Halls of Mandos: Difference between revisions

From Tolkien Gateway
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 6: Line 6:
The name comes from two [[Elvish]] words meaning 'prison' and 'fortress',
The name comes from two [[Elvish]] words meaning 'prison' and 'fortress',
[[Category:Halls]]
[[Category:Halls]]
[[Category:Aman]]
[[Category:Valinor]]
 
[[de:Hallen von Mandos]]
[[de:Hallen von Mandos]]
[[fr:encyclo:geographie:villes_tours_et_forteresses:aman:cavernes_de_mandos]]
[[fr:encyclo:geographie:villes_tours_et_forteresses:aman:cavernes_de_mandos]]
[[fi:Mandosin Salit]]
[[fi:Mandosin Salit]]

Revision as of 23:59, 19 February 2010

The dwellings of the Doomsman of the Valar, the mighty being properly called Námo, though he was more often given the name Mandos from his own halls. Halls stood on the western shores of Valinor, looking out across the Encircling Sea. They were said to grow in size as the World aged, and their walls were hung with the tapestries of Námo's spouse Vairë, depicting all the events of unfolding history.

It was to the Halls of Mandos that the spirits of Elves and Men were gathered to await their different fates, and so Mandos was given its common name of the Halls of Waiting. After a time, the immortal Elves could be re-embodied, and return from the Halls to their kin in Aman. Men had a different fate, a fate which, even among the Lords of Valinor, only Mandos and Manwë truly understood.

Etymology

The name comes from two Elvish words meaning 'prison' and 'fortress',