Last Bridge: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:The Last Bride.jpg|thumb|''The Last Bridge'' in [[Middle-earth Collectible Card Game|MECCG]]]]  
[[Image:The Last Bride.jpg|thumb|''The Last Bridge'' in [[Middle-earth Collectible Card Game|MECCG]]. Note that this depiction only shows one of three arches.]]  
The '''Last Bridge''' was the “ancient stone bridge”<ref name="H30">[[The Hobbit]], Chapter 2: “[[Roast Mutton]]”, page 30 obliquely describes the [[Last Bridge]].</ref> that carried the [[East-West Road]] over the River [[Hoarwell]] (''[[Mitheithel]]''), about a hundred miles east of [[Weathertop]]. Its three arches{{fact}} crossed the wide river at the bottom of a “deep valley”<ref name="H30"/>, and to the east the land rose again into the wooded hills of the [[Trollshaws]], in which [[Bilbo Baggins]] and his companions encountered an unfriendly trio of trolls.
The '''Last Bridge''' was the “ancient stone bridge”<ref name="H30">[[The Hobbit]], Chapter 2: “[[Roast Mutton]]”, page 30 obliquely describes the [[Last Bridge]].</ref> that carried the [[East-West Road]] over the River [[Hoarwell]] (''[[Mitheithel]]''), about a hundred miles east of [[Weathertop]]. Its three arches{{fact}} crossed the wide river at the bottom of a “deep valley”<ref name="H30"/>, and to the east the land rose again into the wooded hills of the [[Trollshaws]], in which [[Bilbo Baggins]] and his companions encountered an unfriendly trio of trolls.



Revision as of 00:05, 26 November 2011

File:The Last Bride.jpg
The Last Bridge in MECCG. Note that this depiction only shows one of three arches.

The Last Bridge was the “ancient stone bridge”[1] that carried the East-West Road over the River Hoarwell (Mitheithel), about a hundred miles east of Weathertop. Its three arches[source?] crossed the wide river at the bottom of a “deep valley”[1], and to the east the land rose again into the wooded hills of the Trollshaws, in which Bilbo Baggins and his companions encountered an unfriendly trio of trolls.

No record of its builders survives, but it was most likely constructed by the Dúnedain of Arnor, or perhaps of the later kingdom of Rhudaur, in which it lay. There was no other means of crossing the river for hundreds of miles to the north, and so the Bridge had great strategic value. In the War of the Ring, three Black Riders attempted to hold it against Aragorn and the Hobbits on their journey to Rivendell. Their plan was foiled by Glorfindel, who drove them away and left his token, a green beryl, on the Bridge.

Etymology

The Last Bridge was known by no other name in cannon. However, a literal translation into the Elvish Sindarin would be Iant Vedui.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 The Hobbit, Chapter 2: “Roast Mutton”, page 30 obliquely describes the Last Bridge.