before she suffered a wound from a Morgul blade.

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Celebrian’s Imprisonment – by Liga-marta

She was brought back to Rivendell and Elrond healed the wound. But Celebrían “suffered torment… (and) lost all delight in Middle-earth, and the next year went to the Havens and passed over the sea” – The Return of the King, Appendix A. This effect of the Morgul blade sounds familiar, as Frodo suffered the same torment and pain, many years after being stabbed at Weathertop at the ruined tower of Amon Sûl. He also suffered torment, and pain, and had to sail to the Undying Lands to seek relief.

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Frodo Stabbed by the Mogul Blade from The Fellowship of the Ring

Now Rhudaur, the name given by the Dúnedain, is a region south of the Ettenmoors and west of Rivendell and the Misty Mountains, and is the location of the tombs of the High Fells. Known as a rugged, hostile area, with low soil fertility, and little resources, the men of Rhudaur together with Angmar waged war against neighboring Arthedain and Cardolan in 1409 of the Third Age. At Amon Sûl, the Cardolan Dúnedain took a last stand and were besieged by the men subjected to the command of Angmar. The great Watch Tower was burned, and Dúnedain lost their lives, but not before the people of Arthedain were able to escape with one of the remaining Palantír. The Arthedain were the last Line of Isildur, and after the fall of Amon Sûl, they lead a nomadic life, becoming what were known to be the Rangers of the North.

lotr___the_tower_of_amon_sul_by_pakpolaris-d34fd5q

The Tower of Amon Sûl – by Pak Polaris

The Tombs of the High Fells do not exist in any Tolkien works, but for the movie The Desolation of Smaug, Gandalf and Radagast travel to the High Fells of Rhudaur to investigate the tombs. After a vertigo inducing hike, they discover that the tombs in fact have been opened. Radagast, more sensitive to the effects of dark magic, feels that dark spells haunt the tombs. The heavy stone lid sarcophagus is broken, and Gandalf comments how the tombs themselves were opened from the inside out. The rise of the Nazgûl and the mystery of the Morgul Blade have been solved. There is in fact a Sorcerer who can summon the dead.

high fells

High Fells and Tomb Renderings by Alan Lee

Saruman’s Treason

Saruman is the chief of the Order of Istari, the five great wizards that come in the Third Age. The primary purpose of their existence in Middle-earth is to combat the power of Sauron and bring balance and peace. Curunír, as he is known to the Elves, was a vested scholar in Ring lore, spending much time studying the history, myths and legends. This was his undoing. He somehow acquires a lost Palantír. This Seeing Eye-Stone, combined with his obsession with Ring lore, began to turn Saruman. He was seduced, just as Gollum was. But being the Head of the Order and the Head of the White Council makes him very dangerous.

When the White Council meets in the year 2851, Saruman already knows that Sauron has returned as the Necromancer. He becomes concerned that the White Council will learn that not only Sauron seeks the One Ring, but that Saruman himself is also seeking it. This explains why he intentionally dissuades the Council from any attack on Dol Guldur. Saruman then begins searching the Gladden Fields, the marshy area where Isildur was betrayed by the Ring and murdered. Isildur fell into the river, and the Ring passed out of all knowledge.

saruman

Saruman and the Palantír from The Two Towers

The Council meets again in 2941; Saruman discredits Gandalf’s debate, as seen in An Unexpected Journey. From a small orc pack that “dared to cross the Bruinen (Actually this may be a blooper! If the orc pack is to cross any river from Gundabad, it would be the Hoarwell. The Bruinen or Loudwater is too far south depending on how far south they came from the Misty Mountains), to an old dagger found, to a mortal-man dabbling in dark witchcraft, Saruman counters every argument that there is trouble brewing. Even poor Radagast is discredited. Saruman explains that he cannot be taken seriously because of his “excessive consumption of mushrooms. They’ve addled his brain and yellowed his teeth.” (And Saruman might benefit from a little attention to his own dental hygiene.) Saruman attempts to persuade the White Council to intervene in the Quest to reclaim Erebor. He is secretly concerned that should the dwarves succeed, a stronger defensive guard would be placed in the North.

The Appearance of the Necromancer

The White Council’s chief concern is the appearance of this new sorcerer. It is a new (or old) power that seems to bring the dark shadows that Galadriel feels in Lórien, causing her to form the White Council. That a sorcerer has taken up in Dol Guldur is alarming, but is it dangerous?

What is a Necromancer? The term itself deserves discussion. In “Laws and Customs Among the Eldar” taken from Morgoth’s Ring, Christopher Tolkien compiled his fathers’ notes and research and deciphered the following: When an Elf dies, the Elvish spirit (or Fea) is attracted to a living host and will attempt to penetrate the living body and vanquish the living hosts Fea from its rightful owner. J.R.R.Tolkien wrote “It is said that Sauron did these things…”

Most of us take for granted that the Necromancer is Sauron. Years of Lord of the Rings media, either in literature, or movies, enlightened us to Sauron’s powers and abilities. But remember as a child reading The Hobbit? Gandalf leaving Thorin and Company to fight this foe seemed a small and not so dangerous task. We underestimate what the Necromancer really could be. Initially, Tolkien felt the same way. Anderson writes that the Necromancer simply serves as a reason for Gandalf to leave the Company. But as early as the fall of 1937, around the same time as the first publication of The Hobbit, a dawning grew on Tolkien as the Necromancer’s shadow grew on Middle-earth. But that is the second part of this paper to be continued in the future.

What We May See In The Desolation of Smaug

I strongly suspect three very important things will be seen in The Desolation of Smaug.

-That Gandalf will take it upon himself to attack Dol Guldur despite the White Council’s decision not to attack. He never follows any advice when it conflicts with a path that he is on. Such examples would the recruitment of Bilbo Baggins to join the Quest of Erebor. From thirteen Dwarves to Galadriel, no one understands this decision of Gandalf’s, not even himself. Another example is the aversion of entering Moria in The Fellowship but he knows entering will cost him his own life. He leads the Fellowship anyway. Another is his fear the Helm’s Deep will suffer a great defeat in Two Towers, and seeks out Éomer. Yet another is his knowledge that Denethor had a Palantír, and its use drove him mad (This explains his madness in Return of the King movie if you have never read the books). Gandalf knows, without reason or explanation. That is why I feel confident in saying he will attack Dol Guldur on his own accord.

– That Galadriel will come to Gandalf’s aid in the attack of Dol Guldur. In Unexpected Journey, there is a tender moment between the two. She gently gives him courage saying “Do not be afraid, Mithrandir. You are not alone. If you should ever need my help…I will come”. That certainly was no love scene. She senses he will need her aid, and I bet we will see that in Desolation.

– And finally we will see Thráin, son of Thrór, father of Thorin Oakenshield, in a flashback scene in the dungeons of Dol Guldur. He will be in possession of the map and key of Erebor, and he will reveal something to Gandalf that sets this whole fantastic story in motion, from the Quest of Erebor to the Return of the King. That will be discussed in a part III of the series. I leave you to ponder this quote of Saruman (from this behind-the-scenes footage) for it reveals much:

“Without the ruling ring of power, the seven are of no value to the enemy“.

thrain

Thrain the Insane from the trailer of An Unexpected Journey

Part II – The Rings of Power

Map of Middle-earth

map

Bibliography

Literary Sources:

Works of J.R.R. Tolkien:
The Lord of the Rings.
New York: Houghton Mifflin 1994.
Works of J.R.R. Tolkien and Douglas A. Anderson:
The Annotated Hobbit.
New York: Houghton Mifflin, 2002.
Works of J.R.R. Tolkien and Christopher Tolkien editor:
The Children of Húrin.
New York: Houghton Mifflin 2007.
Unfinished Tales of Númenor and Middle-earth
. New York: Random House, 1980.
The Silmarillion.
New York: Houghton Mifflin 2001.
Tyler, J.E.A.
The Complete Tolkien Companion. New York: Thomas Dunne Books 1976.

lordoftheringswiki.com, thrainsbook.net, thorinoakenshield.net

Movie Sources:

Jackson, P. (Director). (2001). The Fellowship of the Ring. United States: New Line Cinema
(2002)
The Two Towers. United States: New Line Cinema
(2003)
The Return of the King. United States: New Line Cinema
(2012)
An Unexpected Journey. United States: New Line Cinema/Warner Brothers

Illustration Sources:

deviantart.com, lotrwiki.com, thalion.ovh.org, thorinoakenshield.net, tumblr.com
Falconer, Daniel.
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey Chronicles. New York: Harper Collins, 2012.
Tolkien, J.R.R.
The Silmarillion. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 2004

Map taken from: J.R.R. Tolkien. The Lord of the Rings. New York: Houghton Mifflin 1994.

Photoshop assistance: Kelly Ramage
Additional Research: Dark Jackal at thorinoakenshield.net

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