The Many Origins of Tolkien's Orcs - Elves, Men, & Morgoth

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  • čas přidán 1. 03. 2024
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    Orcs - merlkir
    Melkor - Anna_Kulisz
    lotr-orc-camp
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    Aule Crafting the Dwarves - Peet
    orcs - Angus McBride
    orcs-v3 - sergio-artigas
    Orc Army - Eric Fraser
    Professor Tolkien - Kinko White
    the_might__of_morgoth - dracarysdrekkar
    Awakening_of_the_Elves - Anna_Kulisz
    Misty_Mountain_Orc_2 - Olanda_Fong-Surdenas
    Orc_Scout_and_Carrion_Seeker - Olanda_Fong-Surdenas
    Uruk_Heads - The_White_Council
    ainur__children_of_iluvatar - nahar
    Eru_Iluvatar - Janka_Latečková
    Aule_the_Destroyer - Ted Nasmith
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    fathers_of_the_dwarves - steamey
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    Eru and the Gods Singing the First Song of Creation - Kip Rasmussen
    The Uruk-hai - John Howe
    Morgoth - Ralph Damiani
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    Angband - John Howe
    turgon - alystraea art
    Beren and Luthien flee Angband - Pete Amachree
    early orcs - Turner Mohan
    orc berserker - WETA
    Orcs and Uruks - Abe Papakhian
    Melkor - Anna Kulisz
    fingolfin and morgoth - aegeri
    The vilest deed of Melkor - Anna Kulisz
    Gorbag and Shagrat - Alan Lee
    orcs_debate__color - turnermohan
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    goblin with huge head - merlkir
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    Orc Captain - John Howe
    morgoth - dracarysdrekkar7
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    Uruk-hai - Tuuliky
    Saruman The Ringmaker - Ralph Damiani
    Fighting Uruk-hai - Jan Pospisil
    Uruk-hai War Chief - The White Council
    sauron army - weta
    morgoth chained - Kip Rasmussen
    Morgoth and Fingolfin - YidanYuan
    Moria Orcs - John Howe
    Orc - Catherine Karina Chmiel
    Eru Iluvatar (and the Ainur) - Šárka Škorpíková
    Orc at Isengard - Elrodimus Flash
    Uruk Pikemen - John Howe
    In Mordor - John Howe
    Orcs - Turner Mohan
    orc - WETA
    orcs - sergio artigas
    orc berserker - weta
    The Uruk-hai - Anke Eissmann
    The Halls of Mandos - Ralph Damiani
    Moria Orc - John Howe
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    Bilbo_and_the_Eagles - Ted Nasmith
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    In the land of Mordor - Olanda Fong-Surdenas
    the vicious goblins - artigas
    Orc - John Howe
    orc faces - Turner Mohan
    Morgoth Victorious - Turner Mohan
    Uruk with War Hammer - John Howe
    Morgoth - ckgoksoy
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    orc sketch - merlkir
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Komentáře • 282

  • @NerdoftheRings
    @NerdoftheRings  Před 2 měsíci +30

    ICYMI: check out my interview with Oscar-winning writer of LOTR, Philippa Boyens! We chat about the NEW LOTR film: War of the Rohirrim! Philippa Boyens talks War of the Rohirrim! First chat with writers of new LOTR film!
    czcams.com/video/0hDQFo32WE0/video.html

    • @AskMia411
      @AskMia411 Před 2 měsíci +3

      What are your thoughts on the “What if Boromir lived “ scenario? Boromir is injured but survives Amon Hen, joins the three hunters in their pursuit of merry and Pippin. I know it’s probably not something Tolkien considered, like the Gollum repenting video, but I think it could make a cool video regardless. How might Boromir change the rest of the story? How is Faramir’s meeting with Frodo and Sam different? How does Denathor change in the siege of Minas Tirith now that he isn’t as fractured by Boromir’s death? Does he survive at that point? How does Denathor react to Boromir being in favor of Aragorn becoming king?
      I could go on, but I think it could make a very interesting and fun video!

    • @justinparsons2480
      @justinparsons2480 Před 2 měsíci +1

      I did watch! It was fun. I hope it is a good movie. I had some trepidations for the insinuation at 1:04:17 in that video. I hope they can just stick to the Tolkien written work. If they want to play with their own ideas, thats cool, that is writing, but if they want to adapt someone elses work, they need to do it faithfully. Or make their own.

  • @robpersons7172
    @robpersons7172 Před 2 měsíci +88

    If Morgoth taught the Orcs speech, there must have been restaurants in Utumno, or else how would they have know what a "menu" is?

    • @knines4280
      @knines4280 Před 2 měsíci +9

      I understand your argument.
      Unfortunately, it comes from the movie.....
      It's a Jackson contribution.....
      The fight happens, but "meat is back on the menu." Isn't said 😕.

    • @Richard_Nickerson
      @Richard_Nickerson Před 2 měsíci +2

      Those Orcs lived thousands of years after the fall of Morgoth and had much more interaction with Man cultures.

    • @Richard_Nickerson
      @Richard_Nickerson Před 2 měsíci +5

      ​@@knines4280
      Even if it had been in the book, LotR takes place like 7000+ years after the fall of Morgoth, right?
      And we're explicitly shown that Saruman's Orcs were mingled with Men. Even Mordor Orcs mingled with Men more than any Morgoth Orcs had.
      This video literally describes how the Uruk-hai are part Man.
      Why *wouldn't* an Uruk know what a menu is?

    • @knines4280
      @knines4280 Před 2 měsíci +5

      @@Richard_Nickerson well, a "menu" suggests a bit of civility refinement......
      I doubt orcs wore ties😎.

    • @Richard_Nickerson
      @Richard_Nickerson Před 2 měsíci +4

      @@knines4280
      Menus don't imply modern dress attire whatsoever.

  • @gradius12
    @gradius12 Před 2 měsíci +100

    Shoutout to Debbie keeping this channel running. She's a real one.

    • @TF-vb9us
      @TF-vb9us Před 2 měsíci +8

      Hail, Debbie 🫡

    • @zaxmaxlax
      @zaxmaxlax Před 2 měsíci +10

      For me is Tomdabombadil, rabbi rob thomas and the dark haired one

    • @shade9387
      @shade9387 Před 2 měsíci

      Is this voice the guy from Why files?

    • @samadams9581
      @samadams9581 Před 2 měsíci

      Andddd debbie

  • @colinbaldwin313
    @colinbaldwin313 Před 2 měsíci +33

    It may not be exactly canon, but one of the most visually evocative sequences in the LOTR trilogy is the birth of the first Uruk-hai in Fellowship of the Ring. He comes out of the mud-pits below Isengard, and his birth entails pulling away a membrane that makes the vile pit seem rather like a grotesque parody of a womb. It's so effective for how it thoroughly deprives the Orcs of any sympathy. Because Saruman is an industrialist, this Uruk-hai birthing scene gives the impression that his Orcs are not so much bred as manufactured, just as surely as are his weapons and machinery. (It's similarly effective to see Orcs being birthed in Two Towers intercut with scenes of industrial activity and Saruman's voice-over about it). As I said, I'm not sure how canon it is; I'm told that since Orcs are bred from Elves and/or Men, they reproduce sexually just like those natural species. It's true, you don't see many Orc women, but that shouldn't necessarily give rise to the belief that there are no Orc women, and that Orcs just spring out of holes in the ground.

    • @TheCradM
      @TheCradM Před 2 měsíci +9

      Whom do you serve?
      SAHHHHHROOOOOMAAAAAHHN

  • @user-sr9pq9rm1i
    @user-sr9pq9rm1i Před 2 měsíci +56

    This is really interesting how his catholic theology affected his views of the orcs. Catholics typically reject the Calvinist views of predestination. A Calvinist wouldn’t have much conflict with the idea of some souls being destined for destruction and not redemption/salvation. Catholics typically reject that and believe all souls have potential for redemption/salvation. It’s cool to see how it plays into the story.

    • @benjaminagnew5361
      @benjaminagnew5361 Před 2 měsíci +2

      I think the Calvinist view is a little misrepresented in this respect (so that what you have said is best understood by hyper-Calvinist).
      The creature having Fea can surely be likened to the image of God in theology. As such, it's ordaination is distinct. Such, the "vessel made for destruction", is not up to Melkor and his actions but to Eru himself. And the Orcs are not intrinsically cut off from "salvation", whatever that fundamentally means in Tolkien's Middle Earth.
      This is why I (from the a Calvinist view) have always had trouble with the orcs origin. Also... Main stream Catholicism is pretty close to Calvinism in regard to ordination. It's really only Jesuit Molonism that made the big difference.

    • @user-sr9pq9rm1i
      @user-sr9pq9rm1i Před 2 měsíci +3

      @@benjaminagnew5361 Great discussion! I agree that Eru would be the driving force behind destiny in that world. It could be that the elves that failed to respond to the call of the valar were destined by Eru to become the orcs and become vessels for his wrath and destruction. I believe there is strong support for double predestination in the bible and early church fathers (Augustine seemed to endorse double predestination even thought some catholic and orthodox theologians disagree). My background is as a reformed confessional Anglican. I lean in favor of four of the five points of Calvinism. I am not sure I believe in limited atonement but the others have strong arguments in scripture.

  • @plebisMaximus
    @plebisMaximus Před 2 měsíci +109

    I feel like the idea of orcs as animals kind of clashes with that conversation in Two Towers they have, where they show a desire for freedom and independence. They still cling to their wicked ways, wishing to live off raiding, stealing and murdering, but if they really were just animals following their masters every command, they probably wouldn't care to have their own like that. I like the idea they're corrupted elves, deeply wounded by what Morgoth did to them, but not so deeply they can't be made whole again after their soul goes to Valinor. Tolkien kept going back and forth his whole life about whether they could be redeemed and the idea that they will be in the Halls of Mandos, I feel, fit well with the themes set forth in the books. But as with everything else not written in the four books he personally published, it's really just a theory at best and hearing what everyone else thinks is super interesting too.

    • @TommyStrategic
      @TommyStrategic Před 2 měsíci +12

      Agreed! The idea of their having an impotent _fea_ seems to make the most sense. The orcs rarely seem so bestial that they are cannot think about what others are thinking, nor do they seem wholly dependent on “the big bosses.” There is a _there_ there, but it seems permanently stunted in orcs as a whole.

    • @SNWWRNNG
      @SNWWRNNG Před 2 měsíci +9

      That's probably why Tolkien discarded the animal idea rather quickly.

    • @Jane0Mills
      @Jane0Mills Před 2 měsíci +12

      This is what I come up against when considering the 'beast' theory. They are clearly capable of much more than simply parroting back orders.

    • @matteopinamonti1867
      @matteopinamonti1867 Před 2 měsíci +6

      I completely agree, also because I love those parts of the books, when you see that even orcs are beings with their own desires. It makes the story all the more compelling, if the bad guys are actually people their evil deeds are all the more vile, because they are willingly committing them.

    • @LeviSmith-bp4yv
      @LeviSmith-bp4yv Před měsícem

      At the end of the day I think it might be a little of both arguments. The first few generations may have those elvish souls but with each generation those Fea might dimnish more and more and more until there is none and by the time of the second song the orcs may be nothing but the animals they are desribed as

  • @valentinkambushev4968
    @valentinkambushev4968 Před 2 měsíci +47

    Regardless of how they were created, one thing is for certain: they are one of the most tragic races in fantasy. Created by a dark lord for the sole purpose of destruction and killing, with no chance of ever being anything else. Evil they might be, but it's not like they were ever given a choice.

    • @AesirUnlimited
      @AesirUnlimited Před měsícem

      Couldn’t the same be said of Melkor? Eru made him to be the way that he is. If Melkor is evil incarnate, wouldn’t the one responsible for his creation be equally evil?

  • @tboyer86
    @tboyer86 Před 2 měsíci +14

    I swear every time I see a new video I think to myself "man he must be running out of topics". And every time I am completely humbled by how amazing these videos are. Great job.

  • @connorhilchie2779
    @connorhilchie2779 Před 2 měsíci +43

    11:12 I've always thought this for the longest time as well. What better way to mock Eru then by
    1)corrupting the body of his Firstborn
    2)removing/destroying the one thing Melkor can't create/control
    3)putting them through misery without any promise of things ever getting better
    All done to tell Eru "I can't make my own creations, but I have no problem and no issue with remaking yours in my image. One way or the other I will get my way"

    • @12classics39
      @12classics39 Před 2 měsíci +4

      Where, then, would the souls go? Melkor would not have the power to destroy a soul, any more than he had the power to create a soul. Did the souls fly to the Halls of Mandos along with those of the deceased?
      I most agree with the theory that Melkor’s evil was able to suppress/strangle the souls of Elves and Men so that they could only feel horror and suffering while their bodies and minds became enslaved as Orcs. A plausible (due to Melkor’s and Sauron’s enormous power) and also a truly horrifying idea.

    • @colinleat8309
      @colinleat8309 Před 2 měsíci

      Yes, exactly, well said! 🖖😁🤘🇨🇦

    • @KuK137
      @KuK137 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@12classics39 But this is even dumber. If so, soul is not needed for smart, civilized beings, meaning it's completely superfluous and Morgoth could just create orks without souls and called it a day. No, Tolkien just marred his books trying to cram idiotic contradictory nonsense made up by bored stone age goat herders 2000 years ago, all while knowing he can't ram square peg into round hole. Either soul is not needed or Morgoth could create, Tolkien is twisting trying to answer question 'can Aule create stone too heavy for him to lift'...

    • @PALongknife
      @PALongknife Před 2 měsíci

      @@12classics39
      Interestingly, your second paragraph summarizes the final stages of demonic possession, which makes it all the more plausible as it could be yet another echo of Catholic theology from Tolkien.

    • @Richard_Nickerson
      @Richard_Nickerson Před 2 měsíci +1

      ​@@12classics39
      There were 2 possibilities described in the video, right?
      1. Driven out completely, the implication being they would go to the Halls of Mandos as all other Eldar fëa go.
      2. They're driven down within the being itself to the point of being wholly impotent within themselves. Not driven out of the body, but rather driven down to a depth it cannot come back from. In this case, the assumption would, again, be that the fëa goes to the Halls of Mandos, as they're still Elven fëa.
      I would assume that Orc fëa would either never return, as those like Glorfindel did, being too damaged. Or they would just require so much more time than a normal fëa that the Dagor Dagorlad is more likely to come first.

  • @brandonscott4808
    @brandonscott4808 Před 2 měsíci +15

    I think Morgoth corrupting elves into orcs makes more sense lore wise. By the time Sauron was building up power for himself, he most likely used humans to turn into Orcs since there weren't that many Elves in the 2nd and 3rd Age. There's also a possibility that other fallen Maia who were in league with Morgoth could have taken the form of an orc but looked more demonic and beastly than your typical average orc, which could explain why some of the orcs that resided in Goblin Town could have been the offspring of those orcs given their description of their features in The Hobbit.

  • @CartoonHero1986
    @CartoonHero1986 Před 2 měsíci +8

    Anyone else now have a mental image of a special wing in the house of Mandos where the broken souls go like some sort of mental ward filled with soft rooms? "It's going to be okay, you're okay; no one can hurt you in here"

    • @imogencory9591
      @imogencory9591 Před 2 měsíci +2

      This just makes me want to cry, because if we're going with the belief that Orcs are imprison, tortured and corrupted elves, then their soul/Fae would still remain as it was, an Eldar's Fae, and so when in the first age an Orc is slain their soul would go to the halls of Mandos and would have to live with the memories and pain they've endured an deblt for the rest of their immortal lives.

  • @mithrilblue
    @mithrilblue Před 2 měsíci +14

    I would love a breakdown of the origin of trolls as Treebeard explicitly mentions they are derived from the Ents in the books.

    • @Eowyn3Pride
      @Eowyn3Pride Před 2 měsíci +2

      I always understood that trolls were the mockery of ents, dragons the mockery of eagles, wargs the mockery of horses, etc.

    • @mithrilblue
      @mithrilblue Před 2 měsíci +3

      @@Eowyn3Pride yeah that makes a lot of sense. only thing is that Treebeard explicitly states it as canon rather than us speculating or even 4th wall commentary from Tolkein

    • @Richard_Nickerson
      @Richard_Nickerson Před 2 měsíci +1

      ​@@Eowyn3Pride
      The first dragon had no wings

  • @myriadmediamusings
    @myriadmediamusings Před 2 měsíci +29

    Loved that you did this. These races and the big bad of Middle Earth all have interesting in universe origins but thats primarily because all of them had interesting out of universe origins too.

    • @clementineforever
      @clementineforever Před 2 měsíci

      Look into the 1000s of stories of Sasquatch encounters- and encounters with The Wolfmen and others that do live in our earth and come out through caves.
      Militaries around the planet battle them from time to time.
      And their are The 12-15 foot Org like giants.
      Them creatures are known still to eat humans.
      And many stories of In the name of Jesus- people have stoped the attack.
      The Narnia stories get into that story pretty well❤

  • @pabloantoniomendozamartine6046
    @pabloantoniomendozamartine6046 Před 2 měsíci +7

    I could be wrong, but I believe that in Morgoth’s Ring there is an essay where Tolkien suggests that orcs were descendants of lesser maiar’s who, perhaps after taking monstrous forms, mated with beasts (possibly wolves). Implying that orcs were created after a long and brutal process of breeding and interbreeding with animals, then elves and then men.

  • @MarcinWaach
    @MarcinWaach Před 2 měsíci +16

    My head canon is that Morgoth corupted chimps into orcs. Entertain this idea:
    - chimps are similar in appearance to Elves
    - chimps are naturaly agressive so Morgoth's power only enhanced it
    - chimps are inteligent so he enhanced sligthly their inteligece and gave them abillity to speak
    I don't think that any kind of ape or monkey was ever mentioned in Tolkien's writing but keep in mind that, in universe, books are writen by people and scholars from Westernlands of Middle Earth and apes would live around Far Harad or somewhere else in the south. I think it's a fun idea that I wanted to share. Sorry for bad english, it's not my first language

    • @MerryMohProductions
      @MerryMohProductions Před 2 měsíci +7

      "Hundreds of long ladders were lifted up. Many were cast down in ruin, but many more replaced them, and Orcs sprang up them like apes in the dark forests of the South."
      -Helms Deep, The Two Towers

  • @davidfwooldridge3430
    @davidfwooldridge3430 Před 2 měsíci +5

    I don’t think the Orcs being beasts and not intelligent beings is born out in the text. They didn’t imitate like parrots; they talked about stuff and even had a culture. The Goblins of the Misty Mountains literally had a theme song in the Hobbit they sang when they hauled Thorin’s company down to Goblintown. Animals don’t do that.
    I think this is, unfortunately, an example of Tolkien painting himself into a corner. Weirdly enough, one of the few really good things about Rings of Power was that it actually picked at this a bit; orcs are intelligent beings who want things and don’t like being a slave army.

  • @waldo5017
    @waldo5017 Před 2 měsíci +25

    One interesting thing to note is that Shagrat and Gorbag discuss freedom and independence from Sauron in the books. This maybe throws a spanner in the works of them being animalistic beings, possibly showing orcs to have some degree of free-thought and desire for independence. Are the orcs in this conversation just 'parroting' their master's thoughts? Or are these thoughts of their own? If they have agency, does that imply they have souls and by extension free-will? It's a convoluted question, the issue of free-will with regards to Orcs is something Tolkien grappled with but never provided an answer for in his lifetime unfortunately.

    • @backwashjoe7864
      @backwashjoe7864 Před 2 měsíci

      Agreed.

    • @mrs.manrique7411
      @mrs.manrique7411 Před 2 měsíci +1

      I think the way the orcs might be “parroting” Sauron is that Sauron does not want to be under the control of the Valar or Eru Illuvatar, so the orcs speak the same way about their masters.

    • @Richard_Nickerson
      @Richard_Nickerson Před 2 měsíci +1

      Definitely seems to fit with parroting Morgoth and/or Sauron

  • @connor5976
    @connor5976 Před 2 měsíci +7

    You killed this one. It’s been a while since I’ve heard a truly new and also lore based take. Incredibly interesting

  • @rrrAustralianusvids93
    @rrrAustralianusvids93 Před měsícem +2

    I love your channel dude. It honestly is a work of art and you should be so proud of what you have created. I am sure it is getting hard to keep making new videos but I think you should dive deeper into the what if scenarios more and flesh them out more, maybe go back and revisit some of your old ones because I think about them all the time haha. Keep it up mate!

  • @anactaneustheeleventh2542
    @anactaneustheeleventh2542 Před 2 měsíci +2

    The Interview with P. Boyens was special, liked to hear her talk more about middle earth. I geeked out a little too as a fellow writer, would like to hear P. Jackson and P. Boyens on an interview themselves if they could go a little deeper into their thinking or a commentary about the show TROP (Rings of Power) and what they thought about it. Also would like if you (nerd of the rings) could do a video on Sauron’s eastern and southern travels. And how he corrupted the easterlings and southern men. Liked this one as well!!!

  • @durinseventh8892
    @durinseventh8892 Před 2 měsíci +12

    Loved this. I understand why it's so hard to explain the origin of Orcs.
    In Tolkien's own faith humans are more like Orcs than Men: we were like Elves in not knowing evil nor being corrupted by the Evil One/Great Deceiver. Now we all are and our spirit (Faea) can shrivel to impotence (quenched!) with repeat evil deeds/thoughts/desires/etc.
    And without Divine Intervention/a Savior we will remain orcish because our own spirits lack the power to change our bodies for Good. That's what Orcs don't have in Arda: Divine Intervention.
    It begs the question for me if Orc Faea get a 2nd chance (because they were literally born evil) by Mandos allowing them to be reincarnated. 🤔

  • @MrBrendofc
    @MrBrendofc Před 2 měsíci +4

    I'm so happy that discovered that CZcams Channel now, during my doctorate research. I'm studying the geography of fantasy worlds comparing Brazil and USA production of maps in books, and Tolkien's work is the main reference to every fantasy author. NoR helps me a lot to not feel alone while doing my writing

  • @tuomaspolla3814
    @tuomaspolla3814 Před 2 měsíci +2

    I'm kinda rooted to the first theory of the Orcs' origin of them being originally Elves (and Men), captured and reduced into a foulish beings via horrible torture and dark sorcery and corruption, which I'm sure pretty much brainwashed and degenerated them.

  • @TarMody
    @TarMody Před 2 měsíci +3

    The idea that orcs are derived from elves adds more depth to the mythology, but raises many questions:
    1) Are they still immortal?
    2) When they die, do their souls go to the Halls of Mandos?
    3) How does the phenomenon of reincarnation work?
    4) Is the phenomenon of fading still valid for them?
    5) Is it possible to recycle them?
    Since the metaphysical infrastructure of this idea was not sufficiently constructed by Tolkien, it will always receive criticism from these points.

  • @oviekpolugbo4227
    @oviekpolugbo4227 Před 2 měsíci +3

    @9:50 Tolkien also states, in a section of Nature of Middle-Earth, that the Eagles are maiar. There's also an orc origin theory that they were originally maiar (boldogs).

  • @TotalDESSSS
    @TotalDESSSS Před 2 měsíci +2

    Great video, as always. Chilling music. Thank you!

  • @ryankwon8785
    @ryankwon8785 Před 2 měsíci +5

    My Theory (Not Facts)
    Morgoth likely created the orcs through a process similar to how Aule made the Dwarves. However, unlike the Dwarves, the orcs lack a spirit, rendering them mere automatons devoid of free will or thought. Consequently, Morgoth resorted to creating more orcs by corrupting, torturing, and mutilating both Elves and later Men. These soulless orcish drones assisted Morgoth in keeping captive Elves imprisoned, corrupted, and tortured within Angband. The severity of the torture was such that distinguishing the gender of a former Elf-turned-Orc became difficult. In the end, the spirited orcs (former Elves) demonstrate a capacity for independent thought, to the extent that they can compose their own songs, as exemplified by the "Clap! Snap! The black crack!" song from Goblin Town.
    The initially spirited Orcs were immortal, but successive generations of orcs witnessed their immortal Elvish spirits and immortality wane due to the dark magic infused within them. Consequently, orcs are unable to return to the Halls of Mandos upon death, instead becoming wandering dark spirits akin to the final fates of Sauron and Saruman. They remain in this state until the aftermath of Dagor Dagorath and the Second Music of the Ainur.
    However, this does not apply to orcs who genuinely strive to reconnect with their Elvish roots and endeavor to pursue goodness independently. Such endeavors are observed by Eru, who intervenes in the deaths of these virtuous orcs by sending their lost souls directly to the Halls of Mandos for healing. Despite this, I do not believe orcs can ever be redeemed because Tolkien wrote the orcs to be too irredeemable to the eyes of literally everyone.

  • @agentspaniel4428
    @agentspaniel4428 Před 2 měsíci +170

    In short, no one really knows, not even Tolkien himself

    • @em333
      @em333 Před 2 měsíci +17

      Which speaks to the beauty of Tolkien's world building.

    • @KuK137
      @KuK137 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@em333 No, to its stupidity. Tolkien ruined his books with contradictory fundie voodoo, he was so close to realizing things indoctrinated into him in childhood were complete nonsense no amount of rationalizing and tweaking will ever fix, too bad he never made that last step and realized how dumb he was in doing so...

    • @sohamkar1846
      @sohamkar1846 Před 2 měsíci +2

      May be Adar knew. In the Amazon web series.

    • @Richard_Nickerson
      @Richard_Nickerson Před 2 měsíci +2

      Which is just realistic, really. We don't have all the answers in real life either.

    • @nostalgicdouchebag1912
      @nostalgicdouchebag1912 Před 2 měsíci +2

      This is one of the aspects I don't like being left unknown

  • @backwashjoe7864
    @backwashjoe7864 Před 2 měsíci +1

    The picture of orcs as beasts does not fit with how we see them in LotR. The dialog of the orcs in The Twin Towers as they are headed back to Isengard with Merry and Pippen is one of my favorite parts of the books. They are just soldiers, and like soldiers from everywhere and everywhen, just trying to find their best life in a world of madness while staying true to their orders. The rivalry and friction between the units from Isengard and Mordor feels very real and relatable.

  • @mixmaster2269
    @mixmaster2269 Před 2 měsíci +3

    I think it’s safe to say that if they were created from elves, and orcs do have souls like the other Children of Illuvatar then, like Gollum, while there’s little hope for them to redeem themselves, that doesn’t mean there’s no hope at all. That said, in a combination of nature and nurture, their cruel lifestyle and upbringing feeds whatever dark predispositions they have so they supersede whatever inherent goodness they also possess.

  • @Jane0Mills
    @Jane0Mills Před 2 měsíci +1

    This is such a fascinating, if chilling, topic, especially when considered with the complexities behind Tolkien's faith and lore.
    Thank you for covering this topic and summarising its evolution.

  • @user-wm7qx6ny4k
    @user-wm7qx6ny4k Před 2 měsíci +3

    I’ve been watching bong your vids forever and I love them you really put Tolkiens world into light!!!!!!!!!❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @user-sd7ri9fy4i
    @user-sd7ri9fy4i Před 2 měsíci

    Nice work dude thanks

  • @LearndingLife
    @LearndingLife Před 2 měsíci

    Release or a miracle.
    Really enjoy the story! Well done!

  • @pdxoneway
    @pdxoneway Před 2 měsíci +4

    One of my favorite topics

  • @kirandeepchakraborty7921
    @kirandeepchakraborty7921 Před 2 měsíci +2

    A very Different episode. Surreal and Philosophical ❤

  • @ajfarson
    @ajfarson Před 2 měsíci +4

    I have my doubts that Tolkein would embraced the concept of the body and soul (and mind) as divisible things and not part of a whole person. That is called Body-spirit dualism and was/is considered heresy in the Christian faith. While his fiction wasn't a direct alagory of his faith, I think he would avoid such things in his writings. Maybe not.
    I tend to lean toward a corrupted elf mentally twisted and driven to utter insanity. Broken to such a degree that the only thing that matters to them is that they are no longer tormented by their master. They will do anything to avoid this torment. That being could potentially find redemption, though unlikely. This is because they still possess a soul.
    Great video, as always. Thank you.

  • @procrastinator9
    @procrastinator9 Před měsícem +1

    When mentioning beasts, I cannot help but to think of dogs. My dog. A beast to be sure. Carelessly vicious towards a squirrel or a mouse. Driven by instinct. But noble in her loyalty and acute in her empathy. A lover of life. And as she shed this mortal coil accompanied by my tears and gratitude, I refuse to believe that she lacks a spirit with whom I will be reunited when my time comes. Do not let the thought of beasts be sloughed off so easily in an anthropocentric theology. I will be with her again.

  • @aaronbainbridge-lc4pq
    @aaronbainbridge-lc4pq Před 2 měsíci +1

    Could you do a video on the full tale of Aldarion and Erendis. Great work as usual

  • @michaelkaduck1915
    @michaelkaduck1915 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Y'know...in a way, Morgoth did get what he wanted...life he could twist solely to serve him. And he'd make them unable to escape his control, even if they desperately wanted to.
    Evil is not born...it is made.

  • @Dr_Cole
    @Dr_Cole Před 2 měsíci +1

    Excellent summary of the various theories. The notion from The Silmarilian never sat right with me but I could not explicate the reason(s). The last theory seems to capture both the personas of orcs and the evil of Melkor most. As you’ve noted, the theory is horrific in that the soul is trapped inside but seems like an apt representation of their behaviors and amalgamation of the discussions throughout the ages.

  • @arnebenne
    @arnebenne Před 2 měsíci

    You have such a dedicated CZcams channel, Matt Damon. Good job on getting millions of hits

  • @MagicScientist
    @MagicScientist Před 2 měsíci +1

    I wonder if the idea of the body and soul being separate intelligences/entities comes in to play with Gollum and Smeagol - Gollum representing the corrupted body, and Smeagol the tormented soul. Perhaps they are a window in to the middle of this corruptive process for hobbits.
    Orcs having no souls and needing a dark lord to command them helps with explaining why Melkor and Sauron are load bearing bosses for their orcish armies

  • @aaronsherwin6903
    @aaronsherwin6903 Před 2 měsíci

    tokien was really deep with the social commentary. gotta love it

  • @theamazingbatboy
    @theamazingbatboy Před 2 měsíci

    Well the orcs are often shown to be self-loathing or implied to be aware of the misery of their existence, so that tracks with the last theory. Mine was always that 'Orcs' is a catchall term for the humanoid experiments of Morgoth (and their descendants); same way _goblins_ and orcs were ultimately lumped together as variants or sub-species of the same monsters. Morgoth committed the original sin of warping sentient beings - beginning with the elves - and, once unlocked, this lore was pursued and refined by his adherents over thousands of years. Modern orcs are therefore most likely derived from humans, especially since Sauron had a plentiful supply of them in the East. Interesting topic, as always, NotR!

  • @AsadAli-jc5tg
    @AsadAli-jc5tg Před 2 měsíci

    @11:04 this chilled my own soul.....if that's the case then that must be the Melkor's most evil deed.

  • @rozemsama
    @rozemsama Před 2 měsíci +1

    PLEASE PLEASE a video on the many languages of Middle- Earth!!

  • @gyishin
    @gyishin Před 2 měsíci +2

    "The Many Origins of Debbie" should be the next one

  • @morrgash
    @morrgash Před 2 měsíci +1

    Oh i feel the thirst for a new Middle Earth game, thank you for the video, great quality as always 😊

  • @knines4280
    @knines4280 Před 2 měsíci +1

    One needs only to look at Smeagol......
    The will of Sauron......... & The Ring.......

  • @TiagoRamosVideos
    @TiagoRamosVideos Před 2 měsíci

    Very interesting 👌

  • @bilbo1108
    @bilbo1108 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Eye opener of an episode. Trapped souls in evil bodies is terrifying and shows the darker thoughts Tolkien may have carried from his time in WW1. Never a poor video dude!!

  • @Richard_Nickerson
    @Richard_Nickerson Před 2 měsíci

    I like the idea of Morgoth driving the fëa out of Elves. It fits the "corrupted Elves" description, and fixes Tolkien's personal issues with his own concept.

  • @AMRosa10
    @AMRosa10 Před 2 měsíci +1

    The back and forth on the origin of the orcs could also be a conceit by Tolkien, in the sense that he frames his work on the legendarium as that of a translator of found works from the distant past, where there may be conflicting documentary evidence for multiple origin stories.
    So, if he "found" multiple conflicting accounts, then simply translated them, then put forward the one that had the most supporting "evidence" as the most likely "canonical" story, he could then go back and revisit the other origin tales and intellectually debate the merits or drawbacks of each.

  • @ChiChiLand299
    @ChiChiLand299 Před 2 měsíci +2

    You kind of also could think of them as simply living machines, they move and have programs that allow them to think and reason but they do not have souls for they are machines of flesh and blood

  • @danielbroening
    @danielbroening Před 2 měsíci

    You hit a home run with this one. Just when I thought I had heard enough about the subject you weaved a wonderful and harrowing tale. Thank you! Good choice in background music also, whose the composer?

  • @paladinponyt1556
    @paladinponyt1556 Před 2 měsíci +1

    My own theory about the Orcs come from the idea that the first of them were Elves but forced into a new form. We know that Morgoth, Sauron, and the Witch King had some kind of power over souls and I believe this is the key to the Orcs creation. Morgoth captured some of the Elves and experimented on their bodies and spirits, after learning how easy it was to reshape their souls and turn them evil, Morgoth removed the Elves souls and put them into new bodies. I think he might have used a type of primate, because Orcs have a lot of ape-like features. This is likely because we know that souls can be put into other things. Sauron made werewolves by use evil spirits and the Barrow-wights are dead bodies with evil souls inside them. We also have the Silent-Watchers which are statues housing evil souls. This idea make since to me, because it uses things that Tolkien himself write down in the books and it explained why the Orcs are so animal-like. Again this is just my theory, so I could be wrong.

  • @AsadAli-jc5tg
    @AsadAli-jc5tg Před 2 měsíci

    @11:18 this chilled my own soul.

  • @TheMastiffprince
    @TheMastiffprince Před 2 měsíci

    Interesting to hear. I've heard a few stories as well that the orcs were before Morgoth and they lived in tribes.

  • @kidtwist29
    @kidtwist29 Před 2 měsíci +2

    I prefer the idea that they were corrupted elves.

  • @Carlb328
    @Carlb328 Před 2 měsíci

    I just wrote about this in my latest short story! In it I said that all creatures have a spark of the secret fire in them except for orcs and trolls.

  • @Hundredyacrewoods
    @Hundredyacrewoods Před 2 měsíci +2

    I think the last option is the best origin for the Orks (followed closely by the classic Elves version)
    However I would like to say that his opinion of animals not having souls makes me very uncomfortable and I highly doubt he had any pets.

    • @valentinkambushev4968
      @valentinkambushev4968 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Agree. As a dog owner, I can assure you that animals do have soles and different personalities.

  • @benjaminallen3371
    @benjaminallen3371 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Huan might not have a rational soul but he might have an _irrational_ one, because he is a dog. This irrationality is why we love dogs.🙂
    Tolkien's later characterization of Orcs as soulless seemingly contradicts their portrayal in _The Lord of the Rings._ I keep thinking of the dialogue between the tracker and the big orc in _The Return of the King,_ and Gorbag and Shagrat at the end of _The Two Towers_. In both instances there is subversive talk, which would be inconceivable if Orcs were unthinking beings.

  • @thegradyfiles3272
    @thegradyfiles3272 Před 2 měsíci

    The soul being trapped in trapped in a body while the only thing it can do is watch in terror is very terrifying

  • @greyworld6242
    @greyworld6242 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Awesome

  • @S0L12D3
    @S0L12D3 Před měsícem

    I like the idea that Morgoth created them in rebellion. As a mockery of the Elves. It makes sense as to what a devil like being would do.

  • @Hrothlac1
    @Hrothlac1 Před 2 měsíci +1

    To me it seems to come full circle: If the orcs have no fea and were akin to animals could morgoth have not just made them from rocks as Tolkein originally planned?

  • @gagaplex
    @gagaplex Před 2 měsíci +1

    I prefer the version with them as corrupted Elves. The Orcish souls will be redeemed at the end of the world at last, because no ensouled being beyond ultimate redemption to Eru.

  • @JessWLStuart
    @JessWLStuart Před 2 měsíci +1

    Melian the Maia was able to reproduce with an elf, Thingol. What if corrupted Maia were used to create or contribute to orks in some way?

  • @rogueascendant6611
    @rogueascendant6611 Před 2 měsíci

    I prefer the idea of Orcs being Elves once that were corrupted by Melkor in the name of mockery. But also does not dissuade the idea that the Dark Lord used 'terror' to get rid of Fea from within. So that he can create his army bend to his absolute will.

  • @Bananaman-jm4xl
    @Bananaman-jm4xl Před 2 měsíci +2

    I prefer a possibility for orc redemption over being fully evil. To me that seems to fit better in the world Tolkien created.

    • @metatronblack
      @metatronblack Před 2 měsíci

      What culture do the Orcs represent in real life?

    • @tevildo45
      @tevildo45 Před 2 měsíci

      Southern English

  • @DashsChannel
    @DashsChannel Před 2 měsíci

    05:12 This is why I love Tolkien's works. Evil must be struck down and purged immediately and without inflicting suffering. This narrative and that of the Jedi in Star Wars were the heroic ideals I grew up with.
    It's really sad how in the 21st century we got so many twisted and depraved heroes (IE, Jack Bauer from "24") who revel in torturing and doing horrific things in the name of "good," apparently okay as long as they are doing it, not the villains. Failing to see that such acts are inherently and irredeemably evil. If a hero stoops to the villain's level, then that is a flaw or a mistake made, often understandably, in the throes of battle, not something to be celebrated and portrayed as good and righteous.

  • @erichtomanek4739
    @erichtomanek4739 Před 2 měsíci +1

    So let's form a Fellowship and go in search of the Lost Writings of the Orcs!

  • @ac4th371
    @ac4th371 Před 2 měsíci

    I always just assumed it was a fact that Morgoth tortured the souls out of Elves then bread them. After a few generations they were born without souls. Didn't give it a second thought.

  • @imaginemyshock8067
    @imaginemyshock8067 Před 2 měsíci

    I am reminded of Nephilim, empty vessels ripe for use by another spirit. The spirits of Melkor and Sauron could drive them to do his will, and when they were gone the orcs became rudderless and almost unable to function.

  • @STMukr
    @STMukr Před 2 měsíci

    Like friend for you.❤
    Be blessed for your work.

  • @S0L12D3
    @S0L12D3 Před měsícem

    I feel like smegol could be a good example of the feya being driven out.

  • @gabrielshoebrigde6399
    @gabrielshoebrigde6399 Před 2 měsíci +8

    I love how tolkien invented the orcs and have become so popular that they are in almost all of the most popular fantasy series

    • @dominicadrean2160
      @dominicadrean2160 Před 2 měsíci +1

      I got the Feeling if he was alive people would probably have to ask him for permission to use them in their fantasy worlds since he created them they have to pay him to use them in their fantasy worlds

    • @valentinkambushev4968
      @valentinkambushev4968 Před 2 měsíci +1

      To be honest, most modern orcs have very little in common with Tolkien's orcs. They are so different nowadays that they are orc only in name.

    • @mayhem4ever
      @mayhem4ever Před 2 měsíci +1

      They have some pretty similar monsters with similar names from Latin and European mythology.

    • @ryankwon8785
      @ryankwon8785 Před 2 měsíci +2

      The orcs in media, like World of Warcraft, are redeemable and are natural beings. Tolkien’s orcs (goblins) are near-irredeemable and unnatural creatures. In Warcraft, Thrall (Go'el) is the epitome of Orc redemption for the war crimes committed during the First War and the Second War on Azeroth.

    • @apokatastasian2831
      @apokatastasian2831 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@ryankwon8785Based Tolkein

  • @paulmcleod8370
    @paulmcleod8370 Před 2 měsíci

    Only one word truly captures this ‘Grisley’ - how sad

  • @connorbeattie583
    @connorbeattie583 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I thinks it’s insane that the Great Eagles or any other animals do not have souls, I think not having a soul would be worse than death (for example in Harry Potter lore the dementors kiss) so the fate of an orc is a cursed existence.

  • @dtice69
    @dtice69 Před 2 měsíci

    I don't care what anyone else says, the orcs being corrupted elves makes the most sense for the story, the personality of Morgoth, and for the themes of Tolkien. I think the rarest of mistakes in his entire life was changing the origin of orcs away from that.

  • @olegkerbikov36
    @olegkerbikov36 Před 2 měsíci

    I think the best explanation is that orcs originated from elves. Orcs were really intelligent creatures - Tolkien himself stated in Hobbit " they can tunnel and mine as well as any but the most skilled dwarves - it is not unlikly that they invented some of the machines especially the ingenious devices for killing large number of people at once for wheels and engines and explosions always delighted them....

  • @christianvincentcostanilla8428

    Can you make a video :
    Melkor creatures creations

  • @Liethen
    @Liethen Před 2 měsíci +1

    If real life humans can become just as depraved as orcs then I see no reason they had to be soulless beasts rather than evil people.

  • @arsaydaegon
    @arsaydaegon Před 2 měsíci

    What is the music that plays at 12:41 ? It also plays earlier in the video as well

  • @TheMarcHicks
    @TheMarcHicks Před 2 měsíci

    My own head canon will always align with what is said on the matter in The Silmarillion.

  • @j-dmachado4349
    @j-dmachado4349 Před 2 měsíci

    What a fascinating exploration! So many nuances of orcish nature that I certainly hadn’t considered, very organically and eloquently presented. Intriguing (chiling!) stuff!! 😯
    I think the last reasoning of the Dark Lords terrifying the fëa of elves/men to paralysis within their being until they became orcs may be most applicable to Tolkien’s latest thinking? It seems to solve a lot of Tolkien’s nagging questions about the origin of orcs, their (oppressed) dignity/integrity as created beings, and their fate after death 🤔

  • @valentinkambushev4968
    @valentinkambushev4968 Před 2 měsíci +3

    6:59 To be fair, if men and elves could have children together, there's no reason for men and orcs to not be capable of the same, if they are indeed tortured elves.

    • @keitolainen7459
      @keitolainen7459 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Yeah. I wonder why there are no elf-orcs or orc-elves though. They should be super compatible. Unless I just haven't heard of them maybe? Seems to get a little muddled when you start getting into the weeds of who has souls and what that means. Do orc-men have souls? What about orc-men-men? Men-orc-men-men?

  • @QuentaAccords
    @QuentaAccords Před 2 měsíci +1

    Imagine Orcs and Elves as the Hunter-Gatherers of ages past upon our Earth. Their difference is their way of life. An Orc will hunt for food with a little bit of gathering, while an Elf will gather food (provided by Yavanna) with a little bit of hunting. As such Orcs have been selectively bred by Melkor, Elves and Men to gather under one Master and ravage the lands of Arda in Warbands. Eurasia has seen such savagery, and I believe Tolkien didn't struggle with their Origins. An Orcish lifestyle exists in nature (Melkor), it exists in gathering (Elves) and it exists in societies (Men). Cannibalism.

  • @Arphemius
    @Arphemius Před 2 měsíci +1

    I don't think it's such an inconceivable idea that orcs have their own afterlife, just like elves and men. That Iluvatar provides for them and gives their corrupted souls a chance to heal, separate from the others. You already have different afterlives for men and elves, why not have a third? That might explain why their souls don't reside in the halls of Mandos.

  • @bjsuits
    @bjsuits Před 2 měsíci

    Wow that was way better than it had any right to be. Really refocuses the lens in which I view orcs

  • @mhmt1453
    @mhmt1453 Před 2 měsíci

    That is the best explanation I’ve heard thus far. I have been reading Tolkien since the early 1980s, and could never quite accept entirely any origin for the orcs. There was always an inconsistency. If they were tortured elves, how were their souls reconciled to Mandos? Would they not be immortal? Why, then we’re other captives such as Gwindor not made into orcs? Obviously, orcs were far more numerous in population to the elves, and given elves’ low propensity to bear many children, it seems unlikely that orcs only originate from elves Morgoth (and later Sauron) managed to capture. Even an unnaturally robust breeding program could not yield the vast hordes that show up at each of these battles. I find it more digestible that orcs were fashioned from a template of tortured elves whose spirits were cast out from their bodies. If Aule could create soulless moving creatures in the Dwarves, should we then not suppose Melkor, first among the Valar in skill and power, should have this potential? Clearly, orcs are soulless beings.

  • @Eowyn3Pride
    @Eowyn3Pride Před 2 měsíci

    Well done lad! 😀❤️🧝‍♂️🧝‍♀️🧙‍♂️🍻🥔

  • @dominicadrean2160
    @dominicadrean2160 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Here's a fun to what if question how different do you think the second and third ages would be if the lands of the first age never sunk under the sea after the war of Wrath

  • @Sunborne187
    @Sunborne187 Před 2 měsíci

    That last line fits true to what Christians, like Tolkien was, believe: that to nourish the spirit is to be closer to God, but to nourish the body alone is to move closer to Satan.

  • @valethemajor
    @valethemajor Před 2 měsíci

    This is how such creatures work in my setting. I am also Catholic and struggle with the same dilemma. I have separated out free-willed races as simply exaggerations/fantastical human races (they are still ultimately human - I have a soft issue with creatures like Tolkien's elves) and other seeming-intelligent creatures I call the 'sapients'. The sapients have mortal souls a la animals and some live for much longer to compensate. The sapients have a fixed culture that is irrevocably tied to their species, as well as their behavior. There are no goblins that aren't violent and don't steal; there are no bormin who do not construct anything more sophisticated than dirt huts, etc.
    This excerpt from St Alphonsus Ligouri makes me dwell all the deeper on this matter:
    "If on this earth where were two classes of men, one mortal, and the other immortal, and if the former saw the latter entirely devoted to the acquisition of earthly goods, would they not exclaim: O fools that you are! You have it in your power to secure the immense and eternal goods of Paradise, and you lose your time in procuring the miserable goods of this earth, which shall end at death. And for these you expose yourselves to the danger of the eternal torments of hell. Leave to us, for whom all shall end at death, the care of these earthly things."
    What would be considered indulgence and greed from our morality as immortal souled beings would actually be the pursuit of the natural good for such a mortal race...

  • @paulmcleod8370
    @paulmcleod8370 Před 2 měsíci

    Having watched this video fascinated - can you tell me the difference between a goblin and an orc and whats the heritage of goblins thank you

  • @11-AisexualsforGod-11
    @11-AisexualsforGod-11 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Their eversion to sunlight indicates that they only maintain a 2nd hand interpretation of reality handed down to them..
    Highly religious

  • @davidgrange8182
    @davidgrange8182 Před 2 měsíci

    With that last theory, does that mean that after death it would be possible for the orcs to be resurrected, and that the souls restored to being elves all along?

  • @dhaburuk6494
    @dhaburuk6494 Před měsícem

    That final origin makes the most sense in the context of Tolkien's faith and other establish lore. Christianity has divided and wrestled between factions & individuals, despite doctrine stating that all men should be redeemed. For the Orcs of Middle Earth to be alive they must have souls, and for the Elves and Men to forget that fact is all too relatable.