Read The Complete Tolkien Companion Online
Authors: J. E. A. Tyler
New Row
â The name given to the former Bagshot Row after it was rebuilt by the Hobbits following the events at the end of the War of the Ring. This quiet residential lane, which led to the Hill of Hobbiton near the centre of the Shire, and housed among others Hamfast âthe Gaffer' Gamgee, was razed by agents of Saruman during the War. After their victories over these ruffians, the Hobbits rebuilt the neat row of cottages and called it simply New Row, although it was sometimes drily referred to as âSharkey's End' â a reference to the death of Saruman, which had taken place near this very spot.
Nibin Noeg
â The
PETTY-DWARVES
.
Nienna
âLady of Mourning' (Q.) â A Queen of the Valar, the sister of the Fëanturi Mandos and Lórien. In the traditions of the Eldar she is the Lady of Grief and Compassion, who dwells in the Gardens of Lórien but sleeps by day on the island in the middle of the lake Lorellin. Nienna is one of the three Valar Queens (the Valier) to be numbered among the seven Aratar (High Ones) of Arda. Her task is to bring peace of mind to the grief-stricken. She does this through the medium of dreams. Olórin the Maia was of her following.
Nienor
âMourning' (Sind.) â The birth-name of the maiden of the Edain afterwards known as
Niniel,
âTear-maiden'; for although she bore the earlier name for the first twenty years of her life, the Doom of the Children of Húrin overtook her, and the memory of her life before that moment was taken from her, by bewitchment. Those who found her thus wandering named her Niniel and so she was called for the remainder of her short and tragic life.
Nienor was the third child of Húrin of the Third House of the Edain and his wife Morwen Eledhwen of the First House; the other two were Túrin Turambar and Lalaith (who had died in infancy before Nienor's birth). She passed her girlhood together with her mother in Dor-lómin (which had been occupied by Easterlings in the years following the Nirnaeth Arnoediad), but when Nienor was barely twenty Morwen took her and together they slipped secretly out of that country, intending to seek refuge in Doriath, whither Nienor's elder brother Túrin had been sent some years before.
In the event Morwen was fated never again to see her son; but Nienor's fate was different. Rebelling against her mother's commands, she wilfully left the safety of Thingol's kingdom and fled west: to be overtaken by recurring misfortune â and at length encountered by the arch-foe of her House and Kin: Glaurung the Dragon. This evil creature hypnotised her into forgetfulness, and so, wandering, she was found by some woodmen, Edain of the Forest of Brethil, who took her with them back their arboreal sanctuary of Ephel Brandir. Among these woodmen was her own brother Túrin, though neither of them knew it; for he had not seen her for many years, and she did not remember him.
The tragedy unfolded itself with increasing speed. âNiniel' wed Túrin, and became pregnant by him; and though Túrin slew the Dragon which had worked such evil, and thus partly avenged them both, Nienor, filled with horror â as she was when Glaurung withdrew his bewitchment and the memory of the days of her life came flooding back to her â slew herself in the river Teiglin. Her brother also slew himself soon afterwards; and the following year their mother Morwen died in the same place.
See
CABED NAERAMARTH
.
Night-fearers
â A contemptuous term for Men, in use among some Elves (to whom the night was of course the holiest part of the day).
Night of Naught
â A poetic reference (in Bilbo Baggins' poem âEärendil Was A Mariner') to the veiling cloak of Shadow which Elbereth wove about the Undying Lands following the rebellion and flight of the High-elves in the First Age.
Nimbrethil
âSilver-Birch' (Sind.) â The name given by the Elves of the Havens of Sirion and Arvernien to the birchwoods of that latter region of West Beleriand; these stood not far from the sea, and though not overly extensive, provided excellent wood for shipbuilding. Eärendil's ship Vingilot was built of this wood.
Nimloth
âWhite-flower' (Sind.) â The name given by the Númenoreans to their White Tree, a descendant of Celeborn of Eressëa (and ultimately of Telperion, Eldest of Trees) which grew in the court of the King in Númenor. (
Nimloth
is etymologically identifiable with Q.
Ninquelótë;
a name for Telperion.) A fruit of this tree survived the Downfall and was borne back to Middle-earth to become the chief heraldic emblem and holiest symbol of the Realms in Exile.
In an earlier age of the world, Nimloth had also been the name of the wife of Dior EluchÃl, a princess of the Sindar of Doriath; she was the mother of Eluréd, Elurin and Elwing. All save the last-named were slain by the sons of Fëanor, as was Dior himself.
Nimphelos
âWhitefrost' (Sind.) â The name of the great pearl from the Bay of Balar given by Thingol of Doriath as fee to the Dwarves of Belegost who had helped him in the building of his underground palace, Menegroth.
Nimrodel
âLady of the White Cave' (Sind.) â An Elf-princess, probably of the Galadhrim; she dwelt in Lothlórien but, with her lover
AMROTH
chose to pass over Sea at the end of the second millennium of the Third Age. It was at this time that the Dwarves of nearby Moria accidentally released the Balrog; the evil thus unchained, added to that which already emanated from Dol Guldur, oppressed the lands between. Nimrodel and Amroth therefore prepared to flee from Lórien and pass to the sea-coast. But she, journeying separately from him, perished in the passes of the White Mountains in the South.
Also the name of the cascading stream which flowed from the Misty Mountains eastward to join the Silverlode (Celebrant) inside the borders of Lórien. The Galadhrim believed that its waters carried the voice of the maiden who had once dwelt beside it.
Nindalf
âSwan-water' (Sind.) â Known to Men as the Wetwang Marshes; a huge expanse of fen-country which lay on the eastern borders of the Anduin between the Emyn Muil and North Ithilien, whose own southern region was the Mere of Dead Faces.
Nindamos
â The chief settlement of the fisher-folk of Númenor, in the south of the island.
Nine, The
â The
RINGWRAITHS
of Sauron, often called the Nine Riders or the
Uláiri
(
Nazgûl
in the Black Speech).
Nine Walkers
â The members of the Fellowship of the Ring: four Hobbits, two Men, one Elf, one Dwarf, and a Wizard.
Niniel
âTear-maiden' (Sind.) â
See
NIENOR
.
Nin-in-Eilph
â
See
GLANDUIN
.
Ninquelótë
âWhite-blossom' (Q.) â
See
NIMLOTH
.
Ninui
â
See
NENIMÃ
.
Niphredil
âPale-point' (Sind.) â The name given by Elves to a small white flower of western Middle-earth, said to have come into existence in Doriath, at the moment of birth of Lúthien Tinúviel (it is depicted on her heraldry). In later ages it also grew in Lothlórien.
Nirnaeth Arnoediad
âTears Unnumbered' (Sind.) â The name given in the lore and traditions of the Eldar to the Fifth Battle of Beleriand, or more properly the fourth day of that great conflict upon the desert of Anfauglith, when with great slaughter and terror the armies of the Eldar and their allies, the Edain, were overthrown for ever by Morgoth Bauglir of Angband, their ancient foe. It also forms the first words of the Curse pronounced by the Valar upon the rebelling Sons of Fëanor, and on those who followed them into exile.
A supreme irony lies in the fact that this battle, with all its appalling consequences, actually came about as a result of a renewed (and admirable) determination on the part of the Eldar to lure Morgoth into a conflict from which his forces could never escape. This new confidence and boldness was in turn the product of a string of military successes which the Eldar and the Edain â loosely grouped under the leadership of Maedhros, eldest son of Fëanor â had been winning as the second decade since the Dagor Bragollach wore away and the shock of that defeat likewise diminished.
Yet in the winning of these victories they had alerted Morgoth to their renascent strength, and so he was not unprepared (as seems to have been hoped by the Elf-captains Fingon and Maedhros). Moreover, by the adroit uses of treachery their Enemy learned of all their plans, and so was able to forestall them by a grand design of his own, which proved utterly victorious.
The conflict itself is described in a most vivid fashion in existing works, and few will wish for more than a summary. Though there was great heroism, and deeds were done whose consequences outlasted the more grievous results of the Nirnaeth, the Eldar and Edain, themselves lured into a gigantic trap, were virtually destroyed. But there was no rout, and Elves and Men â and Dwarves â fought as long as they were able. And because of this some survived: notably the Elf-host of Gondolin, led by Turgon, whose retreat was made only possible by the self-sacrifice of the Men of Dor-lómin, led by Húrin and Huor.
But Azaghâl of the Dwarves was slain, and Fingon High King of the Noldor, and Huor together with all the Men of Dor-lómin (save Húrin only), and the Men of Brethil died, and the Elves of Nargothrond led by Gwindor son of Guilin were all slain. The realms of the sons of Fëanor were swept away for ever, though the brothers themselves survived. Mithrim was overrun, and Dor-lómin also. The armies of Morgoth penetrated even to the Falas, where they sacked the Havens of Eglarest and Brithombar.
From here, as from other places now overtaken by disaster, Elves and Men fled to the Havens of Sirion, or here and there as they might. The black tide flowed around Doriath, Nargothrond, and Gondolin. But their days were doomed, and they also fell, in time, and those who survived joined the earlier survivors at the Havens. As the final stroke, they were then assaulted by others of their kin.
After this internecine attack few indeed remained of the proud hosts who once had crossed over the Sea to wreak their will upon Morgoth and regain the Silmarils. Before the Nirnaeth the Noldor of Middle-earth were a coherent and potent military force, occupying and ordering many fair realms in north-western Middle-earth; but after that day they were a fugitive people, dispossessed of all they had held dear and bereaved of many of their close kin. The only hope of Elves and Men now lay in the West.
Nisimaldar
â
See
FRAGRANT TREES
.
NÃsinen
â A small lake in the river Nunduinë in western Númenor; it was renowned for the abundance of fragrant shrubs and plants that grew around its circumference.
Nivrim
â The westernmost portion of the Forest of Region, separated from the main wood by the waters of Sirion; it was accounted Doriath's western march, and was protected by the Girdle of Melian. Nivrim was renowned for its oaks.
Noakes
â A family of Shire-hobbits, settled in Bywater.
Nob
â A Hobbit-servant of
The Prancing Pony
inn in Bree at the time of the War of the Ring.
Nobottle
â A village of the Shire, located in the northern part of the Westfarthing, not far from Needlehole.
Noegyth Nibin
âLesser [petty]-Dwarves' (Sind.) â A Grey-elven name (not altogether polite) for the strange, stunted race of âspeaking-people' who appeared in Beleriand early in the First Age, after the departure into the West of the Calaquendi but before the appearance of any other intelligent race. Their harsh speech was not understood, and their wizened appearance was misliked; regrettably they were persecuted by the Sindar and the Green-elves. This drove them into hiding, where they nurtured grievances against Elves.
It was this people who discovered and delved the first caves of
Nulukkizdin
(Nargothrond). They excavated other halls besides; one of these was on Amon Rûdh. Not until other Dwarves had appeared in East Beleriand did the Elves cease their persecution of the Petty-Dwarves â but by then there were only a few left. (Mîm, one of the last of all, was slain by a Man, Húrin of Dor-lómin.)
Nogothrim
âDwarf-folk' (Sind.) â A Grey-elven name for the race of Dwarves, more polite than
Naugrim
(âStunted People'), though not as overtly complimentary as
Hadhod
or
Gonnhirrim. Nogothrim
is a collective plural. In the incantation first used by Gandalf the Grey when attempting to command the Doors of Durin to open into Moria, he chose the words
Fennas Nogothrim,
âGateway of the Dwarf-folk', which carried a distinct measure of respect: for no Dwarf-doors were likely to open to one using an impolite form of address.
(Nonetheless Gandalf hedged his bets: he also addressed the gateway as
Annon Edhellen,
âDoor of the Elves', no doubt taking into consideration that the Doors, though of Dwarf-make, were designed by, and for, Elves.)
Nogrod
âHollow Dwelling' (Sind.) â The Elvish name for a city of Dwarves in the east of the Blue Mountains, known to its builders and occupiers as Tumunzahar, and to Men as The Hollowbold. Its sister city was Belegost, seven leagues to the north. Dwarves of both cities had much to do with the affairs of the Elves in Beleriand during the First Age; but the memory of Nogrod is clouded â for Elves â by the murder of Thingol Greycloak of Doriath, committed by Dwarves of this city out of desire for the Silmaril, which Thingol then possessed. For this reason the feud between the Sindar and the Dwarves of Nogrod was bitter.