Quote:
Originally Posted by jallanite
Zigūr’s attempted answer seems to me to depend on Gandalf using “Rings of Power” to refer only to Sauronic rings, which I don’t see on further study. And he does not account for Thrór giving up his Ring to Thrįin. See #21 in the thread “The Effect of the Great Ring”.
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Didn't I argue that Thrór was able to pass on his Ring because he was a Dwarf and not a Man?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Zigūr
Perhaps Gandalf knew or assumed that, as a Dwarf, Thrór would be more resistant to some of the effects of the Ring, and thus more capable of passing it on to his son?
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Also I just argued that "Rings of Power" seems to be a vague term with no rigid definition, which seems to refer to different groupings of Rings from usage to usage. I wasn't trying to give a hard and fast answer and I don't think I can.