Encyclopedia > Moria (Middle-earth)

  Article Content

Moria (Middle-earth)

Warning: Wikipedia contains spoilers

In J. R. R. Tolkien's fictional universe, Middle-earth, Moria (also known as Khazad-dûm, The Black Chasm, The Black Pit, Dwarrowdelf, Hadhodrond, and Phurunargian) is the name given to the underground city, mines, and connected tunnels that run through the central Misty Mountains. There, for three ages of Middle-earth, a thriving Dwarvish community created the greatest city ever known. However, by the end of the Third Age, at the time of the events of The Lord of the Rings, Moria had become a dark and cursed place, and dwarves no longer lived there, but only orcs, trolls, and other evil entities.

Before the First Age, the father of the Dwarves, named Durin, woke by a lake in the Misty Mountains. This lake, called Mirrormere or Kheled-zaram, was later a revered place among Dwarves. Nearby, Durin first began his city, which was called Khazad-dûm by the Dwarves and also Dwarrowdelf by Men and Hadhodrond by Elves. Afterwards, other rulers of Khazad-dûm were sometimes named Durin, who the dwarves believed came to live again among his people.

In the Second Age, the Dwarves of Khazad-dûm forged a friendship with the Noldorian Elf realm of Eregion - but this friendship ended in disaster with the forging of the Rings of Power, the rise of Sauron wielding the One Ring, and the destruction of the Elven realm. Then Khazad-dûm was closed, and Sauron could not enter it.

In the year 1980 of the Third Age, however, the Dwarves, seeking a precious metal called mithril, delved too deep and awakened Durin's Bane, an evil fire spirit from the elder days. This spirit fought the Dwarves and killed Durin VI, the King of Khazad-dûm. The following year, it also killed Náin, Durin VI's son, and the Dwarves were forced to flee their ancient home. After that, the realm was known as Moria, the Black Pit.

Eventually, Sauron began to people the Pit with his followers, mainly orcs and trolls, and they discovered that the terror was, in fact, a Balrog of Morgoth. In 2799 of the Third Age, a battle was fought on Moria's East Gate, and the Dwarves were successful in driving away Sauron's minions, but they could not defeat the Balrog. Several Dwarven generations later, Balin, who had accompanied Bilbo Baggins on the Quest of Erebor[?] described in The Hobbit, led a new group of Dwarves to reopen the city. At first all went well, but after a few years the community was destroyed by Orcs and similar creatures, although their fate was initially unknown.

In The Lord of the Rings, when Frodo Baggins set out from Rivendell with the Fellowship, they at first planned to travel over the Misty Mountains. When they were stopped by snow on Mt. Caradhras[?], they found themselves pursued by wolves and Orcs, and fled into Moria, so as to go under the mountains. There they found Balin's journal and learned the fate of his expedition. They were then set upon by a host of trolls, Orcs, and the Balrog. Gandalf fought the Balrog on a narrow bridge and succeeded in destroying a section of bridge to make the Balrog fall. As it fell, the Balrog snagged Gandalf's leg with its whip of thongs and pulled him after it, sending them both plunging into the abyss spanned by the bridge. The rest of the Fellowship managed to escape Moria and reach Lothlórien mostly unharmed.

Gandalf's fight with the Balrog is one of the most impressive scenes in Peter Jackson's movie The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring.

Unknown to the Fellowship, both Gandalf and the Balrog survived the fall and fought a ferocious battle from the depths of Moria to the mountains above, demolishing large parts of Moria in the process. Gandalf cast down the Balrog upon the mountainside and lived just long enough to see it die, but his story was not yet ended. (See his entry for further details.)



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Shoreham, New York

... household size is 2.88 and the average family size is 3.11. In the village the population is spread out with 27.6% under the age of 18, 6.2% from 18 to 24, 17.7% from 25 to ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 23.5 ms