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The Entwives interacted with Men and taught them the art of agriculture. The gardens of the Entwives were destroyed by Sauron, and the Entwives disappeared. It was sung by the Elves that one day the Ents and Entwives would find each other. Treebeard indeed implored the Hobbits to send word to him if they had news of the Entwives. [T 8]
[T 10] Later some of the Noldor go back to Middle-earth in their quest for the Silmarils, while the Vanyar remain in Valinor. [3] The Silvan Elves, of Nandor and Avari descent, inhabited Mirkwood and Lothlórien. In Tolkien's earliest writings, elves are variously named sprites, fays, brownies, pixies, or leprawns. [4]
J. R. R. Tolkien built a process of decline and fall in Middle-earth into both The Silmarillion and The Lord of the Rings.. The pattern is expressed in several ways, including the splintering of the light provided by the Creator, Eru Iluvatar, into progressively smaller parts; the fragmentation of languages and peoples, especially the Elves, who are split into many groups; the successive falls ...
The people below stumbled upon some truly hilarious pics that way and couldn’t resist sharing them online. Naturally, we couldn’t keep them from you either, pandas! Naturally, we couldn’t ...
The name supposedly denotes sites where ritual senicide took place during pagan Norse prehistoric times, whereby elderly people threw themselves, or were thrown, to their deaths. [1] According to legend, this was done when old people were unable to support themselves or assist in a household.
The latest episode of "The Rings of Power" ushered in a slew of new characters, including the long-awaited live-action depiction of Tom Bombadil.
Her mother, Frances Bratt, was 30 years old, unmarried, and was the daughter of a local shoe and bootmaker. [1] According to Humphrey Carpenter, Frances Bratt never married, and the name of Edith's father is not listed on her birth certificate. Even so, Frances is reported to have always preserved a photograph of him and his name was known ...
A Levite from the mountains of Ephraim had a concubine, who left him and returned to the house of her father in Bethlehem in Judah. [2] Heidi M. Szpek observes that this story serves to support the institution of monarchy, and the choice of the locations of Ephraim (the ancestral home of Samuel, who anointed the first king) and Bethlehem (the home of King David) are not accidental.