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Where did all the goblins go?
Forgive me if this has been covered before, or if there's an explanation in the books that I somehow missed?
At the end of the Third Age, after the defeat of Sauron, what became of all the goblins and orcs? Were they bound to Sauron and the ring, and so faded after its destruction? Did they retreat to the deep places of the earth, never to be heard from again? Did they become second-class citizens? I'm curious whether their fate was ever addressed... |
didnt they just scatter all around ME
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I believe a lot retreated to the woods where they were crushed by the Huorns and the Ents...at least after the battle of Helm's Deep. I'm pretty sure many did still retreat to the woods after the fall of Sauron, and they were either consumed by the Ents/Huorns or the soldiers of Gondor. This is all speculation however, I have no evidence...pure speculation.
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Wiped out, as the Renunited Kingdom formed.
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They were hunted down by the reunited kingdom and it's allies, until none could be found but in the deepest places of the world and elsewhere.
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Makes me pity the cute little orcseys...
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Assuming that this is feigned history, one would expect that some goblins, orcses, trolls, and whatnot, survived, or there would be none left to fill the later folklores of the Northern Europeans from approximately 2000 B.C. until such folklores stopped being produced. That would mean no Grendel for Beowulf to fight, for example. So I am supposing that some did escape to the depths of the mountains and to the far nothern wastes beyond the reach of the King of Gondor.
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'Feigned history' :eek: So Middle Earth isn't real then... :(
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Also pure speculation...
This is Mordor, so there are not too many forests nearby besides Ithilien. I am guessing that the fled into Khand and beyond or just hid in the mountain ranges of Mordor. |
...and re-emerged several thousand years later as door-to-door insurance salesmen. :D On a more serious note, I don't really see how it could have been much different to the situation at the end of the First, when Thangorodrim was broken. I could easily imagine nests of them hiding out in more secluded places, probably engaged in petty banditry and thuggishness. |
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Where did all the goblins go, long time passing? Where did all the goblins go, long time ago? Where did all the goblins go? Young girls have picked them everyone. When will they ever learn? When will they ever learn? (But no, I don't want to think what would have to be in the last but one strophe. It's really disgusting.) |
With a united, peaceful kingdom being Aragorn's goal, and with no evil being to rally under, it is likely that the orcs all died. As for crossed myths and such, beings such as Grendel could just be like the Watcher in the Water.
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I bet they fought amongst themselves a little, in the panic of leaderless hordes after an ambush to 'punish' 'stupid' scouts, etc.
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After the destruction of the Ring and it's power over the minds of the Orcs, I can imagine the Orcs of the Misty Mountains becoming useful members of the Reunited Kingdom.
Aragorn's forces would be too strong for them to take up their old ways of making a living. To survive they would have to take up a more honest trade. They could start by opening up their tunnels through the mountains to provide safe, all weather routes for the ever-increasing trade between East and West, for heavy tolls, of course. They could then branch out into providing other services for travellers: a chain of inns along the main roads, ending in a hugh hotel in Fornost; a nation-wide pony-hire service; fast food outlets across the North. Building on their experiences in Isengard and their profits from road-houses, the Orcs could go on to develope steam engines, leading eventually to OrcRail, a transport network spanning the whole of Middle Earth, creating an era of peace and prosperity, binding the Reunited Kingdom to it's neighbours in alliances of mutual trade. The orcs become the glue that holds Middle Earth together. . |
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Ah! Then it starts to make sense to me. And did you hum it before, or after you named the thread? Because this popped up in my mind just after I saw the title.
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But I have proof that orcs outlived Sauron: Tolkien in his Letters to his son Christopher repeatedly referred to "orcs on both sides of the war" and such like; apparently, they merged with the races of Men. :p And Selmo, are you sure you haven't been reading any "Assigned to Mordor" rpgs lately? "Orcs as the glue of society" is just plain hilarious. :D |
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On a serious note, the only hard evidence we seem to have is that orcs were certainly capable of outliving Melkor (when Sauron had also - initially - surrendered). In the absence of any statement either way, it's quite reasonable to assume that if they were capable of outliving Melkor, outliving Sauron would have been a relative doddle. If one were able to pin down JRRT today and put the question to him, I suspect he'd answer either "preposterous! of course they obviously did!" or "preposterous! of course they obviously didn't!" :D Hmmmm - I wonder does "The New Shadow" have anything to say on the matter? Plus I seem to recall either a letter or essay where he said straight up that there would not have been a direct cut off from Sauron's reign to Aragorn's, and that there was still a lot of evil to be rooted out and destroyed. |
I have a hard time beliveing that the orcs was completely killed off by Aragorn and his forces. . .It simply could not be done!
Middle-Earth is just to big, it is not like they where all gathered in one place and could be trapped. There was plenty of places to seek refuge and to hide and if a Balrog can hide for ages then surely small groups of orcs could have done the same. I belive that the orcs was destroyed as a power, but not as a race. They would probably have been scattered into small groups seeking refuge in mountains and such and probably also migrating east. I don't know how long they would survive, but I suppose they would be able to hide for a fair amount of time before dying by sword and because a lack of numbers. Kind of like the Petty-Dwarves. |
Feigned history?
I'm not so sure that orcs don't exist today. You see them pop up from time to time as leaders of places like Iran, Iraq, Venezuela, North Korea...:D
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Well, when you quote Tolkien, maybe it is not only about this, wars or machines, but if I take what he says, then the Orcs are far more common than it seems. Or "Orc-minds", at least. In the Appendix to LotR, in the part about the translation of LotR to English - which means also telling what the Orcs said there - Tolkien wrote:
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I am apparently alone in thinking that Tolkien described the end of the orcs quite well.
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They're all wiped out, the books and notes don't coreograph continuation of their existance.
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It may also have something to do with the fact that Sauron was the one who created the orcs in the first place. Quote:
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Here is a cursory treatment. If you really want to get into some nitty gritty (and delve into the bowels of the site, waaaaay back into its earliest days) click here |
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I think "Like old times" is the key element of this quote. There was once a time when orcs acted as free agents without any "big bosses", and so - unless their nature has been changed dramatically in the interim - they would subsequently be able to do so again. It's also blindingly obvious from this that orcs are - and I must emphasise this - rational free-thinking beings. Whatever version of their origin you may subscribe to, it must go without saying that rational free thought can only derive from Eru. Think of Aule and the Dwarves - when he first created them, they were only able to move and act at his command. Now, this was a small number of Dwarves and one of the mighty of the Valar. Now contrast. Sauron is a Maia, still powerful, but Aule would be off the scale by comparison (in fact, Aule was Sauron's original "master"). And it's not a small number of orcs, it's tens of thousands. So no question about it, the orcs would have easily survived Sauron's downfall, no differently to the Haradrim, Variags or Easterlings. |
This is just what I wanted to say. Mhagain, you saved me the trouble :)
Kuru, I never wanted to start any speculations on Orcs, the Downs have had their share of it. I was only presenting the fact that Orcs, unlike Trolls or spell-enslaved beasts, were not dependant on Sauron. Which mhagain already said pretty brief and clear, I think. |
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Going back to Legate’s statement for a moment… Quote:
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We don’t know (because we are not told) how much of a strain it would be for a Vala to control the will of another being. However, I think about how Melkor “spent his spirit” on the domination of his minions to the point that after the Battle of the Powers Manwë almost didn’t recognize him. After his return to Middle-earth he continued this process until he was a shadow of his former self. This sounds similar to what Eru was warning Aule would happen in his creation of the dwarves (although I think what Melkor was more extreme in that he, in a manner of speaking, broke off bits of himself and made his minions little Melkor’s). What if Sauron was able to tap this Melkor element present in the orcs. That would make it easier for him (a lesser being) to provide direction and control. Once the last being capable of providing this direction disappears, the orcs would wander “mindless” and quickly die out. Quote:
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In a draft letter, Tolkien noted:
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What they did?
They went into politics. Turn on the TV to see them. :D |
I expect that at all times, at least after then breaking of Thangorodrim, a greater or lesser proportion of the Orc population were free agents. Their natural tendency, after all, is towards anarchy and entropy! Even after Sauron hung out the "Grand Re-Opening" sign on Barad-dur, there was a considerable lag time involved in whatever bribes, threats or cajolery were involved in 'recruiting' orc-tribes to the Red Eye, and it's unclear that those of, say, Moria were ever working for him. I expect there were any number of "Avari" Orcs in the remoter parts of Middle-earth even during the War of the Ring. When Sauron went down his surviving Orcs returned to their previous sort of existence.
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