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View Full Version : Trolls and ents relations


Bandobras Took
01-28-2004, 08:46 AM
How did morgoth get trolls out of ents?!?!

Noxomanus
01-28-2004, 11:07 AM
He more then likely didn't.

He bred trolls out of **something** or made them as biological machines. Whatever way,they were meant to be the equivalent of the Ents.

Some hold that the light-resistant Trolls of the Third Age were bred out of Entwives but that seems highly unlikely,if not impossible to me.

burrahobbit
01-28-2004, 01:10 PM
Trolls are just kind of made of stuff. Like rocks. Or people. Bears? I dunno.

Some hold that the light-resistant Trolls of the Third Age were bred out of Entwives

???

Oroaranion
01-28-2004, 02:43 PM
I would have to exclude the Entwives, because me and some friends theorized that they went to the Old Forest, in the Shire.

Finwe
01-28-2004, 09:11 PM
Entwives??? Where did that come from, I wonder?

Sharkû
01-29-2004, 02:11 AM
Whatever origin the orcs have, Trolls are likely to share it with them. This is material I compiled long ago, but never wrote an article or post from:

<sub>Treebeard does not say that the Dark Lord 'created' Trolls and Ores. He says he 'made' them in counterfeit of certain creatures pre-existing. There is, to me, a wide gulf between the two statements, so wide that Treebeard's statement could (in my world) have possibly been true. [...] Treebeard is a character in my story, not me; and though he has a great memory and some earthy wisdom, he is not one of the Wise, and there is quite a lot he does not know or understand. [...] I might not (if The Hobbit had been more carefully written, and my world so much thought about 20 years ago) have used the expression 'poor little blighter', just as I should not have called the troll William. [...] There might be other 'makings' [sc. orcs]all the same which were more like puppets filled (only at a distance) with their maker's mind and will, or ant-like operating under direction of a queen-centre."</sub>(Letter 153)

This means that trolls are only 'made out of' Ents in a way at best.

The Myths Transformed essays give various, largely inconclusive but nevertheless important ideas on orcs. One of those is also explicitly applied to trolls:

<sub>"Since Melkor could not 'create' an independent species, but had immense powers of corruption and distortion of those that came into his power, it is probable that these Orks had a mixed origin. Most of them plainly (and biologically) were corruptions of Elves (and probably later also of Men). But always among them (as special servants and spies of Melkor, and as leaders) there must have been numerous corrupted minor spirits who assumed similar bodily shapes. (These would exhibit terrifying and demonic characters.)
The Elves would have classed the creatures called 'trolls' (in The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings) as Orcs - in character and origin - but they were larger and slower. It would seem evident that they were corruptions of primitive human types.</sub>" (HoME X,5,ix)

From this we know that not only the differentiation between orcs and trolls didn't seem important to the Quendi, but also that trolls are actually just a larger type of orc, in this theory of úmaiarin origin and based on corrupted humans.

A note on the language of trolls, not found in the Appendices as it was intented, further adds to this:

<sub>"$17. Trolls, in their beginning creatures of lumpish and brutal nature, had nothing that could be called true language of their own; but the evil Power had at various times made use of them, teaching them what little they could learn, and even crossing their breed with that of the larger Orcs. Trolls thus took such language as they could from the Orcs, and in the west-lands the Trolls of the hills and mountains spoke a debased form of the Common Westron speech." </sub>(HoME XII,1,ii)

This quote beautifully shows the differences between orcs and trolls, that they are dumber and larger, and generally slower; but also gives the important fact that orcs and trolls could mate. They would have to be biologically 'compatible' and therefore need to have much the same origins. This rules out Ents.

Noxomanus
01-29-2004, 07:55 AM
My vote goes to Trolls as exceptionally big Orcs. Bye Bye to Uruk-Hai as the largest type of Orc.

Kransha
01-29-2004, 08:12 AM
Trolls do seem to be very large orcs, but seem different in many ways. I don't see how they could've been bred from ents or entwives. Originally, they were called stone giants or Torogs, if I remember correctly. They do eat man flesh, very similar to orcs and uruk-hai.

Finwe
01-29-2004, 10:57 AM
In the Appendices of Return of the King, it says that the Trolls could have been "corrupted" in mockery of the Ents. Since the latter race was "made" primarily out of wood, or wood-like materials, the trolls were made out of stone, or stone-like materials. In the darkness that hid all deceit, they could keep their semblance of life, but once they came out in the Sun, which lays bare all deceit and trickery, they reverted back to their original forms, creatures of stone.

lathspell
01-29-2004, 11:29 AM
Correctamundo Finwe!

Burzdol
02-03-2004, 07:03 PM
I always thought they were a mix between big orcs and stone giants(really odd combination). But that's just a theory.

Kransha
02-03-2004, 07:08 PM
Finwe hit the nail on the head (or should I say stone? *absurd drumroll*)

Stone giants are trolls, or torogs, or tarag, or anything else you want to call them. Contrary to the way trolls look in the film, they are not supposed to resemble orcs so much. Trolls are sentient beings spawned of stone, whereas Ents are of wood.

Sharkû
02-04-2004, 02:55 AM
Apart from overly fanciful and therefore hardly concrete ideas presented by Bilbo in The Hobbit, there is nothing which suggests Trolls are made of stone.

Kransha
02-04-2004, 05:58 AM
I meant Stone-Trolls. There is nothing in the books to support that fact, but is seems like it would make sense, considering they were made "in mockery of the ents." Nobody ever sees stone-trolls (stome-giants in the books, except for when they're throwing boulders at Bilbo in the Hobbit, so there's no evidence to support either viewpoint. It may just be a giant unweildy metaphor.