Iron Mountains: Difference between revisions
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Of old the Iron Mountains connected the [[Blue Mountains]] (''[[Ered Luin]]'') of the West to the [[Red Mountains]] (''[[Orocarni]]'') of the East, but in the wars between the [[Valar]] and [[Melkor]] the mountain range was distorted. | Of old the Iron Mountains connected the [[Blue Mountains]] (''[[Ered Luin]]'') of the West to the [[Red Mountains]] (''[[Orocarni]]'') of the East, but in the wars between the [[Valar]] and [[Melkor]] the mountain range was distorted. | ||
Melkor's great fortresses of [[Angband]] and [[Utumno]] were built in the mountains. North of the range lay the | Melkor's great fortresses of [[Angband]] and [[Utumno]] were built in the mountains. North of the range lay the regions of ever-lasting cold. | ||
After the [[War of Wrath]] the Iron Mountains were broken and disappeared for a great part of their length. | After the [[War of Wrath]] the Iron Mountains were broken and disappeared for a great part of their length. | ||
==Fate== | ==Fate== | ||
Remnants of the range in the East could perhaps be all the northern mountain ranges of [[Eriador]] and [[Rhovanion]]: the [[Mountains of Angmar]], [[Gundabad]], the [[Ered Mithrin]], and the [[Iron Hills]], still occupied by [[Orcs]] and [[Dragons]] until the [[Third Age]]<ref>[[Karen Wynn Fonstad]], ''[[The Atlas of Middle-earth]]'' p. 78</ref> | Remnants of the range in the East could perhaps be all the northern mountain ranges of [[Eriador]] and [[Rhovanion]]: the [[Mountains of Angmar]], [[Gundabad]], the [[Ered Mithrin]], and the [[Iron Hills]], still occupied by [[Orcs]] and [[Dragons]] until the [[Third Age]].<ref>[[Karen Wynn Fonstad]], ''[[The Atlas of Middle-earth]]'' p. 78</ref> | ||
These mountains, if imagined to belong to a greater range, indeed occupy the same location as the Iron Mountains in Tolkien's map in the [[Ambarkanta]]<ref>{{SM|Ambarkanta}}</ref> | These mountains, if imagined to belong to a greater range, indeed occupy the same location as the Iron Mountains in Tolkien's map in the [[Ambarkanta]].<ref>{{SM|Ambarkanta}}</ref> | ||
{{Remnants}} | {{Remnants}} | ||
[[Category:Beleriand]] | [[Category:Beleriand]] | ||
[[Category:Mountain Ranges]] | [[Category:Mountain Ranges]] | ||
[[de:Ered Engrin]] | [[de:Ered Engrin]] | ||
[[fr:encyclo/geographie/reliefs/montagnes_de_fer]] | |||
[[fi:Rautavuoret (Esiajat)]] | [[fi:Rautavuoret (Esiajat)]] | ||
Revision as of 16:52, 23 October 2010
The Iron Mountains or Ered Engrin were an immense mountain range in the north.
Of old the Iron Mountains connected the Blue Mountains (Ered Luin) of the West to the Red Mountains (Orocarni) of the East, but in the wars between the Valar and Melkor the mountain range was distorted.
Melkor's great fortresses of Angband and Utumno were built in the mountains. North of the range lay the regions of ever-lasting cold.
After the War of Wrath the Iron Mountains were broken and disappeared for a great part of their length.
Fate
Remnants of the range in the East could perhaps be all the northern mountain ranges of Eriador and Rhovanion: the Mountains of Angmar, Gundabad, the Ered Mithrin, and the Iron Hills, still occupied by Orcs and Dragons until the Third Age.[1]
These mountains, if imagined to belong to a greater range, indeed occupy the same location as the Iron Mountains in Tolkien's map in the Ambarkanta.[2]
Remnants of Drowned Beleriand | |
Isles: | Himring · Tol Fuin · Tol Morwen |
---|---|
Mainland: | Lindon |