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Encyclopedia > Forodwaith

In J. R. R. Tolkien's fictional universe of Middle-earth, Forodwaith was the name both of a region and the people that lived there.


The Sindarin name Forodwaith translates loosely as Northern Waste, and was a name for the land north of the Iron Mountains of the First Age. Little was known of it, except that it was an area of immense cold due to the proximity to the Gap of Ilmen, and Morgoth's evil cold.


After the War of Wrath and the breaking of the World, the Iron Mountains were mostly destroyed, and the area of Forodwaith that lay north of Eriador became known as Forochel, together with the great ice-bay and -cape that carried the same name.


The Men of Forodwaith were a strange folk apparently unrelated to the Edain. During the Third Age they were known as the Snowmen of Forochel or Lossoth.


Arvedui, last King of Arthedain, fled to the Ice-bay of Forochel after his realm was destroyed by Angmar, and the Lossoth helped him survive the winter. Against their advice he took ship to sail south, and he was drowned in the ice-bay, together with the Palantírs of the North.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Forodwaith (people) - Tolkien Gateway (161 words)
The Forodwaith were an almost unknown people who dwelt in the far north of Middle-earth, apparently dating back to the First Age.
However, the frozen north was still refered to as Forodwaith by the people of Middle-earth.
Forodwaith means "People of the North" in Sindarin (from forod = "north" and gwaith = "people").
  More results at FactBites »


 

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