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#27 | ||||
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Shade of Carn Dûm
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Minas Morgul
Posts: 431
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As far as I remember, it was not Sauron, but Gothmog the Balrog who was head of Morgoth's army. So who of the two was Morgoth's second remains a question.
Also we don't know if Sauron had been friends with Gothmog and other balrogs back in the First Age. They might have been bitter rivals. I am not sure that Sauron himself would fare well if pitted one to one against a Balrog, even the Moria one, much less Gothmog. In the Third Age Sauron was fully incarnated, even self-reincarnated (twice) and that weakens a Maia. The Balrog was likely still a shape-shifter. Sauron might have won, but it would cost him dear. Quote:
Here is also this quote from "The Hunt for the Ring": Quote:
Quote:
Nothing to look forward to, thus the Witch-King must have been much more reluctant to die than any mortal Man. He never fought against a stronger opponent when he could help it. As for mortal Men, they were not as weak as some tend to think. Three Men killed a dragon (Turin, Fram and Bard), yet we know of no elf who had achieved the same. Beren fought Celegorm and Curufin and was in Angband, there were Turin, Tuor Elendil... but you know the story. The Witch-King still had the same body he was born with. Albeit invisible, he had the high stature and strong muscles of a High Numenorean lord - and those were quite similar to Elves: Quote:
I would say he had some chances against the Balrog - at least to make it even.
Last edited by Gordis; 08-27-2008 at 01:45 PM. Reason: "Balrog" spelled wrongly |
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