Mat Heathertoes: Difference between revisions

From Tolkien Gateway
(typos)
(infobox, for what it's worth)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{men infobox
|image=
|name=Mat Heathertoes
|othernames=
|birth=
|death=[[Third Age 3019]]
|race=Men
|gender=Male
|height=
|hair=
|eyes=
}}
{{quote|All good fellows, and they're missed|[[Barliman Butterbur]]<ref name="Bound"/>}}
{{quote|All good fellows, and they're missed|[[Barliman Butterbur]]<ref name="Bound"/>}}
'''Mat Heathertoes''' (died [[Third Age 3019]]) was a [[Bree-men|Man of Bree]].
'''Mat Heathertoes''' (died [[Third Age 3019]]) was a [[Bree-men|Man of Bree]].

Revision as of 08:29, 20 November 2008

Mat Heathertoes
Man
Biographical Information
DeathThird Age 3019
Physical Description
GenderMale
GalleryImages of Mat Heathertoes
"All good fellows, and they're missed"
Barliman Butterbur[1]

Mat Heathertoes (died Third Age 3019) was a Man of Bree.

History

With the War of the Ring raging in the South-east, many refugees came up the Greenway to Bree. Not all these refugees came with the same intentions: a group of ruffians was ousted from the town near the end of T.A. 3018. With the help of Bill Ferny and Harry Goatleaf, they returned soon after New Year, and a fight ensued. The number of casualties on the side of the ruffians was not recorded, but five of the Bree-folk, three Men and two Hobbits, were killed. Mat Heathertoes was one of them.[1]

Etymology

Mat was a name employed by Tolkien to translate the common (but untranslated) Hobbit name Matta.[2] The name Heathertoes was, like all surnames of the Men of Bree, a plant name,[3] though this seems to have escaped Tolkien when he wrote a list for translators. In it he said Heathertoes was a Hobbit name, and was given in joke to the unshod Hobbits. While walking, they would gather twigs and moss between their toes.[4] However, Mat was most certainly a Man: given that two of the five were Hobbits[1], and the last two named victims - Willie Banks and an Underhill were both positively identified as Hobbits as well.[3][4]

Portrayal in adaptations

1981: BBC Radio's The Lord of the Rings:

Though the "set-to" with the ruffians is mentioned by Butterbur, he does not give the names of the casualties.[5]

References