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Thread: Nice read only: Stewards, Rhudaur, Gladden Fields, Sauron strategy (Pt. 1 & 2) and Theoden

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    Default Nice read only: Stewards, Rhudaur, Gladden Fields, Sauron strategy (Pt. 1 & 2) and Theoden

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 
    Guardianship is the mark of the Stewards of Gondor. They are guardians, wardens, keeping an ancient trust placed in their hands by a family of kings which, at the end of the Third Age, no longer exists. Gondor's Ruling Stewards are a curious example of how authority combined with tradition can produce a subtle irony in power and position.
    The Elvish word for "steward" is Arandur, "King's servant". The name implies that the Stewards began their long career as something less than government officials. They may have been the personal servants of Gondor's early kings. At some point in Gondor's history, the Aranduri may have assumed special duties which led to their elevation in station and authority. Eventually, they succeeded to the royal authority of the kings, although they never displaced the House of Elendil in Gondor's formal government.

    Some people have observed a parallel between Gondor's history and the history of early medieval France. The Major Domos of early Frankish dynasties eventually displaced the kings and assumed royal authority. Charles Martel, renowned as the Major Domo who defeated the Moors in southern France, founded a new dynasty.

    But the problem with comparing the Frankish Major Domos to Tolkien's Ruling Stewards is that it their history provides a Frankish model. Tolkien was not very fond of France, or of French words. In fact, few of the important titles or names in The Lord of the Rings are derived from French words.

    For example, the term Major Domo is usually translated as "Mayor of the Palace" by historians discussing the Pepinid dynasty (Charles Martel is believed by some people to have been descended from Pepin of Landen, who became the Mayor of the Palace in Metz under King Chlotar II of Neustria). The Frankish Major Domos were in some ways like Tolkien's stewards, in that they governed Frankish nations in the names of their kings, but the Major Domos eventually became kings. They were powerful men who controlled money, armies, and royal appointments. The kings who appointed the Major Domos had very little real power. It proved to be only a matter of time before the Pepinids replaced the descendants of Clovis as rulers of the Franks.

    Tolkien uses nothing like "mayor of the palace" or "major domo" in Middle-earth. The Mayor of Michel Delving is about the only example of an official whose title derives from a French title. The term "Steward", on the other hand, is a good, old-fashioned Anglo-Saxon word for "sty warden", the guardian of the animal compound. How a beast-keeper should rise to become an important royal officer (and eventually King of Scotland, as in the royal Stewart/Stuart family) is an interesting bit of history.

    The reason for the importance of stewards lies in the architecture used by northern Europe's early peoples. They lived in long houses (going back thousands of years) which eventually evolved into the halls of Norse and Germanic song and legend. Heorot, the golden hall of Hrothgar, King of Denmark (in the poem "Beowulf") is a typical if idealized northern hall. The hall-warden would have been the most important servant of the lord, looking after the animals and managing the lord's affairs in his absence.

    The hall-warden and sty warden were virtually the same person, since animals were commonly kept in the ancient long houses. As the power of the northern chieftains grew and they became kings of early Anglo-Saxon peoples in England, their Sty Wardens assumed more important duties. Eventually, Stewards were as important to the Anglo-Saxon kings as Major Domos were to the Frankish kings. But the Anglo-Saxon kings managed to retain their power.

    Walter Fitz-Alan, a Norman knight, founded the Stewart Clan which eventually assumed the throne of Scotland. He served King David I in Scotland's wars with the Vikings. Walter's great-grandson Alexander became Lord High Steward (Stewart) of Scotland. Sir John Stewart, a descendant, married Marjory, daughter and only child of Robert Bruce. Their son Robert became Robert II, King of Scotland, and the Stewart Kings of Scotland and England were descended from him.

    Thus, one of the first apparent ironies stems from the fact that Tolkien's choice of title for the "temporary" rulers of Gondor, the Stewards, is derived from the Anglo-Saxon surname of an Norman-Scottish family. The Normans were responsible for destroying the ancient English nobility, along with suppressing their English literature and language with which Tolkien had fallen in love.

    Despite history's examples, Tolkien clearly wanted his Stewards to keep their place. They were not destined to assume the throne of Gondor, although at least one member of the family had royal aspirations. Boromir, elder son of Denethor II, asked his father how long it would take for a Steward to become King. "Few years, maybe, in other places of less royalty," Denethor told him. "In Gondor ten thousand years would not suffice." The comment seems to be a poke in the eye to the Pepinids, who supplanted the rightful heirs of Clovis as Kings of the Franks.

    Boromir obviously chafed at the confinement tradition (and law) had placed upon him. As he grew up, he could only expect to become the faithful steward to a long-dead line of kings. He undoubtedly felt his family was wasting its time, waiting for the impossible return of a king who could not possibly exist. In contrast, the Pepinids chafed under the rule of weak Merovingian kings (Merovech was the grandfather of Clovis, and the dynasty is named after him). The Merovingians occasionally tried to curb the power of their Major Domos, and eventually the Major Domos simply got rid of them. Tolkien's Stewards thus proved to be more reliable than the Frankish Major Domos.

    When Boromir reached maturity, he became his father's servant. We know from his own testimony in Rivendell and comments made by Faramir and Denethor that Boromir was a captain of Gondor. Tolkien uses the word "captain" (a French word derived from Latin) in various ways throughout The Lord of the Rings. The only specific titles attributed to Boromir are High Warden of the White Tower and Captain-General (of all Gondor's forces). "Captain-General" is an actual royal title of the British monarchy, and denotes the station of the monarch as commander-in-chief.

    Although it might seem imprudent or even hypocritical for the Stewards to assume such a title, The Peoples of Middle-earth says that "the Hurinionath were not in the direct line of descent from Elendil, [but] they were ultimately of royal origin." Boromir, therefore, was a descendant of Elendil, a fact not provided in The Lord of the Rings. Descent from Elendil may have provoked Boromir's ambitions, but it also may have served as the foundation for Denethor's jealousy of Aragorn, whom he had known in his own youth as Thorongil. In any event, since Gondor needed a commander-in-chief, the office and its title was assumed by the Stewards (and presumably conferred upon a son or nephew being groomed to take up the Stewardship later in life).

    Hurin of Emyn Arnen was the Steward of Minardil, King of Gondor from 1621 to 1634. Minardil died in battle at Pelargir, fighting the Corsairs of Umbar (who were led by his cousins Angamaite and Sangahyando). Minardil was twenty generations removed from Meneldil, son of Anarion. There is no indication in any of the published texts about where Hurin of Emyn Arnen's family branched off from the royal line. He himself may have been the son of a royal princess.

    One possibility for Hurin's ancestry would be the daughter of Eldacar, the half-Dunadan/half-Northman King of Gondor who was driven from the throne for ten years by Castamir the Usurper. Eldacar's elder son Ornendil was slain in the Kin-Strife, and Eldacar was eventually succeeded by his younger son Aldamir. But Aldamir was Eldacar's third child. Minardil was Aldamir's grandson, so Hurin of Emyn Arnen could have been Aldamir's grand-nephew and Minardil's second-cousin. Hurin could not have been more closely related to Minardil, and he could, perhaps, have been more distantly related.

    A descent from Eldacar would prevent the Stewards from claiming a purer bloodline than that of the Kings. Bloodlines, however, are not as important to Tolkien as they are to many of his failed characters. That is, the Kin-Strife was fought between Gondorians who believed the royal house should remain pure and Gondorians who believed that mingling the royal family with other kindreds of Men would do no harm. So, it is not necessary for Tolkien to show from whom the Stewards descended. Nonetheless, Eldacar remains, in my opinion, the best candidate for their most immediate royal ancestor. At the very least, he is the only king said or implied to have a daughter (in "The Heirs of Elendil", a chapter in The Peoples of Middle-earth which provides a great deal more information about the leading houses of Gondor than The Lord of the Rings).

    Boromir's perspective would have been shaped, at least in part, by his own family's historical experience. Whereas the kings had all been descended of the male line in Anarion's house, the Stewards were more liberal in their choices. At least one Steward came from a daughter's family. Denethor I (2435-77) was the son of Rian, sister of Dior (2412-35), the 9th Ruling Steward. If he didn't have to come from the male line to be Ruling Steward, then why should he not be king? Boromir seems to have felt that the Hurinionath had earned their place on the throne, and it wasn't like they weren't descended from Elendil anyway.

    Denethor II's reply to his son's inquiry might seem a bit rude and short-sighted. "Shut up, son, and do as your forefathers have done." But the Stewards had effectively eliminated themselves from the succession. It was in the power of the council of Gondor to make new law, but not to undo ancient law. In the year 1944, King Ondoher and both his sons fell in battle with the Wainriders. Neither son left behind any male heirs. Gondor was in a quandry, for by this time the royal house had become a victim of its own suspicions. Pure-blooded men of the royal house either foreswore their heritage and took wives outside the Numenorean community, or if the kings became jealous of them they fled to Umbar.

    Arvedui, prince of Arnor, had married Ondoher's daughter Firiel in 1940. He claimed the throne of Gondor in Firiel's name but the council, led by the Steward Pelendur, rejected his claim. They wanted only a prince descended in the male line from Anarion. Even Arvedui's son, Aranarth, would not be acceptable, though he was also the son of Firiel and a descendant of Anarion. By excluding Isildur's line from claiming the throne, Pelendur effectively excluded himself and his heirs from making similar claims. A thousand years later, Pelendur's descendant Boromir, son of Denethor II, would ask why he was not destined to be King of Gondor. The answer was that Pelendur had made it impossible for his family to ascend the throne.

    Pelendur did actually have at least one good candidate left in the Line of Anarion. Earnil II, who had led the Southern Army of Gondor to victory against the Wainriders, claimed the throne in 1945. He was as pure-blooded as any descendant of Eldacar could be. As a victorious captain, he was popular and thus well-accepted by the people. Unfortunately, Earnil's son Earnur never took a wife. When he vanished in 2050, Gondor was left without any acceptable claimants to the throne.

    The Stewards were thus left in a peculiar state. Earnur doesn't seem to have left any instructions about what should happen if he failed to return. Mardil Voronwe ruled in his name for many years, and though Gondor's council probably debated how to choose a new king, the fear of a new Kin-Strife prevented them from choosing a new monarch. Technically, there is no reason to believe that the Line of Anarion really ended with Earnur. That is, there must have been men descended of the male line whose forefathers had married women from non-Numenorean families. But their ancestors had foresworn their heritage, and the tradition-bound Gondorians would not allow those families to repudiate the choices of their fathers.

    The root of such an iron-clad adherence to tradition must lie in the choices made by Elrond and Elros at the beginning of the Second Age. When Elros chose to be of mortal kind, he bound his descendants to that choice forever, even though some of them later decided they would rather be Elves. The Faithful Numenoreans who founded Arnor and Gondor longed for perpetual youth and immortality, but they accepted the choice of Elros (in fact, most of them probably weren't descended from Elros, but their leaders were). The Faithful would thus have brought with them an understanding that the choice of a father affected all his descendants. Hence, in any matter of law, a family's fate was decided by its current generation. Unborn generations were given no leeway.

    And that is the truth Boromir had to face, when his father pointed out to him that he was not royal enough to be king. It wasn't that he was deemed to be less of a man, whether by virtue of blood or deeds. Rather, Boromir's ancestor had made a choice which bound all future generations of the family. Boromir may have resented that choice. In one letter, Tolkien referred to Boromir as Faramir's "bossy brother". Boromir's bossiness does reveal itself in numerous passages throughout the text. For example, when the Company of the Ring is trapped in the snow on Caradhras, it is Boromir who takes the initiative and decides that he and Aragorn will forge a path through the snow for the others. When the Hobbits despair of following that same path, Boromir decides that he and Aragorn will carry them.

    He asserts himself again when the Company is outside of Moria's West-gate. When it becomes apparent that Gandalf has no clue about how to get into Moria, Boromir orders Sam not to let Bill the Pony go just yet. Aragorn is silent on both occasions. Why is that?

    It would seem that Boromir had to be a very compelling man, perhaps a very charismatic man. His people loved him, including his stern father, his scholarly brother, and the brave men who served under him in war. Aragorn seems to have respected Boromir's opinion enough not to argue with him. And perhaps Aragorn was himself a bit intimidated by Boromir, who was after all the heir of the ruler of Gondor. Aragorn was the rightful King of Gondor, but his right had not been recognized by Gondor. Boromir seems a bit tyrannical at times, but it may be that he was simply being himself -- a leader of men, making decisions swiftly and reasonably (within the bounds of his experience). He did give pretty good advice, on occasion. For example, it was Boromir who suggested the Company of the Ring take bundles of wood up onto the mountain.

    For his part, Aragorn was deferring to Gandalf's leadership while Gandalf traveled with the company. But he may also have been winning Boromir's trust. Boromir would have been in a position to sway the people of Gondor toward Aragorn's claim, but why should he do so? When Frodo told Faramir (in Ithilien) that Boromir was satisfied of Aragorn's claims, Faramir pointed out that Boromir and Aragorn had not yet become rivals in Gondor's wars. Aragorn needed to be Boromir's friend. He needed Boromir to trust him, at least to the point where Boromir might say nothing when Aragorn pressed his claim. Were Boromir to denounce Aragorn after reaching Minas Tirith, things would not have gone well for Aragorn.

    But Boromir, for his part, had accepted Aragorn's companionship on the road. Furthermore, he recognized his obligation to let Aragorn make his case to Gondor. After Elrond introduced Aragorn to Boromir, Aragorn asked him bluntly: "Do you wish for the House of Elendil to return to the land of Gondor?" Boromir immediately denied any such request: "I was not sent to beg any boon," he replied, "but to seek only the meaning of a riddle." Nonetheless, he quickly added: "Yet we are hard pressed, and the Sword of Elendil would be a help beyond our hope -- if such a thing could indeed return out of the shadows of the past."

    Boromir's concession is very grudging at best. He is not saying, "Yes, you are the heir of Elendil, come and make your claim to the throne." Rather, he is saying, "The throne awaits the return of a true king, as it has for a thousand years." Boromir does not yet believe that Aragorn is really Elendil's heir. He knows Elrond is an ancient lord among the Elves, but Elrond's words just cannot ring quite true to a man whose family has awaited the return of a king merely as a formality for so many centuries.

    Boromir's opinion of Aragorn begins to shift ever so slightly during the rest of the council. Aragorn speaks for himself, and the details of the journey from Bree to Rivendell are discussed at length. Eventually, Boromir suggests that the Ring can be used against Sauron, but Elrond rebuffs him, and both Elrond and Gandalf flatly refuse to take up the Ring. In the face of such rebuke, Boromir is humbled. It is not that he politely bows his head when he says, "So be it. Then in Gondor we must trust to such weapons as we have." Rather, his humility allows him to confess, "though I do not ask for aid, we need it."

    Boromir is honest enough to recognize his weaknesses. A good commander must be able to do so. So Faramir's words many months later, when he learns that Boromir had tried to take the Ring from Frodo, reveal an especially bitter observation: "Alas for Boromir! It was too sore a trial!" But why was the trial too sore for Boromir, and not for Faramir? For his part, Faramir implies that his own vow has fortified him: "We boast seldom, and then perform, or die in the attempt," he reminds Frodo and Sam. "Not if I found it on the highway would I take it, I said." Boromir had made no such vow. It might have gone better with him if he had.

    But, in truth, Boromir's test was not as easy as Faramir's. Faramir was indeed tempted by the Ring, once he understood it was in his presence. Faramir had a brief moment of intense reaction to that knowledge, and then he passed the test and moved on. But for Boromir the test did not pass so quickly. He expressed an immediate interest in using the Ring at Elrond's council, and though he was rebuffed, he did not renounce his desire. "So be it" is not the same as "I fear to take the Ring to hide. I will not take the Ring to wield it," which is what Elrond says. "Nor I," Gandalf chimes in, although he has already refused the Ring in Bag End.

    Even Aragorn had already refused to take the Ring. "If I was after the Ring, I could have it -- NOW!" he declared in the Prancing Pony, when he was trying to persuade Frodo to accept his company. There followed a brief moment in which Aragorn stood up and scared the Hobbits with his stern and commanding nature. As when other people handle the Ring, or are tempted by it, a light gleamed in his eyes. But the moment passed and Aragorn affirmed that he was who he said he was, and he swore to save Frodo.

    When Boromir says, "So be it," in reply to Elrond, he is not renouncing the Ring or any claim to it. Nor is he placing himself in direct opposition to the Ring's power and purpose. Rather, he leaves his options open, and that proves to be a fatal mistake. But it is the kind of mistake that one should expect of a master tactician. Boromir is used to thinking in terms of how to win battles, and how to persuade others to follow his will. His experience at dealing with conflicts undoubtedly includes working with his father's council. "So be it" is a safe, non-committal reply. It betrays Boromir because he does not understand what he is dealing with.

    And Boromir should not be faulted for that. The Ring represents an opportunity to him, and Boromir looks at the opportunity, not at the risks. He is an optimist who doesn't allow himself to become trapped. He plans ahead and reacts swiftly to danger. Not only does Boromir advise the Company to carry extra wood up onto Caradhras, he immediately changes his mind about going to Moria when the Company of the Ring realizes that wargs are tracking them in Eregion. Boromir isn't simply an optimist, he is a pragmatist. He not only believes there is a solution to every problem, he is willing to do whatever it takes to get the job done. Whatever works, as long as it does the job, is good enough for him.

    And if there is one thing the Ring of Power can do, it's give a leader of armies a winning edge in a war. Boromir has no ambition to rule the world or to conquer other lands. He just wants to find a way to defeat Sauron. The Ring seems to be a tool which can give him (or someone) that victory. It is difficult to believe that the victory would come at so great a cost that no one should want it. In fact, for Boromir, it is impossible to believe such a thing. There is nothing in his experience which allows him to accept that some victories should not be sought.

    Boromir's wisdom is firmly rooted in the common wisdom of the people of Gondor. He is practical, not thoughtful. Solutions present themselves to Boromir. He does not seek them out. When Boromir shares some of the lore he has learned in Gondor, he draws upon common knowledge, not esoteric knowledge. For example, when Gandalf points out that Isildur "did not march away straight from the war in Mordor, as some have told the tale," Boromir replies with: "Some in the North, maybe. All know in Gondor that he went first to Minas Anor and dwelt a while with his nephew Meneldil, instructing him, before he committed to him the rule of the South Kingdom."

    And later, when the Company of the Ring is struggling up Caradhras and the snow is coming down heavily, Boromir says out loud: "I wonder if this is a contrivance of the Enemy. They say in my land that he can govern the storms in the Mountains of Shadow that stand upon the borders of Mordor. He has strange powers and many allies." In expressing this thought to his companions, Boromir undoubtedly speaks for them all (or most). But he reveals a knowledge or familiarity with the enemy, which is the mark of a good war leader.

    And yet, Boromir's wisdom has its limits. When Celeborn warns the Company to avoid Fangorn Forest, Boromir says: "Indeed we have heard of Fangorn in Minas Tirith. But what I have heard seems to me for the most part old wives' tales, such as we tell to our children." Celeborn then admonishes him: "Do not despise the lore that has come down from distant years; for oft it may chance that old wives keep in memory word of things that once were needful for the wise to know."

    Boromir has no real use for old wives' tales. He needs solid, credible information upon which to base his decisions as a leader. His attitude thus strikes some people as a bit arrogant. But he is true-hearted in his own fashion, pursuing a goal which he feels is noble and worthwhile. He is the Captain-general of the one nation which stands between Sauron and the complete domination of Middle-earth (or so he believes). He is the heir of Gondor's Ruling Steward, destined to one day be Steward himself. He naturally evaluates every situation and reaches his own conclusions, and he is used to expressing his ideas and commanding others. He is, as Tolkien says, bossy, but that is because he was raised to be bossy.

    Boromir's flaws are a reflection of the flaws of the Stewards. He legitimizes their values. Even Denethor is stubborn and quick to judge both others and situations he is involved with. Rather than wait for confirmation of his conclusions, for example, after he has beheld the fleet of ships sailing up the Anduin, Denethor gives in to despair and kills himself. Denethor has passed on his resolute and determined nature to his elder son. But somewhere along the way, the Stewards have lost their true wisdom. They are no longer masters of lore.

    Among the Elves, the most renowned loremasters are their kings and princes. Tolkien does not say so directly, but it would seem that the Numenorean loremasters also come from their kings and princes. The Stewards are thus charged with both preserving and understanding the ancient lore they have inherited from the kings. It is not enough simply to retain control over ancient lore. One must ensure that it is not left in the care of old wives or, worse, left to rot in some library where everyone forgets about it.

    As Boromir distrusts the old wives' tales, Denethor leaves scrolls unread in his library until Gandalf comes searching for them. It appears that, by the time Gandalf returns to Minas Tirith with Pippin Took, Denethor has begun piecing together all the clues which are available to him. He has given long thought to the rhyme which troubled the dreams of both his sons and eventually led to Boromir's death. He has probably deciphered the scroll of Isildur, to learn what Gandalf had sought. He has figured out that his old rival, Thorongil, was probably the Heir of Isildur, leader of the Dunedain of the North. Hence, knowledge comes to Denethor eventually, but not wisdom. And the same is true for Boromir.

    Just as Denethor realizes that Aragorn intends to claim Gondor's throne, and that Gandalf has sent the One Ring to Mordor, so Boromir eventually concludes that his only chance for greatness is to accomplish something even Aragorn cannot do. As Boromir and Aragorn travel together, Boromir has as much opportunity to assess Aragorn as Aragorn has to assess Boromir. Aragorn relies upon Gandalf's judgement, and he is respected by the Elves, who must seem like creatures out of old wives' tales to Boromir. Aragorn bides his time and complies with Boromir's immediate commands, but when the true leadership of the Company is cast into momentary doubt by the loss of Gandalf, Aragorn immediately says, "I will lead you now." He leaves no opportunity for Boromir to assert himself as Gandalf's successor.

    It is not that Boromir hesitates at the crucial moment. Rather, it is simply not his moment. Boromir's concern is not with leading the company, but with returning to his people. Boromir often looks ahead, but he overlooks the immediate tasks which lie before him. He is so troubled by the dream both he and Faramir have had that he sets aside his duties in Gondor and undertakes a heroic journey to seek the meaning of the riddle. Boromir admits to the council that Gondor's situation is desperate. He has already been defeated in battle. He has no plan for defeating the enemy when the final assault comes.

    Yet Gondor likes victorious captains. Maybe the people will rally around a leader who can only say, "We have done the best we can, and we will fight bravely until the end." But if someone else arrives who speaks of hope and defeating Sauron, Boromir's career will be over. Especially if that someone claims to be the rightful King of Gondor. Such concerns, though far away from Rivendell, should be clear to Boromir. During the months which follow the Council of Elrond, Boromir's thoughts must be in conflict. On the one hand, he has a duty to his people. On the other hand, the Council has decided to overthrow Sauron once and for all. If their plan succeeds, all of Middle-earth will be saved. But Gondor may be called upon to make a tremendous sacrifice. And what will Aragorn do? He has a more legitimate claim to the throne than the House of Hurin.

    Were Boromir to use the One Ring against Sauron, he would deprive Aragorn of the chance to win popular acclaim. The decision regarding the return of the House of Elendil would be deferred indefinitely. While in his heart Boromir undoubtedly is not pursuing such a plan, the Ring seems to be offering exactly that to him. Boromir's resolve is weakening in Lothlorien, the night before the Company of the Ring bids farewell to the Elves. Boromir suggests it would be folly to throw the Ring away. He also becomes more adamant about persuading the Company to go to Minas Tirith with him, even though everyone knows Minas Tirith lies outside the path the Ring must take.

    It is an unrealistic ambition, and a faux hope. Nonetheless, the torment of knowing that his people are doomed if the Ringbearer's quest fails, or if it takes too long, must frustrate Boromir. As it becomes more evident with each passing day that no one is really powerful enough to face Sauron directly, despair gnaws at Boromir's mind each day. Despair eventually leads his father to conclude that all is lost, and that there is no further point in living. Despair leads Boromir to believe that he can take the Ring and use it. Only after he fails both the test and to take the Ring is Boromir freed from the torment at last, and he understands what he has done.

    In fact, Boromir inherits the burden of a thousand years spent waiting for a future no one thought would ever come. The Stewards have become complacent about their situation. They no longer expect a claimant to the throne to turn up. Gondor is theirs, in their eyes, but not theirs to claim. Generations of sons of Stewards must have asked the same question, time and again: "Why are we not the kings, if we rule the land?" The ancient oath of office, whereby the Steward takes up rule of the land "until the king returns", suddenly rings true in Boromir's ears. He has a duty to examine Aragorn's claim, and to present it to Gondor, if it seems to be legitimate. In the end, that duty falls to his brother Faramir, who succeeds Denethor as the last Ruling Steward of Gondor.

    Faramir needs time to reconcile himself to Aragorn's claim. When he first learns of that claim from Sam and Frodo, he is doubtful. "So great a claim will need to be established, and clear proofs will be required," he points out, before Gondor considers Aragorn's petition. From that time forward, until he is awakened from his illness by Aragorn, Faramir has no opportunity to meet and appraise the man who would be king. And yet, Faramir recognizes Aragorn immediately upon awakening. He has certainly had plenty of time to consider Frodo's story. In fact, Faramir knows Gondor's history better than Boromir. Whereas Boromir casually relays what the common people know or believe about the past for his companions, Faramir gives Sam and Frodo a concise lecture on Gondor's history. It may be that Faramir has had time to think about Thorongil, the mysterious Dunadan warrior who served his grandfather, Ecthelion, for a few years.

    By the time Aragorn arrives at Minas Tirith, it seems everyone but Denethor himself is ready and willing to acknowledge Aragorn's claim. Prince Imrahil, whose fief lies beyond the authority of the Stewards, declares for Aragorn openly. And Faramir does so as well. Eomer, King of Rohan, also supports Aragorn's claim, though the Rohirrim have no power or authority to intervene in Gondor's affairs. Their recognition nonetheless swells Aragorn's reputation. But the only clear proof Aragorn provides of who he is can be his sword, which is the sword Elendil had borne and which broke beneath him. All other heirlooms have either been lost, withheld, or given away.

    It requires a Steward's recognition for Aragorn to become King of Gondor. A Steward must judge him and proclaim his worthiness to the people of Gondor. That would have been Boromir's task, and Boromir knew Aragorn far better than Faramir. But what would Boromir have done? The question is unanswerable. Boromir was conflicted, and he only found peace through sacrificing his life for others. He was guided by his ambition, and to some extent his forefathers were guided by similar ambitions. When Gandalf asked Denethor how he would order things, if he could have his own way, Denethor replied: "I would have things as they were in all the days of my life, and in the days of my longfathers before me: to be Lord of this City in peace, and to leave my chair to a son after me, who would be his own master and no wizard's pupil."

    The Stewards did not view themselves as caretakers. They were lords and princes. Even Faramir felt this way, when he met Frodo and Sam in Ithilien. When Frodo said that Aragorn alone would be able to claim Isildur's Bane for himself, if any had the right to do so, Faramir asked: "Why so, and not Boromir, prince of the City that the sons of Elendil founded?" Soon afterward, when Sam angrily confronts Faramir over the way he questions Frodo, Faramir points out: "I am commanded to slay all whom I find in this land without the leave of the Lord of Gondor."

    For a thousand years, the Stewards have been the lords of Gondor. To suddenly learn that a claimant to the throne is on the way is a bit unnerving. And perhaps there have been false claimants to the throne in the past. Their way of life must be utterly and irrevocably changed when a new king sits upon the throne. And what will be left for the Stewards in the aftermath of such an event? When Faramir greets Aragorn in formal procession before the city of Minas Tirith, he lays aside his office as Steward. Technically, there is no law requiring Aragorn to restore that office to Faramir. In fact, there is no law requiring Faramir to acknowledge Aragorn as king. Just as Aragorn subtly alters his claim, naming himself Elendil's Heir rather than Isildur's Heir (as the Isildurian claim had already been rejected), so Faramir avoids naming Aragorn as Isildur's Heir. He names Isildur in Aragorn's lineage, but leaves Elendil's name for last.

    Faramir could easily have said, "Well, the Line of Isildur has already been considered and rejected. Gondor will not revisit that issue." Instead, he accepted the assertion that only an heir of Elendil would be acceptable to Gondor. By implication, Aragorn's claim was reuniting Gondor with Arnor. Faramir's decision thus ensured that Gondor's power would be extended far to the north.

    If the Stewards were indeed descended from Anarion, then Faramir's recognition of Aragorn was the final action by the family of Anarion. Aragorn was indeed descended from Anarion through Arvedui's wife Firiel, but the last vestiges of the Line of Anarion ceased to exist under the law. All claims were laid aside in favor of the House of Elendil. In effect, Faramir laid to rest ancient conflicts which, like the Dead Men of Dunharrow, had to wait through the centuries for an Heir of Isildur to give them release. He brought closure to the ancient question of succession, and in doing so discharged the final obligations of his office. The Stewards' peculiar role in Gondor's history ended on a much more graceful note than that on which it had begun.

    Had Tolkien truly modelled his Stewards on the historical Pepinids, Faramir would have rejected Aragorn's claim, and he would have taken the throne for himself. But eventually Gondor would have been divided among his descendants, and the ancient realm his family had been entrusted with would have ceased to exist. That, of course, was what actually happened in Arnor. The High Kingship was set aside and the northern realm divided into three lesser realms. Denethor's remark to his son about "other places of less royalty" was thus a subtle rebuke to the northern kings who set aside their heritage. But it also emphasized the fact that, despite all its tribulations, Gondor had survived. It had proven itself worthy of the rightful king, should he return to claim the throne. And it had done so under the rule of the Stewards. They had proudly remained humble, curbing their ambitions. And they did so because they were Stewards, not men who would be kings.

    Martinez


    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 
    One tale people seldom discuss is the story of Theoden. That is, people who have read The Lord of the Rings recognize Theoden as the heroic king of Rohan who with the aid of Gandalf recovers from the evil spell Saruman's spy and surrogate, Grima Wormtongue, has woven about him. Theoden seems bent with old age when the reader first sees him, and then Gandalf works a near-miraculous recovery on the king. Theoden rides forth to do battle with his enemies and the enemies of Gondor, and he dies in glory on the Pelennor Fields.
    It may surprise people to learn that we know a great deal about Theoden's life and career, and that we can probably reasonably infer many things about him from the events and peoples who surrounded him.

    Why did the Rohirrim so admire Theoden? Was it simply because he was their king? These were a brave and warlike people who valued courage, honesty, and faithfulness. They would not have been devoted to a king whom they considered weak just because his ancestors had accomplished great things.

    We get a glimpse of how the Rohirrim measure men when Eomer meets Aragorn, Legolas, and Gimli. He is impressed by their courage and loyalty to one another, and also to their dedication to friends who have been lost to Orcs. Later on, when Gandalf refuses to relinquish his staff before entering Meduseld, Hama, Theoden's doorward, relents, saying, "Yet in doubt a man of worth will trust to his own wisdom. I believe you are friends and folk worthy of honor, who have no evil purpose."

    The Rohirrim were proud, and perhaps sometimes haughty, but in their pride they recognized that they were no more than equals of other men. Although their kings came from the House of Eorl, it was not necessarily a matter of fine genealogical determination as descent in Gondor would be determined. When the eldest line of Eorl's family failed upon the death of Helm Hammerhand, his nephew Frealaf became king. But Frealaf was the son of Helm's sister Hild. At least one other male of descent still existed in that time: the descendants of Eofer, third son of Brego. So the Rohirrim clearly did not practice primogeniture.

    Eofer probably lived from around 2550 to 2640 (his older brother Aldor the Old, second of Brego's sons, lived from 2544 to 2645). Eomund, the father of Eomer, was a descendant of Eofer. These men probably bore the title of Lord of Eastfold, much as Erkenbrand and his family bore the title of Lord of Westfold. If I had to guess, I would say that Erkenbrand's family may have been descended from the first Eomund, the "chief captain of the host of the Eotheod" who, with Eorl, Cirion, and the Lord of Dol Amroth, defined Rohan's boundaries.

    The Lords of Eastfold probably experienced uneven fortunes through the years. Many if not all of them may have been Marshals of the Mark. We know that Eomund himself became a Marshal, as did Eomer many years later. Although the Rohirrim's early foes were the Balchoth and Dunlendings, Eastfold was Eorl's home. He undoubtedly selected the region in part to help ensure the defense of Gondor, but also because it was more secure than the northern vales.

    As the generations passed the Easterlings became less of a threat but the Dunlendings, many of whom were descended from Gwathuirim of Calenardhon whom the Rohirrim had displaced, became increasingly hostile and threatening to Rohan. There was some intermarriage between the Rohirrim and the Gwathuirim who lived around the river Adorn, the tributary which flowed into the Isen river from the south. Freawine, the fifth king, probably had a younger son who colonized the region, and from that son would have been descended Freca, the rebellious lord whom Helm slew, and the father of Wulf the Usurper.

    Hence, Eastfold languished, or at least did not serve the purpose of a buffer state. When Easterlings invaded Rohan to help Wulf usurp the throne Eastfold may have suffered along with other regions of Rohan, but it wasn't a strategic necessity for Wulf to achieve full control of the region. Frealaf had retreated to Dunharrow and was a much more immediate threat to Edoras.

    However, centuries later, when Sauron declared himself openly in Mordor, he attempted to buy horses from Rohan, though Rohan refused to sell them according to Eomer. Eomer doesn't say when Sauron made the overture, but it seems certain that events began heating up after Fengel died in 2953. Saruman declared himself Lord of Isengard in 2953 and began to help Rohan's enemies from this time onward.

    Appendix A says that Thengel left Rohan when he "came to manhood" because he didn't get along well with his father, Fengel. Thengel probably left Rohan sometime between 2925 and 2930 (he was born in 2905). He married Morwen of Lossarnach, who had been born in 2922, in the year 2943. Morwen was a lady of high Numenorean descent, whose father had moved to Lossarnach from Belfalas, and they were originally descended from the Princes of Belfalas (the Lords of Dol Amroth).

    Thengel therefore lived in Gondor during the years that Turgon, son of Turin II, was Ruling Steward of Gondor. Sauron reclaimed Mordor in the year 2951 and Ithilien was finally deserted by the last of its people. By this time Thengel and Morwen had had at least two children (Theoden was their second child and only son; one other daughter was born in Gondor, and two more daughters were born in Rohan).

    Theoden was only 4 or 5 years old when his father was recalled to Rohan in 2953. 10 years later Theodwyn, last child of Thengel and Morwen, was born in Edoras. Theoden was then only about 15 years old, but he became very fond of his youngest sister. The other three sisters are never mentioned again, but presumably they married and had children. Only, they probably did not marry prominent men.

    Theoden, on the other hand, seems to have become involved with the family of Eastfold. His wife was Elfhild of Eastfold. Although her name doesn't necessarily imply she was a descendant of Eofor, she must have come from some prominent family in the region. Their son Theodred was born in 2978, and Elfhild died in childbirth so he was their only child.

    Although we don't know when Eomund was born, he married Theodwyn in 2989, nearly 11 years after Theoden and Elfhild were married. It's quite possible that Elfhild was Eomund's older sister. Eomund was probably born sometime in the years 2960-4. Elfhild could have been born in the years 2950-58 and therefore would have been of an appropriate age to marry Theoden, but still would have been young enough to be Eomund's sister.

    Uruks from the Misty Mountains began raiding Rohan after 2953. Their raids would have been mostly into the Wold, the northernmost region of Rohan, and the two Emnet regions. The purpose of the raids would most likely have been to acquire food and perhaps slaves. There may also have been attempts to communicate with Mordor. Thengel reigned until 2980, and Theoden probably served in the Muster of Edoras at least from 2968 to 2980. He probably was made a Marshal before Thengel died, and may have known Thorongil, although there seems to be no sign that Theoden remembered Aragorn years later.

    Aragorn told Eomer (in "The Riders of Rohan") that he had been in Rohan many times, and that he had both served in the Muster of the Riddermark and that he had in fact ridden with Eomund. Eomund was too young to have served with Aragorn during his period of errantries (2957-80), so Aragorn probably served Thengel in actions against the Dunlendings and Uruks of the Misty Mountains and probably had nothing to do with Eastfold. Aragorn must have known Eomund years later.

    Around the time that Eomer (2991) and Eowyn (2995) were born, Orcs from Mordor began raiding Rohan. By this time Eomund had himself become a Marshal of the Mark, and must have commanded the East Muster. What happened to his father? Quite possibly Eomund's father had fallen in battle, either against the northern threat or soon after Mordor began attacking. Aragorn would have had to visit Rohan again during the years 2995-3000. In the year 3001 he was again in Eriador, for then Gandalf confided in him concerning the Ring. Eomund died fighting Orcs in the next year (3002), and Theodwyn died soon after. Theoden then took the two children into his household and raised them as his own.

    Twelve years of warfare (2968-80) would be a long time for Theoden to serve as a soldier. It's doubftul that the Rohirrim conducted full campaigns during those years. They probably maintained strong patrols and may have occasionally crossed over into Dunland or other neighboring lands to pursue raiders. And it's not likely the raids would have stopped simply became Theoden had become king, although he might have decided upon different policies from those of his father.

    Eomer and Eowyn therefore not only had a special relationship with Theoden, who was their uncle, but they were also quite probably raised in the house of a warrior king. Theodred, 13 years older than Eomer, was ready to serve in the Muster if he was not already doing so when Eomer came to live in Edoras. Twelve years later (3014) Theoden's health began to fail, and Eomer would himself had probably been serving as a Rider of Rohan for several years by that time. In 3017 Eomer was promoted to Third Marshal of the Mark.

    Grima tried to portray Eomer as a rival to Theodred, and it certainly could have seemed like the two young men were in competition. Theodred was made Second Marshal of the Mark and given command of the West-muster, while Eomer took command of the East-muster. Both men had to defend Rohan against incursions, but Theodred, older, more experienced, and the King's Heir, was given the much more difficult task of holding the border with Isengard and Dunland.

    Theoden's reasons for assigning Eomer to the East-muster rather than the West-muster should have been both practical and sentimental. In Eastfold Eomer could follow in his forefather's steps and not be a hindrance to Theodred. Grima's influence thus must be discounted. That is, it doesn't seem like Grima would have wanted two capable commanders in charge of Rohan's most active armies. The Muster of Edoras seems to have been relatively inactive in these years, although it's clear from "The Battles of the Fords of Isen" that the Muster of Edoras was used to reinforce either army if necessary.

    We can thus conclude that Theoden must have been relatively clear of mind when he appointed Eomer Third Marshal in 3017. It would not be until 3018, when Gandalf arrived with the dire news that Isengard was preparing for all-out war with Rohan, when Grima would have to turn up the juice, so-to-speak. Theoden's gradual decline may have become accelerated.

    So we can look back at the nearly 40 years of Theoden's reign prior to 3017 as a period when he would have been a vigorous king. Even if he became considerably less active and decisive in 3014, Theoden's strength and confidence as a leader would have been recent in the minds of his people, many of whom would have grown to adulthood under Theoden. Their devotion to Theoden would thus be derived from long years of peace and prosperity.

    Rohan was troubled by Orcs and other evils in those years, but it wasn't forced to war. And Tolkien notes that in Theoden's day there were far more Riders than the full Muster of Rohan called for (12,000). Rohan didn't just prosper under Theoden, it became more powerful than ever before. It was therefore strategically necessary for Sauron to neutralize Rohan before he could take action against Gondor.

    Sauron seems to have begun moving against Rohan in earnest around the year 3000, which the Tale of Years suggests was the year when Saruman first dared to use the palantir of Orthanc. The battle in which Eomund was lost, where he pursued a small band of Orcs to the Emyn Muil only to be ambushed by a larger force, may therefore be a sign that Sauron was seeking to eliminate Theoden's greatest asset. Erkenbrand had once been an officer in the Muster of Rohan (according to "The Battles of the Fords of Isen" in Unfinished Tales) but Tolkien doesn't say he was ever a Marshal before the War of the Ring. So it would seem that Eomund was indeed the most prominent of Theoden's officers when Sauron turned his attention to Rohan.

    With the loss of Eomund Theoden would actually have to groom his own son and Eomer to become Rohan's next great captains. Hence, the great affection the three felt for each other would have worked to Theoden's strategic advantage. He would have eager students. And the difference between Eomer and Theodred's ages ensured that Theoden would not have to train two young boys together. Theodred must have been put on the fast track to command as soon as Eomund was killed, and there could be no doubt that Eomer, rightful Lord of Aldburg, would receive the best training a Rider of the Mark could expect.

    Eowyn is a different matter. Many people feel she was an unusual example among the women of Rohan, but I'm not so sure of that. She was a shieldmaiden, and Appendix A says there were many valiant men and women among the Rohirrim and their ancestors. Eowyn's battle with the Witch-king, where she lopped off the head of his winged steed with one stroke, and, despite suffering the great pain from her broken arm, subsequently dealt him a deft death-blow, clearly demonstrates she knew how to use a sword.

    Eowyn's training as a shieldmaiden must therefore have been dictated by Theoden. But for what purpose? He had no queen and she had no hope of becoming either the captain of Theoden's guard or a Marshal of the Mark. Did Theoden foresee that war would come to Rohan in his time, and that it would be war of the most desperate kind which his people hadn't seen for generations? Yet, there is an incongruity between Eowyn's obvious martial education and the facts of the story presented in The Two Towers. Why didn't Theoden think of Eowyn when he needed to appoint someone to govern the people of Edoras when he rode to Helm's Deep?

    It may be that Eowyn's education was more a matter of sport. That is, she may have been trained as a shieldmaiden as a way of helping to maintain the tradition of the shieldmaiden among the Rohirrim. If that was the case, there may have been few women like Eowyn in Theoden's time. Perhaps he was even reviving an ancient custom his people had not observed for generations.

    Theoden made some interesting decisions during his reign as King of the Mark. He didn't just sit around and wait for old age to take him. It cannot be said that Theoden was moved to bring Gondorian customs to Rohan. It may be that Thengel had attempted to elevate Rohan to Gondor's culture. Tolkien does say that the language of Gondor was spoken in the King's household during Thengel's reign, and that some of the Rohirrim were not entirely happy with that change. Theoden at least restored use of the old language as a means of distinguishing between friend and foe. Even in his dotage, that was a shrewd move.

    The training of Eowyn may thus also have been a move to restore traditions which his father may have allowed to fall by the wayside. Theoden may have seemed like a Renaissance king to the Rohirrim, a restorer of old traditions. Hence, their love for him would be even greater than their love for his father.

    Theoden's life is therefore not as much a questionmark as the lives of many of his forebears. The sudden advent of his character into the main story, long foreshadowed by Gandalf's account at Rivendell, is rounded out by a solid representation of the relationship Theoden had built up with his people through the decades. The history is there, and it seems to be stand out behind the story clearly enough to show that Theoden isn't simply a convenient resource to throw at the reader as a means of helping the story along.

    He posed some intriguing questons about possible past connections with Aragorn, and his life sheds some light on Sauron's strategic moves against Rohan. While we cannot examine Theoden's motives in great detail, we can see that he did act with purpose and that he probably was relying as much on a natural ability to adjust to changes in circumstance as upon Gandalf when he decided to ride west to Helm's Deep.


    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 
    The Disaster of the Gladden fields

    After the fall of Sauron, Isildur, the son and heir of Elindil, returned to Gondor. There he assumed the Eledilmir as King of Arnor, and proclaimed his sovereign lordship over all the Dunedain in the North and in the the South; for he was a man of great pride and vigour. He remained for a year in Gondor, restoring its order and defining its bounds, but the greater part of the Army of Arnor returned to Eriador by the Numenorian road from the fords of Isen to Fornost.
    When he at last felt free to return to his own realm he was in haste, and he wished to go first to Imladris: for he had left his wife and youngest son there, he he had moreover an urgent need for the council of Elrond. he therefore determined to make his way north from Osgiliath up the Vales of Anduin to Cirith Forn en Andath, the high climbing pass of the North, that led down to Imladris. he knew well the land, he had journeyed there often before the war of the last Alliance, and had marched that way to the war with men of eastern Arnor in the company of Elrond.

    It was a long journey, but the only other way, west and then North to the road meeting in Arnor, and then east to Imladris, was far longer. As swift maybe for mounted men, but he had no horses fit for riding; safer, maybe, in former days, but Sauron was vanquished, and the people of the Vales had been his allies in victory. He had no fear, save for weather and weariness, but these men must endure whom need sends far abroad in Middle Earth.

    So it was, as is told in the legends of later days, that the second year of the Third Age was waning when Isildur set forth from Osgiliath early in Ivanneth, expecting to reach Imladris in fourty days, by mid Narbeleth, ere winter drew nigh in the North. At the eastgate of the bridge on a bright morning Meneldil bade him Farwell. "Go now now with good speed and the Sun of your setting out not cease to shine on your road".

    With Isildur went his three sons, Elendur, Aratan and Ciryon, and his Guard of two hundred Knights and soldiers, stern men of Arnor and war hardened. Of their journey nothing is told until they had passed over the Dagorlad, and on the northward into the wide and empty lands south of greenword the Great. On the twentieth day, as they came withing far sight of the forrest crowning the highlands before them with a distant gleam of red and gold of Evanneth, the sky became overcast, and a dark wind came up from the Sea of Rhun laden with rain. The rain lasted for four days; so when they came to the entrance to the Vales, between Lorien and Amon Lanc, Isildur turned away from the Anduin, swollen with with swift water, and went up the steep slopes of its eastern side to gain the ancient paths of the Silvan Elves that ran near the eaves of the forrest.

    So it came to pass that late in the afternoon of the thirtieth day of their journey they were passing the north borders of the Gladden Fields, marching along a path that led to Thranduils realm, as it then was. The fair day was waning; above the distant mountains clouds were gathering, reddened by the misty sun as it drew down towards them; the deeps of the valley were already in grey shadow. the Dunedain were singing, for their days march was near its end, and three parts of the long road to Imladris were behind them. to their right the forrest loomed above them at the top of steep slopes running down to their path, below which the descent into the valley bottom was gentler.

    Suddenly as the sun plunged into cloud they heard the hideous cries of Orcs, and saw then issuing from the Forest and moving down the slopes, yelling their war-cries. In the dimmed light their number could only be guessed, but the Dunedain were plainly many times, outnumbered. Islildur commanded a thangail to be drawn up, a shied-wall of two serried ranks that could be bent back at either end if outflanked, until at need it became a closed ring. If the land had been flat or the slope in his favour he would have formed his company into a dirnaith and charges the Orcs, hoping by the great strength of the Dundain and their weapons to cleave a way throught them and scatter then in dismay; but that could not now be done. A shadow of foreboding fell upon his heart.

    'The vengeance of Sauron lives on, though he may be dead,' he said to Elendur, who stood beside him. 'There is cunning and design here! We have no hope of help: Moria and Lorien are now far behind, and Thranduil four days' march ahead.' 'And we bear burdens of worth beyond all reckoning,' said Elendur; for he was in his father's confidence.

    The Orcs were now drawing near. Isildur turning to his esquire: 'Ohtar' he said, 'I give this now into your keeping'; and he delivered to him the great sheath and the shards of Narsil, Elendil's sword. 'Save it from from capture by all means that you can find, and at all costs; even at the cost of being held a coward who deserted me. Take your companion with you and flee! Go! I command you!'Then Ohtar knelt and kissed his hand, and the two young men fled down into the dark valley.

    If the keen-eyed Orcs marked their flight they took no heed. They halted briefly, preparing their assault. First they let fly a hail of arrows, and then suddenly with a great shout they did as Isildur would have done, and hurled a great mass of their chief warriors down the last slope against the Dunedain. Expecting to break up their shield-wall. But it stood firm. the arrows had been unavailing against the Numenorian armour. The great men towered over the tallest orcs, and their swords and spears far outreached the weapons of their enemies. the onslaught faltered, broke, and retreated, leaving the defenders little harmed, unshaken, behind piles of fallen orcs.

    It seemed to Isildur that the enemy was withdrawing towards the forrest. He looked back. The red rim of the sun gleamed out from the clouds as it wound its way behind the mountains; night would soon be falling. He gave orders to resume the march at once, but to bend the course down towards the lower and flatter ground where the orcs would have less advantage. Maybe he believed that after their costly repulse they would give way. Though their scouts might follow him during the night and watch the camp. That was the manner of orcs, who were often dismayed when their prey could turn and bite.

    But he was mistaken. There was not only cunning in the attack, but fierce and relentless hatred. the orcs of the mountains were stiffened and commanded by grim servants of Barad-Dur, sent out long before to watch the passes, and though it was unknown to them the Ring, cut from his black hand two years before, was still laden with Saurons evill will called to his servants for their aid. The Dunedain had gone scarcely a mile when the orcs moved again. This time they did not charge, but used all their forces. they came down on a wide front, which bent into a crescent and soon closed into an unbroken ring about the Dunedain. They were silent now, and kept at a distance out of the range of the dreaded steel bows of numenor, though the light was failing, and Isildur had to few archers for his need, he halted.

    There was a pause, though the most keen eyed among the Dunedailn said the orcs were moving inwards, stealthily step by step. Elendur went to his father, who was standing dark and alone, as if lost in thought. "Atarinya", he said, "what of the power that would cow these foul creatures and command them to obey you?, is it then of no avail?." " Alas, it is not, senya. I cannot use it. I dread the pain of touching it. And i have not yet found the strength to to bend it to my will. It needs one greater than i know myslf to be. My pride has fallen. It should go to the keepers of the three."

    At that moment there came a sudden blast of horns , and the orcs closed in on all sides, flinging themselves against the Dunedain with reckless ferocity. Night had come, and hope faded. Men were falling now; for some of the greatest orcs leaped up, two at a time, and dead or alive with their weight bore down a Dunedain, so that other strong claws could drag him out and slay him the orcs might pay five to one in this exchange, but it was cheap. Ciryon was slain in this way and Aratn mortally wounded in an attempt to rescue him.

    Elendur, not yet harmed, sought Isildur. he was rallying the men on the east side, where the assault was heaviest, for the orcs still feared the Eldilmir that he bore on his brow and avoided him. Elendur touched him on the shoulder and he turned fiercely, thinkingan orc had crept behind.

    My king,' said Elendur, Ciryon is dead and Aratan is dying. Your last counsellor must advise, nay command you, as you command ohatar. Go!. take your burden, and at all costs bring it to the keepers: even at the cost of abandoning your men and me!.'

    'Kings son,' said Isildur, 'I knew what i must do so; but i feared the pain. Nor could i go without your leave. Forgive me, and my pride that has brought this doom. Elendur kissed him. 'Go, go now!,' he said.

    Isildur turned west, and drawing up the Ring that hung in a wallet from a fine chain about his neck, he set it apron his finger with a cry of pain, and was never seen again by any eye apron Middle earth. But the Elendilimir of the West could not be quenched, and suddenly it blazed forth red and wrathful as a burning star. Menand orcs gave way in fear, and Isildur drawing a hood over his head, vanished into the night.

    Of what befellthe Dunedain only this was later known: ere longthey all lay dead, save one, a young esquire stunned and buried under fallen men. So perished Elendur, who should afterwards have been King,and as foretold who knew him, in his strength and wisdom, and his majesty without prode, one of the greatest, the fairest of the seed of Elindil, most like to his grandsire.

    Now of Isildur, it is told he was in great pain and anguish of heart, but at first he ran like a stag from the hounds, until he came to the bottom of the valley. there he halted to make sure that he was not pursued, for orcs could track a fugitive in the dark by scent, and needed no eyes. then he went on more warily, for the wide flats stretched on into the gloom before him, rough and pathless, with many traps for wandering feet.

    So it was that he came at last to the banks of the Anduin at the dead of night, and he was weary. For he had made a journey that the Dunedain on such ground could have made no quicker marching without halt and by day. the river was dark and swirling swift before him. He stood for a while, alone and in despair. Then in haste he cast of his armour and weapons, save a short sword at his belt, and plunged into the water. he was a man of strength and endurance that few of the Dunedain of that Age could equal, but he had little hope to gain the farther shore. Before he had gone far he was forced to turn almost north against the current, and strive as he might he ever swept down towqards the tangles of the Gladden fields. They were nearer than he thought, and even as he felt the stream slacken and had almost won across he found himself striggling among great rushes and clinging weeds.Then suddenly he knew the Ring was gone. By chance, or chance well used, it had left his hand and gone where he had no hope of finding it again. At first so overwhelming was he sense of loss that he struggled no more, and would have sunk and drowned. But swift as it had came the mood passed.The pain had left him. A great burden had been taken away. his feet founmd the river bed, and heaving himself up out of the mud he flounderdf throughy the reeds to a marshly inlet close to the western shore. There he rose up out of the water, only a mortal man, a small creature lost and abandoned in the wilds of Middle earth. But to the night-eyed orcs that lurked there on watch, he loomed upas a monstrous shadow of fear, with apiercing eye like a star. they loosed their poisoned arrows at it, and fled. Needlessly for Isildur was un-armoured and pierced through heart and throat, and without a cry he fell back into the water. Notrace of his body was found by Elves or Men. So passed the first victim of the malice of the masterless Ring, Isildur, second King of the Dunedain, lord of Arnor and Gondor, and it that Age , the last.

    There were eye witnesses of the event. Ohatar and his companion escaped, bearing with them the shards of Narsil. the tale mentions a young man who survived the slaughter, he was Elendurs esquire, named Estelmo, and he was one of the last to fall, but was stunned by a club, and not slain, and was found alive under Elendurs body. he heard the words of Elendur and Isildur at their parting. There were rescuers who came to the scene to late, but in time to disturb the orcs and prevent the mutilation of the bodies, for there were also certain woodmen who got news to thranduuil by runners, and also got themselves gathered a force to ambush the orcs, or which they become forewarned and scattered, for though victorious, their losses had been great, nearly all the great orcs having fallen: they attempted no such attack for long years after.

    The story of the last hours of Isildur and his death was due to surmise, but well founded. the legend in its full form was not composed untill the reign of Elessar in the Fourth age, when other evidence was discoverd. p till then it had been known, firstly that Isildur had the Ring, and that he fled towards the river, secondly that his helm, armour shield and great sword (but nothing else) had been found on the bank not far from the Gladden Fields, thirdly, that the orcs had left watchers on the west bank armed with bows to intercept any who might escape the battle and might flee to the river (for traces of there camps were found, one close to borders of the Gladden Fields, and fourthly that Isildur and the Ring, seperatly or together must have been lost in the river, for if Isildur had reached the west shore wearing it he should have eluded the watch, and so hardy a man of great endurance could not have failed to come then to Lorien or Moria before he founderd. Though it was a long journey, each Dunedain carried in his wallet a sealled phiall of cordial and waybread that would sustain life in him for many days, not indeed Miruvor and lembas of the Eldar, but like them, for the medicene and other arts of Nemenor were potent and not yet forgotten. No belt or wallet was among the gear discarded by isildur.

    Long afterwards, as the Third Age of the Elvish world waned and the War of the Ring approached, it was revealed to the council of elrond that the Ring had been found, sunk near the edge of the Gladden Fields and close to the western bank, though no trace of Isidurs body was discovered. They were then also aware that Sauraman had secretly been searching the same region, but though he had not found the Ring(it had long before been found and carried off), they did not not know what else he had discovered.

    But king Elessar, when he was crowned in Gondor, began the re-ordering of the realm, and one of his first tasks was the restoration of Orthanc, where planned to set up again a palantir recovered from sauraman. Then all the secrets of the toer wwere searched. many things of worth were found, jewels and hierlooms of eorl, filched from Edorasby the agency of Wormtongue dur the decline of King Theoden, and other things , more ancient and more beatiful,from mounds and tombs far and wide. Sauraman in his degredation had becoma not a dragon but a jackdaw. At last behind a hidden door that they could not have found had they not the aid of Gimli the dwarf a steel closet was revealled. Maybe it had been intended to recieve the Ring, but it was almost bare. In it a casket on a high shelf two things were laid. one wa a small case of gold,attatched to a fine chain, it was empty and bore no sign or token, but beyond all doubt it had once born the Ring about isildurs neck. Next to it lay a treasure beyond price, long mourned as lost forever, the Elindimir itself, a white star of Elvish crystal upon a fillet of Mithrill that had descended from Silmarien to Elendil, and had been taken as him as a sign of royalty in the North kingdom. Every king and Chieftain that followed then in Arnor had borne the Elindimir down to Ellesar himself, but though it was a jewel of great beuty, made by elven smiths in Imladris for Valindil, isildurs son, it had not the ancientry or potency of the one that had been lost when Isildur fled into the dark and came back no more.

    Ellesar took it up in reverence, and when he returned to the Noth and took up again the full kingship of Arnor, Arwen bound it upon his brow, and men were silent in amazement to see its splendour. But Ellesar did not again imperil it, and wore it only on high days in the North kingdom. Otherwise, when in kingly raiment the Elindimir he wore that had descended to him.' And this is also is a thing of reverence,' he sad, 'fourth heads have worn it before.'

    When men considered this secret hoard more closely, they were dismayed. For it seemed to them these things, and certainly the Elendilmir, could not have been found , unless they had been apon Isildurs body when it sank, but if that had been in deep water of strong flow they would have in time been swept far away. Therfore Isildur must have fallen not into the deep, but into shallow water, no more than shoulder high. Why then, though an Age had passed were there no sign of his bones?. Had Sauramn found them, and scorned them, burned them with dishonour in one of his furnaces?. If that were so it was a shameful deed, but not his worst.

    JRRT


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    Sun Tzu points out the wisdom of the "divide and conquer" strategy, but he also advocated the use of massive, overwhelming, superior force whenever it was available. The art of war is indeed an art, for both sides in any given war have the potential to learn and adapt. One of the notable qualities of Middle-earth history is Sauron's mutability. He alters his strategies. In the First Age, Sauron was just one of several captains serving Morgoth. Sauron's generalship is never really explored. We learn more about his cunning ability to ferret out enemies, and his willingness to engage in personal combat at considerable risk to himself. Morgoth, on the other hand, relies upon stealth and massive, overwhelming, superior numbers. It seems to be Morgoth's perpetual weakness that he confuses numbers with force. Of course, Morgoth pulled off a few major victories. In fact, he crushed the Eldarin civilization in Beleriand and reduced the Dwarves of Nogrod and Belegost to sideline players. But Morgoth missed the big picture. While he dithered around in the north with the Noldor, most of Middle-earth escaped his attention. The Valar took advantage of Morgoth's intense interest in Beleriand and the Noldor to isolate him there and inflict the final defeat upon him. The outcome of the War of Wrath was that Morgoth was captured and his forces reduced to probably no more than a few vagabond groups of Orcs, Trolls, and Men. At most, only a handful of the corrupted Maiar probably escaped, and at least a couple of the winged dragons as well (since a breeding population of dragons survived into the Third Age and beyond). Of the Maiar, we can be sure that two were Sauron and the Balrog of Khazad-dum. The Balrog withdrew from all political entanglements for over five thousand years. Sauron, on the other hand, was apparently apprehended. "Of the Rings of Power and the Third Age" (published in The Silmarillion) tells us that Sauron "put on his fair hue again and did obeisance to Eonwe, the herald of Manwe, and abjured all of his evil deeds." But Eonwe could not pardon Sauron, and instead commanded him to return to Valinor and await the judgement of Manwe. To that Sauron would not consent, and he remained in Middle-earth when Eonwe returned into the West. For the next five or six hundred years, Sauron vanished from history. It is unlikely that Sauron "slept" in the sense that the Balrog seems to have curled up under a conveniently huge mountain and dreamed of past debaucheries for the next several thousand years. More likely, Sauron retreated into far eastern Middle-earth and there he could have done anything, such as plant a garden or found a monastery to teach ancient Elves, Dwarves, and Men the Way of Peace. Whatever he did, after a few hundred years Sauron realized he wasn't going to accomplish much -- or else that he could probably get away with doing whatever he wanted, so he launched a new initiative.


    Sauron's gradual emergence into the affairs of Middle-earth did not go unnoticed, and it may be that the catalyst for his return was the eastward migration of Sindar. Tolkien observed that, "seeing the desolation of the world, Sauron said in his heart that the Valar, having overthrown Morgoth, had again forgotten Middle-earth; and his pride grew apace." In the "notes on motives in the Silmarillion" essay (published in Morgoth's Ring), Tolkien wrote: "[Sauron] did not object to the existence of the world, so long as he could do what he liked with it. He still had the relics of positive purposes, that descended from the good of the nature in which he began: it had been his virtue (and therefore also the cause of his fall, and of his relapse) that he loved order and co-ordination, and disliked all confusion and wasteful friction." Sauron fundamentally believed that he could set the world in order, bring it out of the chaos that Morgoth and his wars with the Valar and Eldar had created, and restore it to its original purposes. But, because of his pride, "his 'plans'...became the sole object of his will" (ibid.). Sauron forgot why he wanted to bring order to the world, and simply focused on bringing order to it. He clearly saw the Elves as potential instruments of his will. They had the sub-creative abilities to affect the wider world in ways that other creatures, such as Men, apparently lacked. Dwarves don't seem to have figured broadly in Sauron's designs, and that may be due to either a lack of knowledge about them on Sauron's part (such a perspective is reinforced by the fact that Sauron failed to convert any Dwarves into Ringwraiths) or to their lesser abilities (although we have too little information about Dwarven capabilities to compare them with the Elves in that way). However, Sauron at first began organizing the remnants of Morgoth's creatures. They would have been easy for him to recruit into his service -- he would have known them well and they might have remembered him -- but he seems to have worked slowly and subtly at first. Gil-galad suspected that a servant of Morgoth had begun organizing peoples or creatures in the east before the year 1000 in the Second Age. He recruited Anardil, prince of Numenor, to serve as an ambassador to men living in northern and western Middle-earth. At the time, Gil-galad seems to have striven to collect information and to build up goodwill among peoples dwelling near his kingdom, which lay upon the northwestern shores of Middle-earth, in the last remnant of eastern Beleriand. Anardil's activities in Middle-earth, and the growing presence of Numenoreans in the coastlands (through voyages of exploration and seasonal camps or temporary colonies such as Vinyalonde), induced Sauron to select a permanent base of operations around the year 1000. We can infer from the settlement of Mordor that Sauron had no permanent secure base in the east. He must have had one or more fortresses from which he directed his growing empire, but he apparently believed that he needed to be closer to the westlands in order to devise and implement a new strategy. This strategy was founded upon Sauron's hope of inducing the Eldar to accept him as a teacher and guide. Hence, either he initially populated Mordor with servants not likely to instill alarm in the Eldar, or else he suppressed knowledge of his presence in the region. Sauron's diplomatic missions to the Eldar appear to have occurred in the brief period of a single year. The entry for 1200 in the Second Age of "The Tale of Years" (Appendix B in The Lord of the Rings) reads: "Sauron endeavors to seduce the Eldar. Gil-galad refuses to treat with him; but the smiths of Eregion are won over." He probably never visited the other Elven realms, where the Eldar were few or had adopted the ways of the less sophisticated Silvan Elves. Clearly, Sauron was going after the heart of Elven power. Since his objective was to impose an order upon the world (presumably to repair the hurts done by the war in Beleriand, and to eliminate or reduce the chaos which had replaced Morgoth's regime at the end of the First Age), Sauron had to appeal to the Eldar's own innate desire to bring order to the world about them. The Elves, in Tolkien's view, "wanted to have their cake without eating it." Or, more precisely, the Eldar "wanted the peace and bliss and perfect memory of 'The West', and yet to remain on the ordinary earth where their prestige as the highest people, above wild Elves, dwarves, and Men, was greater than at the bottom of the hierarchy of Valinor." (Letter 131) So, early on, Sauron's own desire to dominate Middle-earth was rivalled by the Eldar's (growing) desire to achieve a similar status. Both Sauron and the Eldar were seeking control, and influence. Rather than pursue an outright war, however, Sauron elected to bring the Eldar into his community through subtrefuge. By appealing to their strengths, he believed he would take advantage of a vulnerability he perceived. Yet, was that vulnerability really there? Could Sauron have succeeded with the Elves? Probably no more than he did. That is, Sauron seems to have underestimated the Elves' powers of perception and understanding. He did not anticipate the Elven-smiths' awareness of his actions, when he created the One Ring and placed it upon his finger. At that moment, the Elves were aware of him, his true nature and designs, and they removed their Rings. Sauron never had the opportunity to begin influencing them as he had hoped to.

    We can infer from the settlement of Mordor that Sauron had no permanent secure base in the east. He must have had one or more fortresses from which he directed his growing empire, but he apparently believed that he needed to be closer to the westlands in order to devise and implement a new strategy. This strategy was founded upon Sauron's hope of inducing the Eldar to accept him as a teacher and guide. Hence, either he initially populated Mordor with servants not likely to instill alarm in the Eldar, or else he suppressed knowledge of his presence in the region. Sauron's diplomatic missions to the Eldar appear to have occurred in the brief period of a single year. The entry for 1200 in the Second Age of "The Tale of Years" (Appendix B in The Lord of the Rings) reads: "Sauron endeavors to seduce the Eldar. Gil-galad refuses to treat with him; but the smiths of Eregion are won over." He probably never visited the other Elven realms, where the Eldar were few or had adopted the ways of the less sophisticated Silvan Elves. Clearly, Sauron was going after the heart of Elven power. Since his objective was to impose an order upon the world (presumably to repair the hurts done by the war in Beleriand, and to eliminate or reduce the chaos which had replaced Morgoth's regime at the end of the First Age), Sauron had to appeal to the Eldar's own innate desire to bring order to the world about them. The Elves, in Tolkien's view, "wanted to have their cake without eating it." Or, more precisely, the Eldar "wanted the peace and bliss and perfect memory of 'The West', and yet to remain on the ordinary earth where their prestige as the highest people, above wild Elves, dwarves, and Men, was greater than at the bottom of the hierarchy of Valinor." (Letter 131) So, early on, Sauron's own desire to dominate Middle-earth was rivalled by the Eldar's (growing) desire to achieve a similar status. Both Sauron and the Eldar were seeking control, and influence. Rather than pursue an outright war, however, Sauron elected to bring the Eldar into his community through subtrefuge. By appealing to their strengths, he believed he would take advantage of a vulnerability he perceived. Yet, was that vulnerability really there? Could Sauron have succeeded with the Elves? Probably no more than he did. That is, Sauron seems to have underestimated the Elves' powers of perception and understanding. He did not anticipate the Elven-smiths' awareness of his actions, when he created the One Ring and placed it upon his finger. At that moment, the Elves were aware of him, his true nature and designs, and they removed their Rings. Sauron never had the opportunity to begin influencing them as he had hoped to.
    Hence, the Longbeard Dwarves themselves must have posed a considerable threat to Sauron's plans. Their kingdom had been strengthened early in the Second Age by an influx of Dwarves emigrating from the Ered Luin. These were mostly Belegostian Dwarves, former allies of the Eldar in Beleriand and enemies of Morgoth. Khazad-dum, the chief city of the Longbeards, provided a key avenue of supply and reinforcement between Eregion and the Vales of Anduin. Considerable trade must have passed through the Longbeards' hands. But more importantly, the Longbeards were the traditional central power of Dwarvendom. They were the guardians of Gundabad, where the Dwarven peoples had communed for countless years. If the Eldar posed a threat to Sauron's control over Middle-earth, the Dwarves were at the very least an obstacle in his path. They would not have accepted his domination and they were, in the westlands, allied with the Eldar and the Edainic peoples who were friendly with the Eldar. Sauron well knew what the Edain were capable of, for he had fought them in Beleriand. Among Men, the Numenoreans may have presented the greater threat, but their homeland lay far beyond Middle-earth. Relatively few Numenoreans dwelt in Middle-earth. The Edainic peoples provided Gil-galad and his allies with a tremendous resource. Therefore, Sauron's assault on the lands east of the Misty Mountains makes sense. While he lay siege to Eregion, Khazad-dum's priorities were divided. Sauron may not have anticipated the assault that Durin III launched against the invaders from Khazad-dum's west-gate. Or else he intended the battles in the east to draw off a great part of Durin's strength. The Edainic peoples were driven from their lands, and most were apparently killed. The survivors fled into the mountains, where the Dwarves could protect them, or the deeper woodlands, where they were isolated from other peoples. Most of them probably fled into the far northern lands anyway. The Silvan Elves probably suffered terribly. They may have been incapable of mounting or sustaining the kind of war which the Eldar could achieve, but they were more numerous than the Eldar and, in some lands, were led by Eldarin princes. It may be that several smaller realms were wiped out or driven to seek refuge in Greenwood the Great and Lothlorien. Yet Sauron's failure to destroy the realms of Amdir (father of Amroth) and Oropher (father of Thranduil) implies that he lacked the resources to fight a woodland war. He must have had few if any troops trained to for warfare under the trees.


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    failure to capitalize on his victories in the east may have been the reason for why Sauron decided to burn the forests of Eriador. His eastern armies must have cleared the open lands of Men and Elves and been stopped in the forests. Either the eastern forces were wiped out in pitched, desperate battles, or else they withdrew when they could go no further. Durin's attack on Sauron's western forces may have been completely unexpected, and Sauron could have realized that if he took his army through the great woodlands of Eriador, the Eldar and Edain would ravage his troops and supply lines. Hence, after crushing Eregion, Sauron sent enough troops northward to ensure that Elrond's army was pinned down, and then he proceeded to eradicate the whole of Eriador. In a way, the devastation Sauron wreaked upon the world would serve as a statement, a sort of declaration of sovereignty. "This is mine to do with as I please." He would be telling the Elves in no uncertain terms that he, and not they, would control Middle-earth. The cake was his, not theirs. The Elves must have understood this, too. After the war was over, and Sauron had been defeated, there apparently was no talk of marching into Mordor and taking Sauron down a peg. Many Elves fled Middle-earth and Gil-galad elected to establish a new outpost at Imladris, which was farther north (and distant from Mordor) and more defensible than Eregion had been. The army or armies which had pursued Sauron back to Mordor must not have had sufficient resources to force their way into the land. So the implication of their withrdawal is that the Eldar and Numenoreans ran into something they were not ready to deal with. Mordor, surrounded by high mountains, was very defensible, and undoubtedly Sauron chose to make it his fortress because of the advantages offered by the geography. But Gil-galad had few if any resources for maintaining a lengthy siege so far from Lindon. Numenor had no bases in the area (Pelargir would not exist for another 600 years), and the only peoples in the area were unfriendly (except possibly for the Ent-wives, who may have been willing to support the cause, but might also have stood aside). "The Tale of Years" says that, beginning around the year 1800, Sauron extended his power eastward. It would seem that Sauron, like the Eldar and Numenoreans, felt it was time for a change in policy. Rather than take on the Eldar directly, he elected instead to build up his power among other peoples (presumably among the Men of eastern Middle-earth, whose ancestors had once been loyal or friendly to Morgoth). The evolution of Sauron's goals emerges as a consequence of his several failures: he failed to accept responsibility for his rebellion and refused to go to Valinor; he failed to seduce the Eldar to his full service; he failed to crush the Eldar and eliminate them as potential rivals for control over Middle-earth.

    Gil-galad's lack of ambition was Sauron's saving grace. While Gil-galad probably concentrated on healing the lands and peoples Sauron had nearly destroyed in the war, Sauron invested his time in developing new resources. And he did not forget the Dwarves. Having seized the Nine and the Seven Rings of Power from the Gwaith-i-Mirdain in Eregion, Sauron perverted the Rings and gave them out to Men and Dwarves. Three of the Rings were given to Numenoreans, possibly to captains or lords who led new colonization efforts in Middle-earth. Although the Numenoreans had begun making permanent havens around the year 1200, they began "establishing dominions on the coast [of Middle-earth]" around the year 1800 ("Tale of Years"). By dispensing Rings of Power to Men and Dwarves in the east, where he already had influence, Sauron probably achieved ironclad control over many lands very quickly, within the space of a few years or generations. Although the Men who received Rings eventually became wraiths, the Dwarven lords could not be so corrupted. And yet, the essay "Dwarves and Men" (published in The Peoples of Middle-earth) implies that all the eastern Dwarven peoples may have fallen into evil. If Sauron could not have dominated the Dwarves through their Rings, he may nonetheless have won influence and friendship among them through the bestowal of such gifts. The Rings given to the western Dwarves are a more complicated issue. There is no indication that any of them ever fell into evil. Their Rings may have been the foundation of great hoards (and the implication of that tradition, recorded in Appendix A to The Lord of the Rings, is that the kingly houses of the Ered Luin not only survived but thrived in the Second Age). How did Sauron manage to give Rings of Power to the Dwarves? And when? He clearly did not visit them in the capacity of his former persona. Durin III, at least, should have resisted any such attempts at bribery. The whole business with redistributing the stolen Rings of Power smacks of a poorly thought-out "Plan B". Sauron did not quite know what to do. He needed more powerful servants through whom to conquer Middle-earth, but those servants did not present him with advantages over the Elves. In fact, although Sauron continued to attack the Elves throughout the next 1300 years or so, he never again mounted the kind of massive campaign against the Eldar that he had attempted in the war. Why?
    The Numenoreans certainly began to take on a larger role in the affairs of Middle-earth. As the centuries passed, new Numenorean strongholds and havens were established along the coastlands. Numenorean power slowly marched northward toward Mordor's borders. So Sauron found himself confronted by two rivals: the Eldar in the north and Numenor in the south. And yet, with the destruction of Eregion, all ambition seems to have fled the Eldar. As long as the Rings of Power existed, of course, the Elves would have some protection against fading. So their chief objective had been accomplished. But they appear to have had the stuffing beaten out of them. There would be no more great Elven realms in Middle-earth. Sauron may have built up his strength, but he seems to have devoted more than 1,000 years to dueling with the Numenoreans over various minor regions. His strategy floundered as he pondered what to do about the two problems. Sauron's flexibility undoubtedly ensured that his realm survived. By changing directions and pursuing more easily obtained goals in the east, he established an empire capable of withstanding most of the incursions of Numenor. But he appears to have held back in confronting Numenorean power. There is no mention of massive assaults on any Numenorean fortresses. Once Umbar was established, it remained in Numenorean control. Once Pelargir was built, Numenor had a permanent foothold along the lower Anduin. However, it may be that Sauron stumbled early on, and his apparent reluctance to launch a second massive war was due to a realization of his mistake. When the Elves realized that they had been betrayed, Sauron could have given in to anger and pride. He demanded that they surrender their Rings of Power to him. Of course, they refused to do so. Hence, Sauron reacted angrily and launched a war against them. Although he might have cooled off after a few dozen years, any setbacks he suffered early on in the war (such as losing his eastern armies, or at least failing to destroy the woodland realms) may have reignited or fed his anger. It would not be until Sauron and his bodyguard returned to Mordor, soundly defeated, that he may have calmed down enough to figure out that he wasn't going to seize all of Middle-earth through war. Hence, the ensuing centuries where Sauron sparred with the Numenoreans for control over what must have been relatively minor territories (probably mostly in the south) may have been time well spent in Sauron's opinion. That is, he was able to probe the Numenoreans for weaknesses, and he must have studied them. It may be that Sauron studied the young prince who eventually became Ar-Pharazon, realized that here was an individual who could be manipulated, and eventually inticed Ar-Pharazon (from afar) to challenge Sauron for mastery over Middle-earth. If that was indeed Sauron's goal, he blundered. For Ar-Pharazon brought such an immense army out of the west that Sauron's allies deserted him. Of course, Sauron resorted to subtrefuge, surrendering himself so that he could be taken to Numenor as a prisoner. There he gradually won the king's confidence and seduced the vast majority of Numenoreans, many of whom were already rebellious toward the Valar, into worshipping Morgoth and defying the Valar. "Akallabeth" implies that Sauron hoped to destroy Numenor all along, but it also records that he was astounded at what he found in Numenor, for the achievements of the Dunedain surpassed all his expectations. Sauron's change in plans preserved Mordor as a base of power and opened up for him an opportunity to undermine the Numenorean civilization. He was clearly acting opportunistically, and perhaps making up things as he went along. But his sojourn in Numenor was a fresh approach, and one which though resulting in temporary setbacks (Gil-galad was able to extend his own power during Sauron's absence from Middle-earth), helped Sauron achieve one of his goals: the destruction of Numenor. With Numenor out of the way Sauron returned to Middle-earth, wounded but not greatly weakened. He may have contemplated turning his full attention upon Gil-galad, but he would have quikly learned that Numenorean survivors led by Elendil were establishing two new kingdoms in the north. Although many of the Numenorean colonies would now support Sauron, the Faithful Dunedain were helping Gil-galad to consolidate his power in the north. In effect, Sauron had replaced an immensely powerful Numenor, which he could not overcome militarily, with an immensely powerful alliance of Elves and Men. Sauron attacked Gondor without warning, but Appendix A says he "struck too soon, before his own power was rebuilt; whereas the power of Gil-galad had increased in his absence." "Of the Rings of Power and the Third Age" is less pessissmistic: "When therefore Sauron saw his time he came with great force against the new realm of Gondor, and he took Minas Ithil, and he destroyed the White Tree of Isildur that grew there." Although Minas Ithil fell, Anarion held out in Osgiliath and eventually drove Sauron back to the mountains. Sauron thus seems not to have fully integrated all his former allies back into his realm, or else he didn't wait long enough for their armies to arrive. The attack on Gondor is similar in scope to the attack on Eregion. Sauron was selecting strategic targets and seeking to isolate them from allied powers. He succeeded partially with Eregion: Elrond was unable to break through Sauron's lines, although Durin III rescued some of Eregion's people. The assault on Gondor was a failure, and it underscored the weakness in Sauron's approach: he allowed his enemies to work for the benefit of each other, even if they could not coordinate their efforts against him. Elrond and Durin both saved a portion of Eregion's people because Sauron was focused on seizing the Rings of Power. Gondor withstood his attack becase he was too eager to launch his war
    Isildur was able to sail north and rouse Elendil and Gil-galad. The alliance they assembled proved to be strong enough to destroy Sauron's realm. In fact, they raised a larger army than Ar-Pharazon had broughht to Middle-earth nearly 200 years before. If Sauron's allies were incapable of facing Ar-Pharazon's army, it is to his credit that they stayed by him during the final war of the Second Age. But they were no match for the Last Alliance. Through war after war, Sauron allowed his enemies to support one another and sometimes to work together. It would not be until Barad-dur was besieged and Sauron's plans lay dashed in blood across the landscape that he finally figured out what he was doing wrong. He needed to isolate his enemies from one another. He launched a final, desperate attack against Gil-galad and slew the Elven-king, but Elendil stood close by and was able to strike a mortal blow to Sauron. The last combat on Orodruin may have been more an act borne of frustration than anything else. Even without Gil-galad, the Last Alliance had won the war. Sauron's empire was dismantled. His personal realm of Mordor was occupied. A second death gave Sauron a much-needed respite. Middle-earth settled into a long period of peace in which Men would forget the Dark Lord and the Elves could only hope he did not return. Sauron had plenty of time for reflection upon his mistakes, and when he finally returned he had a new strategy, one which encompassed millennia and took into consideration all the variables he had not considered well enough in the Second Age

    Martinez


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    Rhudaur is always portrayed as an evil land. Its people betrayed the Dunedain and killed them or drove them out. The Hobbits who settled there fled. Trolls ventured down from the hills and drove everyone away. But when Elendil sailed to Middle-earth and established the Kingdom of Arnor, the Dunedain who settled in Rhudaur must have been members of his own following. They were Faithful Numenoreans who venerated the Valar and lived in friendship with the Eldar of Aman and Middle-earth. These were not evil people. So what happened? Well, in one sense, progress may have happened. That is, the character of the people and their culture must have changed progressively through the centuries. And there were probably several reasons for the change, reflected in different periods and events in Rhudaurian history. The region claimed by the Kings of Rhudaur in the middle Third Age extended eastward from the Weather Hills to the Misty Mountains, and south from the Mitheithel (Hoarwell) where it flowed past the Ettenmoors to the tip of the Angle, the land between the Mitheithel and Bruinen (Loudwater) rivers. The rivers joined together above Eregion and became the Gwathlo (Greyflood), the chief cities of which were Tharbad and Lond Daer Ened (formerly Vinyalonde). When Elendil arrived at Lindon with four ships of Faithful Numenoreans, Eriador was already well-populated by Elves, men of Edainic descent, Numenoreans, men of mixed heritage, and men who are probably best described as "Easterlings". These Easterlings must have dwelt in the foot-hills of the Misty Mountains, mostly north of Imladris (Rivendell). There may have been some clans which lived in the lowlands east of the North Downs and the Weather Hills. The Numenorean peoples must have accepted Elendil as their lord almost immediately. Faithful Numenoreans had been leaving Numenor for years, and most of them came from Andunie, the province of Numenor where Elendil's father had been Lord, until he was removed by Ar-Pharazon. The salvation of a beloved noble family should have encouraged the Numenoreans of Eriador to retain their traditions. In "Of the Rings of Power and the Third Age", J.R.R. Tolkien writes that Elendil's "people dwelt in many places in Eriador about the courses of the Lhun and the Baranduin; but his chief city was at Annuminas beside the water of Lake Nenuial." Yet other places of Numenorean settlement included "Fornost upon the North Downs" and "in Cardolan, and in the hills of Rhudaur." We also know, from other writings, about the city of Tharbad. Lond Daer Ened may have been destroyed in the floods which ravaged the coastlands of Middle-earth after Numenor was destroyed and the world was changed. Or it may be that Lond Daer Ened became deserted sometime early in the Third Age, much as Annuminas did. But the principal inference we may draw from these references to Elendil's people is that the majority of them dwelt in western Eriador.
    So what made Rhudaur so important that Elendil sent people to colonize the region? Furthermore, why were the Dunedain never able to fully integrate with the local population? It must be that the hill-folk were neither friendly nor hostile to the Elves, but their lands were deemed strategically important to Gil-galad's realm. That is, prior to the founding of Arnor, Gil-galad's authority extended all the way to the Vales of Anduin. Gil-galad couldn't have simply ruled just the Elves of Eriador; he must also have been ruling the Men of Eriador. And that means he must have either been ruling the Men of Rhudaur, or he was preventing Men from settling there. When Isildur and Anarion founded Gondor, they probably used Pelargir as a base of operations. The city was an ancient royal haven of Numenor and most likely had a large population. But the Numenoreans had already spread out from Pelargir to colonize lands along the Anduin river. Isildur and Anarion built the city of Osgiliath upon a vast bridge farther up the river. The bridge itself had to connect roads, but there is no indication of where the roads led prior to the founding of the two cities of Minas Anor and Minas Ithil. Most likely there was a road leading north along Anduin's eastern bank from Pelargir which crossed the river at Osgiliath's location. This road then led through Anorien to Calenardhon and Cair Andros. There were probably scattered Numenorean settlements along the river. Isildur must have chosen to build Minas Ithil in the Ephel Duath to prevent incursions from Mordor. Sauron had left Middle-earth, but his creatures had not. And Anarion built Minas Anor against Mindolluin to defend Gondor against raids from the Men of Ered Nimrais. As Gondor felt threatened by its neighbors in the south, so Arnor may have felt threatened by its neighbors in the north. Isildur and Anarion built the fortresses of Angrenost (Isengard) and Aglarond (the Glittering Caves) to control the Gap of Calenardhon. These fortresses presented no strategic threat to armies invading Gondor from the east, but they could repel or at least delay forces advancing from Enedwaith down into Gondor, or forces attempting to march around the western end of the Ered Nimrais into Calenardhon. Arnor would rely upon Tharbad to contain the Gwathuirim of Enedwaith. Lond Daer Ened might have served a similar though less useful strategic purpose. Standing upon the southern shore of the Gwathlo, Lond Daer Ened was cut off from Arnor. It may simply have been abandoned because it could not be strategically supported. Elendil, despite incorporating many Men from Eriador into his kingdom, must still have had considerably fewer people in his realm than Ar-Pharazon had once governed.
    So the presence of tribes of Men in the northern foot-hills of the Misty Mountains, perhaps descended from some of the Easterlings of the First Age who had served Morgoth, would give Elendil some reason to be concerned. The Easterlings might have been awed by the Elves, but if there were only a few Numenoreans living in Rhudaur, the Easterlings may not have been very intimidated. Rhudaur would control the passage from Lindon to Imladris. But it would also control the passage from the Vales of Anduin into Eriador. The Elves could travel safely through Eregion down to the Redhorn Pass over Caradhras, but they probably also used the High Pass by Imladris frequently. It would make sense for Elendil to control the region if Gil-galad had to give up his authority over the lands between Rhudaur and Lindon. Elrond probably did not have enough Elves to control a large region. Elendil may therefore have sent soldiers to establish outposts in Rhudaur along the Road. In turn, these soldiers may have entered into trading agreements with some of the hill clans. The hill-folk would have benefitted from joining Elendil's kingdom. Perhaps they engaged in frequent feuds among themselves, and the victorious clans drove the weaker clans south. If that were the case, the Numenoreans would be increasing their strength by welcoming the weaker clans while at the same time opening the door for barbarization. In the early generations such a prospect would have seemed remote. Elendil's four shiploads of Numenoreans couldn't have fielded a great army, but he had plenty of men to recruit from in Eriador. All that changed in the War of the Last Alliance, however. Now the Numenoreans assmbled a vast army from all of Arnor, and Elendil joined forces with Gil-galad and other Elven kings to march against Mordor. Although we don't know the details of the war, we know that Arnor suffered tremendous casualties in the battles, such that its population became diminished. In the wake of Elendil's war with Sauron, Arnor would have to change its administrative policies. Valandil, the young king raised by Elrond, would have held on to Rhudaur because Imladris was important to him. He was born there and had been raised there. Rhudaur was also probably the location of many camps established by Gil-galad and Elendil during the years they were training and equipping their armies. The region might not have seemed a very tempting target for raiders from the north for a generation or two
    But in less than 900 years Rhudaur would leave Arnor and establish its own dynasty, descended from Valandil. To justify the establishment of the kingdom, Rhudaur must have possessed a significant population and exploitable resources. So the question arises of, was there a city in Rhudaur which eventually fell into ruin much as Annuminas had? Where, for example, did the Kings of Rhudaur live? Valandur, the 8th High King of Arnor, and the 5th High King to rule after Valandil, was slain in the year 652 of the Third Age, according to the genealogies. Tolkien never explains this death. Valandur only ruled Arnor for 50 years. He probably should have lived another 30 years or so, and since the Numenoreans really only began to feel old age in about the last ten years of their lives, he must have been very strong and healthy. So it seems he died in a war. But what war? Even Gondor was at peace. Since Tolkien never mentions any strife or rebellion in Arnor at this time, it's unlikely Valandur was slain in a civil war. Instead, he must have been killed while fighting external enemies. He could have ventured off into the east, but it seems more likely he was fighting with the hill-folk who dwelt north of Rhudaur. These would be the ancestors of the Men of Angmar, and they were never apparently incorporated into the Kingdom of Arnor. Since Arnor's population had been diminished by the War of the Last Alliance, it follows that by the 7th century the clans in the northern hills were ready to expand, and they would have found Arnor was weak. Perhaps there had always been continuous raids into the south, but by Valandur's reign a King of Arnor felt it necessary to take the field. The easiest path down into Rhudaur from the north must been along the Mitheithel river. The Last Bridge stood where the East-West road crossed the Mitheithel. All that we know of the bridge is that it faced a steep slope in the Road on the western side, possessed three arches, stood a mile from the ravine that Aragorn took up into the northern hills on the eastern side, and had lasted until the end of the Third Age. The Last Bridge must have been worth protecting, and there had probably been a Numenorean fortress in the area at one time, perhaps even a small town or city. It seems that the Last Bridge would be the best location outside the Angle for a Numenorean dynasty to make its seat. Bridges were important to the Numenoreans. Osgiliath and Tharbad were both built on or around major bridges. There was no bridge at Cair Andros, but the armies were able to cross the Anduin there and Gondor maintained a garrison on the island for many years. The Undeeps, in northern Calenardhon, were also fortified against invasion. Even the Bridge of Stone Bows, which crossed the Baranduin, remained a place of activity and settlement in the Shire at the end of the Third Age
    If the Last Bridge marked the location of a Numenorean fortress or town, it may also have been the place where Valandur died. Or at least where he launched his campaign from. He could have followed the Mitheithel north, or met a force of Easterlings marching south along the river, and prevented them from taking control over the bridge. If the king's death in battle means that his army was driven back, they would not have suffered defeat for long. The Last Bridge was located at the heart of Rhudaur, but also sat upon the border of Cardolan. If an enemy marched through Rhudaur from the east, the Last Bridge would have to be defended to protect Cardolan. Thus it may be that the Numenoreans of Rhudaur concentrated their numbers around the Last Bridge. It would be the focal point of their society, and the most important of their fortresses. When Rhudaurian kings launched wars against Arthedain and Cardolan for control over the Weather Hills, they could assmbled their forces at the Last Bridge. Cardolan would, in fact, have to expend considerable resources to defend itself against an invasion from Rhudaur. And by building up its border forces, Cardolan would give Rhudaur just cause to build up its own border garrisons. Hence, if the Kings of Rhudaur could not maintain a standing army, they would have to rely upon local lords to defend points of entry along the Road and the Mitheithel. So the best opportunities for Numenorean lads to rise in the social circles would lie in western Rhudaur. When Sauron began stirring again in Middle-earth, and the Hobbits started leaving the Vales of Anduin, the Harfoots entered Eriador and most likely settled in Rhudaur. If northern Rhudaur were controlled by the semi-barbaric hill clans, the Harfoots may have settled along the Road near the Last Bridge. They were too smal to provide Rhudaur with useful soldiers, but the Dunedain could have taught them many trades to expand industrial output. The Kings of Rhudaur may have increased their armies, and thus could fight longer, larger wars. Their chances of dying those wars, of producing fewer heirs, and of losing their heirs, would have increased. Cardolan, threatened by a stronger Rhudaur, would have become more warlike, too. Hence, its kings would also be more likely to die in battle, heirless. The frequent warfare must therefore have opened up opportunities for the hill clans. Although Stoors settled in the Angle in the 12th century, when Angmar arose around the year 1300 the Hobbits decided that Rhudaur was no longer safe for them. The Harfoots and Fallohides began migrating west to Arthedain. Rhudaur must therefore have come into direct conflict with Angmar, and it may be that the Heirs of Isildur, already diminished in number by their feuds with Cardolan and Arthedain, actually died while fighting Angmar. The Dunedain were few in number, the Hobbits had left, and the hill clans forged a secret alliance with Angmar. When Argeleb claimed royal authority over all of former Arnor in 1349, Rhudaur openly sided with Angmar
    In the war of 1409, the remaining Dunedain were slain or driven out of the country. The Stoors of the Angle fled west to the Vales of Anduin or south to Dunland. Imladris was cut off from Arthedain, Cardolan, and Lindon. Angmar gained effective control over all the lands east of the Weather Hills as far south as the East-West road. The Last Bridge was lost to the Numenoreans. The hill clans which had seized control over Rhudaur seem themselves to have been swept aside by new Men sent out of Angmar. Why? Were they not subservient enough? Had they been tainted by contact with the Dunedain and the Eldar? Had they refused to attack Imladris, which Angmar subsequently laid siege to? If Elendil's objective in colonizing Rhudaur was to achieve strategic control over the East-West road, and to defend Imladris against northern enemies, the losses Arnor suffered in the War of the Last Alliance made the eventual loss of Rhudaur inevitable. As the Dunedain waned and turned their attention toward fighting each other, they would have relied upon other peoples to defend their northern borders. If the hill clans were left mostly to themselves, their alliance with Angmar makes sense. If the relocation of many Hobbits to Rhudaur in the 11th and 12th centuries made it possible for the Kings of Rhudaur to wage almost endless war against Arthedain and Cardolan, then the departure of the Hobbits would have made it almost impossible for later kings to retain their power. Nonetheless, with the destruction of Angmar in 1975, Aranarth elected not to restore the Kingdom of Arnor because the peoples of Eriador became few in number. Although Tolkien does not say when the Dunedain recolonized southern Rhudaur, by the end of the Third Age Aragorn's people were living in the Angle. Aranarth's sons were raised in Imladris. The Rangers of Eriador appear to have been active in former Rhudaur throughout the last millennium of the Third Age. Their activity and the location of their people imply that Aranarth or his successors adopted Elendil's old strategy of drawing the line against incursion in Rhudaur. And this time they stayed the course, avoiding further divisions and strife among themselves
    Michael Martinez
    Last edited by Chim; August 22, 2008 at 05:21 AM.

  2. #2

    Default Re: Sauron stratrgyPart II

    too lazy to read this

  3. #3
    Lü Bu's Avatar "Mightyest Man Alive"
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    Default Re: Sauron stratrgyPart II

    absolutely!
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  4. #4

    Default Re: Sauron stratrgyPart II

    Helps to use breaks between paragraphs.

  5. #5
    Varjon's Avatar Praepositus
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    Default Re: Sauron stratrgyPart II

    Well I read this and disappointed because this gave me no new info.

  6. #6

    Default Re: Sauron stratrgyPart II

    +rep that was a good read and nicely put together.

  7. #7

    Default Re: Sauron stratrgyPart II

    Yes, i just read it, and it's nothing really all that new.

  8. #8
    ccllnply's Avatar Tribunus
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    Default Re: Sauron stratrgyPart II

    I'd read it, only its over 100 lines fitted into 2 paragraphs. My eyes are already damaged enough, thank you


  9. #9

    Default Re: Sauron stratrgyPart II

    :hmmm: why give him plus rep, he copied and pasted this just like his other 4 threads...look at the time he posted them.

    I even made an account just to point this out.



    Post Script
    Dwarves FTW

  10. #10
    Mithrandir's Avatar Flame of Anor
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    Default Re: Nice read only, Stewards.

    You obviously have way too much free time


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  11. #11

    Default Re: Nice read only, Gladden fields

    eh, why do you keep posting random info on LOTR?

  12. #12
    ccllnply's Avatar Tribunus
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    Default Re: Nice read only, Gladden fields

    Quote Originally Posted by lord0thief View Post
    eh, why do you keep posting random info on LOTR?

    Yeah, I found myself asking the same question but it doesn't really matter. If he wants to let him, some of its pretty interesting


  13. #13

    Default Re: Nice read only, Gladden fields

    Maybe just one topic with links to the texts (or all of them together, in spoiler tags) would have sufficed, though...
    "He is suffering from Politician's Logic: 'Something must be done, this is something, therefore we must do it.'"
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  14. #14

    Default Re: Nice read only, Gladden fields

    just give us a link of the site ur pasting it from thx

  15. #15
    The Count(er)'s Avatar Protector Domesticus
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    Default Re: Sauron stratrgyPart II

    the account was created almost 2 years ago I doubt it was made just to post these threads 2 years later
    Quote Originally Posted by Chaigidel View Post
    everyone but me is wrong.
    Ego's are fun

  16. #16

    Default Re: Sauron stratrgyPart II

    i never said anything about the person making an account.

  17. #17
    The Count(er)'s Avatar Protector Domesticus
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    Default Re: Sauron stratrgyPart II

    my bad I misread you "I" as a "He"
    Quote Originally Posted by Chaigidel View Post
    everyone but me is wrong.
    Ego's are fun

  18. #18
    ccllnply's Avatar Tribunus
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    Default Re: Sauron stratrgyPart II

    Quote Originally Posted by Warwood11 View Post
    :hmmm: why give him plus rep, he copied and pasted this just like his other 4 threads...look at the time he posted them.

    I even made an account just to point this out.



    Post Script
    Dwarves FTW

    Thats kind of sad isn't it? No one is denying that he copied and pasted these. He never said he wrote them himself. He's providing us with information, random information, but information none the less


  19. #19
    knight of virtue and valor's Avatar Praefectus
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    Default Re: Sauron stratrgyPart II

    cool never saw that before!
    "WE WILL SMITE THE INVADERS FROM OUR SKIES! Though they sweep over our lands like the sands of winter, never again will we bow before them; never again endure their oppression; never again endure their tyranny. We will strike without warning and without mercy, fighting as one hand, one heart, one soul. We will shatter their dreams and haunt their nightmares, drenching our ancestors' graves with their blood. And as our last breath tears at their lungs; as we rise again from the ruins of our cities...they will know: Helghan belongs to the Helghast." -Scholar Visari

  20. #20

    Default Re: Sauron stratrgyPart II

    wutevs, no need for argument over plain old info.

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