Pelennor Fields: Difference between revisions

From Tolkien Gateway
m (Added Etymology section)
(Added Battle of the Pelennor Fields section)
Line 3: Line 3:
After Minas Ithil had fallen and been renamed [[Minas Morgul]], the Pelennor Fields were walled by the great wall of Rammas Echor, to prevent an invasion.
After Minas Ithil had fallen and been renamed [[Minas Morgul]], the Pelennor Fields were walled by the great wall of Rammas Echor, to prevent an invasion.


During the [[War of the Ring]], the Pelennor Fields were the location of the [[Battle of the Pelennor Fields]], when [[Sauron]]'s [[Orcs]] and evil [[Men]] overran the Rammas Echor and besieged the city.
==Battle of the Pelennor Fields==
 
:''Main article: [[Battle of the Pelennor Fields]]''
It was on these fields that [[Théoden]] King was slain, and that most of the great battle was fought. After the War of the Ring, the Rammas Echor was rebuilt by the [[Dwarves]] of [[Aglarond]].
During the [[War of the Ring]], the Pelennor Fields were the location of the [[Battle of the Pelennor Fields]], when [[Sauron]]'s [[Orcs]] and evil [[Men]] overran the Rammas Echor and besieged the city. It was on these fields that [[Théoden]] King was slain, and that most of the great battle was fought. After the War of the Ring, the Rammas Echor was rebuilt by the [[Dwarves]] of [[Aglarond]].


==Etymology==
==Etymology==

Revision as of 15:06, 13 September 2007

The Pelennor Fields were the townlands and fields of Minas Tirith, capital of Gondor.

After Minas Ithil had fallen and been renamed Minas Morgul, the Pelennor Fields were walled by the great wall of Rammas Echor, to prevent an invasion.

Battle of the Pelennor Fields

Main article: Battle of the Pelennor Fields

During the War of the Ring, the Pelennor Fields were the location of the Battle of the Pelennor Fields, when Sauron's Orcs and evil Men overran the Rammas Echor and besieged the city. It was on these fields that Théoden King was slain, and that most of the great battle was fought. After the War of the Ring, the Rammas Echor was rebuilt by the Dwarves of Aglarond.

Etymology

The name Pelennor translates to "Fenced Land" in Sindarin.