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Old 09-30-2012, 02:24 PM   #1
Elmo
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What did boromir do in rivendell?

He had no friends, no one to to talk to, he spent about a whole month there, what did he do there? Wake up, have a bit of elvish beef, a few ales then go to sleep. Must have been a lonely nevermind a boring existence even in Rivendell, no wonder he didn't get on that well with the rest of the Walkers. Poor Boromir
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Old 09-30-2012, 08:46 PM   #2
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Well, after the Council of Elrond, he might well have sat in on the planning sessions Gandalf and Aragorn surely had. And speaking of Aragorn, I can see Boromir being curious about the line of Isildur and how they had survived, so maybe he passed the time talking to Aragorn, Gandalf, and perhaps Elrond about that.
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Old 09-30-2012, 10:58 PM   #3
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Well he was a bit haughty wasn't he..."we in Gondor".... this "we in Gondor" that... I am sure there was a lot he could learn if he weren't too proud and I don't see why there was noone to talk to ... Dunedain, elves, dwarves. If he were too grand to talk to Glorfindel and co .. more fool him.

Since he had travelled so far alone I expect he would have been glad of the rest and any company going.
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Old 10-01-2012, 07:24 AM   #4
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One thing he wasn't doing, was playing around with the shards of Narsil.

Otherwise, well, "[Elrond's] house was perfect, whether you liked food, or sleep, or work, or story-telling, or singing, or just sitting and thinking, best, or a pleasant mixture of them all."

Remember, Boromir had some recuperating to do; his journey through Minhiriath and Eriador had been arduous, in fact remarkable, a real Bear Grylls feat.
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Old 10-01-2012, 02:43 PM   #5
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Interesting question, and it brings up another interesting question: if Boromir had been told by Denethor that Elrond was legitimate and trustworthy then why was Boromir so skeptical of Galadriel? He was almost as hesitant to enter Lorien as he was to pass through Moria!

Did Boromir not know of the close relationship and allegiance between Lorien and Rivendell? Or maybe Elrond's history of aiding the Dunedain of Arnor was known in Minas Tirith, whereas Lothlorien was more distant, mysterious, and difficult to comprehend. You'd think someone would have provided a little Elves 101 during a month in Rivendell and another several weeks' travel with Gandalf, Aragorn and Legolas ...
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Old 10-01-2012, 03:32 PM   #6
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Interesting question, and it brings up another interesting question: if Boromir had been told by Denethor that Elrond was legitimate and trustworthy then why was Boromir so skeptical of Galadriel? He was almost as hesitant to enter Lorien as he was to pass through Moria!
While it's possible (or even likely) that Minas Tirith received some news from Elves of Lórien from time to time, the average Gondorian would still have harbored some wariness about Elves in general. That would be in keeping with the Third Age theme of a gradual estrangement and drawing away of the Elves in Middle-earth from the other "speaking peoples". Add in dimly recalled myths and half-truths about Lórien and its Lady remembered in Gondor and Boromir's uneasiness is explained. Boromir wasn't exactly thrilled about Elrond, either. It was only the inability to interpret a strange dream that had the ring of a prophesy that induced Denethor to send Boromir to Rivendell.

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Did Boromir not know of the close relationship and allegiance between Lorien and Rivendell? Or maybe Elrond's history of aiding the Dunedain of Arnor was known in Minas Tirith, whereas Lothlorien was more distant, mysterious, and difficult to comprehend. You'd think someone would have provided a little Elves 101 during a month in Rivendell and another several weeks' travel with Gandalf, Aragorn and Legolas ...
Well, Boromir may not have been in on all the planning. He had no knowledge of Moria, after all. He may have simply not looked past the planned crossing over the Dimrill Stair.
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Old 10-01-2012, 03:49 PM   #7
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We know that Boromir, unlike his father and brother was not so interested in lore and was in some ways alike to the men of Rohan who have a great suspicion of Lorien. Even Faramir who is more learned and perhaps open to other cultures is wary of Lorien. Maybe Rivendell having been forgotten by most was less threatening than the closer realm that was the subject of rumour and superstition.

This prejudice is reinforced by Galadriel perceiving his developing desire for the Ring.

Boromir certainly doesn't embrace his alleged distant elven ancestry..
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Old 10-01-2012, 09:23 PM   #8
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Tolkien seems to be imagining that Men told tales of Lothlórien and its Elvish ruler similar to medieval tales of Fays who often appear as deceptive.

Compare Morgain the Fay in medieval tales who in some stories is Arthur’s sister who takes Arthur away after his last battle to heal him and who in some stories is a villainous would-be murderess, hostile to Arthur and to all his knights.

It would have been nice if Tolkien had actually told some of the tales supposedly current in Gondor and Rohan about Lothlórien and Galadriel.

Medieval fays often appear as seductresses who make mortals into their lovers. In some tales this is mostly represented as a good thing and in some tales it is not so. One might imagine a tale of a knight of Gondor who in error wandered into Lothlórien and met Galadriel who restored him to his own world, and how forever after the knight had little interest in his earthly duties and no interest in taking a wife but thought only of Galadriel. Galadriel as la belle dame sans merci unintentionale!

Faramir, while mostly not believing such tales as he knows, does believe that it is perilous to Men to seek Elves. Faramir and Sam both link Boromir’s lust for the Ring with the almost-temptation of Galadriel, is if Boromir was already tempted but it was Galadriel’s testing which (unintentionally) fully brought out Boromir’s lust for the Ring.

The same supposed Elvish ancestry was shared by Ar-Pharazôn. Anárion, possibly one of Boromir’s ancestors, was brother to Isildur who was the first Man to be tempted by the Ring, so far as we are told. But I understand what you are saying and do not disagree.
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Old 10-02-2012, 03:06 AM   #9
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Ar Pharazon? I was thinking of Mithrellas elf of Lothlorien and supposed ancestress of the Lords of Dol Amroth , not the "known" Elvish strain in the line of Elendil and other descendants of Elros. And I didn't relate the Elf blood to being tempted.

Interesting that Faramir seems to know what happened even before he knows about the Ring, "What did she say to you, the Lady that dies not? What did she see? What woke in your heart then?.." .


It is possible that the verse Gandalf says "in Dwimordene, in Lorien.." originated from Rohan and Gandalf was reminding of them rather than informing. Faramir comments that the Men of Rohan "shun the Elves and speak of the Goldenwood with Great Dread". I think in Cirion and Eorl in UT the host of Eorl is "protected" by the mist emanating from Lorien. It may be that although this was benevolent it was sufficiently uncanny to be a basis of the widespread suspicion of Lorien and its inhabitants. We know that they have an oral tradition and so stories are more likely to get distorted as they pass that way rather than being written.
The Rohirrim are a more superstitious lot on the whole - using terms like devilment, devilry, devil's mirk seems to be a feature of their language.
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Old 10-02-2012, 08:11 AM   #10
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It seems that in contemporary Gondor almost nothing was known of Rivendell; according to Boromir, when he asked about the dream-verse ("Seek for the Sword that was Broken/In Imladris it dwells") all his father had was "that Imladris was of old the name among the Elves of a far northern dale, where Elrond the Halfelven dwelt, greatest of loremasters." I don't think Gondor would have been inherently mistrustful of Elros' brother, but it does seem that there hadn't been a family reunion in recent centuries! Notice that neither Denethor nor anybody else even knew where the place was: "long have I wandered by roads forgotten, seeking the house of Elrond, of which many had heard, but few knew where it lay."

As to Lorien, one gets the impression that it was decidedly unwelcoming to outsiders; in fact, aside from Aragorn when had a Man last been admitted? Even other Elves weren't frequent visitors; Celeborn tells Legolas "Too seldom do my kindred journey hither from the North."
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Old 10-02-2012, 08:19 AM   #11
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You'd think Boromir would have liked to learn of his great-great-great(etc.) grandfather from his uncle Elrond. And of course tales of Numenor. Of course, there's that Aragorn problem to be taken care of (sort of like taking care of that Jim Rockford- tv series- problem).
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Old 10-02-2012, 09:46 AM   #12
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It seems that in contemporary Gondor almost nothing was known of Rivendell; As to Lorien, one gets the impression that it was decidedly unwelcoming to outsiders; in fact, aside from Aragorn when had a Man last been admitted? Even other Elves weren't frequent visitors; Celeborn tells Legolas "Too seldom do my kindred journey hither from the North."
Rivendell wasn't easy to find even if you knew fairly closely its location, no doubt protected by one of those quirks of geography that mean you can't see it for looking. Even Gandalf, in The Hobbit, needs to look for the markers. It may well have been that Boromir and even Legolas were guided in the last stages by Rangers or Elves on watch outside the valley. Certainly a half elf far away and akin might seem less threatening than a full elf woman "on the doorstep" - and there may well be something in jallanite's comment about fays if the story of Beruthiel. Minas Tirith, even by Tolkien's standards is an excessively male environment, by the time the reader gets there the only women present are the likes of Ioreth and until Sauron falls the only one to enter is disguised as a man! Maybe they do feel particularly threatened by a feminine power. And now I find myself thinking of the realms of Middle Earth as Oxford colleges with the ladies' establishments kept safely on the fringes!

That said Middle Earth is sparsely populated and any interraction is limited - even the Shire and Bree less than a day's ride apart have become strangers. Lorien and Thranduil have the menace of Dol Guldur separating them.
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Old 10-02-2012, 03:43 PM   #13
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Minas Tirith, even by Tolkien's standards is an excessively male environment, by the time the reader gets there the only women present are the likes of Ioreth and until Sauron falls the only one to enter is disguised as a man! Maybe they do feel particularly threatened by a feminine power. And now I find myself thinking of the realms of Middle Earth as Oxford colleges with the ladies' establishments kept safely on the fringes
Bree contains no women so far as we are shown. Rivendell contains only one woman, Arwen, so far as we are shown. Balin’s kingdom in Moria contained no dwarf-women, so far as we are told. All of Lothlórien contains only one woman, Galadriel, so far as we are shown. All of Rohan contains only one woman, Éowyn, so far as we are shown. The Ents are all male, having lost their she-ents. Mordor contains no women, so far as we are shown, unless we count Ungoliant as barely inside Mordor instead of barely outside it. Minas Tirith contains only one named woman, Ioreth, so far as we are told. Ioreth and unnamed women work in the House of Healing under the supervision of a male Warden.

I don’t see that “Minas Tirith, even by Tolkien′s standards, is an excessively male environment.” It is just the norm. Comparatively Tom Bombadil was living in a harim.

Would it have made a difference if Tolkien had been employed and lived in something more like a modern university in which many women worked at the same level that he did and some of them produced works of superb scholarship? Merry and Pippin might as well be Amy and Rory from the recent Doctor Who television stories. There is no real reason why at least one of the main Hobbits could not have been female.
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Old 10-02-2012, 04:41 PM   #14
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Originally posted by Jallanite:

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unless we count Ungoliant as barely inside Mordor instead of barely outside it.
I'm guessing you mean Shelob?

But I get your point.
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Old 10-02-2012, 05:26 PM   #15
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That isn't actually the case. We know that the cloaks of the company were woven by Galadriel and her maidens, Rohan has women - there is a camp in the Hold of Dunharrow which houses the exiles from Edoras "women and children and old men". and in Underharrow and Upbourne "where many sad faces of women looked out from dark doors". Bree had children which necessitates women somewhere. Balin's party may have had women but the dwarves by their culture would not advertise it and how could anyone else tell given the nature of Dwarf women.

So yes I find it quite easy to distinguish between places that are ruled by women (Lorien) or have high profile royal women (Rohan and Rivendell) and places that must have had women (Bree) and somewhere from which the women have been evacuated other than those working for the healers (and the only named one basically a figure of ridicule).

Minas Tirith not only has no woman of significance but the last one "withered in the guarded city, as a flower of the seaward vales set upon a barren rock". Minas Tirith has few children, few gardens, the claim of Arvedui was refused because "in Gondor this heritage is reckoned through sons only"
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Old 10-02-2012, 10:05 PM   #16
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I'm guessing you mean Shelob?
Oops! My error.

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That isn't actually the case.
Yes, I was exaggerating, but only slightly.

The problem is that Tolkien may be seen as naively sexist, writing an heroic romance in part based on medieval tales that are also sexist because the society was sexist and the authors were almost all male. For most of his life Tolkien lived in a society in which it was taken for granted that even bus drivers and postal workers were all male.

But since The Lord of the Rings is arguably the third most popular book ever written (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_best-selling_books ), it seems that this supposed sexism has not hurt the sales much. I suspect it is because it is not really sexism at all.

Partly The Lord of the Rings gets away with it because Tolkien personally appears not to have had any problems with women and partly because a good writer can get away with anything and partly because he is so obviously concerned with the morality of his characters and partly because he writes Galadriel and Éowyn so strongly.

Given all that, and given that Tolkien nowhere proposes that any real or fictional society would be improved by females being given less voice than males, it is not worth making much of it. Those who try don’t get very far. Rightly so I think.
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Old 10-03-2012, 12:20 AM   #17
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It's as true in Arda as in ME, "This is a man's world" - James Brown. There is Alderion and Erendis, The History of Galadriel and Celeborn, Beren and Luthien [she was really the one wearing the pants], Turin and Nienor, Tuor and Idril, Andreth, also in the sexist world of ME there were 3 Queens of Numenor who ruled.
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Old 10-03-2012, 12:35 AM   #18
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You'd think Boromir would have liked to learn of his great-great-great(etc.) grandfather from his uncle Elrond. And of course tales of Numenor. Of course, there's that Aragorn problem to be taken care of (sort of like taking care of that Jim Rockford- tv series- problem).
I doubt Boromir and Elrond are related as Elrond is to Aragorn. Keep in mind the words of Faramir, "We of my house are not of the line of Elendil, though the blood of Numenor is in us. For we reckon back our line to Mardil, the good steward, who ruled in the king's stead when he went away to war. And that was king Earnur, last of the line of Anarion, and childless, and he came never back. And the stewards have governed the city since that day, though it was many generations of Men ago." [TTT, p. 328]
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Old 10-03-2012, 04:52 AM   #19
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Given all that, and given that Tolkien nowhere proposes that any real or fictional society would be improved by females being given less voice than males, it is not worth making much of it. Those who try don’t get very far. Rightly so I think.
I didn't say it was, it was an observation not a criticism. If anything it serves to highlight the renewal brought by the return of the King and bringing home his Queen. I am sure somewhere, though I haven't located it about how part of the problem of Gondor was that it had become obsessed by it's past and thought less of the future. No doubt the darkening state of the world was a factor but it is noticeable that both Theodred and Boromir died childless at an age when most heirs of great houses are expected to have done their duty by posterity whatever their preferences. OF course their deaths allow a complete new order butI still think there is significance beyond that.

I think that Imrahil is the example of how Denethor might have been, both in his relationship to Faramir and his leadership. He recognises Aragorn instantly for what he is and cedes authority. His heir already has an heir at the time of the War of the Ring... a little triumph of hope against the darkness. Faramir of course becomes Prince mirroring his Uncle's rank and his fiefdom is the reclaimed Ithilien "the Garden of Gondor" as verdant as Minas Tirith is cold and stony.

I have never felt the lack of female characters even as a nine year old proto-feminist first exposed to the hobbit and by the time I got to LOTR Eowyn and Galadriel were sufficiently wonderful to compensate for a mere head count, and I find their artificial insertion into the films patronising and as ludicrous as if they say made the Tom Hanks character in Saving Private Ryan a woman. Anyway this has been a long digression off the topic, my fault no doubt for mentioning something that occured to me in the course of another response.
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Old 10-03-2012, 10:42 AM   #20
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NB: T specifically tells us that Minas Tirith's women and children had been evacuated, except for the Healers, and boys like Bergil who served as runners. Presumably they're back by Elessar's coronation, although the only one mentioned is Ioreth's "kinswoman from the country;" but then that chapter doesn't name a single new character of any sort.*


*Actually, in draft the chapter did introduce a new character, Finduilas; Tolkien then changed her name to Arwen and ret-conned her into earlier chapters.
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Old 10-03-2012, 02:26 PM   #21
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… also in the sexist world of ME there were 3 Queens of Numenor who ruled.
Considering how many rulers of Númenor there were, that actually sounds very sexist.

Of course, Tolkien was basing his politics on the rules of kingship found in the real world. Should he be blamed for that?

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I have never felt the lack of female characters even as a nine year old proto-feminist first exposed to the hobbit and by the time I got to LOTR Eowyn and Galadriel were sufficiently wonderful to compensate for a mere head count, and I find their artificial insertion into the films patronising and as ludicrous as if they say made the Tom Hanks character in Saving Private Ryan a woman. Anyway this has been a long digression off the topic, my fault no doubt for mentioning something that occured to me in the course of another response.
Quite agreed. One might as well blame the book Little Women for having too many women. In The Hobbit the only females even mentioned are Belladonna Took and one half of the Sackville-Bagginses. But the book is sufficiently well written that it transcends any attempt to blame Tolkien for writing an adventure story in which males only appear.

You digression was amusing and I though it might be fun to take it farther. Apparently not. Sorry.
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Old 10-03-2012, 02:53 PM   #22
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Ah well I didn't detect the amusement, I have a somewhat literal mind at times that can cause a sense of humour bypass. Tone of voice can be very hard to read. My first neg repped post was because what I had written as self deprecating also read as somewhat arrogant. Hey ho...
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Old 10-06-2012, 10:29 PM   #23
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Considering how many rulers of Númenor there were, that actually sounds very sexist.
If it were so sexist I'd say there would be ONLY kings which there weren't. I believe there are more women than men in the real world. I also believe without the consent of men women would have less rights than they do today. I do wonder if the sexes are equal why women should ever be treated as lesser than men being half and usually most of the population. Personally I do not believe in equality. I think some people are better than others.

Back to Tolkien, Galadriel was the equal of Feanor who was seen as the greatest of the Children of Illuvatar. Though with Elves there was not much difference in physical ability between the sexes whereas in our world men are about 30% stronger than women physically. So is there sexism or women not knowing their place? I'm not sure. I like women even those like Penthesilia but even the daughter of Ares was no match for Achilles. I can't see an army of women in the thick of battle where the men are perhaps just nurses or non-combatants. Obviously, people not being equal there are some women who're more suited for battle than men. There are always some things that make me wonder about these differences like war, philosophizing, birthing humans, etc.
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Old 10-06-2012, 11:29 PM   #24
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Women who seek equality with men lack ambition...

I suddenly feel like I have fallen through a time-warp, here maybe.
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Old 10-07-2012, 01:07 AM   #25
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If it were so sexist I'd say there would be ONLY kings which there weren't.
See the discussion of sexism at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sexism . A system in which females are mostly denied rulership allowed to males would be by almost everyone be called a sexist system. Protest all you want. It will remain a sexist system. Similarly a system in which rulers must be from a particular class will be a class system, despite the occasional exception.

Tolkien wrote his Middle-earth stories set in a prehistoric world largely modelled on historic medieval Europe which was also sexist. There are arguments that there are reasons for this, even good reasons, why female rulers were recognized only when the male line failed. That doesn’t make the practice non-sexist. It may indicate that it was, at least in origin, a practical solution to the problems of choosing a ruler.

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I believe there are more women than men in the real world. I also believe without the consent of men women would have less rights than they do today.
Similarly laws against slavery exist with the consent of the majority of non-slaves, and laws giving full rights to gay folk exist with the consent of the majority of straight people, and laws allowing full rights to the handicapped exist with the consent of most of the able-bodied.

Rights are often given only with the permission of those who are not part of the group to which the rights were given. What import does that have?

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I do wonder if the sexes are equal why women should ever be treated as lesser than men being half and usually most of the population. Personally I do not believe in equality. I think some people are better than others.
Scarcely anyone believes in equality you are talking about in societies in which contests between people over physical and intellectual superiority are so important. Democracy does not depend on equality but about a contest in which a number of people try to obtain the most votes to rule or to become one of the rulers. Few would be so dishonest as to say that all voters are equal in their discrimination in casting their vote.

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Back to Tolkien, Galadriel was the equal of Feanor who was seen as the greatest of the Children of Illuvatar.
I have not checked everything Tolkien wrote on the matter, but I doubt this is true. No-where is it even suggested that Galadriel was equal to Fëanor as a craftsman and it is often indicated that Galadriel was probably less possessive than Fëanor. People are different in different ways. No one person is the exact equal of another, if you mean the exact equivalent.

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Though with Elves there was not much difference in physical ability between the sexes whereas in our world men are about 30% stronger than women physically. So is there sexism or women not knowing their place? I'm not sure.
Suppose men were, on the average 50% stronger than women? What does that have to do with the right to rule? We no longer choose even the physically strongest man to rule. Perhaps only professional, male, athletes should be allowed to enter politics and they should fight one another in an arena.

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I like women even those like Penthesilia but even the daughter of Ares was no match for Achilles.
It is doubtful that either Achilles or Penthesilia ever existed. This imaginary story can only be used to indicate the attitudes of those who wrote it, not reality. If you want a genuine warrior woman, try http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artemisia_I_of_Caria .

I can't see an army of women in the thick of battle where the men are perhaps just nurses or non-combatants. Obviously, people not being equal there are some women who're more suited for battle than men. There are always some things that make me wonder about these differences like war, philosophizing, birthing humans, etc.[/quote]

Stories of Amazons may also be untrue, but it is only your personal beliefs that indicate that the story of Achillles and Penthesilia is any more true.

See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_the_military and other real sources which may help you in your wonderings.

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Old 10-07-2012, 03:34 AM   #26
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A system in which females are mostly denied rulership allowed to males would be by almost everyone be called a sexist system. Protest all you want. It will remain a sexist system.
In RotK it is said, "it was then made a law of the royal house that the eldest child of the King, whether man or woman, should receive the sceptre." [p. 353] This is not a denial of rulership. This would actually be some progress on the island of Numenor.

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Similarly a system in which rulers must be from a particular class will be a class system, despite the occasional exception.
Certainly. I've no problem with class.

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There are arguments that there are reasons for this, even good reasons, why female rulers were recognized only when the male line failed. That doesn’t make the practice non-sexist. It may indicate that it was, at least in origin, a practical solution to the problems of choosing a ruler.
Good point. But as the quote from RotK indicates it was law that "the eldest child of the King, whether man or woman, should receive the sceptre".

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Similarly laws against slavery exist with the consent of the majority of non-slaves, and laws giving full rights to gay folk exist with the consent of the majority of straight people, and laws allowing full rights to the handicapped exist with the consent of most of the able-bodied.
Consent to be taken into account and recognized nevertheless.

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Rights are often given only with the permission of those who are not part of the group to which the rights were given. What import does that have?
Access to those rights is the import of such things.

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Democracy does not depend on equality but about a contest in which a number of people try to obtain the most votes to rule or to become one of the rulers.
Democracy is for very small populations and does not work in large ones. Like a village is a place where Democracy can be practical.

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Few would be so dishonest as to say that all voters are equal in their discrimination in casting their vote.
Inequality abounds in all segments of life.

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No-where is it even suggested that Galadriel was equal to Fëanor as a craftsman and it is often indicated that Galadriel was probably less possessive than Fëanor. People are different in different ways. No one person is the exact equal of another, if you mean the exact equivalent.
I did not mean to say they were equals. That is my fault. Feanor as we are told, "was made the mightiest in all parts of body and mind, in valour, in endurance, in beauty, in understanding, in skill, in strength and in subtlety alike, of all the Children of Illuvatar." [Sil., p. 112] Of Galadriel it is said that, "she was the greatest of the Noldor, except Feanor maybe, though she was wiser than he, and her wisdom increased with the long years... she grew to be tall beyond the measure even of the women of the Noldor; she was strong of body, mind, and will, a match for both the loremasters and the athletes of the Eldar in the days of their youth." [UT, p. 241] And of the two of them it is said, "These two kinsfolk, the greatest of the Eldar in Valinor were unfriends for ever... she withheld her goodwill from none save only Feanor." [UT, p. 241]

You say that "People are different in different ways" and I'd say we are just different.

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Suppose men were, on the average 50% stronger than women? What does that have to do with the right to rule?
Forgive my thoughts but I did not mean to correlate that statement with rulership. I was only speaking of a few of the differences that abound among us.

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Perhaps only professional, male, athletes should be allowed to enter politics and they should fight one another in an arena.
The arenas to which their skills are best put to use are fine enough. I believe that the politicians in my country of the U.S.A. are not fit for the arena in which they get down and dirty.

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It is doubtful that either Achilles or Penthesilia ever existed.
I don't believe they did but Quintus did a good job with them. Exciting tale.

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If you want a genuine warrior woman, try http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artemisia_I_of_Caria .
I love me some Rhonda Rousey.

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Stories of Amazons may also be untrue, but it is only your personal beliefs that indicate that the story of Achillles and Penthesilia is any more true.
They're likely are not true at all! I did not mean to reference Achilles-Penthesilia as a historical anecdote. My point was that the best male warrior will best the best female warrior. Not that females cannot beat males in a fight. I recall watching an entertaining beatdown in the street when a woman I know beat this guy up and basically overpowered him so badly she was bashing his head into a car.
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Old 10-08-2012, 12:09 AM   #27
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In RotK it is said, "it was then made a law of the royal house that the eldest child of the King, whether man or woman, should receive the sceptre." [p. 353] This is not a denial of rulership. This would actually be some progress on the island of Numenor.
This sentence from The Lord of the Rings seems to make no sense. According to what this says, approximately half of the rulers of Númenor following Tar-Ancalimë would be Ruling Queens, not only two. Tolkien appears to have made an error.

Possibly Tolkien has ignored the possibility of refusing the sceptre. But Christopher Tolkien near the end of “Aldarion and Erendis″ in Unfinished Tales notes that outside of The Lord of the Rings the new law of succession is normally noted differently:
But by this ‘new law’ the (eldest) daughter of the Ruler inherited the Sceptre, if he had no son (this being, of course, in contradiction to what is said in The Lord of the Rings). By the advice of the Council it was added that she was free to refuse.
In “The Line of Elros” in Unfinished Tales the law is stated as in “Aldarion and Erendis”:
In her [Tar-Ancalimë’s] favour Aldarion altered the law of succession, so that the (eldest) daughter of a King should succeed, if he had no sons.
But in the same document it is noted for IX Tar-Súrion:
He was the third child of Tar-Anárion; his sisters refused the sceptre.
This must assume that The Lord of the Rings version of the new law is in effect.

So even if one takes The Lord of the Rings version of the new law as valid there is still sexism in that female may refused the sceptre while males may not and if there are no sons and all females refuse the sceptre then the sceptre passes to the nearest male kinsman of male descent from Elros.

Sexism occurs when there is any issue of sex at all. That said, the majority of both men and women may agree that some examples of sexism are justified. For example, in Toronto, women travelling late hours on Toronto Transit vehicles may request to be let off between stops and the driver will do this unless there is some reason why the driver cannot safely stop exactly where required.

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Certainly. I've no problem with class.
I do with inherited class, the usual problems.

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Democracy is for very small populations and does not work in large ones. Like a village is a place where Democracy can be practical.
True for direct democracy (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_democracy ). Not true of represenative democracy (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Representative_democracy ). Constitutional monarchy (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constitutional_monarchy) is really representative democracy in disguise in which the supposed monarch is almost entirely a puppet in the hands of the genuine rulers.

It is the opinion of many people in many countries that representational democracy/constitutional monarchy is working reasonably well in their countries and other countries. Few people would prefer the imposition of an hereditary autocracy or want to return to a period in which woman were mostly given inferior education.

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I did not mean to say they were equals. That is my fault. Feanor as we are told, "was made the mightiest in all parts of body and mind, in valour, in endurance, in beauty, in understanding, in skill, in strength and in subtlety alike, of all the Children of Illuvatar." [Sil., p. 112] Of Galadriel it is said that, "she was the greatest of the Noldor, except Feanor maybe, though she was wiser than he, and her wisdom increased with the long years... she grew to be tall beyond the measure even of the women of the Noldor; she was strong of body, mind, and will, a match for both the loremasters and the athletes of the Eldar in the days of their youth." [UT, p. 241] And of the two of them it is said, "These two kinsfolk, the greatest of the Eldar in Valinor were unfriends for ever... she withheld her goodwill from none save only Feanor." [UT, p. 241]
And because Fëanor is male and of a particular lineage he and his loutish sons have great wealth and possessions while Galadriel, natively, has less. More sexism.

Originally Tolkien had Galadriel gain her rulership by marrying into a lineage outside the Noldor. Later he had both Celeborn and Galadriel somehow gain possession of Lothlórien which was entirely outside the circle of Noldorin and Sindarin lords. In both cases this is partly sexism.

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The arenas to which their skills are best put to use are fine enough. I believe that the politicians in my country of the U.S.A. are not fit for the arena in which they get down and dirty.
I am not certain what you are talking about. What countries historically have had a history which is distinctly less vile than the U.S.A. and is not a democracy?

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I don't believe they did but Quintus did a good job with them. Exciting tale.
And lots of exciting tales are fictional. The story of Achilles and Penesthilia is known to have been previously written by many authors before Quintus Smyrnae.

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I did not mean to reference Achilles-Penthesilia as a historical anecdote. My point was that the best male warrior will best the best female warrior.
Not necessarily. Penesthilia is a fictional character who is beaten because the authors want her to be beaten. The story of Achilles continues until the authors want Achilles to be beaten and slain, slain by Paris or by Apollo or by the two of them. Nothing is proved by such fictions. There is no such thing as “best male warrior” or “best female warrior” in real life. And in real life often the one generally perceived as the inferior may turn out to be the victor in a particular contest.

An unexpected trick may gain the victory against odds.

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Not that females cannot beat males in a fight. I recall watching an entertaining beatdown in the street when a woman I know beat this guy up and basically overpowered him so badly she was bashing his head into a car.
Since I have no information about what the fight was about, I could have no opinion about whom I should be rooting for, if either of the two.

Basically Tolkien has mainly written books set in sexist societies for the same reason that historical writers do. The reader does not expect to be reading a tale set in a perfect utopia. Of course, Tolkien was usually writing an heroic romance, not a realistic novel which one should expect to be grimmer. But, in that mode, the Shire is somewhat cleaned up but mainly based on places he was brought up. The sexism exhibited is the normal sexism one expects of the kind of places and times about which he writes, also somewhat cleaned up, and mostly with no light shed on it.

You appear to be supporting very much the kind of thing which Mithalwen’s post makes fun of. The link to http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MMb8C...ature=youtu.be I find wonderful.

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Old 10-08-2012, 09:04 AM   #28
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You might like ths one too then... http://youtu.be/39qdhbkTko4
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Old 10-08-2012, 02:50 PM   #29
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You can just come out and call me sexist as that is what you are essentially doing. I've no problem with that. "For justice speaks thus to me: 'Men are not equal.' And neither should they become so!" [Thus Spoke Zarathustra] I've no problem with women or men violating mores, or gender roles. When I look to the divine it is feminine, I've no problem with female warriors, politicians, or whatever craft or sphere they may be in based on their gender. Like their male counter-parts I look to their performance. I know my post in which the other poster essentially called me a sexist without saying so seemed like I was against women in certain positions. Hardly the case! I was only reflecting on the world as it is and is not.

I think in the end the cream rises to the top. Certainly anyone at the top of any sphere is capable of being bested by lesser persons. Sometimes someone not in another's league just has that person's number even though he or she could not hope to attain the type of success exhibited by that person in their craft versus the rest of the field. I do believe that in almost any physical contest, the top male will almost always be better than the top female.

Sexism, racism, classism have been hurled at the LotR. No women or few of little significance, no blacks, the Dunedain vs. the Middle Men, et cetera.

I do not recall Galadriel ever being the ruler of anyone, at least not in title. She and Celeborn did "establish the Noldorin realm of Eregion" [UT, p. 246] though I know Feanor's grandson to be its Lord.
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Old 10-08-2012, 03:38 PM   #30
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I suspect that the communication passing like ships in the night here has to do with, on the one hand, viewing the word "sexist" as morally freighted and pejorative, and on the other hand viewing it as a neutral descriptor. It can of course be either, but onhe hopes that both participants in a conversation understand it the same way for that purpose!

(BTW, modern "representative democracy" does NOT work- but everything else is even worse).
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Old 10-08-2012, 05:46 PM   #31
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You might like ths one too then... http://youtu.be/39qdhbkTko4
Lovely.

The motif that women don’t understand cars is unfortunately still with us, though if carefully handled it need not give offence as in fact some males also do not understand cars. See http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=51JtuEa_OPc . Note that the Doctor simply brushes aside Amy’s desire to learn to operate and repair the Tardis while training her husband Rory. Does he love her dearly but think that she is perhaps more suited to talking about kittens. Rory then teases Amy about her incapacity in driving. The upshot is that Amy is, however, very successful at sexually attracting and distracting men, which causes the main problem in this very short episode. The story continues in http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RkmiefoRcfU in which ditzy Amy manages to sexually attract and distract herself.

Normally Amy is portrayed as a more intelligent person than she is here.

It is still amusing as long as one does not take it that every female is like Amy and that, as other episodes show, Amy is generally intelligent and capable.

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You can just come out and call me sexist as that is what you are essentially doing.
Fair enough. But ask yourself why the only two people who have commented on your posts give you that impression. What have you said that might give them that impression?

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Sexism, racism, classism have been hurled at the LotR. No women or few of little significance, no blacks, the Dunedain vs. the Middle Men, et cetera.
Some of these charges are true enough in part. But there is so much more to this one story. You appear to be unecessarily defending Tolkien’s writing by claiming that sexism is alright because most men are physically stronger than most women.

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I do not recall Galadriel ever being the ruler of anyone, at least not in title. She and Celeborn did "establish the Noldorin realm of Eregion" [UT, p. 246] though I know Feanor's grandson to be its Lord.
Exactly. Living in a pseudo-medieval world Galadriel is limited by her environment in a way that the sons of Fëanor are not. Her brothers Finrod, Aegnor, and Angrod all have their lands and followers in the First Age while Galadriel does not. The same is true for other Elvish women. They all live with their brothers or their husbands and do not rule on their own, do not have the same rights as their male siblings because they are women.

No surprise. This is a pseudo-medieval world after all. So Galadriel, according to the published Silmarillion:
… the only woman of the Noldor to stand that day tall and valiant among the contending princes, was eager to be gone. No oaths she swore, but the words of Fëanor concerning Middle-earth had kindled in her heart, for she yearned to see the wide unguarded lands and to rule there a realm at her own will.
Eventually she gets her land to rule as she and her husband Celeborn become Lord and Lady of Eregion and then Lothlórien. Lady is here obviously the feminine of Lord. Together Celeborn and Galadriel rule Lothlórien. How did you interpret Galadriel’s title of Lady of Lórien if you “do not recall Galadriel ever being the ruler of anyone, at least not in title”? “The History of Galadriel and Celeborn” in Unfinished Tales states:
Celeborn and Galadriel came to be regarded as Lord and Lady of the Eldar in Eriador, …
That is, Celeborn and Galadriel are rulers of the Eldar in Eriador.

Later (emphasis mine):
So great became his [Sauron’s] hold on the Mírdain that at length he persuades them to revolt against Galadriel and Celeborn and to seize power in Eregion; and that was at some time between 1350 and 1400 of the Second Age. Galadriel thereupon left Eregion and passed through Khazad-dűm to Lórinand, taking with her Amroth and Celebrían; but Celeborn would not enter the mansions of the Dwarves, and remained in Eregion, disregarded by Celebrimbor. In Lórinand Galadriel took up rule, and defence against Sauron.
Another version of the history of Galadriel and Celeborn states (emphasis mine):
After the disaster of Moria [in the year 1980] and the sorrows of Lórien, which was now left without a ruler (for Amroth was drowned in the sea in the Bay of Belfalas and left no heir), Celeborn and Galadriel returned to Lórien, and were welcomed by the people. They dwelt there while the Third Age lasted, but they took no title of King or Queen; for they said that they were only guardians of this small but fair realm, the last eastward outpost of the Elves.
Yet another version (emphasis mine):
In her wisdom Galadriel saw that Lórien would be a stronghold and point of power to prevent the Shadow from crossing the Anduin in the war that must be inevitably before it was again defeated (if that were possible); but that it needed a rule of greater strength and wisdom than the Silvan folk possessed. Nevertheless, it was not until the disaster in Moria, when by means beyond the foresight of Galadriel Sauron’s power actually crossed the Anduin and Lórien was in great peril, its king [Amroth] lost, its people fleeing and likely to be deserted to be occupied by the Orcs, that Galadriel and Celeborn took up their permanent abode in Lórien, and its government. But they took no title of King or Queen, and were the guardians that in the event brought it unviolated through the War of the Ring.
Try to recall better.

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Old 10-08-2012, 06:22 PM   #32
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My great-grandfather was works foreman at the Triumph for 25 years over the turn of the last century and refused to employ women thinking they couldn't cope with engineering. He didn't live long enough to see one daughter become a winning rally driver and the other leasrn to fly and drive a train. My mother was one of the first people to drive round Silverstone. Don't have any truck with using the nature of a person's reproductive organs to decide what they should or could do - other than in matters of reproduction of course.

BTW referring women not knowing their place especially as an alternative to sexism does give impression of sexism.
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Old 10-10-2012, 11:24 AM   #33
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No surprise. This is a pseudo-medieval world after all. So Galadriel, according to the published Silmarillion: the only woman of the Noldor to stand that day tall and valiant among the contending princes, was eager to be gone. No oaths she swore, but the words of Fëanor concerning Middle-earth had kindled in her heart, for she yearned to see the wide unguarded lands and to rule there a realm at her own will.
It reflects not only the pseudo-medieval Middle Earth, but the culture of the time the books were written. These days, if one visits the fantasy / horror section of your neighborhood book store, one is apt to find a strong dash of the 'romance' genre added to the modern magic tradition. The heroine is apt to be an over sexed vampire, werewolf, demon, angel or slayer of whatever. Her sorta trusty sidekick and love interest is more apt to resemble Boromir or Beorn than Samwise. Things have changed.

Not necessarily for the better, mind you.

Fiction often echoes the world view of the author's time and place. Tolkien's time was not particularly enlightened. He pushed the envelope in enough areas that I can't fault him for not pushing in other areas.
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Old 10-11-2012, 08:53 AM   #34
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William Cloud Hicklin is battling Black Riders on Weathertop.William Cloud Hicklin is battling Black Riders on Weathertop.William Cloud Hicklin is battling Black Riders on Weathertop.
Even there, though, Tolkien cites Galadriel *and* Celeborn as co-rulers; he couldn't bring himself to make even the greatest (tie) of all the Eldar a sole ruler in her own right- and this despite the fact that Galadriel was by far superior to he husband in both native power and royal lineage. No Elf-king seems to share rule with his consort! (At least, not if she isn't a demi-goddess).

Here naturally Tolkien is simply being a man of his time, and a product of long European and English tradition. Of England's first three ruling queens, two had to share the crown with their husbands in dual monarchies (Philip and Mary, William and Mary), and the third (Elizabeth) ducked marriage so to avoid that fate. The three since have been carefully paired with "prince consorts;" a King can have a Queen, but not the reverse. In much of the Continent it's worse: Salic law applied and no female could inherit or even transmit inheritance (that's why Victoria was never Queen of Hanover though her uncles and grandfather had been Kings).

As to the 'physical strength' business- in olden days there was a certain logic to that, so long as kings were expected to go out personally and hack at other big men with meat cleavers. It's notable that while Numenor moved from strict male primogeniture to either male-preference or gender-neutral primogeniture (depending on the version of the amended succession law one accepts), neither of the kingdoms in exile ever had a ruling Queen; and this difference can I think be explained by the fact that Numenor was mostly at peace and was never threatened at home, whereas the tale of the North and South Kingdoms is one of constant war.

EDIT: In fact, Gondor passed the crown to a cadet line, and then allowed the Kingship to lapse entirely, rather than even consider a claim by or through a perfectly valid princess, Firiel. Plainly the revised Numenorean law did *not* apply in the South-kingdom.
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The entire plot of The Lord of the Rings could be said to turn on what Sauron didn’t know, and when he didn’t know it.

Last edited by William Cloud Hicklin; 10-17-2012 at 09:12 AM.
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Old 10-17-2012, 05:19 AM   #35
Lobelia
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Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Australia
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Lobelia has just left Hobbiton.
[QUOTE=urbanhiker;675049]

Did Boromir not know of the close relationship and allegiance between Lorien and Rivendell?
Well, yes, Galadriel was Elrond's mother-in-law, after all!
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