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Do dwarf women have beards?!
It is said in the appendixes of LotR about dwarf women:
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I have always assumed that they did have beards. In fact I thought that Tolkien explicitly stated this somewhere but maybe not.
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It is a little know fact that, unbeknownst to Bilbo, four of Thorin's company were in fact female.
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I must admit it surprised me ..... just tttooooooooooooooo wierd... but it is true and is in either UT or HoME .....I will check the ref... my guess would be "The Peoples of Middle Earth". I hate to think what Aule was thinking of..... I mean beards are horrible even on men...
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Perhaps the likeness in appearance between dwarf men and women is due to the fact that other races (Elves, Men, Hobbits, etc..) were generally unaware that Dwarves REALLY liked their beards, and ALWAYS had them....
I mean, perhaps they occasionally saw a Dwarf without a beard, but simply thought it was a more civilised clean-shaven one? After all, the Dwarves were pretty secretive, so it's unlikely that they would have given away the secret... That's the only thought I've got. Other than that, the only thought that comes to mind is that Dwarf women actually DID have beards, scary as the thought is... |
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However, my main point is that these are the only two ideas that I can come up with that would explain Tolkien's statement. Any ideas from someone else are fine with me. I'm certainly not tied to either theory... |
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Appendix A, 'Annals of the Kings and Rulers;' III - Durin's Folk. |
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Yes, dwarf women had beards. They also, like dwarf-men, had enormous breasts.
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Yes, Tolkien did state it clear and without doubt: female Dwarves had beards!
[“The History of Middle-Earth“; volume 11: “The War of the Jewels“; part II: “The Later Quenta Silmarillion”; chapter 13: “Concerning the Dwarves”]: Quote:
Respectfully Findegil |
Thanks for answers
Okay then... Sounds disgusting but I can imagine that... :D
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Hmm... forgot about that passage. You'd think it would stick in one's mind, especially after reading it as many times as I'm sure I have...
Okay, female dwarves have beards. I can handle that. Still, I'm REALLY glad I'm not a dwarf.... |
Sorry to bring it up, but I saw the ROTK extended movie, and there was a hilarious drinking game scene in Edoras. If you've can it, see it, for makes an amazing comment about this topic.
"IT IS THE DWARVES THAT GO SWIMMING- WITH LITTLE HAIRY WOMEN!!!""""" |
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It does raise some other fairly boggling questions which probably should be left well alone... Edit .. for some reason when I posted this the screen hadn't brought up the last posts which raised some of those disturbing questions! |
I've just been more about this...
If four of Thorin's companions were women and it's not mentioned in the story itself, how many of the dwarves we've coma along could be women? Just thinking about all dwarves in Tolkien's books... :) Well, seriously, probably no one, because there aren't very much female main characters in Tolkien's books and those dwarves mentioned are usually kings or great warriors and not many of Tolkien's women are "warheros" (except Éowyn and so on...). So the question I thought about: The Seven Fathers of the Dwarves. Some of them were women? Dwarves are, in my opinion, very patriarchaic (?) people. So some of their most highly regarded ancestors being women doesn't sound very smart. But some of them, at least one, had to be women/woman, because otherwise the dwarves would have died to extinction, because men can't reproduce without women. Any ideas about this? |
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That sounds correct to me, though I haven't ever heard about it.
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i find this kind of odd since it is written that durin woke upp long before all the other dwarves |
Hair, hair, hair, long beautiful hair, flow it show it long as God can grow it
Hmmm. What might have inspired or prompted Tolkien to imagine or create bearded dwarven women?
Was he conceiving of some kind of sexual boundary shifting? Both the Ents and the Dwarves apparently as races 'die out' and both have female members who are somehow beyond the pale of female norms. The entwives are said to prefer too much control or power over the natural world. Dwarven women with their beards are indistinguishable from dwarven males and few in number. And if this is the case, does the disappearance of the race suggest a comment on this boundary shifting? Or is Tolkien merely drawing upon old legends to populate his race? Why did Terry Pratchett give his female dwarves beards--a nod to Tolkien? This appears to be a feature of fantasy. What's with the cultural meaning of hair in Middle-earth? See also Bearded Women in Wikipedia |
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Maybe Aule couldn't remember this little detail, that male and female differ in the face. Consequently he gave both a beard. In every case I have the meaning, that Tolkien wanted to express that Dwarves are different from the other Children of Ilúvatar. And this theory fits well with the reasons of Aule creating the Dwarves (and his lacking memory of the vision.) |
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EDIT: Just found this. Relevant part (possibly) is the story of the chain made by the Dwarves to restrain the Wolf Fenris: Quote:
At least, this seems to be where Tolkien got the idea for Dwarf Women having beards. 'Unless, of course, you know different....' |
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And I'm not sure it would include hairy hobbit feet. :D |
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