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image_caption =Rivendell in ]| | image_caption =Rivendell in ]| | ||
place_name = ''Rivendell''| | place_name = ''Rivendell''| | ||
place_alias = ''Imladris''<br/>''Last Homely House East of the Sea''| | place_alias = ''Imladris''<br/>''Karningul''</br>''Last Homely House East of the Sea''| | ||
place_description= Refuge of the Elves| | place_description= Refuge of the Elves| | ||
place_built= ]| | place_built= ]| |
Revision as of 17:36, 16 December 2005
Template:Infobox LOTR place
Rivendell (Sindarin: Imladris) is an Elven outpost in Middle-earth, a fictional realm created by J. R. R. Tolkien. It is also referred to as 'The Last Homely House East of the Sea,' a reference to Valinor, which is west of the sea. It is established by Elrond in the Second Age of Middle-earth (four or five thousand years before the events of The Lord of the Rings). Besides Elrond himself, notable Elves who live there include Arwen and Glorfindel. In The Hobbit, Bilbo Baggins stopped off at Rivendell with the dwarves on the way to the Lonely Mountain and also on the way back to the Shire with Gandalf. In The Lord of the Rings, Frodo Baggins and his Hobbit companions journey to Rivendell, where they meet with Bilbo, who had retired there after his 111th birthday, spending his time on his memoir, There and Back Again. Several other Elves, Dwarves and Men also arrive at Rivendell on separate errands; at the Council of Elrond they learn that all of their errands are related to the fate of the One Ring, and they must decide what to do about it. In the end it is the Hobbits who influence the decision. Rivendell is located at the edge of a narrow gorge of the river Bruinen (one of the main approaches to Rivendell comes from a nearby ford of Bruinen), but well hidden in the moorlands and foothills of the Hithaeglir or the Misty Mountains. The Sindarin name for Rivendell (which is a translation thereof) is Imladris, meaning "deep valley of the cleft". The physical appeareance of the valley of Rivendell is based upon the Lauterbrunnental in Switzerland, where J.R.R. Tolkien had hiked in 1911. See also
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