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Defending Rohan during the battle of the Pennor Fields
OOPS! Of course, the title should say the PELENNOR Fields. Can't figure out how to edit the title.
In another thread Would Saruman Have been a Reliable Ally the subject of Rohan defenses after Theoden led his 6,000 to Minas Tirith. Quote:
So how might an attack by Sauron's forces have been countered without immediate ent help? One possibility, split the bulk (3,000 or so of available forces) between the Golden Hall and Helm's Deep. As many as possible of civilians put in the areas between the Hall and Dunharrow, might be defended for a while. A long march with extended lines of supply and commuication would be necessary by sauron's lads to simultaneously attack Helm's Deep (and there would be a limited time (2 weeks or so?) to do so before some relief might come from Minas Tirith. 500-1,000 of the rest of the defenders could be used as a sort of horse infantry (using second or third tier quality horses) to loom around the northern frings of Sauron forces which would be attacking fortresses near the White Mountains. The Golden Hall and many dwellings outside, and some people, would be destroyed but many might be saved. I think Theoden implied some variant of his people, under Eowyn's guidance, surviving in such a way. As for structures destroyed, after World War II places in London like the House of Commons (and much of St. Paul's) were repaired/replaced). Why not do so with Edoras? Is such a plan viable? Any alternate suggestions to deal with threats sans ents? |
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As for the question, I have no idea. :confused: I'm not a very numbers kind of person in terms of dates, distances, and masses. I tend to take these things less literally and more as enhancements of the emotion of the story, so to me it doesn't make any difference how many defenders Edoras had - if it weren't for the friendship the Ents developed with the people, Rohan would have been demolished, and there would have been a Scouring of the Riddermark before Saruman even got to the Shire. And to add the personal aspect of those who are more closely involved with the land - devastation for those who survived the War but found their homes destroyed, perhaps guilt and difficult situation of the leaders (Eomer) for saving another country but failing to save Rohan, a response from Gondor (you saved us, we help you)... This is what comes to my mind when I read that passage. I'm clueless about the technicalities and realism of how things worked out. :) |
Edoras was indefensible. The stronghold for Eastern Rohan was at Dunharrow- where even a small force could hold off an army indefinitely, given sufficient provisions.
But trying to maintain a line of communications across the open plains, in the face of a vast Orc-army? Suicide; a pointless sacrifice of manpower. With the halt/lame/old/boy/women forces at hand, you need every force-multiplier (i.e. walls and cliffs) you can get. Some communications (message, not logistical) could be maintained between Helm's Deep and DH vis the mountain-paths (that's still about 4 days). But then Helm's Deep wouldn't be under much immediate threat, Saruman and the Dunlendings having been neutralized. |
Thanks for ideas on editing titles. I'll give it a try.
As for defending the Mark. One thing to keep in mind, the forces that would have been sent by Sauron would have been second line. I believe the big blocking force was across from Cair Andros, to hold off the Rohirrim. And the orcish irregulars would have been strung out themselves. You'd need a JRRT to work out the details of movement, forces, etc. One interesting scenario for the Dunharrow refugees and defenders (whose total would be in the thousands): It's very defensible (PJ got that right geographically in the LoTR movies) but if they were threatened with being overwhelmed they could in desperation try The Paths of the Dead. After all wouldn't the Army of the Dead have been drawn off by Aragorn to South Gondor? After leaving Aragorn it's possible they finally really died and so it was just a long, dark passage to be traversed by Rohan refugees and perhaps 1-2,000 soldiers. And should the Dead still be able, and interested in opposing passage (which seems unlikely from Aragorn's dismissal of them and their relief at ending their [undead? :) fate), a large group of Rohan people fleeing for their lives would have been a different order of magnitude from one tipsy lord or even a small group of Rangers. |
Although it's not found anywhere in published texts that I recall, the orc-army that invaded Rohan was in fact the one which had attacked Lorien and been repulsed, so it turned southwards over the Limlight instead. I suppose one could speculate that an army based on Dol Guldur was "second-line" compared to those of Mordor.
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Communication is probably not a problem,because the rider of rohan is very fast,and the could possibly outrun sauron's warg and use different path from sauron'armies.and rohan may holed up in hornburg,flee to dunharrow,or go straight to isengard where the ent will protect them.
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There may be spies who are made use of. I'm not sure how much they are used in M-E but I'd think they would definitely be made use of since it's really just a guessing game in war or battle otherwise. Spies are a must. I'd think the Elves would be best at it especially so since they could actually use their abilities to really blend into the enemy. Although they could be found out as Sauron did when he was being careful of spies with Felagund. There might be converted spies within the enemy camp as well that they could send messages through.
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