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Old 08-27-2005, 07:28 PM   #1
littlemanpoet
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Originally Posted by Elladan and Elrohir
Don't really have anything to add to this discussion except to say that there were eight palantiri, not seven. Granted, only seven made it to Middle-earth.
You're joking, right? You had better be joking, because we're messing around with the rescue of the palantiri in Prisoner of Numenor rpg, and if this is so, it messes everything up! .... that is, as long as we're trying to be canonical. You, um, are joking, aren't you?
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Old 08-27-2005, 09:30 PM   #2
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I thought we had Canonicity safely shipped off to Mordor. With her gone, there's naught to worry about.

On a more serious (and slightly more related) note... there were eight palantirs!?! Are you sure? I always thought... "seven stars, seven stones, one white tree". Did I miss out on something?
And speaking of numbers... is there a biblical importance for "9"? We've got our holy trinity of elven rings, our perfect number of dwarven rings, our ultimate power source of one ring... and then nine. Interesting though, that the "holy trinity" bit goes to the Elves, who are more spiritual beings than Man. The "perfect number" goes to the perfectionists that are dwarves, and the "one" is for the one force that can make or break existance in Middle Earth.
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Old 08-27-2005, 09:40 PM   #3
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"is there a biblical importance for "9"?" ~Feanor of the Peredhil

I'm not sure of a biblical importance...but again 9 is three sets of three (three squared)...a trinity of trinities...so on and so forth...rather special in that way...

Though as for it's use specifically with the rings I always assumed it was so that they added up to 20.
3+7=10
1+9=10
10+10=20

Is there any special importance in 20 then? Or, specifically with the rings again, is there any importance to the fact that the halfs (the sets of ten) were elf/dwarf and Sauron/man? (though that second question's probably more off-topic than should be discussed here.)
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Old 08-28-2005, 01:43 AM   #4
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On a more serious (and slightly more related) note... there were eight palantirs!?! Are you sure? I always thought... "seven stars, seven stones, one white tree". Did I miss out on something?
Well, seven or eight palantiri could be considered canonical. In the Palantiri section of UT, CT notes that in some of his father's manuscripts on the subject, it is mentioned that there is a Master Stone in Tol Eressëa. Presumably this was used by the elves to communicate with the Faithful of Númenor. Also, since it was Fëanor who made the palantiri, and having seven sons, it seems logical that he would have had one for himself as a sort of family intercom system.

But, CT mentions that in other of JRRT's manuscripts, there is no mention of the Master Stone. So it's back to the old question of which unpublished manuscript which Tolkien left should be considered Canonical. In any event only 7 palantiri ever came to Middle-earth.
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Old 08-28-2005, 02:38 PM   #5
littlemanpoet
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In any event only 7 palantiri ever came to Middle-earth.
And therefore only 7 palantiri ever were in Númenor. Thanks for the clarification.
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Old 09-06-2005, 07:46 AM   #6
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Done!

171/111 I hope you didn't want me to simlify.

...wait? this wasn't about Algebra? You were actually talking about something important? Well...while you're here...



3 and 7 look like biggies. I don't know if anyone has mentioned it, but 3 seems to have a somewhat more interesting role in my opinoin. Ever read a fairy tail? Chances are, there will be three of something. Three pigs, Goldilox, etc. i remember finding out the answer to why this is, but I have forgotten it I guess three is just one of those magical numbers.

For seven, I have nothing more to add, except that, maybe Tolkien wanted his book to get published, so he put little "lucky charms", if you will, throughout his book, to try and make it sell better. Just an guess (and a bad one at that).

I wanna see that 8th Palantir
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