Gelmir (son of Guilin): Difference between revisions
From Tolkien Gateway
m (Added image caption) |
No edit summary |
||
(4 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{disambig- | {{disambig-more|Gelmir|[[Gelmir (disambiguation)]]}} | ||
{{noldor infobox | {{noldor infobox | ||
| name=Gelmir | | name=Gelmir | ||
Line 33: | Line 33: | ||
'''Gelmir''', son of [[Guilin]] and brother of [[Gwindor]], was a [[Elves of Nargothrond|noble Elf]] of [[Nargothrond]]. He was captured by [[Morgoth]] in the [[Dagor Bragollach]], and as a captive was tortured and blinded. | '''Gelmir''', son of [[Guilin]] and brother of [[Gwindor]], was a [[Elves of Nargothrond|noble Elf]] of [[Nargothrond]]. He was captured by [[Morgoth]] in the [[Dagor Bragollach]], and as a captive was tortured and blinded. | ||
Years later, he was taken at the fortress of [[Barad Eithel]], where he was maimed and executed before the [[Elves|elven]] host. It was this sight that made Gwindor | Years later, he was taken at the fortress of [[Barad Eithel]], where he was maimed and executed before the [[Elves|elven]] host. It was this sight that made Gwindor charge, beginning the great battle of the [[Nirnaeth Arnoediad]].<ref>{{S|Fifth}}</ref> | ||
==Etymology== | |||
The name is [[Sindarin]], but of unclear meaning. It could be a combination of ''gell'' ("joy") and ''[[mîr]]'' ("jewel").<ref>{{HM|GS}}, p. 350</ref> | |||
==Genealogy== | ==Genealogy== |
Revision as of 12:10, 9 May 2022
Gelmir | |
---|---|
Noldo | |
"Gwindor, Finduilas and Gelmir" by Juliana Pinho | |
Biographical Information | |
Location | Nargothrond |
Death | F.A. 472 Barad Eithel |
Family | |
Parentage | Guilin |
Siblings | Gwindor |
Physical Description | |
Gender | Male |
Gallery | Images of Gelmir |
Gelmir, son of Guilin and brother of Gwindor, was a noble Elf of Nargothrond. He was captured by Morgoth in the Dagor Bragollach, and as a captive was tortured and blinded.
Years later, he was taken at the fortress of Barad Eithel, where he was maimed and executed before the elven host. It was this sight that made Gwindor charge, beginning the great battle of the Nirnaeth Arnoediad.[1]
Etymology
The name is Sindarin, but of unclear meaning. It could be a combination of gell ("joy") and mîr ("jewel").[2]
Genealogy
Guilin b. F.A. | |||||||||||||||||
Gwindor d. F.A. 495 | GELMIR d. F.A. 472 | ||||||||||||||||