The Silmarils | Tolkien Explained
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- čas přidán 4. 08. 2023
- Covering the History and Nature of the Silmarils!
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Melkor and the silmarils - Sara Morello
Silmarils - Daniel Dougherty
Feanor - Bella Bergolts
The Oath of Feanor - Jenny Dolfen
The Kinslaying at Alqualonde - Ted Nasmith
Maedhros Casts Himself into a Chasm - Ted Nasmith
Feanor and the silmarils - Bella Bergolts
Two Trees of Valinor - Anna Kulisz
The silmarils - aegeri
Feanor - alystraea
The Two Trees - Kinko White
Feanor - Tolman Cotton
Galadriel - lady of light - Kinko White
Galadriel - YidanYuan
Galadriel - Ivan Cavini
Galadriel - alystraea
Feanor - Bella Bergolts
Artanis and Feanor - Tolman Cotton
Galadriel - Steve Airola
Galadriel - Lida Klavina
The gifts of Galadriel - kuliszu
Feanor - Jenny Dolfen
The_Two_Trees_of_Valinor - Šárka_Škorpíková
The making of the silmarils - kuliszu
Feanor Creates the Silmarils - Ted Nasmith
Feanor - MellorianJ
Tuor, Gelmir, and Arminas - Ted Nasmith
Doors of Durin - J.R.R. Tolkien
palantir of elostirion - Matej Cadil
Feanor with silmaril - steamey
Varda the Star-Queen - Janka Latečková
Varda - Janka Latečková
Mandos - Ralph Damiani
Feanor and the silmarils - Sara Morello
Melkor and Morgoth - Ralph Damiani
Melkor - Kimberly
Melkor Morgoth - Soni Alcorn-Hender
Feanor - Turner Mohan
Feanor - Catherine Karina Chmiel
Feanor - Tolman Cotton
drawing of the sword - Jenny Dolfen
Victorious Return - Fingolfin and Fingon - Jenny Dolfen
Ungoliant and the Two Trees - Ted Nasmith
The Two Trees Doom - Ted Nasmith
The Court of the Valar - Ralph Damiani
Feanor - Jenny Dolfen
Feanor's first son - Marya Filatova
Mandos - Janka Latečková
Finwe - Jenny Dolfen
Oath of Feanor - Bella Bergolts
Ungoliant Demands the Silmarils - Ted Nasmith
Ungoliant and Melkor - Olanda Fong-Surdenas
into the storm - TS Rodriguez
Morgoth - Ralph Damiani
The Kinslaying - Ted Nasmith
spirit of fire, feanor - Jenny Dolfen
The Oath of Feanor - Jenny Dolfen
The royal court of thingol - steamey
Luthien - Sara Morello
Luthien in the court of Morgoth - Pete Amachree
Beren with Silmaril - Anke Eissman
Carcharoth - Turner Mohan
Carcharoth - alvaro fernandez gonzalez
Carcharoth - Stevce Lazarevski
Huan's Leap - Ted Nasmith
Nauglamir Thingol - Kimberly
The Request of Thingol - Peet
Elu thingol & the dwarves of Nogrod in menegroth - steamey
The silmarils heraldic device - Matej Cadil
Silmarils - Daniel Dougherty
Silmarils heraldic device - J.R.R. Tolkien
Thingol and dwarves - anotherstranger_me
Death of thingol - steamey
Luthien at Tol Galen 2020 - Ted Nasmith
Seven sons - Jenny Dolfen
Kinslaying of doriath - dracarysdrekkar
Earendil and Elwing - Peet
The third kinslaying - Turner Mohan
ulmo and elwing - aegeri
The Ruin of the House of Feanor - Jenny Dolfen
Resentment - Jenny Dolfen
Earendil and Elwing - steamey
Eärendil Searches Tirion - Ted Nasmith
Earendil's ship - John Howe
Earendil vs Ancalagon - Daniel Dougherty
Earendil - alystraea
star of earendil - Matej Cadil
Gil-Estel, the Star of High Hope - Lída Holubová
Stargazing - Anke Eißmann
New star - alystraea
And Morgoth came - Jenny Dolfen
Tulkas Chaining Morgoth - Kip Rasmussen
they prepared to die, maglor & maedhros - Jenny Dolfen
Maedhros_and_Maglor - Catherine Karina Chmiel
Lord of the Eagles - Tuuliky
Maedhros and Caranthi - Catherine Chmiel
Maedhros - Lída Holubová
Maedhros and Maglor - Turner Mohan
Maedhros - Lída Holubová
#silmarillion #silmarils #tolkien - Zábava
Ah the Silmarils, the three gems that make the rings of power and one ring look like cereal box toys.
Not really! While the silmarils were the greatest work of craftsmanship, the one ring held a darker allure. It's power was rooted in darkness and malice. Conversely the silmarils burned the flesh of any evil being.
@@hendrickson3414They would burn any "unclean" or "evil" flesh.
@hendrickson3414 Ya but EVEN THE EVILIST of all, Morgoth, whos skin it did burn, still dained to wear them upon a crown atop his head. Dark allure, there it be. Me thinkst thou has forgotten thigh history.
@@hendrickson3414while the ring had its provenance in Saurons power, and so placed an evil curse upon any who kept or wore it. The Silmarils were of such purity and beauty, they caused desire and jealousy in any who looked upon them, simply for their divine origin, no evil touched their creation but bekuz of their divinity, they caused desire leading to malice in mortals and immortals alike
@@hendrickson3414 Yeah, it's a bit of an apples-oranges comparison. They are different kinds of objects. But we note that Shelob isn't frightened of the One Ring, but is terrified of the light of the Two Trees coming from the Phial of Galadriel. The scene in The Hobbit films where Galadriel uses the light of the Phial to expel Sauron from Dol Guldur is, of course, an invention of Peter Jackson, but we can see the logic of why that light could overpower Sauron.
I believe it is a testament to Galadriel valuing a good heart over outstanding greatness that she would deny Feanor the gift that she would give to Gimli
Maybe it's not that. Maybe shes thought about what could've been avoided if she granted Feanor some hair
Feanor sought to use her hair. Gimli wanted only to treasure it.
"Not the first." Always gives me chills.
Mandos knew many things not known to the rest. You are absolutely correct. Not the first is such a terrible truth.
I always read that line in the voice of James Earl Jones.
Messing with any other Vala is number three on the Do not do list, only because messing with Mandos specifically is number two, and messing with Eru is number one.
@@myriadmediamusings Am I missing something? Mandos is a Vala.
@@philipc3221 That would have been a great choice to the voice of Mandos in a Silmarillion audiobook.
Gimli, the only person on Middle Earth who had enough rizz to get a trace of Galadriels hair 😅
An one of the few mortals to get to Aman.
Hair from the head right? 😅
@@andrewbartczak5941 Actually the island of Tol Eressëa. Gimli would not have been able to stand foot on the continent of Aman. Only the Ainur and the Elves were allowed to reside in Valinor and Eldamar.
@@Alexs.2599 so basically all the cool kids get to party in the greatest place on Arda while the common people can only look from the outside?
Elrond Galadriel and Olorin must have been telling the bouncer not to let them in or they’ll ruin the fun
@@Byenie0912 hahaha pretty much, good one lol.
I’ve often wondered if the reason Sauron made the ring look so generic was in part because he remembered what happened with the silmarils being the most beautiful jewels ever that everyone recognized the second they saw them and so the Ring of Power is a simple band of gold most people wouldn’t recognize
Well, since the only people he planned on seeing it were his slaves, I doubt that was a consideration.
Interesting. Makes sense
@@terry7907 Sauron relied on deception early on with the ring
@@MikeTheDit could in part explain why Isildur took the ring off Sauron because he probably thought, neat gold ring not, this is the most dangerous thing in creation full of Sauron's taint.
@Tadicuslegion78 Isildur knew that it was the One Ring. In his account of the battle, he describes it as such. He knew, that's why he kept it.
Fëanor's story is so sad that I always liked the version that contains the Dagor Dagorath where he gets some redemption by willing breaking the silmarils to help in the recreation of the world. It is such a beautiful ending to his story.
It wraps up Turin's story best too.
Agreed!
Is it weird of me to hope for Morgoth to get a clue and repent after he loses Dagor Dagorlath and become besties with Manwe😅
Fëanor doesn't need redemption he needs revenge
@@roddo1955 Well he's like Satan he will never ask and if morgoth begged he still wouldn't receive mercy and Satan well I can't say because idk gods judgement
Reading the History of Middle-earth, it's interesting to watch the significance of the Silmarils grow larger as the legendarium evolves over the years.
That's how legends work... They grow great and greater with time, even today.
For example; in his time, Jesus Christ was known only locally and within Israel. But look at how widespread his name and story (his "legend") is now.
sorry, but that's simply not correct...how can you _possibly_ say that their influence in the third age is greater than in the years of the trees, when they led directly to the destruction of the two trees, the first kinslaying, the exile of the noldor, and the coming of the first age? certainly, the importance of the silmarils echoed through the history of arda, especially with respect to the destinies of the elves and people involved and their descendants' fates (e.g., aragorn and arwen being descendants of beren and luthien). but they were just legendary treasures of ancient antiquity by the time of "the lord of the rings". lol, it's actually yet another mark of distinction upon sam gamgee that he even knows about them.
@@douglasharley2440 I think you have somewhat misunderstood my comment.
@@adpirtle oh, i see now!...you meant in terms of tolkein's updates to the legendarium from initial conceptions to relatively-polished final versions, how they became much more important. derp! my bad.😬
Hey I just started reading History of Middle Earth too. Basically my last books to get through in the middle earth legendarium.
Can't imagine how terrifying the giant spider Ungoliant is that made even Melkor tremble in fear
Ungoliant.
She was powered up 🎄🎄
And Melkor was weakened
Not quite a fair fight 🕷
Arachnophobia hits hard.
I think Melkor felt fear because until then, he had never come across something that was pure darkness. Melkor himself was originaly made from goodness and has control over things that were originally good. A corrupted form of 'goodness'. Shelob was pure darkness incarnated. Melkor craved light to control. Shelob craved light to consume. Including the flame imperishable. The very flame that sustains him through Eru. Shelob was about to consume his 'light'.
One of the coolest things about this whole ordeal is something that is seldomly talked about. Morgoth and Ungoliant had their little disagreement in a valley. So loud were the screams of Morgoth, that not only it alerted thr faraway Balrogs that their master was in danger, Morgoth's own essence tainted the mountains of the valley. And it is said that if someone were to go to said valley, the echoes of their voices would comeback in the Dark Lord's own voice.
Now I understand the significance of Gimli's request, and the number of hairs she willingly gave to the pure-hearted dwarf.
Honestly, I was so confused, but now I know, and it's one of the sweetest gestures she could make.
One of your best commentaries. Best closing line ever: “so the Light shall go out over all the World.”
The people that make fan art of stories like this are the real heroes. We all hear amazing tales, but people that take them and bring them to life putting their own unique imaginative flair into the imagery giving us unique and original interpretations... I have so much envy and inspiration from that skill
Also obligatory these videos are wonderful and you are doing Eru's work etc
Imagine if the history dose channel does this epic af 😮
Ever since finding this channel back in January i have read the Lotr books , hobbit and just made it to chapter 13 of the Silmarillion so far i love this book series. Edit: Finished the Silmarillion two weeks after writing this Quite a good book
Probably also worth mentioning that Feanor asking Galadriel for her hair wasn't a case of some random dude asking some random chick for something random. No, Feanor was her uncle. They were family! Her father, Finarfin, was the younger brother of both Feanor and Fingolfin (both of whom would later die in middle earth, but Finarfin, having forsook the march of the Eldar, never left Valinor and so, would have been waiting gladly to receive Galadriel when she comes home, at the end of the 3rd age/ beginning of the 4th age). But I digress...
The point is, she gave to Gimli, a complete stranger AND a Dwarf (as well being a traditional enemy of the Elves) 3 strands of her hair. Whereas to her own uncle, she gave nothing, having refused him every time he asked. Maybe the subtext is _Blood doesn't have to be thicker than water. Not if you decide that it isn't..._
I think by Galadriel's estimation, Gimli is like a fan who's a genuinely good guy but also harmless in terms of power level. While Feanor would be the weird mad scientist type uncle who's always working on some crazy invention. Who knows what would have become of it if she did give her hair.
@@Th0ughtf0rce This is where I'd lean. We all have people in our lives whom we trust less because we know them more. I suspect it would be no different in this case.
@@Th0ughtf0rcepeople get to know each other pretty quickly in middle earth. She sees into Gimli’s heart and sees that it is noble, and he is humble.
The One Ring. The Silmarils. The Arkenstone. Precious objects all around
Macguffins😂
mushrooms
@@celestialhylos7028 I would argue the One Ring at least (though most likely the Silmarils as well) is not a Macguffin at all, because one of the main criteria for a macguffin is that it’s actual nature isn’t relevant to the story, but simply the importance given to it by the characters. The One Ring’s nature is a fundamental element of the LOTR story.
Is the arkenstone one of the simarils? It seems to have similar properties and it was found in the earth.
@@joshmorgan4476 no it's not, or at least there is no canon that would suggest it is the case. The properties are quite dissimilar as well as the Arkenstone only really appeals to the dwarves.
'For the less even as for the greater there is some deed that he may accomplish but once only'
Here I think we see something fundamental to Tolkiens universe. The thought of a Magnum Opus. A life's work. Whether it's the great trees themselves or the silmarils, The One Ring or the Red Book of Westmarch. Each life has one crowning achievement.
Seen in this light 'The Gift of Men' starts to make sense. After we finish our purpose we die to leave space for the next generation, who will have their own magnum opus to create.
This is, I think, the message of LOTR. A way to cope with death, to see ourselves as another stepping stone for humanity's ongoing journey towards greatness.
You could argue that the time afforded to us is too short, and I think Tolkien would agree. Hence the Numenorians, long lived and wise, able to achieve wonders beyond ordinary humans.
Perhaps it is, but that is not for us to decide, all we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given to us.
So much blood spilled for three jewels. I know they are unworldly beautiful, but they are still not worth all the lost lives.
Wasn't just beauty it was power as well.
@@Eric-cj8sb still not worth it.
It's a different game for the Elves. They don't really die, they get "sent to timeout" awhile in the Halls of Mandos, before returning to the flesh. Feanor's detention is still ongoing, but even he will return.
Now, Tolkien did write how it mystified and saddened the Elves to learn of the frailty and mortality of Men, when they first met them and witnessed their aging and deaths. So it sounds like they really had no conception of true, permanent death... perhaps had they understood, they would have acted differently at the onset.
And yet, it's important to note how key it was that the Noldor do return to Middle Earth. It was they, and not the Sindar of Doriath who embraced the Edain, and raised their stature. And without the Noldor, there would have been no ultimate escape of Men from Morgoth. The Edain had fled the East, where Morgoth already held sway. Beleriand wouldn't have been a safe haven, Morgoth was already moving on Doriath and would have taken it. Melian's Girdle might have held awhile, but not if/when Morgoth himself came. As for the Dwarves of Belegost and Nogrod... we saw a single Balrog ultimately take Khazad Dum. Those Dwarven cities stood no long-term chance against the power Morgoth would eventually turn against them.
Had the Noldor not rebelled, by the time the Valar decided to act on behalf of Men, most of Middle Earth would be barren and it's peoples enslaved and ruined. It's worth noting that the Rohirrim and other Northmen (such as those in Dale), were later perceived by the Numenoreans as kinfolk, fellow Edain that didn't travel to Numenor. The others, the ones that served Morgoth, later turned to evil again under Sauron. That most likely would have been the fate of all Men, to easily fall under the Shadow.
The irony in making the Silmirils to preserve the trees, yet refuse to give them up to actually save the trees.
The Silmarils are precioussss...
I'd still like to think that Feanor, having spent enough time to reflect on his wrongdoing, eventually would learn of how a simple Dwarf's humility and true love for beauty for the sake of sharing with others earned him the radiant gift he had been denied thrice over, on top of being the only one of his kind to reach the everlasting shores.
And while bitter of Gimli at first, Feanor would finally understand that he had to be of the same mindset, to share beauty and radiance rather than covet it.
You're my all time fav CZcamsr when it comes to lotr 🥰
Sad, the red book is far better
@@squaeman_2644 Meh, I disagree with you there. While I enjoy the Red Book's channel very much, I prefer Matt's channel just a little more, but to each their own.
@@squaeman_2644 Matt's is good for people who haven't or don't want to read Tolkien. Red Book's is good for people who aren't new to Tolkien.
Melkor, the one who embodies fire & darkness. Always up to no good in the shadows🔥
First and while less corruption with the the three silmarils are not with malice built into them they caused so much more bloodshed than the one ring or the arkenstone could ever had
I've watched all your videos and I must say this may be the greatest of them all!
Even though Morgoth twice removed light from the world he still coveted it in the forms of the Silmarils I believe. Opinion, but it was more of a control thing than completely getting rid of light. Ungoliant was a true form of darkness, all consuming, and even Morgoth knew that was a big nope.
In the end, Morgoth would have utterly destroyed the world if he had been able to.
Ive always loved Middle-Earth but never read the books past The Hobbit and LOTR. But thanks to this channel which is the best source of Middle-Earth knowledge, I am almost done with The Children of Hurin and want to read The Silmarillion next. Thanks ya big nerd!
Sauron: behold! With all my power i made this ring! It shall be the most powerful of all
Fäenor eons ago: so anyway i made some gems…
The simarils or the Italian version Simarili 🤌🤌
That connection to Gimli and the Fellowship later on was crazy🤯
Made the moment even more beautiful
Truly a sad story, the story of Feanor, and the Oath of Feanor, the evil of Morgoth worked almost as he desired. One could imagine if Morgoth's evil words had perfectly worked, the elves of Middle-Earth would be no more
This world never ceases to amaze me
Peter jackson needs to do a movie based on morgoth and the simarils
I don't think anyone can afford the movie rights to the first age material from the Tolkin team.
No thanks. I've had enough Legolas to last me, lol.
@@pendragon2012 lol you know he’d be in it for some reason too. I like him in the LOTR trilogy though
No more modern media destroying the image of middle earth. Just enjoy the books
@@eberco5 Well yeah, he belongs in there, even though he's overused, lol. There'd probably also be a scene where Feanor gets pierced by an evil blade and one of the elven people has to find aethelas to heal him.
I live in France 🇫🇷 and I really like this youtube channel 😍
The Silmarils are really powerful and beautiful. It's sad to see that they were the cause of so much death and destruction
“Thou shalt not covet.”
No earthly possession should ever be held in such high regard, regardless of their beauty and power.
This isn't unique to Tolkein but a truth known since the existence of beautiful things such as gold and jewels has been known. It's a theme that both Agatha Christie (In "Cat among the Pigeons" most famously) and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle ("The Mazarin Stone, The Blue Carbuncle, The Six Napoleans") often explored. Sherlock Holmes puts it best in the Blue Carbuncle - "When the commissionaire had gone, Holmes took up the stone and held it against the light. “It’s a bonny thing,” said he. “Just see how it glints and sparkles. Of course it is a nucleus and focus of crime. Every good stone is. They are the devil’s pet baits. In the larger and older jewels every facet may stand for a bloody deed. This stone is not yet twenty years old....In spite of its youth, it has already a sinister history. There have been two murders, a vitriol-throwing, a suicide, and several robberies brought about for the sake of this forty-grain weight of crystallized charcoal. Who would think that so pretty a toy would be a purveyor to the gallows and the prison?"
Truly such legendary treasures. It was said that when morgoth stole them for many weeks, he could do nothing but stare into their beauty. It was only when one of his tears touched upon the jewels that he saw his own reflection, and could no longer look upon them again. Rings of power did do that nicely ill give them that how items so beautiful almost turned the heart of the great foe himself but still burdoned him.
But what truly amazes me is how they aided in the creation of the elven rings of power. Im looking at collecting the three. I already posses narya and having the remaining two would only let me respect the feanors work a little more in my own room in display.
Rings of power shat allover the writings Tolkien spent decades lovingly putting together. It’s an insult to his experiences and what he believed in.
@@j-mc5201 I don't think he's referring to the show. Tolkien called all the rings crafted as part of Sauron's plan 'Rings of Power.'
@@istari0 that's what I meant. The elven rings though were an addition celibrimbor made. I am okay with the series but I do agree it could have done better when using Tolkiens work in respect. But I will say I did enjoy some of it and I want to see where they take the next season.
It's kinda cool that each simiarils are cast in the sea, land and sky
I so much appreciate your work, thank you so much for your time and effort! Cheers!
Thanks for all your research…
You make those story so simple and even more interesting
I need Tolkien's tale of the end of Arda, I need to read it, it sounds amazing.
Like always, a real big pleasure to watch. Thanks !
These type of videos are so good.
I love that quote from Sam!
I just realized that the Silmarils glow because they are radioactive.
Hence why no mortal hand can touch them 😅
this was genuinely so fascinating
Amazing content as always. Even though some of which is covered in other videos I love relearning something and getting excited then to go watch those again.
I think that's the best video you've made, thank you for the excellent Tolkien content. What an epic conclusion to Tolkien's tales, I just wish he had finished it and Feanor had his redemption story, he's such a fascinating character, more personality than many lesser tales could ever achieve (rings of power😂).
It's a pity Tolkien's work on the Dagor Dagorath was unfinished. Feanor's ultimate chance- and act- of redemption certainly melded well with Tolkien's devout Catholicism, and it was something that didn't get much of a chance to shine in LOTR.
Not unfinished, scrapped.
Tolkien decided to remove the second prophecy from the legendarium.
It was a conscious decision for him to leave it unfinished as he didn’t see it as part of the story anymore.
we need some live-action Years of the Trees material
Wow your videos are awesome. Great work.
great video so much good content, great pacing, and great execution
The silmarilis the reason which the elves and morgoth fight each other. Brilliant video. We always appreciate your hard work and dedication towards these videos.
Great video!
Two things. One, Morgoth never regretted losing a Silmaril. That one Silmaril caused the disarray of his enemy's and the end of the seven sons. Two, although I know it has been stated as untrue, I love the assumption that the Heart of the Mountain discovered in the Lonely Mountain is the Silmaril that was thrown into the chasm.
You can say the Arkenstone is an "essay in the craft" similarly how there are many lesser magical rings made before the creation of the Rings of Power.
Great video, great topic.
I still dont understand how Earendil was able to defeat Ancalagon, I know his ship was blessed, but Ancalgon was massive
Because he had a Silmaril and the blessings of the Valar.
One of a dragons power is the ability to mesmerize. I suspect the Silmaril was proof against this power and actually mesmerized Ancalagon. Next time you face a legendary dragon, ask to borrow the Silmaril from Earendil .
Elendil should have been wearing the Elendilmir while facing Sauron. I suspect that is one reason Elendil was able withstand Sauron wearing the one ring, that and Elendil being the greatest of numenoreans alive. Of course, Gilgalad because he was the Noldor king, and greatest of high elves in the middle earth
Cause Ancalagon is ridiculously oversized by fans. Same as Smaug actually. The size of Smaug in the Hobbit movies would probably be somewhat fitting for Ancalagon, with Smaug beeing like a 1/3 or 1/4 of that size. A 20-30m long dragon is EXTREMELY dangerous already
Masterpiece, ty for the vid
I would love to see a video where you treat some of the adaptions of Tolkien's works by other authors.
Like, in Russia in the 90s, there were many alternative views on Tolkien's works and the evolution of the Silmarillion such as in the books "Last ringbearer" (Where Mordor is seen as a technological and rational heaven) and "Black book of Arda" (Where Morgoth is seen as a good Valar fighting the tyrannical Eru Ilúvatar)
LETS GO SILMARILS!
Swim swim sim!
Another nice video. You bring our geek-musings to life. Btw: Your 'Sam' voice is perfection! I think you should read the trilogy for audible or something. You have a good voice for it 👍
Good work bro🎖️💯
I really appreciate your videos, @Nerd of the Rings, thank you for making them. I really like the backgroud music / score of the videos. Who made the score for your videos? Is the a way to just listen to the music somewhere online? Thank you, Juraj
Think of the Silmarils as copies of a long-lost original work of literature, the bread and butter of philology. What would you do for a copy of Ennius or the Tristan by Chrétien de Troyes? These works of literature are now lost forever because no copies have survived. If someone had made a copy, even imperfect like the Silmarils are to the Trees, then in the hand of a skilled Vala-philologist like Tolkien, the original could be reconstructed. The Silmarils are not just a metaphor for power, but also for cultural transmission: many beautiful and horrible things were made in the name of Classical literature, our Western Silmarils.
Epic content 💛
All I've learnt is if I ever travel to middle earth I'll stay away from any jewels
Whoever came up with the name TomDaBombadil is a genius.
I’ve often thought it would be hilarious, deserved and tragic it Feanor made it to the end, held the Silmarils at last and they burned his hands and his being at once began to unravel with grief and betrayal and rage that his own creations rejected him and he refused to let go and forsake his body that eventually it was destroyed and his spirit was left unable to touch it. And as with Saruman, he looked to the west and was blown away. Or refused the summons of Mandos, and lingered, and the greatest in might of all Elves was laid low and diminished, the greatest craftsman left unable to interact with the world. A spirit so mighty he killed his mother to come into the world, a whisper on the wind. Left less than Gollum. And as his oath demanded, follow Morgoth, and Sauron into The Void.
Please make a video"what if Aragorn took the one ring "
A possible idea for the future could be a summary or a ranking of the mightiest/most beautiful things/items in the universe of Tolkien. Containing the rings of power, silmarils, and maybe weapons, ...
You could do this like a ranking. Would be nice to watch in my opinion.
They should make a movie about this
I love your videos! So interesting and peaceful!
Love your passion. Always wondering how you come up with more content! Very inspiring
Great Job.
Imagine being Feanor, with all of his power and talent, somehow getting to see that the one guy who managed to get a lock of Galadriel's hair is some crass little dwarf.
Can you do a video on Aldarion and Erendis?
Out of question topic, I want to ask what happened to the orcs who fled after the ring was destroyed and was moria fully reclaimed by the dwarves? I mean bookwise.
What a treat!!!!
I feel bad of Aulë. His knowledge was perverted by his own pupils as they became the source of great perils from the ancient days down to the Third Age of the world.
Did Tolkien ever write about what Aulë feels after seeing bad things unfolded in the Middle Earth by the hands of his own pupils?
Remember these were only a few of his servants. I'm sure he had many others who did not become corrupted. Morgoth also corrupted other Maiar besides Sauron; we just don't know which Vala they served.
All I know is that he must have been SO PROUD when Gimli became the 1st and only Dwarf to ever enter the Undying lands.
Yavanna divorced him... Manwe and Varda never invited him to council meetings in fear that he might leak information to his students... the returning elves from Middle Earth keeps on criticizing him for creating dwarves that killed them
that's my head canon
@@Byenie0912 That's rough, buddy...
It isn't Aule's fault. The desire to create is native to him, and he found things that were also imbued with that native nature, as would be natural. However, it just so happened the evil of morgoth DELIBERATELY sought out such people as well becasue the desire to create often leads to the temptations of pride and power. VERY easily.
There are some things you can make only once
Day 1 of asking for top 100 most powerful lotr characters
You're the only person who will like the fact my parents named me, Elbereth Laurelin. This was before the movies came out, too.
I feel bad for the sons of Feanor they just wanted their inheritance like any children would. 🫤
"Then Manwë spoke and said: 'Hearest thou, Fëanor son of Finwë, the words of Yavanna? Wilt thou grant what she would ask?' There was long silence, but Fëanor answered no word. Then Tulkas cried: 'Speak, O Noldo, yea or nay! But who shall deny Yavanna? And did not the light of the Silmarils come from her work in the beginning?'
But Aulë the Maker said: 'Be not hasty! We ask a greater thing than thou knowest. Let him have peace yet awhile.'
But Fëanor spoke then, and cried bitterly: 'For the less even as for the greater there is some deed that he may accomplish but once only; and in that deed his heart shall rest. It may be that I can unlock my jewels, but never again shall I make their like; and if I must break them, I shall break my heart, and I shall be slain; first of all the Eldar in Aman.'
'Not the first,' said Mandos, but they did not understand his word; and again there was silence, while Fëanor brooded in the dark. It seemed to him that he was beset in a ring of enemies, and the words of Melkor returned to him, saying that the Silmarils were not safe, if the Valar would possess them. 'And is he not Vala as are they,' said his thought, 'and does he not understand their hearts? Yea, a thief shall reveal thieves!' Then he cried aloud: 'This thing I will not do of free will. But if the Valar will constrain me, then shall I know indeed that Melkor is of their kindred.' Then Mandos said: 'Thou hast spoken.'"
Oooooh.... Tom "Da Bomb"-adil. I just got that.
"By Eru Illuvatar! Father no! Melkor has slain you, oh tidings of darkness and woe! That an eldar hath been slain here in Valinor!"
Finwe walks over, having been rehoused in the halls of Mandos
"Eyup. He got me good"
Feanor: if you were to break my gems, I would be the first elf in Aman to be slain
Mandos: not the first
Feanor: what
Mandos: what
It always irked me that the Valar did nothing while one of their own destroyed the trees, slaughtered elves, stole the Silmarils and allowed him to cause endless suffering for ages, just because some of the Noldor acted like jerks
ya if anything i feel like they should have saved the two trees. trees did nothing wrong. and not everyone was following feanor.
That's why Ulmo is the best.
@@Zero00899 The Two Trees were already dead before the Valar found out what happened. That's why they asked Fëanor to break open the Silmarils so they could be restored. Just like Fëanor was only able once to create such a work, the creation of the Two Trees was something Yavanna could only do once.
Slaughtering the Teleri for their ships is far more than acting like jerks. It's called the Kinslaying at Alqualondë for a reason.
@@istari0 ya from that point on there was no going back for feanor and those who followed him and those who were forced to. Not being able to save two trees was the trigger point. How could they trust melkor to this much that he won't do something like this. If trees weren't destructed to the point that they can't be grow again then they could have simply regrow it and problem with silmarils would becomes feanors own problem.
A video for Ecthelion, please. The balrog slayer !
I love your videos, but I have to say that the part I love the most is when you, at the end, tell all the people who helped you, all of which have interesting names "the dark haired one"... And Debbie haha that part always gets me, it's awesome
Which makes Gimli's gift of her hair even more extortionary
This is a great summary. Love it. I have read the LOTR trilogy, The Hobbit and The Lays of Beleriand. I started the Silmarillion, but never read in full. I have read other summaries of The Silmarillion here and there. I grew up in a family, who loved reading L0TR and The Hobbit, loved Tolkien. But the Silmarillion is a whole different vibe, even though its history glimmers throughout the other stories. Yet, I do not think it is always an easy read, even when one loves Tolkien's stories. Not just because of the historic-like scope of it.. well i dont mind that.
But the actions of Feanor after Melkor taints him are shocking and sad. Even if a fan of dwarves might occasionally grumble about how everyone was blindfolded in Lothlorien...all those high and haughty elves laugh. . To read about the kinslaying or find out more of this happens? It can be kind of depressing, because until one reads this book, they have no idea that some elves fell far enough to slay their own kind. And these were elves not turned to orcs.
I read a bit past that chapter. But now I want to return and give this a fresh go. After learning more and more about the book nd various chapters. And being reminded how much i liked Finrod even from the Lays of Beleriand. And the Beren and Luthien tale. Yes i want to return. Plus the thought of the universe being sung into existence is awesome. Reminds of other myrhs around the world.
I had noticed others around me who loved Tolkien, slowed down reading The Silmarillion I think there is just something touching about the "eucatastrophe" Tolkien creates and is inspired to create in LOTR very uplifting... and that kind of energy is so needed at times. But one has to be patient and in a good place of mind to read through the Silmarillion, because after all there is still the promise of High Estel. And there is beauty woven throughout. It is worth another go! Since I read the long ballad book afterall laugh!
Banger episode.
Despite being almost the opposite of the One Ring,
their effects sure seem pretty similar...
Gimli was one lucky dwarf to get three strands of Galadriel's hair.😂
Smëanor: MY jewels! MY Silmarils!! MY PRECIOUS!!!
Oh man these Jewels, how so much *not all, just 75%* of Arda's early history history ended in Blood spilled because of them!!!
8:45 "Dwarves killed Thingol over it" -- _ALL_ dwarves, eh?
Love the videos, you explain the events of Arda very well. Not sure if you have done one yet, but if you could do a video about doriath and the girdle of Melian that would be great. Either way I love your content.
Thank you for making this video ❤❤❤ 8 requested this via Instagram.
You guys are on another level!!! Very very good video I wish they had made a movie about this! And yes I think Peter Jackson would do a great job!!! You want I want to know why all the elvish blades did not glow blue in The Hobbit movies. Did I miss something or are they not supposed to?
Hey @NerdoftheRings
For the longest time, I’ve been confused as to WHY Beleriand sunk into the Sea. Well, I’ve come up with a theory as to the Valar’s motives at this crucial transition. The apocalyptic final battle, the War of Wrath, being what caused the sinking of an entire continent? That was never a good enough explanation for me.
My reasoning is that the sinking wasn’t because of the War of Wrath, but by the surviving two Silmarils. The entire early history of Middle-earth wrests on the Jewels, that are a symbol of nostalgic beauty-of a time before the Sun and Moon. Those familiar balls of light paled in comparison to the mythic Two Trees, so that says something about what the Jewels truly represent, although an imitation of the Trees.
Therefore, when the surviving two sons of Fëanor Maglor and Maedhros cast their Silmaril into the Sea and Earth, the Valar must have reacted to this with a desire to put an end to their influence on history. The only way to do so was erase Morgoth’s kingdom in the North and keep the Silmarils as far away as possible from recovery. This meant a change in geography so that no one can dig for Maedhros’ Silmaril and Maglor’s Silmaril won’t be spotted underwater or wash back to shore. This divine erasure could also explain why Fëanor’s body became ash when he died, the only time such an occurrence happened. The Valar specifically didn’t want a monument for someone who inspired such an ill-thought rebellion against them, which would have happened if his corpse remained intact.
The only hole in this theory is that if the Valar are so powerful that they can turn people into animals, like Ulmo changing Elwing into a white bird, or the like, then why not retrieve and break the Silmarils themselves. One reason could be that the Silmarils, despite their disappearance being a good pivot into a more freer age, would still serve a purpose in influencing the very elemental forces of Arda, now as Air, Water, and Earth. Inaccessible, but in reserve should Eru Illúvatar order the reanimation of the dead Trees. In the immediacy, the Silmarils remain a symbol of evil for the history they influenced. Middle-earth would be better off without objects that scorn the power of the Gods (though that of course is not what happens, hence the Rings of Power.)
i very much enjoy this channel.