Could someone explain to me on why Sauron getting back his ring is such a bad thing btw? Lol I mean as far as I've seen, it can only turn ppl invisible. Sure, sauron would get his physical form again but it doesn't look like it would be a deal breaker from what I saw in the films. I mean the dude is still commanding his armies without a body.
The One Ring had power over all the other rings, including the immensely powerful Elven rings. One could speculate that the Dwarven rings would also find their way back to Sauron, if he had the One. In any case, The One seemed to have special powers: once it was destroyed, the Third Age ended and the Elves faded from Middle Earth.
I dont think he had cause to wield it with the war over. He took it as "weregild" originally and to covet it; he had no use for it as a weapon. It granted him invisibility that much is definite. As a Numenorean king I'm sure he couldve used it to more benefit than Frodo could, probably to command his armies to greater effect and more assured victories.
And would have become corrupted as surely as Gollum was. Isildur was fortunate to have been killed at the Gladden Fields as a worse fate awaited him had he kept the ring. Gollum was a tragic character. Without him, Frodo would have been lost. His utter corruption at the end ultimately became Frodo's salvation.
EDIT: Isildur had yet to "learn" how to control the ring as he had only possessed it only for a short time. Frodo, on the other hand, had the ring for years (though he rarely used it). Gollum just wasn't strong enough to control it and, in any case, acquired it through murder.
Her own power from my understanding.Out of curiosity, just so that I have a better idea of how these rings work, was the whole light-energy protection that Galadriel was throwing off when rescuing Gandalf a result of her Elvish ring? Or was that all on her own without it?
lol I've been pushing for at LEAST a Fantasy section to do threads like that. But here is okay tooThat's the good thing about being a purist....I don't have to be pragmatic. The worst thing about it is that I never get exactly what I want.t: The best thing about the worst thing is that I don't let it get me down and am still able to enjoy movies I don't think are perfect (hey, works for me).
If I can't have it all, then I want to start with early Valinor and end after the flight of the Noldor and the the first battles of Middle Earth. It's a good foundation and a lead in for other stories in The Silmarillion. If I were to pick one story, it would be Beren and Luthien because it brings SO many different areas of the larger tale together. Thingol/Melian and Doriath, Melkor/Morgoth, Utumno, the Iron Crown, and those gems made by Feanor....what were they called? Oh yeah....The Silmarils. They were sort of important to the book (if you get my drift).![]()
Also, there were some really cool characters like Carcharoth, Huan, etc. that would be really cool to see as well as the start of the line of "the" pivotal character in LotR (Aragorn). The tale of the house of Hurin is one of the best in The Silmarillion, but doesn't reach as far as the expounding of the Lay of Leithian. (IMO)
EDIT: Oops....this isn't The Silmarillion thread. Sorry.
Seems to help significantly with command over others/leadership.I dont think he had cause to wield it with the war over. He took it as "weregild" originally and to covet it; he had no use for it as a weapon. It granted him invisibility that much is definite. As a Numenorean king I'm sure he couldve used it to more benefit than Frodo could, probably to command his armies to greater effect and more assured victories.
Makes sense. I would have liked to see how Forod would have been with the Ring long term.OK folks, Here's the short story......Sauron (also known a Thauron and Gorthaur the Cruel) wrested control of the 3 elven rings forged by Celebrimbor (grandson of Feanor and son of Feanor's fifth son Curufin) by putting much of his power into the 1 ring. This was necessary as the elvish rings were very powerful. With the ring, Sauron became more powerful than he was in the beginning because he was able to exercise control of the works of others. Without it, he didn't have his full power (but clearly was very powerful). It would be possible for someone of strong will (like Aragorn, who wrested control of the palantir from Sauron, Galadriel, or Gandalf) to wield the ring. Doing so, however, would utterly corrupt them. All of the above recognized this and refused to take the ring.
Think of the ring as a vessel of Sauron's power. With it, he gained the power of others, without it, he was weakened and didn't have full control of the power of the ring, if the ring was destroyed, so was the power he put into it and he would be weakened beyond ever being able to take shape again.
The interesting thing is the Frodo himself became powerful enough to control the ring when he stood at the edges of Sammath Naur (inside Orodruin/Mount Doom). He was barely able to get there and Sam had to carry him on his back. Once he got there, he claimed the ring as his own and spoke so in a clear, powerful voice. Had Gollum/Smeagol not bitten his finger off, Frodo might very well have been able to control the Nazgul and the armies of Sauron and defeated him. In doing so he would have become corrupted.
Earlier I said I thought Frodo actually pushed Gollum in to the fires of Orodruin and here's why I think this is the case. Frodo's finger was still in the ring when Gollum fell into the fires. A short time earlier, Gollum had tried to physically take the ring from Frodo and failed. At that point, Frodo told him that if he ever tried to take the ring from him again, that he himself would be cast into the fires of Orodruin.....and when he took the ring from Frodo, with Frodo's finger still in the ring, that's exactly what happened.
So, some of this is conjecture (but well founded IMO) and some is explained in JRR's writings.
Make sense??
Its primary power was to control the other Rings of Power and the minds of those that wore them. This ultimately failed except with the Nine.Seems to help significantly with command over others/leadership.
Right. All very interesting. Wish I'd read/remembered more about the effects of all the rings. I've got Sideshow Collectibles replicas of the One Ring and the 3 Elven rings.Its primary power was to control the other Rings of Power and the minds of those that wore them. This ultimately failed except with the Nine.
Because it contained part of Sauron himself it ended up actually amplifying his power. I believe this transferred down to other wielders in the power to impose their will over others if that wielder was of a strong enough mind/nature. It also amplified the inherent abilities of those who wore it. Hobbits bacame stealthier and easier to move unheard. Isildur as Numenorean King I believe wouldve become more commanding and seen as greater in stature.

Its primary power was to control the other Rings of Power and the minds of those that wore them. This ultimately failed except with the Nine.
Because it contained part of Sauron himself it ended up actually amplifying his power. I believe this transferred down to other wielders in the power to impose their will over others if that wielder was of a strong enough mind/nature. It also amplified the inherent abilities of those who wore it. Hobbits bacame stealthier and easier to move unheard. Isildur as Numenorean King I believe wouldve become more commanding and seen as greater in stature.
Its primary power was to control the other Rings of Power and the minds of those that wore them. This ultimately failed except with the Nine.
Because it contained part of Sauron himself it ended up actually amplifying his power. I believe this transferred down to other wielders in the power to impose their will over others if that wielder was of a strong enough mind/nature. It also amplified the inherent abilities of those who wore it. Hobbits bacame stealthier and easier to move unheard. Isildur as Numenorean King I believe wouldve become more commanding and seen as greater in stature.
Indeed. Even in Sauron's reduced and greatly weakened state, he was still master of the Ring. For Isildur to truly use it to its full power he wouldve had to have wrested mastery of it from Sauron, which wouldve totally corrupted him and place him as the new dark lord. Maybe he couldve achieved this if he tried while Sauron was so weakened, but im quite sure Tolkien had stated it wouldve taken someone of higher stature like Gandalf to do so. Even Aragorn couldn't have done it. Although Frodo had claimed it in the end, he hadnt deposed Sauron as its master, and he couldnt hope to do so. Tolkien explained that had the Nazgul reached him, and had Frodo tried to command them, they would've feigned submission and led him to Sauron who would then take the Ring back.
Sorry for the long text, but I find it very revealing. From one of Tolkiens letters:
"In any case a confrontation of Frodo and Sauron would soon have taken place, if the Ring was intact. Its result was inevitable. Frodo would have been utterly overthrown: crushed to dust, or preserved in torment as a gibbering slave. Sauron would not have feared the Ring! It was his own and under his will. Even from afar he had an effect upon it, to make it work for its return to himself. In his actual presence none but very few of equal stature could have hoped to withhold it from him. Of mortals no one, not even Aragorn. In the contest with the Palantír Aragorn was the rightful owner. Also the contest took place at a distance, and in a tale which allows the incarnation of great spirits in a physical and destructible form their power must be far greater when actually physically present."
"Of the others only Gandalf might be expected to master himbeing an emissary of the Powers and a creature of the same order, an immortal spirit taking a visible physical form. [However, c]onfrontation of Sauron alone, unaided, self to self was not contemplated. One can imagine a scene in which Gandalf, say, was placed in such a position. It would be a delicate balance. On one side the true allegiance of the Ring to Sauron; on the other the superior strength because Sauron was not actually in possession, and perhaps also because he was weakened by long corruption and expenditure of will in dominating inferiors. If Gandalf proved the victor, the result would have been for Sauron the same as the destruction of the Ring; for him it would have been destroyed, taken from him for ever. But the Ring and all its works would have endured. It would have been the master in the end.
I can't find the part where he explains how the Nazgul wouldve feined allegiance to Frodo had he tried claiming the Ring completely.