What happened to the Blue Wizards?

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  • čas přidán 19. 05. 2024
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Komentáře • 728

  • @philip8551
    @philip8551 Před 6 měsíci +1666

    The Blue Wizards formed an alt-rock band and are still touring to this day.

    • @theMightywooosh
      @theMightywooosh Před 6 měsíci +86

      Blue oyster cult?

    • @larryroberts3598
      @larryroberts3598 Před 6 měsíci +71

      They updated their image...the Blue Man Group

    • @Cauin450
      @Cauin450 Před 6 měsíci +14

      Possible Names: Wizards With Attitude. Rocking Out The Blues. Galadriel na- ur!

    • @_RiseAgainst
      @_RiseAgainst Před 6 měsíci +14

      Pretty sure it was Ska

    • @dreameater9247
      @dreameater9247 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Lmao they are just awful too

  • @jxchamb
    @jxchamb Před 6 měsíci +714

    The lack of information regarding The Blue Wizards makes the whole world feel more real. Tolkien could have easily given them a complete back story. Instead he keeps up pretense that we're reading a history of a real world and sometimes things get lost to time and become legend.

    • @apollosungod2819
      @apollosungod2819 Před 6 měsíci +35

      He was clearly debating on setting up the new threat story arc... had he actually bothered to focus on secretly writing the new threat, it would seem those two Blue Wizards would have been pivotal to the story and how the remaining races would deal with them given that most of the elves are gone.

    • @gavasiarobinssson5108
      @gavasiarobinssson5108 Před 6 měsíci +14

      Is it not real?😢

    • @mr.campwell3655
      @mr.campwell3655 Před 6 měsíci +13

      The blue wizards left "middle earth" into the east. It's a story of middle earth when they don't return to the region they don't return to the story.
      What Saruman did in the east isn't in the store.
      My thoughts.

    • @Cre80s
      @Cre80s Před 6 měsíci +26

      Exactly, the fact not every character (even powerful ones) get fleshed out completely does make it feel more real, like a world. We live in an era of fiction (movie/tv franchises especially) getting, frankly, explained to death. Star Wars especially. They'll take the most inconsequential background character and announce a whole streaming series about him. And not because it’s good for the the imaginativeness, but money. Money they're happy to take and money some fans are happy to pay, whilst not respecting the value of restraint, and not petting their puppy to death.

    • @williamapple7705
      @williamapple7705 Před 6 měsíci +16

      Tolkien certainly built his story like a real legendary tale, with threads like this. There’s no other work I can think of that feels like something that came about as stories for an old history in a different world, as told by people passing down legendary tales of the past. It just feels like a real kind of world with stuff like this. I love it.

  • @Mathemagical55
    @Mathemagical55 Před 6 měsíci +318

    They found Saruman's secret stash of Old Toby and were never heard of again.

    • @danielratcliffe3672
      @danielratcliffe3672 Před 3 měsíci +12

      Love a bit of old toby

    • @firstandlastname6194
      @firstandlastname6194 Před 3 měsíci +10

      Black tar Old Toby. Before they knew it they were doing magic tricks on the streets.

    • @lProN00bl
      @lProN00bl Před 2 měsíci +5

      And pinned it on Gandalf

    • @seferino
      @seferino Před 14 dny

      They set up shop in the east. 🌿👽

  • @Phlucious
    @Phlucious Před 6 měsíci +574

    I think in this context Saruman’s obsession with the One Ring makes total sense. He consulted with the Blue Wizards and realized, with their help, that defeating Sauron was pointless unless the One Ring was also destroyed.
    Or maybe they succeeded in finding Sauron or the One Ring and were destroyed, either through carelessness or hubris.
    Perhaps even the behavior of all three wizards we DO know reflect their own reactions to the failure of the Blue Wizards.
    Radegast distrusted his own power and opted to ignore the ring and Sauron, attempting to avoid the conflict altogether by focusing on treating its symptoms. Saruman trusted his own power and believed he wouldn’t fail the same way as the Blue Wizards, but his search to destroy the ring turned into an obsessive desire to possess it for himself. Gandalf, meanwhile, learned the humility necessary to act indirectly (like Eru Iluvitar, notably) and entrust the act to a worthy proxy, refusing to even TOUCH the ring himself.

    • @thecpt6265
      @thecpt6265 Před 6 měsíci +57

      interesting take, I can see it tbh. I think Saruman didn't wanna discuss the blue wizards at all because they were effectively spies behind enemy line, making them known could tip off sauron's goons to search for them and finally destroy them.

    • @PhilBoswell
      @PhilBoswell Před 6 měsíci +9

      Just to check, wasn't Gandalf's reluctance to touch the Ring made up for the movie? I'm pretty sure he handled it when he took it out of the fire in Bag End…

    • @mikroboy3000
      @mikroboy3000 Před 6 měsíci +11

      @@PhilBoswell Yeah, gandalf touches the ring alright xD In the book at least

    • @ChBrahm
      @ChBrahm Před 6 měsíci +22

      @@mikroboy3000 yes but in the end the point still stands. Radagast was to afraid of the corruption of his power to get involved while Saruman was so confident in his power that he fell to that corruption. Gandalf walked the line between those 2 using his power to help but making it so that someone more suited for the task were to destroy the ring.

    • @mikroboy3000
      @mikroboy3000 Před 6 měsíci +7

      @@ChBrahm i do agree with his take completely just confirmed that the reluctance to just touch the ring is movie stuff since i happened to read that passage of the book a day or so before writing the comment :)

  • @ShawnSansonetti
    @ShawnSansonetti Před 6 měsíci +30

    They were hanging out with the Entwives! 😉

  • @sfrink1425
    @sfrink1425 Před 6 měsíci +100

    I like to think the phrase "fell to evil" means that they were defeated / killed / otherwise overcome by evil, not that they became evil and servants of Sauron. Maybe the reason why Saruman came back was because HE betrayed THEM. Or ran off when they needed his help.
    I think this is just as plausible as the other speculations.

    • @tommasheen963
      @tommasheen963 Před 3 měsíci +10

      Perhaps both, perhaps one turned evil and then captured the other to prevent any challenges. 1 good one and one evil one. That could make for a good tale.

    • @hound3000
      @hound3000 Před 2 měsíci +5

      I've always thought that Saruman killed them or something.

    • @JohnPeacekeeper
      @JohnPeacekeeper Před 2 měsíci +5

      This would honestly be in line with the way they hampered Sauron's mustering of the Easterlings. They started cults which in a way made complete domination of their masses by Sauron more difficult, like fighting fire with fire. Sauron or his agents must have had to deal with them, but by the time of the War of the Ring, the damage to their cause was already too deep

    • @SariusxX
      @SariusxX Před měsícem +6

      Ah, but the quote seems to be "fell *into* evil", which is less ambiguous. I'd assume that Tolkien knew very well how to use or avoid that ambiguity.

  • @dandiehm8414
    @dandiehm8414 Před 6 měsíci +178

    Great video as usual, Robert. The major problem is that the Professor didn't live to be 200! So much left to write! I'm so grateful for what he DID leave.

    • @expred
      @expred Před 6 měsíci +11

      What an amazing thought if he lived another 100 years or so, we would have so much more lore information!

    • @phily8093
      @phily8093 Před 3 měsíci

      Indeed. I'd like to see a video of why or how the Istari became associated with their colours. White it seems always intended for the most powerful. Perhaps in opposition to the dark, perhaps to suggest purity, and light, although that didn't seem to fit Saruman at all, even in the beginning. Grey is more ambiguous, perhaps purposefully so in a story perspective, but in terms of Middle Earth as if real, then why? Is it one down from White on the paint chart? Supposedly less noticable, but not to be underestimated? And brown, well yes, nature is brown, sort of, although I'd suggest green would have been more apt a representation for Radagast. And the blue are the most curious colours of all. Blue to suggest the sea? The sky? And I know they both came to Middle Earth as friends/brothers of sorts, but surely there are enough colours in the rainbow to distinguish them.

    • @generoberts9151
      @generoberts9151 Před měsícem

      Great video. I never thought of what you speculated about the Blue Wizards in the sequel Tolkien briefly started. I like it. Tolkien is so visionary. I don’t doubt he omitted the Blue Wizards purposely for future tales.

  • @ivandedov
    @ivandedov Před 6 měsíci +228

    You actually got it all wrong this time, Maestro. Tolkien says that they failed in 1958, but the note of their success and early coming to the Middle-earth was written much later. And nowhere in that note it is said that they went back to Valinor the first time around.
    It's just another case of the Professor changing his mind and re-writing his initial tale of their failure. If we stick to Tolkien's late writings the story goes like this: they arrived early, helped a lot but did not return to Valinor with Gandalf. Why? We do not know, of course. Maybe there still was some job to be done in the East, who knows...

    • @Uncle_Fred
      @Uncle_Fred Před 6 měsíci +58

      If I had to guess, they probably developed some strong connections to the peoples' they encountered, much like Gandolf did in the Shire. One or both of them perhaps felt obligated to stick around after the Second Age in an attempt to right some of the deeper wrongs in Middle Earth.
      It's one thing to defeat a dark lord, it's an entirely different matter to wipe away cult practices and beliefs that made some of these groups predisposed to autocrats like Sauron. In this, I feel they had only mixed success. Perhaps these efforts even led to actions that caused men to form new cults around the wizards themselves.

    • @JMThought
      @JMThought Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@Uncle_Fredthis makes a lot of sense to me. But I’m bias as I think it’s the more interesting outcome.

    • @Neokretai
      @Neokretai Před 6 měsíci +40

      Yeah this video is basically mixing up older and newer narratives on the Blue Wizards and trying to make story of them, when in fact its obvious that the later narrative is what Tolkien intended to be their story,

    • @ellyjett
      @ellyjett Před 6 měsíci +17

      I had hoped they found a good calling in place of their original one. Might go against what was planned for them but I never liked to think they became evil, rather traveled wide and saw problems to quash and people to help.

    • @benlowe1701
      @benlowe1701 Před 6 měsíci +16

      Personally, I like to reconcile the two stories by having one of the Two fall to the Shadow, and the other remaining true to their mission, with the two brothers slaying each other in a greek style tragedy.
      Pure Fanon on my part, but it makes for fun contemplation.

  • @unvergebeneid
    @unvergebeneid Před 6 měsíci +164

    Can we talk about how Radagast took the biggest L though? From the vast countries that were Middle-Earth, he only had to watch _one_ forest. And it just so happened to be the forest Sauron was hiding in. And he totally missed that. It's almost impressively incompetent 😄

    • @dandiehm8414
      @dandiehm8414 Před 6 měsíci

      Ahh....but his task was NOT to watch Mirkwood. He simply chose that place as an effective hideout against his true calling. He was not searching from Sauron, he was effectively HIDING from him. That is why he didn't discover anything.

    • @blockmasterscott
      @blockmasterscott Před 6 měsíci +17

      OMG, I never realized that! Good point! 🤣🤣🤣

    • @Kelnx
      @Kelnx Před 6 měsíci +30

      Yeah, I've always wondered how the wizards missed that one. Who or what exactly did they think this "Necromancer" was? Are dark magical figures just a dime a dozen in Middle Earth to the point where Gandalf, Radaghast, and Saruman just can't tell which magician in some woods might be the dark lord himself. Ok, we know such entities particularly by the 3rd age aren't in any way common, which is why it's a bit of a headscratcher for me. I mean, "The Mirkwood" even though it used to be "Greenwood the Great" suddenly goes all dark and nobody is like "hmm, I wonder if there's something evil hiding in them trees somewhere? Maybe even at Dol Guldur?". Even if they considered it could be one of the Nazgul perhaps, that would still warrant investigation.
      I guess the question is, what were the Istari doing for most of their time in the 3rd Age?

    • @blueshit199
      @blueshit199 Před 6 měsíci +29

      the halfling leaf (and his love for mushrooms) has clearly slowed his mind

    • @justinhammer3196
      @justinhammer3196 Před 6 měsíci +4

      Hippie wizards, man. They creep me out.

  • @Ken-fh4jc
    @Ken-fh4jc Před 6 měsíci +42

    Legend has it they taught the Easterlings their sick guy liner skills.

    • @bosbanon3452
      @bosbanon3452 Před 2 měsíci +1

      What do you mean

    • @EternamDoov
      @EternamDoov Před měsícem +3

      ​Guyliner is a portmanteau of guy and eyeliner. It refers to eye makeup worn by men.
      I assume the easterlings in the movies have eye makeup.

  • @kentvesser9484
    @kentvesser9484 Před 6 měsíci +213

    I was always suspicious that the Blue Wizards were eventually betrayed by Saruman in some manner. I suspect Saruman learned all he could from them, then betrayed them in a manner, where he was anonymous to Sauron and his Easterling minions, but the Blue Wizards never suspected he had set them up. These were just two powerful men agitating insurrection against Sauron or the local kings in the region and they were betrayed in a manner where they were caught unaware and quickly killed, while Saruman was away on some errand they had sent him on. I think if they had fallen into Sauron's hands alive to be twisted to his service, Saruman would not have been trusted as much as a servant of Sauron as Sauron would have figured out the reason he had the Blue Wizards fall in his lap was Saruman's treachery and therefore he couldn't be trusted at all as an ally and was clearly after Sauron's ring for himself.
    After all, they managed to do some kind of mission in the East for over a thousand years with Saruman along for the ride, so it wouldn't seem like they were stumbling and bumbling their way through the East for that long only to be suddenly capture due to their own mistakes, yet Saruman wasn't with them when they finally got caught? Yeah, I think there is a strong case of betrayal by Saruman in some manner.

    • @mr.campwell3655
      @mr.campwell3655 Před 6 měsíci +21

      I always imagined they stayed the course for a time then did the Ratigaste thing.
      That's just where my head went.

    • @raydavison4288
      @raydavison4288 Před 6 měsíci +10

      I have long suspected that Saruman was responsible for the downfall of the "Blue Two". 😮

    • @kentvesser9484
      @kentvesser9484 Před 6 měsíci +13

      @@mr.campwell3655 I can see that too. Maybe they were having little if any success and had abandoned their mission and that is why Saruman left as they were already fading, or after Saruman left they grew discouraged and faded. Or maybe they grew bitter at the Valar sending them on a thankless task with no backup and just gave up or switched sides as Sauron made them a better offer of a cushy retirement or comfy position administering his allies in the East.

    • @kentvesser9484
      @kentvesser9484 Před 6 měsíci +19

      @@raydavison4288 Would explain why he had so little to say about them when he returned from the East despite spending over a thousand years with them and seemingly mentioning little of what he did in the East either. Of course, if I was reading this novel for the first time back in the 50's, 60's or 70's I probably wouldn't have such suspicions as the novel hardly mentions them. It is only later works drawn from Tolkien's notes that shed even a slight bit more light on who the Blue Wizards were. With the passing of years we all overanalyze what info there is as a kind of parlor room chat exercise trying to fill in an information vacuum.

    • @andrewthomas891
      @andrewthomas891 Před 6 měsíci +8

      i agree with your call. Saruman probably began his change towards a power monger during that 1000 years time frame you mentioned.

  • @malcolmjcullen
    @malcolmjcullen Před 6 měsíci +36

    I like to think they're chilling with the Avari, watching the starlight reflect on Lake Cuiviénen.

    • @dandiehm8414
      @dandiehm8414 Před 6 měsíci

      Naahh.....the lands have changes and to Cuivienen there is no returning.

    • @ohmygordd9426
      @ohmygordd9426 Před 6 měsíci +7

      cuivienen is gone my friend. tolkien said that the changes of the land as the ages progressed caused it to disappear :(

  • @MaxWithTheSax
    @MaxWithTheSax Před 6 měsíci +59

    Was Sauron powerful enough to currupt them to that extent? Even Saruman was never really on Sauron's side and only wanted the power of the ring for himself.

    • @gustawek
      @gustawek Před 6 měsíci +4

      White wizard is stronger than Blue ones according to lore.

    • @MaxWithTheSax
      @MaxWithTheSax Před 6 měsíci +28

      @@gustawek If it came down to pure power that is true but I don't think that is as big of a factor. Gandalf despite being less powerful than Saruman was able to resist taking the ring because he was far wiser than Saruman. I don't think there are many examples in Tolkiens writing where true power comes from actual power.

    • @tabularasa0606
      @tabularasa0606 Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@MaxWithTheSax
      Gandalf was not less powerful, he just didn't want the job of leader.

    • @MaxWithTheSax
      @MaxWithTheSax Před 6 měsíci +15

      ​@@tabularasa0606 Tolkien states that Saruman was the most powerful of the maia who were sent to middle earth. So Gandalf was definitely less powerful, instead his strength comes from his wisdom.

    • @callum1465
      @callum1465 Před 4 měsíci +5

      @@tabularasa0606until his reincarnation he was less powerful

  • @garicb9271
    @garicb9271 Před 5 měsíci +84

    Gandalf was a Maiar of Manwe and like him focused on the big picture. Saruman was a Maiar of Aule and like him focused on crafts (ring lore). Radagast was a Maiar of Yavanna and like her focused on growing things. The blue wizards were Maiar of Orome, the hunter of all evil creatures. Tolkien says that Radagast strayed from or failed 'the mission'. But did he really? He was sent by Yavanna and focused on her interests. Perhaps the blue wizards 'failed' in a similar way, focusing on hunting any and all evil creatures as the Vala who sent them would, and not necessarily hunting Sauron specifically.

    • @kyledabearsfan
      @kyledabearsfan Před 4 měsíci +6

      I like this idea very much.

    • @jeji000
      @jeji000 Před 4 měsíci +6

      Yes Radagast failed the mission. People often say that he was there for Yavanna's purpose, but why would Yavanna's purpose supercede all the Valar's? They were sent to rally the people of middle earth and be the enemy of Sauron, not to be distracted by their own hobbies. In my opinion Radagast was short sighted and let his own interests consume him and largely ignored or procrastinated on the actual charge given to him.
      It's a good thing they got lucky with the ring, because if Sauron emerged victorious from the war, all the forests and animals would have been at the mercy of his destructive touch. And Radagst in that confrontation would not have lasted long at all.

    • @garicb9271
      @garicb9271 Před 4 měsíci +4

      @@jeji000 But 'the Valar' didn't send Radagast. Yavanna had to ask Saruman specifically to bring him along. So whose mission was he on really?

    • @jeji000
      @jeji000 Před 4 měsíci +3

      ​@@garicb9271 Of course the Valar sent Radagast, they made him a member of the Istari, the Order specifically made to be Sauron's enemy. He's not just some random git that got to tag along with the others, he is counted among them. So the Order's purpose is also his purpose.
      Yavanna may have vouched for him because she thought he had a good chance of succeeding, just like how Manwe thought about it of Gandalf. I don't think she's this nature obsessed hippy that cares more about grass than the people of middle earth. She had already made assurance long ago that the forests cannot be abused freely, and that is in the form of giant angry walking talking Ents.

    • @garicb9271
      @garicb9271 Před 4 měsíci +3

      @@jeji000 I cant recall but is the term Istari ever used in Valinor? That seems more like a Middle Earth construct referring to all the wizards (regardless of mission). And the way I read the forming of that group, Gandalf, Saurman and 1 of the blue wizards were 'the picks', and yavanna asked saruman to bring radagast (she didnt ask the council of Valar, or do it during that meeting), and the other blue wizard went along 'as a friend'. So I dont think the association with the group 'istari' = being on the same mission. Honestly it read more like they needed to hitch a ride on their boat. I guess trips TO middle earth were hard to come by.

  • @raydavison4288
    @raydavison4288 Před 6 měsíci +14

    This is the best explanation of the blue wizards and their fate that I have seen to date.
    I first read "The Hobbit" and "LOTR" in 1969. 😊

  • @Loreweavver
    @Loreweavver Před 6 měsíci +46

    I like to think they did their tasks well enough in the other lands that it wasn't a full on invasion from the Lords of those lands but seemingly smaller armies of marauders who joined Sauron.

    • @hugh.g.rection5906
      @hugh.g.rection5906 Před 6 měsíci +7

      i think they were busy pounding elf poon

    • @kitkat6959
      @kitkat6959 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@hugh.g.rection5906this is my headcanon

  • @expred
    @expred Před 6 měsíci +16

    I've tried to learn about the blue wizards, but the information is minimal. This video covers all the lore we have, and I learned new things about them too. Great video Robert, I always love watching your Middle Earth videos!

  • @ghostdreamer7272
    @ghostdreamer7272 Před 6 měsíci +26

    Interesting. I never connected them to the discarded sequel. I also thought it was competing ideas that Tolkien never settled on if they were secretly aiding the resistance to Sauron in the east, or fallen and founding secret cults, never thought the intention could be both combined. But ultimately I don’t think they were the villains of the New Shadow - Tolkien also wrote that Sauron’s defeat was the last time there was an evil really centered on and embodied by one supernatural figure, and how the new story was about Men (I’d presume Black Numenoreans and/or the Mouth of Sauron were behind the New Shadow).

  • @Neokretai
    @Neokretai Před 6 měsíci +51

    This is all fine and well but you're forgetting one important thing, Tolkien changed his mind a lot. Sure at one point he wrote that the Blue Wizards failed, but his last writings on them completely changed their story, having them arrive in the Second Age, and being crucial to the defeat of Sauron in the War of the Last Alliance and the War of the Ring. It doesn't make any sense to try and tie in their older narrative as its clear that was discarded by Tolkien.

  • @andrewwarren8474
    @andrewwarren8474 Před 6 měsíci +44

    I've seen other videos on the Blue Wizards but this was by far the most detailed and insightful.

  • @AskMia411
    @AskMia411 Před 6 měsíci +16

    Didn’t Tolkien change his mind about the blue wizards later on though? I swear in every discussion on them I’ve heard it mentioned that Tolkien’s last conception of the blue wizards was that they did fulfill their mission and didn’t fall, and eventually returned to valinor.

    • @Levacque
      @Levacque Před 6 měsíci +6

      Makes sense. He was constantly looking for ways to re-write in order to match the amorphous, changeable story in his head. The best example is how the original publication of The Hobbit had Gollum willingly give the ring to Bilbo. But it's all through his work - some of the writing compiled but his son feature the older versions of whatever story, then the most recent version (I won't say final version because I'm convinced Tolkien was never finished). It's really neat because you can see both the way his writing style changed through different eras of his life, as well as getting a snapshot of his processes in crafting a story. I HIGHLY recommend Beren and Luthien for this.

    • @DavidOfWhitehills
      @DavidOfWhitehills Před 6 měsíci +3

      ​@@LevacqueGollum willingly gave the ring to Bilbo? There is a first edition of The Hobbit where this happened? A copy of that would be worth a bit.

    • @Levacque
      @Levacque Před 6 měsíci +6

      @@DavidOfWhitehills yeah, it was the published version for decades actually. And then Tolkien wrote it into the narrative of the later series - Bilbo had two versions of his story: the manuscript in the Red Book, which was the truth where he finds it and runs away from Gollum, and the one he told everybody in which Gollum gives it away. Tolkien made new decisions about the One Trying when writing LotR and he had enough influence to go back to the publisher and change the text they'd use in future Hobbit printings. This is what I mean, he really enjoyed giving his story room to grow and change over the decades he spent developing it.

    • @AskMia411
      @AskMia411 Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@DavidOfWhitehills Yup, Tolkien released the revised addition just before publication of fellowship. It was brilliantly woven into the lore, as the other comment describes. It was especially effective with readers of the first edition, because they had a whole other version in their head, and then had Gandalf reveal it to be a lie. A plot twist decades in the making 😄
      I haven’t looked, but I’d bet that first edition versions of the hobbit are pricey, but I’d also love to read it

    • @howdareyouexist
      @howdareyouexist Před 4 měsíci +2

      it was not ever definitively decided what happened to them tolkien himself only used speculative language

  • @JacktheRah
    @JacktheRah Před 6 měsíci +11

    Honestly I love this conclusion because it fits very well with Tolkien's works and the themes of the Lord of the Rings. I can imagine that he wouldn't write a return of Sauron but I can imagine him writing a story about a cult lead by the Blue Wizards that tries to bring back Melkor. Maybe even for supposed good reasons. We know of the idea that the world will be remade one day. Maybe the Blue Wizards tried to free Morgoth so that the Ainur would fight him and restart the world, this time without discord and therefore evil.
    I love that idea, it's very similar to how Tolkien writes his characters who fall to evil. They're not evil for the sake of evil. They're essentially (corrupted) utilitarianists.

  • @michaelkelleypoetry
    @michaelkelleypoetry Před 6 měsíci +11

    Tolkien was a big procrastinator and he even said that without the constant encouragement and badgering of his friend, C.S. Lewis, he never would have completed the Lord of the Rings. By the time he started writing the Sequel, the Inklings were no longer meeting to read to each other and his friendship with Lewis had waned because of the affairs of life: Lewis was further away from Oxford, working in Cambridge as Professor of Medieval and Renaissance Literature, and Lewis had met Joy Davidman who eventually became his wife.

  • @Rj-pw7zs
    @Rj-pw7zs Před 2 měsíci +3

    I don't believe they became servants of Sauron. They may have fallen to evil but if they served Sauron I believe we'd know for sure because he would have used them.

  • @Loreweavver
    @Loreweavver Před 6 měsíci +3

    Side note: this type of throwaway line is my favorite kind of world building. It implies a thing that is knowledge to others but has little to do with the current narrative.
    Classic example is the throw away line about the "clone wars." That had nerds and geeks speculating for years.

  • @joek4377
    @joek4377 Před 6 měsíci +91

    The Blue Wizards had a love for oysters and thus changed their names to the "Blue Oyster Cult" with their best selling song: Don't fear the Sauron..

  • @davidf8365
    @davidf8365 Před 6 měsíci +9

    Would've been great if Radagast had three rods/staves and everyone just assumed there were five wizards.

  • @TheGeneralGrievous19
    @TheGeneralGrievous19 Před 6 měsíci +27

    The Blue Wizards were always very intriguing for me. 🧙‍♂️ 🧙‍♂️ I like that Tolkien purposefuly made some bits of the legendarium mysterious & obscure. I hope they did help the good to win in the end. Blue is also a nice color. 💙

    • @thekittenfreakify
      @thekittenfreakify Před 6 měsíci

      If yhe new shadow notes is anything to go by they might have fallen.

    • @martavdz4972
      @martavdz4972 Před 2 měsíci

      With Tolkien, you never know whether he purposefully made something mysterious, or had been planning to write something about it but died before he could. All the same, I totally agree that fantasy is at its best when some things are left to imagination. In my language, "fantazie" means "imagination", so I grew up thinking the whole genre was about making you think and invent your own stories 🙂

  • @Cmdtheartist
    @Cmdtheartist Před 6 měsíci +11

    The Blueses have always been a point of interest to me, much like the magicians in Pharaoh's court who used magic to try to beat Moses. What happened to all these random magicians? You'd think they would've stood out a little more. Thanks for the video.

  • @Offtask2
    @Offtask2 Před měsícem +3

    The best spies are the ones you don’t hear about

  • @Cosper79
    @Cosper79 Před 6 měsíci +5

    Never stop with the Tolkien lore. I'm here for it!

  • @jeffcleveland2268
    @jeffcleveland2268 Před 6 měsíci +85

    I ran a Middle Earth role playing campaign long ago that was set in the Fourth Age. It involved a group of heroes, under orders from King Eldarion, travelling into the far east of Middle Earth to investigate news of a new empire that preached a cult of Morgoth and was breeding orcs, enslaving men, and putting to the sword the last remnants of the Avari. Upon reaching this distant empire the heroes discovered that it was ruled by the two blue wizards, who had indeed fallen under Sauron's sway and were now twisted and evil. Sauron, before his defeat, had convinced the blue wizards that Iluvatar had betrayed and tricked his first-born children, the Ainur, by tempting them out of the void and into Arda on the promise that they would do great and wonderous things in this new world, only for them to discover that Iluvatar's true plan was that Arda and the Ainur's power would fade, with Arda ultimately destined to be a world for Iluvatar's weakest, and most inferior children; men. Sauron had tried to prevent this destined Age of Men by mastering and wielding what powers still remained in Arda. Ultimately Sauron's plan had failed, but the blue wizards had come up with a plan of their own. In the utter east they had discovered the ruined foundations of the Gates of Morning, still left in the world from when Arda had been made round, and with their empire of slaves, the blue wizards had begun a grand project to rebuild the Gates, tapping into what magical power still remained in the ancient foundations. They believed that completing this project would trigger an alternate Dagor Dagorath, by allowing Morgoth to return from the void here and now, through the Gates of Morning instead of through the Door of Night, at the end of time, as originally prophesied. And further they believed that this utter subversion of Iluvatar's planned timeline for the world would bring his music to a crashing halt, and that Iluvatar would have no choice but to come-to-the-table, so to speak, and negotiate with his first-born children for a new destiny for Arda. Obviously upon discovering what the blue wizards had planned, the heroes had to set about stopping it.

    • @triandfit1
      @triandfit1 Před 6 měsíci +4

      Well did they?

    • @jeffcleveland2268
      @jeffcleveland2268 Před 6 měsíci +6

      @@triandfit1 Of course. :-)

    • @trevorstrugatsky1172
      @trevorstrugatsky1172 Před 6 měsíci +9

      Do you have a spare seat at your gaming table? This sounds like a great campaign!

    • @ionshad7864
      @ionshad7864 Před 6 měsíci +4

      Is there any media recording from this campaign?
      It would give us the power of inspiration! How we would drive a host of campaigns!
      Give it to us!

    • @daddystabz
      @daddystabz Před 6 měsíci +1

      I'm playing currently in a Lord of the Rings 5e online campaign.

  • @michaelmacdonald2928
    @michaelmacdonald2928 Před 6 měsíci +10

    You’ve been churning out tons of stuff on all the fictional worlds you cover and just wanted to say it’s appreciated

  • @robertb6889
    @robertb6889 Před 6 měsíci +7

    This makes me want to make a D&D or RPG campaign set in such a world. Either between the wars or after the fall of Sauron, with the Blue Wizards as the bad guys.

    • @alloran0987
      @alloran0987 Před 3 měsíci +2

      There are D&D source books for 5ed and some of the others that are set after the hobbit, up in dale. I'm sure you could adapt the setting to a later time and roll from there. They're called "Adventures in Middle-Earth"

    • @robertb6889
      @robertb6889 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@alloran0987 could be fun to make happen. =)

  • @undercoverduck
    @undercoverduck Před 6 měsíci +8

    The moment The Hobbit and LOTR become public domain, you should record an audiobook version of them. You have a very pleasant voice and it suits the genre very well.

  • @jornspirit
    @jornspirit Před 6 měsíci +6

    ...another insightful research - much more than I ever hoped to find out about them - thanks so much. To me this piece of history somehow indirectly magnifies even more the importance of Tom Bombadil, although he kept quite away from the troubles of the third age - but he was at ease dealing with the barrow wights and kept the evilness of the trees at bay, the ring had no power over him, and he had many a talk with Farmer Maggot, and Gandalf spent 2 years with him at the end of that age - what could they have talked so excessively about? ...certainly about the upcoming fourth age and the dominion of men... would love to hear anything more about what they talked of, and also: what did Tom (and Goldberry) do in the fourth age, except for what they always did...?! Tom fascinates me at no end - he was like a counterpart to the desperate war of the ring... was he just to hold up and maintain the spiritual presence of Eru? - alas, I stop here for now...

  • @davidkglevi
    @davidkglevi Před 6 měsíci +6

    I'm quite sure Gandalf met at least one of them. I have an idea that he procured his hat from one of them, since it's blue - not grey like the rest of his garments.

  • @johnmiller8975
    @johnmiller8975 Před 4 měsíci +3

    There is a second letter that Geek has missed, because Tolkien changed his mind constantly, In it he states that like their first sojourn in the west they did what they had been sent to do, cripple the Easterlings ability to send reinforcements to aid Sauron.

  • @MourningCoffeeMusic
    @MourningCoffeeMusic Před 6 měsíci +6

    Short answer: we will never know.

  • @darrengibbs4216
    @darrengibbs4216 Před 6 měsíci +8

    Thank you for all you do Robert your content is amazing in so many ways. I've been watching most of your asoiaf videos and it's funny listening to you say any day now on wow lol

    • @Grancigul
      @Grancigul Před 6 měsíci +1

      2025, 2027 or never

  • @qbmac2306
    @qbmac2306 Před 3 měsíci +4

    The Blue Wizards got WOLOLO'd and became the Red Wizards.

  • @xavier84623
    @xavier84623 Před 6 měsíci +5

    Gandalf was truly a great dude, out of 5 angels come to earth he was the only one who saw it through. That makes me wonder about rhadaghast tho, where was he during the final battle? Was he fighting the good fight in the north?

    • @martavdz4972
      @martavdz4972 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Yeah, a lot of fans and the video on this channel think he did. Also, Radagast sent the eagle that rescued Gandalf from Orthank, which was one of the things crucial to success - he came to Weathertop in time to fight the Nazgul and weaken them, otherwise they might have finished Frodo off. Radagast could also have sent the eagles that rescued Frodo and Sam from the exploding Orodruin. And as his birds gathered intelligence for Gandalf at the beginning of the war, it´s possible that they continued to do so for the Mirkwood and the Dale.

  • @Someguy2023now
    @Someguy2023now Před 3 měsíci

    Even a short video like this takes loads of research when it comes to Tolkien! Great work

  • @joshuahallmark7729
    @joshuahallmark7729 Před 6 měsíci

    Wow. Such a great video. Keep up the good work!

  • @dams6829
    @dams6829 Před 6 měsíci +3

    Not gonna lie you combined the 2 viewpoints Tolkien had for them masterfully although I must say this theory makes it sound a bit weird that Saruman is the head of the order when Blue Wizards were the ones that arrived earlier and had much more experience and had actually done things before unlike Saruman.

  • @henriquereisjr6771
    @henriquereisjr6771 Před 6 měsíci +6

    The problem with the theory is that Tolkien says that after Sauron, there was never again another incarnated evil to threaten mankind. There was never another "Dark Lord".

    • @chrisk_nfl4120
      @chrisk_nfl4120 Před 6 měsíci +1

      i think what Robert was getting at, is that the Blue Wizards were trying to give the illusion of a "dark lord" returning by sowing discontent and creating cults etc.
      The Blue Wizards would be servants, but not replacing the Dark Lord. They would work in the background pulling strings

    • @henriquereisjr6771
      @henriquereisjr6771 Před 6 měsíci

      @@chrisk_nfl4120 but they would be a incarnated evil. A spirit in physical form.

    • @chrisk_nfl4120
      @chrisk_nfl4120 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@henriquereisjr6771 I think that's being far too literal with that line tbh. I don't think Tolkein ever states evil left the world, and was probably leaving the fate of the Blue Wizards open to allow a sequel. Two beings working in the background to destabilise and destroy the Kingdom Aragorn created wouldn't need a new incarnation of evil, just the illusion of it

    • @xXxMURRAY94xXx
      @xXxMURRAY94xXx Před 6 měsíci +3

      I think tolkien was very much shutting down any idea of a sequel with that line. It seems he's taking a liberty with it as he described the world of Arda as marred by Morgoth and evil will always play a part until the world is destroyed and remade without Morgoths influence

    • @chrisk_nfl4120
      @chrisk_nfl4120 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@xXxMURRAY94xXx yeah, it was very much a: "no I'm not writing a sequel so don't bother asking about it"
      It's not a line that shuts down the theory, because Tolkein had changed a lot about his lore

  • @manugamer9984
    @manugamer9984 Před 6 měsíci +4

    To think of it, you don’t get a name like “Darkness-slayer” by simply plotting in the dark. Sauron didn’t put much thought on Gandalf, let alone Radagast, but he sure gave more attention to Saruman... and he probably wasn’t even the boldest among the 5 wizards. If Sauron focused on strength alone, he would’ve surely prioritised two enemies of darkness with seemingly supernatural powers. As always, he was crazy but he wasn’t stupid...

  • @forsakenquery
    @forsakenquery Před 6 měsíci

    I thought I knew all this stuff and I still learn things. Amazing work rob.

  • @CloneShockTrooper
    @CloneShockTrooper Před měsícem

    I am glad for this video for solving that mystery :-) Thank you

  • @TheKifster
    @TheKifster Před 6 měsíci

    Your channel is such a boon to the literature of Tolkien. You do a great service, sir.

  • @donaldcarpenter5328
    @donaldcarpenter5328 Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you! I had always wondered their story.

  • @RtB68
    @RtB68 Před 4 měsíci

    Some wonderfully robust speculations in this - glorious in fact. Well done. I do recall reading somewhere once that an abandoned idea for the Blue pair was they were murdered by Saruman in the wild lands of the far East, but I can't recall where I saw it. It doesn't matter. I enjoyed this video more than some of your other excellent work.

  • @sarrjel
    @sarrjel Před 6 měsíci +1

    Interesting. I was always curious about the Blue Wizards. Thanks for doing the research and explaining your thoughts. I kind of wish Tolkien did the sequel. It would’ve been fascinating.

  • @lordofthehouseofstormcrows8615

    Excellent job Mellon! Well met. I feel like Saruman betrayed them...they were lost to the enemy...

  • @MusikCassette
    @MusikCassette Před 6 měsíci +7

    is this a re up?

  • @glorfindel4945
    @glorfindel4945 Před 6 měsíci

    Great coverage of the blue wizards! I wrote a poem about them and Harad not too long ago.

  • @thisguy0906
    @thisguy0906 Před 2 měsíci +1

    In the shadows or mordor video games they mention the blue wizards briefly as allies of the Eastern kingdoms of men.

  • @JHadsfsad
    @JHadsfsad Před 6 měsíci +6

    This was such a cool video. I loved the part about the blue wizards forming weird magic traditions, etc. and being the big bags in the sequels. i wish books were like movies and someone could just write it. like a great writer would just take it upon themselves to write the sequel, maybe patrick rothfuss or george rr martin.

    • @dinok7630
      @dinok7630 Před 4 měsíci +2

      I dont think anyone could write another mans imaginary universe. Its in your head. Everything someone else writes isnt it.

    • @martavdz4972
      @martavdz4972 Před 2 měsíci

      Please, not George R. R. Martin. His value system is totally different.

    • @JHadsfsad
      @JHadsfsad Před 2 měsíci

      @@martavdz4972yeah that is a good point. he does love the books though. he could probably change his style. i only have two his books. i have all the tolkien books just about

  • @CJUzziel
    @CJUzziel Před 6 měsíci

    Very good video once again. Thank you!

  • @Fingolfin3423
    @Fingolfin3423 Před 6 měsíci

    Bravo as usual, Geek.

  • @markus-hermannkoch1740
    @markus-hermannkoch1740 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I love, how Tolkien theorizes about their fate. Of course, how is he to know?

  • @timmyb2507
    @timmyb2507 Před 6 měsíci

    Great video! Really entertaining

  • @blinforlife7847
    @blinforlife7847 Před 6 měsíci +8

    I could have sworn I've watched this video last week

  • @TheKartana
    @TheKartana Před 6 měsíci +1

    I think they were just mad Saruman was put in charge after they did all the work. They were going on strike until they got a promotion

  • @michaelhansson1242
    @michaelhansson1242 Před 6 měsíci +5

    Highly unlikely that the blue wizards fell to Sauron, in that case they would be prominent in tlotr where the real conflict was

    • @JMThought
      @JMThought Před 6 měsíci +3

      They are so powerful that if they did fall I think it’s likely more akin to Radagast, going astray, or perhaps maybe Saruman… selfishly pursing their own aims. Somehow they were removed but if they became allies of Sauron it’s odd he didn’t bring them to bare…

    • @michaelhansson1242
      @michaelhansson1242 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@JMThought yes, since they would be much more capable than the nazguls

  • @ZachariahWiedeman
    @ZachariahWiedeman Před 6 měsíci +3

    The Blue Wizards is the only reason I watched the Amazon Prime show. What a disappointment.

  • @hUCK-
    @hUCK- Před 4 měsíci +1

    11:25 ish
    That's not "exactly" what we were told they were doing based on the quote you had just cited. Outlasting Sauron doesn't mean they kept Sauron's name alive, just that the magical cults he supposes they might have created (within or outside of their instructions seems unclear) would have continued on.
    Great video though, brought up some info I hadn't ever heard before and excellent production in general.

  • @westrim
    @westrim Před 6 měsíci

    It's times like this that I'm glad I bookmark every video I watch.

  • @lscanlon9908
    @lscanlon9908 Před 2 měsíci

    I would love to see a cinematic depiction of the Blue Wizards’ travels through the east. It obviously would not be strictly canon because of the gap, but I wouldn’t mind as long as it weaves back into the canon.

  • @Tictacpanter
    @Tictacpanter Před 6 měsíci

    Minor audio clip at 0:33. Great content as usual though!

  • @3_14pie
    @3_14pie Před 26 dny

    it's sad that he died before fully finishing the world, things like that sound like he had somethings in mind for some characters, but never realized them

  • @sean4236
    @sean4236 Před 6 měsíci

    Thank you for taking all the time to answer a question like this, and not just with a hair-brained opinion, parading around as fact.

  • @AlexZeppo
    @AlexZeppo Před 4 měsíci

    Would be interesting to see your view on What Happened to Radagast

  • @thechodemeister
    @thechodemeister Před 6 měsíci

    1:38 you're saying "Alatar" yes? I heard Annatar, first, and I was like, "yo hold on, no."🤣🤣

  • @patwo9719
    @patwo9719 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I remember Gandalf telling BIlbo there were two blue wizards but he couldn't remember their names. I've wondered since then if they would ever play any part in the story.

  • @redfive5856
    @redfive5856 Před 6 měsíci

    They were blown away.

  • @bitterzombie
    @bitterzombie Před 6 měsíci +9

    My theory is that saruman played them against each other. Probably assigning them missions in regions that are politically opposed, with the claim that it is to make peace between them, but knowing that they would each empathize with the group they were assigned and find themselves at odds with each other. I like the idea of one of them going to Rhun and the other to South Harad, both intending to secure peace but ultimately meeting each other in battle, both believing their side to be the righteous one. I also think that while it would be humans of different nations doing most of the fighting, the seed of the conflict would be much older, the result of ancient wars between the avari elves and the eastern dwarves (orchestrated by the dark lord, obviously). While their tale would be tragic with lots of danger & betrayal, I'm sure that there would be an ending with hope & forgiveness, and they would return to Valinor together, reminescing on all the things they saw & pondering what the Avari will sing about Arda in the reshaping of the new world. Tolkien never got to write his sequel to lord of the rings, but if he did I think it would have been something like that.

  • @ComicalHealing
    @ComicalHealing Před 6 měsíci +6

    At 5:30 you talk about the Blue Wizards returning to Valinor and then making a trip back to Middle-earth. What is your source on this? Because I have never seen nor can I find a reference to their return to Valinor at any point. You also ignore that in his last writings about them is when he gives them the names Morinehtar and Rómestámo and states that they helped reduce his forces from the east.

    • @jxchamb
      @jxchamb Před 6 měsíci

      I think this dude actually communes with Tolkien. Only explanation for his knowledge.

    • @odeum9772
      @odeum9772 Před 6 měsíci +4

      He says presumably. So it's a presumption.

    • @ComicalHealing
      @ComicalHealing Před 6 měsíci

      @@odeum9772 there's no presumption. Tolkien says the only Istari to return to Valinor is Gandalf. Tolkien didn't say that only was after the defeat of Sauron, at no point did any Istari go back to Valinor.

    • @ComicalHealing
      @ComicalHealing Před 6 měsíci

      @@jxchamb 🤣

    • @odeum9772
      @odeum9772 Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@ComicalHealing Sounds like it was a presumption then, since it turned out not to be true after all.

  • @Mare_Man
    @Mare_Man Před měsícem

    I wish we knew more about the early days of Saruman, when he was "as great as his fame him"

  • @TheStewiestPac
    @TheStewiestPac Před 2 měsíci +1

    If the estate can sign off on and help produce whatever the hell was just on prime, then they can and should sign off on somebody exploring either the blues or Aragorns adventures pre-lotr. THAT fans would love. THAT isn’t twisting and changing already existing source material.

  • @MarsVee123
    @MarsVee123 Před 6 měsíci +2

    This is what Amazons show should have been about. They wouldn't be constrained by the books and in fear of messing things up. I would have hired Peter and Fran to show run. 🧙🧙

  • @nc3216
    @nc3216 Před 6 měsíci +2

    An interesting later conception of the Blue Wizards from Tolkien that I wasn't aware of.. last time I read "the lore" they simply arrived in the Third Age and vanished in the East, which is the story I prefer. For one thing, this version leaves two powerful Istari in the East after the fall of Sauron, and where were they during the War of the Ring? Istari are far more powerful than Nazgul. And if it were up to me I'd leave the Wizards out of the Second Age story entirely (although I'm sure the hack fan-fic writers at Amazon have already slotted them in), since it blunts the story of the Last Alliance, where the combined power of Elves and Men still in their prime were *just enough* to defeat Sauron.

  • @paulemge9156
    @paulemge9156 Před 6 měsíci

    For some reason I never considered the Blue Wizards returned to Valinor after the second age, that makes a lot of sense and ties the two stories of there arrival at different times together

  • @JervisGermane
    @JervisGermane Před 6 měsíci +1

    Didn't you cover this already?
    Maybe it was part of a livestream last time.

  • @disgruntledtoons
    @disgruntledtoons Před 6 měsíci +17

    Truth be told, if Tolkien had been granted more years to live, he probably would have retconned the Blue Wizards out of the legendarium altogether. The narrative as published has no dependence on them.
    If the Blue Wizards had fallen to evil, then most likely they ruled realms of Men as satraps for Sauron. They were then assassinated by mortal rivals for power (Black Numenoreans, perhaps?), and like Saruman when he was "killed" by Wormtongue, they were denied re-embodiment and became powerless spirits. Something must have put them out of business, for during the events at the end of the War of the Ring it would have made much more sense for Sauron to recall them from whatever they were doing and send them against Gandalf.

    • @adamarens3520
      @adamarens3520 Před 6 měsíci +2

      This theory holds water👍!

    • @barbiquearea
      @barbiquearea Před 6 měsíci +1

      Its also possible that at some point during their service to Sauron, they may have grown so powerful and confident, that they rebelled against his rule and Sauron had to send an army to quash their rebellion, and in doing so forced them into hiding. They may have sat out during the events of the War of the Ring, and only resurfaced after Sauron's final defeat.

  • @12classics39
    @12classics39 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I find it extremely suspicious that the last confirmed sighting of the Blue Wizards was with Saruman heading East, and then Saruman later returned without them. It seems to be screaming out at us that Saruman killed them, yet that can’t be, because such an action would’ve alerted the Valar of his treachery, and Ilúvatar would’ve sent them back anyway, like he sent Gandalf back. But since the Wizards never returned to Valinor, and Tolkien clearly abandoned his original idea of their becoming servants of Sauron, they must’ve either died or lost interest in their original purpose and decided to stay in Middle-earth. Perhaps Saruman realized that his own goals were growing too different from theirs, and left them behind, citing some false reason that they bought.
    I wonder if their success during the Second Age gave them such faith that Men would triumph that they decided to step back into the shadows and no longer interfere with the fight against Sauron, believing (correctly) that the coming of the Dominion of Men meant that victory would be in the hands of Men, not their own. This could explain why Gandalf is counted as the only Istari to remain true to his purpose, as he knew that for all the strength of Men, his direct help and interference was absolutely necessary.
    Either way, Tolkien’s abandonment of his potential sequel means we should not count any of the few pages he wrote of it as “canon.” He decided not to finish it, so it’s not official. Thus, the Blue Wizards could not have been involved in the “New Shadow” that never really happened.

  • @Sam-qd8fy
    @Sam-qd8fy Před 4 měsíci +1

    You know what. I give in. I love this channel. And I accept being a total geek. I'll Subscribe and come to turns and live geeky for the rest of my days.

  • @justinweber4977
    @justinweber4977 Před 2 měsíci +1

    "The Blue Wizards got really into the 60s and were never heard from again."

    • @DavidVerbout
      @DavidVerbout Před měsícem +1

      What movie is that from? That's so familiar sounding to me.

    • @justinweber4977
      @justinweber4977 Před měsícem

      @@DavidVerbout Sandlot, the fates of one of the kids "He got really into the 60s and we never heard from him again."

  • @Sebby_Nineteen
    @Sebby_Nineteen Před 6 měsíci +2

    I thought you already did this video?

  • @Macaf4r
    @Macaf4r Před 5 měsíci +1

    I heard they opened a ramen shop called Cup Bowl White Beards

  • @kingearwig
    @kingearwig Před 6 měsíci +2

    This video illustrates one of the many unfinished stories that are part of the LOTR universe. Someone could write a show based on this and have nearly unlimited creative license without complaint from the millions of devoted book fans. And Amazon chose to change stories that were fully told in their series...

  • @specialnewb9821
    @specialnewb9821 Před 6 měsíci

    This is an uh, interesting way to reconcile different conceptions.

  • @davidmiddleton7958
    @davidmiddleton7958 Před 6 měsíci +5

    It is stated in Tolkien's works that Saruman went East. His power to use his voice to convince people would be invaluble to weaken Sauron's support. I wonder what would have happened if he had stayed in the East?

  • @journeymanX
    @journeymanX Před 3 měsíci

    They formed a band called eifel and released the single "i'm blue"

  • @fich1023
    @fich1023 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I really like those arts depicting those blue wizards in middle eastern or oriental costumes.

    • @martavdz4972
      @martavdz4972 Před 2 měsíci

      In some of the pictures, one is Indian and one Chinese or Vietnamese or thereabouts. In some others, their clothes are reminiscent of Central-Western Asian traditional female clothes, from Afghanistan, Iran or Tajikistan.

  • @Jordy120
    @Jordy120 Před 4 měsíci

    My favourite fantasy author. I'm not a writer. I wanted to ask if Tolkien has left tiny doors/clues that he could have used later as side stories for a later time? For me, I have seen many opportunities for expanding an additional tale. Love ya channel & work.

  • @garmisra7841
    @garmisra7841 Před 6 měsíci +3

    This is a fascinating analysis. I wonder if it might have been something like a Frankish/Holy Roman Empire (Numenoreans/Gondorians) in comparison to a Byzantine Empire or Ottoman (Easterlings/Haradrim)? The Blue Wizards being active to sow insurrection in a land where Sauron may have been seen as a god-king, like the Old Persian kings were viewed. They would have had the cards stacked against them, more than likely. And, I imagine the human kingdoms in the East were probably less civilized compared to idealized Numenorean kingdoms - e.g. slavery and suchlike, but probably not anarchic and evil in and of themselves, and such as it was, the domination of Sauron over their kings and kingdoms may have even created some sort of order, and it's understandable that they had conquering armies and would have gotten that Sauron propaganda that the West were their hereditary enemies.

    • @BVargas78
      @BVargas78 Před 6 měsíci +3

      I've always seen Gondor more as the equivalent to the east roman empire while Arnor was more akin to the western empire and perhaps the franks/holy roman empire to a certain extent. Constantinople and Minas Tirith faced similar challenges over their history and the general look of Gondorean civilians and even the architecture evoke the byzantine empire to me.
      As for the blue wizards, I think it was implied in some writings that over time they lost connection to their original mission, 'went native' for lack of a better word. I could see them as Istari not falling to the level of Saruman perhaps, but perhaps opting to become god kings/emperors of the people of the east. Perhaps initially with benevolent and altruistic intentions but ultimately haughty and self serving. And in the same way that Gondor and the west of middle earth can be evocative of the ancient west of our world, the Istari who eventually ruled over the east (the theory i subscribe to) helped form cultures that were evocative of the ancient India and Chinese civilizations. Realms that were strong in their own territory and free from the dark influence of Sauron. But insular and not ideal either due to becoming despotic.

    • @shekel2356
      @shekel2356 Před 6 měsíci +3

      ​@@BVargas78I'm not sure I understand in what sense the eastern nations would be described as insular and despotic, in your analysis, but the western nations of middle earth wouldn't be? Tolkien is a product of colonial Europe, despotism was brought to them in the form of colonial nations, they were no more or less despotic in the middle ages than European nations. Equally, they were no more insular, medieval eastern cultures had vast amounts of trading between them and the west, they have done since Alexander the Great, they've had meaningful cultural and economic connections since the bronze age. I think your historical analogies, or evocations as you have put it, are apocryphal at best

    • @BVargas78
      @BVargas78 Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@shekel2356 I'm not saying they are my personal views, I do agree that western civilization was just as autocratic/despotic as the east. Maybe even more so in some regards. But Tolkiens Arnor and Gondor were based around an idealised West, largely devoid of the bad parts (but not entirely). Yet I do think Tolkiens views of the blue wizards were of that nature i mentioned before, as it's possible/likely that Tolkien shared in the 'orientalism' view of the east. Bearing in mind he himself was the product of his society and time when such views were common place among western intellectuals.
      But to be more specific, there is also reference to letters of Tolkien in his histories of middle earth compilation of books which i think his son put together. Though there is very little extra information, there is a part he mentions the possibility of cults and organized religions being organised around them (the blue wizards). Which is something only a despotic ruler would permit. And you never hear of empires east of Sauron going on the war path either, not even to the aid of Gondor and the west. Which reinforces to me that they became insular realms.

    • @shekel2356
      @shekel2356 Před 6 měsíci +2

      @@BVargas78 Thank you very much for such a rapid and detailed response! I agree and understand better where you're coming from now

  • @ToothpikcOriginal
    @ToothpikcOriginal Před 6 měsíci +12

    Such a shame they aren't in the Rings of Power. That would've been the perfect opportunity to delve into the lore

    • @ohmygordd9426
      @ohmygordd9426 Před 6 měsíci +3

      a story line abt the blue wizards in the east would be so cool. its also a far more thoughtful way of introducing characters of different ethnicities into the legendarium without altering what is already there.

    • @JacktheRah
      @JacktheRah Před 6 měsíci +8

      Visually it'd be very interesting.
      I'm just afraid that they wouldn't write them a proper story.

    • @ladvargleinad7566
      @ladvargleinad7566 Před 6 měsíci +1

      I will forever be mad that the TV series did not focus on the Blue Wizards during the 2nd and 3rd Age.

  • @justinhammer3196
    @justinhammer3196 Před 6 měsíci +1

    I think Tom Bombadil turned the two wizards into his blue shirt and yellow hat respectively.

  • @chickenmonger123
    @chickenmonger123 Před 6 měsíci

    I like to think that they are still running around Middle-Earth. That there are wonders and Magic still to be uncovered.