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Them Dwarven folk.
I'm sorry if this has already been discussed before...but here it goes. I've always been fasinated by the dwarves, actually maybe even my favorite race. Partially because I like Gimli, and also the story that was told at the Council of Elrond about the Dwarves denying Sauron's offer. So this thread is dedicated to all dwarven discussions.
First I wanted to talk about Dis, I believe the only female dwarf mentioned in Tolkien's works. The dwarves seemed to me like a declining race, and I never read where dwarves married someone from another race. Afterall, that is sort of a scary thought I mean Gimli, marrying, and having children with Galadriel...or Arwen? Anyway, I wanted to know, because I could be missing something but was there another female dwarf mentioned besides Dis? And if anyone for sure knew that dwarves were a declining race? Another thing I wanted to talk about was Erebor. I've always thought of Erebor as one of the stronger fortresses of Middle-Earth. I mean after the dwarves had went and hid in Erebor, not even Sauron's forces broke through, but of course I don't think Sauron had a 40 000 man assault on Erebor like he did on Minas Tirith. As yes, I'm kicking myself, because I still haven't read the hobbit. But any information on Erebor, or description would be of help to me. |
Yes, I believe the appendices say that Dis was the only female dwarf who was in any of the Middle-earth tales. I believe the Dwarves were a declining race, since there were so few Dwarf-women and many Dwarf-men never married anyway. It goes along somewhat similar lines as the Elves -- as the dominion of Men grew the other races began to diminish.
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I have to agree with you, Boromir88, they are a fascinating folk - brave, tough, likable, with their own flaws like the other races, in their case a love of gold -but then, they're craftsmen and can't help loving beautiful things. |
Dwarf Gold.
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I think another thing fascinating about dwarves is their friendships. PJ makes it seem like all elves hate dwarves. In fact most Elves I believe were atleast respectful to eachother. Elrond and the elves of Rivendell showed their kindness to Gloin, and respected the dwarves. It seemed Noldor elves had this connection with the dwarves, coming from Aule, they shared an understanding, which is for the reason for Galadriel's kindness to Gimli. Where the Sindarin or Silvan elves were more hateful towards dwarves, as we get to see with Thranduil, and then with Haldir. I think what PJ missed was the relationship between Gimli and Legolas was something never seen between and Elf and Dwarf. But yet that doesn't mean dwarves were hated by elves, when in fact it seemed like most elves atleast respected the dwarves. Then we get to see Gloin's kindness towards Frodo during Elrond's supper. As it says Gloin and Frodo talked the whole time. Gloin had deep respect for Bilbo and of course would like Bilbo's heir. |
[ I think what PJ missed was the relationship between Gimli and Legolas was something never seen between and Elf and Dwarf. But yet that doesn't mean dwarves were hated by elves, when in fact it seemed like most elves atleast respected the dwarves.
Then we get to see Gloin's kindness towards Frodo during Elrond's supper. As it says Gloin and Frodo talked the whole time. Gloin had deep respect for Bilbo and of course would like Bilbo's heir.[/QUOTE] There is, of course, that feud that started centuries ago when a certain woodland Elven King didn't pay up for a necklace... :) It gets a brief mention in THE HOBBIT and, of course, in the HOME books. Then there's the mention of "evil woken in the mountains" by what is perceived as Dwarvish greed. In the end, though, I suspect there's a rivalry between craftsmen - both Elves and Dwarves are good with their hands. But you're right that the problem is largely with Sindarin and Silvan Elves. As for Gloin, if you have a read of THE HOBBIT, it took him a while to respect Bilbo, at whom he sneered at first - only Balin was kind from the start, which is one reason why those of us who have read THE HOBBIT get choked up by that scene in Moria. |
[QUOTE=Boromir88]First I wanted to talk about Dis, I believe the only female dwarf mentioned in Tolkien's works. [QUOTE]
actually 4 of thorins companions were dwarf female just that since the hobbit is described from bilbos point of wiew he thinks they are male. |
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obloquy :rolleyes:
Mahedros, I remember from a conversation SpM and I had where he said this, and if that's where you happened to see where some dwarves in The Hobbit were females, I think you should know that The Saucepan Man was only joking. |
I remember when I first read Terry Pratchett's novels and he had female dwarves with beards I thought he was just having fun with the fact that all of Tolkien's Dwarves seem to be male, but imagine my surprise to find a passage somewhere in the HOME books where it was actually stated that female Dwarves were bearded! There is a mention, anyway, that you can't tell the males from the females, who rarely travel and when they do, they look like the males, so people assume they are. Given that all the Dwarves we meet seem to have beards,it's the logical conclusion that the women (including Dis?) DO have beards! :D
I think, anyway, that it was all a matter of Tolkien's Boys' Club attitudes. He just didn't think. The first time he writes about the ancestors of the Dwarves, they're all male. Another (later?) version has them put to sleep with their mates. Durin is the only one who doesn't have a mate, yet somehow he has a line of descendants who are very proud of the fact. Tolkien's fiction is filled with "the fathers of the fathers of ..." whoever. The only time it seems to occur to him that you do need both genders is in the matter of the Ents. Ah, well. I love him anyway. And for the record, in my moments of whimsy, i have always speculated as to whether any of Thorin's companions might just have been female ... :p |
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I have got the impression that dwarf caravans (merchants) pass through Shire and sell things there. That would make them familiar to hobbits at some degree. (In one of the first chapters of LotR it says that dwarves have talked with hobbits; given them news. It leaves the impression that it wasn't the first time hobbits had talks with dwarves.) edit: And, dwarves had to have some trade with the hobbits, by the way. Otherwise they couldn't have pipeweed. edit2: Unless they bought it from Bree... |
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This was because they were both created by Eru Iluvatar (God) to the same physical pattern. Dwarves were created independently by Aule, one of the Valar. Aule could not copy Eru's creations exactly so Dwarven DNA was significantly different from that of Men and Elves, too diferent for them to mate succesfully. Hobbits, as a sub-group of Mankind, could, in theory, inter-breed with Men and Elves. A scary thought, though not as scary as Dwarves and Elves. . |
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Not to mention the sad looks on some elf girls' faces when the Fellowship left Rivendell (as observed on the dvd by Billy Boyd and Dominic Monaghan). :D Oh, and as to above dwarf/elf disagreements. even though I believe the petty dwarves were exiled from dwarfdom their initially being hunted by elves (until they found the petty dwarves weren't animals) could have fueled the dwarf/elf enmity. |
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I think I remember reading somewhere that when the Dwarves saw what the Elve were doing to the Petty-Dwarves, they took the in and they no longer were exiles. Considering the fact they were Dwarves too, and we all know how proud they were of their race. It makes logical sense.
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Wow it's amazing, this is the 2nd or 3rd thread I ever did (so it's over 2 years old) and it's gotten more responses now than when I first started it. :p
I imagine the dwarves slaying the great Thingol probably put a big damper on their relationship. But again, it wasn't like all elves hated all dwarves. The Elves of Rivendell and the Noldor Elves seemed to always get along with the dwarves. |
Wonderful thread Boromir! This is definatly worth reviving.:cool:
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However, in the aborted 1960 rewrite of The Hobbit, Tolkien tells us that Dwarves often did transient or contract- work in the Shire, especially in roadbuilding and the like; and that there was an inn on the East Road which specially catered to Dwarves.*
There is also Gandalf's comment in the Quest of Erebor to the effect of "you may think the Shire-folk simple, because they are generous and do not haggle....," which implies that commerce went on between them. (Query: who made Bilbo's clock?) EDIT: * Did it serve rat with ketchup? |
William, I had the same thought some time ago and built the Dwarven origins of the Hobbits' clocks into a (canonical Hobbit) fan fiction I began writing. Alas for its completion, it remains on the back burner in hopes of being continued sometime...
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Zxcvbn, that's a very old post of mine so I'm not sure, but I think I meant that Hobits have the best relations to Dwarves (= they had better relations to dwarves than humans - except Breelanders - or to Elves - even though that can be argued as they hardly had any dealings with each other). I agree that from the Dwarves' perspective, they had best relations with the Dalemen. This sounds horribly confusing - do I make sense at all?
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Hobbits are related to the Pukel-men or Druedain, so many thought them very simple and very backwards in technology and knowledge (which they were, because they had less time to imrove than any of the more advanced races. Only since the third age, I think.)
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I was thinking about making a thread about this, but I thought it better to keep this thread revived.
What do we know about Dwarves wielding bows? I know Thorin wielded a bow in the Hobbit, when the Dales people came to get their fair share of the treasure. Does anybody know any other references regarding darf bows? |
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However, I think something may be in the Silmarillion. Definitely the Petty-Dwarves had their own history with bows, but aside from that, maybe the other Dwarves used them somewhere in the battles? I'd have to look. |
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I wouldn't be surprised if dwarves had some mushroom farms. Easy to grow even inside a mountain and tasty. And surely there are some underground lakes that provide them with fish as well. However, given the dwarves' physique (really, you can't get those muscles just through genes), I think they must eat some meat as well. Granted, there's protein also in fish, but a fish-mushroom diet would be quite boring. Personally I can see dwarves hunting (with bows, slings or something similar). And what about cattle herds? They can graze on the mountains in the summer and don't need that many people to watch over them anyway. Dried or salted meat doesn't go bad very quickly, and if need be more animals can be slaughtered during the winter. I'm not sure if they could have any animals inside the mountain, though. Could they stand the lack of daylight (or could the dwarves stand the smell)? Well, maybe goats, hens or something? Or now that I think it, even cows. Probably they would enjoy their lives better than animals in factory farms these days, anyway. edit: crossed with uncle Leggie |
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Maybe they were just poor at farming and herding? They certainly didn't seem to have much harmony with nature. Quote:
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Maybe Terry Prachett is right and dwarves really do have a fondness for eating rat. :D
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And as to the Dwarves of the Blue Mountains - Shire is very far away to be the main source of food and I really can't see there being much of friendly communication between the Elves and the Dwarves of the Lindon area. It makes sense they had some communication and trade, but it'd be very odd if the Dwarves got most of their food from the Elves - as the two races didn't like each other very much in late times. |
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And as for the Shire being too far way for trade, how do you think the Dwarves knew of pipe weed? |
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No, they had to be able to produce food also on their own. Quote:
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** And now that I think it, mushroom farming sounds even more and more probable. A union between Aulë and Yavanna- things that grow underground and are eaten by Aulë's folk. How romantic. :) |
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As to the qoutes you provided, they are indeed very familiar to me, but I think they - at least the latter one - only refer to the First Age. So they're useless when arguing about the Third Age (which we're discussing, right? :)). Quote:
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