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Mansoron
12-18-2003, 03:36 PM
has anyone else in past ages challenged a balrog and won? do you have to be a Maiar to be victorious?

Arwen Imladris
12-18-2003, 04:11 PM
Yes others have killed balrogs, always by somehow throwing them down cliffs, however, the person doing the killing usually dies in the attempt.

Mahal
12-18-2003, 05:13 PM
No, all the others were Elfes and not maia spirits. But like Arwen said most died in the attempt, like ecthelion who I tought drowned together with Gothmog lord of the Balrogs.

Meoshi
12-19-2003, 05:45 PM
Three cases of fighting with Balrogs are reported. Two have already been mentioned (Gandalf, Ecthelion), and the third was Glorfindel, who died fighting a Balrog while escaping with refugees from ruined Gondolin.

Legolas
12-20-2003, 12:23 AM
Glorfindel and Ecthelion, Noldorin lords of Gondolin, slew a balrog each, and each died in the process - just as Gandalf did.

Tuor Turambar,Cursed by the Valar
12-20-2003, 11:07 AM
Just wondering- how can elves slay a corrupted maia? they are not as powerful, even though they are elven lords.

Earendilyon
12-20-2003, 11:29 AM
Tuor, just wondering: why do you add 'Cursed by the Valar' to your name? IIRC, Tuor was the only Man (Human and Elvish alike) who was reckoned to be a Vala! Or is this just a typo for "Túrin Turambar etc"? In that case, his whole family was Doomed, but only by a fromer Vala by the name of Morgoth.

<font size=1 color=339966>[ 12:46 PM December 20, 2003: Message edited by: Earendilyon ]

Tuor Turambar,Cursed by the Valar
12-20-2003, 11:51 AM
To confuse people like you. smilies/evil.gif
Not a typo, this is my name. It is basically nonsense, but it sounds interesting.

Eöl
12-20-2003, 11:53 AM
to answer tuor's question :
i think they were equal or less powerfull than the elven lords just because of their corruption. Agreed, they had great power and it waxed and waned with melko's but i think their power lessened by their ensaring,but also in that time the Noldoli were mighty indeed.

But then again, were the Gondothlim that strong? Because in BOLT Rog slays alot Balrogs.

Mahal
12-20-2003, 01:26 PM
And the elves were also stronger because they still had the light of the trees in their eyes.

Finwe
12-20-2003, 02:12 PM
Rog is a fairly controversial character because he is described as slaying several Balrogs, whereas much stronger warriors like Ecthelion and Glorfindel fought one, and still died while killing them. Unless there are different "grades" of Balrogs, with different levels of strength, I don't think that Rog could have slain many Balrogs. Most likely, he would have been able to slay the "weaker" ones.

Eöl
12-20-2003, 02:17 PM
hm, is it stated that Glorfindel and Ecthelion were stronger? because it is said that Rog was of a house(don't exactly remember the name) with alot of miners and escaped thralls from melko and they were the strongest ?

correct me if i'm wrong finwe(i'm learning from this smilies/biggrin.gif )

Finwe
12-20-2003, 02:37 PM
True, Rog was of a very strong House, but Ecthelion was one of the greatest captains of Gondolin, which is shown by his guardianship of the last gate. Only one of the strongest could be trusted with that post, and since Ecthelion had charge of it, I assume that he was one of the strongest. As for Glorfindel, I admit, it is an assumption. Perhaps it was mere chance that while they were fighting, the Balrog fell off of the cliff, I'm not sure.

Maédhros
12-20-2003, 03:05 PM
But then again, were the Gondothlim that strong? Because in BOLT Rog slays alot Balrogs.
The issue of Balrogs at the Fall of Gondolin is interesting. In the Tale of the Fall of Gondolin, there are hundreds of Balrogs.
From the Tale
yet others were creatures of pure flame that writhed like ropes of molten metal, and they brought to ruin whatever fabric they came nigh, and iron and stone melted before them and became as water, and upon them rode the Balrogs in hundreds; and these were the most dire of all those monsters which Melko devised against Gondolin.
But that conception changed of course:
ibid.
The idea that Morgoth disposed of a 'host' of Balrogs endured long, but in a late note my father said that only very few ever existed -- 'at most seven'.
So we have an evolution of the number of Balrogs. It appears that only Gothmog and the Balrog slained by Glorfindel were the ones who perished in the Tale and the others were to be discarded.

Regarding Rog:
ibid.
as the Noldoli sing yet, and many of the Orcs were borne backward into the fires below; but the men of Rog leapt even upon the coils of the serpents and came at those Balrogs and smote them grievously, for all they had whips of Same and claws of steel, and were in stature very great. They battered them into nought, or catching at their whips wielded these against them, that they tore them even as they had aforetime torn the Gnomes; and the number of Balrogs that perished was a marvel and dread to the hosts of Melko, for ere that day never had any of the Balrogs been slain by the hand of Elves or Men.
It seems to me that these balrogs cannot be taken to be of the later conception. In the examples of Echtelion and Glorfindel the Tale is especific by stating that it was a single Balrog, unlike with the case of the Men of Rog.
Also in the Tale, Tuor slew five balrogs too, which cannot be taken to be of the later conception IMO.

Earendilyon
12-22-2003, 10:22 AM
Tuor, I see you understand smilies/smile.gif
It is basically nonsense

Oroaranion
12-22-2003, 03:13 PM
Is this the same Glorfindel that came across Frodo and Strider? Or was that another Elf with a very similar name?

Finwe
12-22-2003, 03:23 PM
It was the same Glorfindel. He alone of all the Elves was sent back to Middle-earth, to help in the fight against Sauron. I'm assuming that he was sent back because he sacrifced his life so that the future of Beleriand (i.e. Earendil) could be saved. Also, Elves are given a choice, after their period of "atonement" in the Halls of Mandos is over. They can either stay in the Halls of Mandos, or be "reincarnated" into bodies identical to the ones that they "bore" in their previous life. Glorfindel apparently chose the latter, and was thus able to come to Middle-earth to help the Free Peoples fight Sauron.

Lost One
12-22-2003, 06:29 PM
Inside Middle-earth, the LOTR Glorfindel is indeed the same as the Gondolin character. Outside (as it were) it was a bit of a fix-up, as I understand it. Tolkien reused the name, and then retrospectively decided that they were the same character. He might have done this also with another reused name - Legolas - but didn't. This makes Glorfindel an interesting character, and possibly one with unfulfilled potential - so far as I'm aware, he was the only reborn elf to return from Valinor to Middle-earth (quite how he returned I'm not sure - are we ever told? Perhaps he came with the Istari). This would suggest some major role or fate, which never in fact happened.