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12-07-2008, 11:07 AM | #1 |
Elven Warrior
Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 306
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Moria bridge and gate
I have to think that this question has been asked before, but I didn't see any old threads about it so…
When the Ring-company was passing through Moria, why in the world didn't the Moria forces place a strong guard by the bridge and/or gate? In another thread, Alcuin recently used a good descriptive word for places such as these - chokepoints. Weren't the bridge and gate essentially perfect chokepoints in this situation? The single narrow bridge (as opposed to several, wider bridges) over the chasm was actually designed to be a chokepoint. (It was intended as a defense against outside attackers, but would have worked equally well against those who would try to escape Moria in a situation such as this.) The Orcs obviously didn't intend to let the company escape. Frodo was speared and hit by an arrow, Sam was injured, and I believe Gandalf got an arrow through the hat. So why didn't the Moria force choose to utilize the tremendous advantage they possessed at the bridge and gate and instead made the seemingly very poor decision to set the place on fire and confront the company at an obviously less crucial barrier? I am hoping someone has a good "story internal" explanation. The story external answer seems pretty obvious. |
12-07-2008, 11:15 AM | #2 |
Elven Warrior
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Just after I posted this question, I came up with what could be a decent answer. Orcs don't appear to be particularly well disciplined. Possibly there were forces stationed at the bridge and gate (more than the pathetic few the company encountered at the gate), but they decided to get in on the "sport" of killing the company, and so, left their posts. Maybe someone has a better explanation?
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12-07-2008, 11:56 AM | #3 |
Elf Lord
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They simply did not give a flying pig about Sauron's affairs. For years they were keeping neutrality and were happy with such arrangement.
In my POV at the bridge location Gandalf and Co. encountered the guards permanently stationed over there, and the news about a bloodshed at the chamber of Mazarbul did not reach them yet, so they did not block the bridge. They just wanted the wandering in theirs domain intruders to be gone. That's it.
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12-07-2008, 04:59 PM | #4 |
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Sauron and The Balrog were independent and not “allies”, certainly not in the sense that Elrond and Galadriel and The Dúnedain were independent but allies. They certainly seemed to have known one another; Haldir told the Company that orcs had recently passed into Moria, presumably from Dol Guldur, “many days” before he met them. No doubt orcs inside Moria obeyed the Balrog; but all the orcs had been sent there by Sauron, and perhaps in that way he discovered the Balrog. (See entry for III 2480 in “Appendix B” of LotR: “…Sauron begins to people Moria with his creatures.”) The Balrog seems to be a little lazy: he isn’t really watching the “back door”, the West Gate: he’s left that to the Watcher in the Water. He really hasn’t placed a strong guard at the Great Gates: the orcs there seem to be rather more prepared to take unwary would-be intruders than to deal with folks trying to exit. They must have missed the morning briefing where the dangerous intruders were discussed; come to think of it, I seriously doubt that there were any morning briefings!
Think about this for a moment. No one entered from the West Gate: everyone came in (or went out) through the Great Gates in Dimrill Dale. There had been two major incursions into or near Moria in the past 350 years, both involving Dwarves. The first was the War of the Dwarves and Orcs, whose penultimate battle was fought in Dimrill Dale: Dain Ironfoot apparently saw the Balrog lurking the in the shadows beyond the Gate, and the rest of the Dwarven host decided to heed his advice and avoid the place. The second was Balin’s misadventure to try to recolonize Moria. In the first instance, the Balrog was ready to attack, but he declined himself to come out into Dimrill Dale, which is interesting in itself; in the second instance, it took the Balrog and the Orcs five long years to root out all the interlopers. I think we can say that
I think the Balrog was sloppy. He had some preparations left over from dealing with Balin and the colonists from Erebor; but he did not have a plan for dealing with invaders coming from the West. The Orcs were not “his”, though undoubtedly the ones living in Moria had, at worst, a divided loyalty to him, for what loyalty Orcs had for their masters (more like fear and loathing, I imagine: the Balrog was in proximity, and therefore to be feared – and obeyed). He had probably never dealt with an invasion from the western end of Moria; and it is likely that, whether he put the Watcher in the Water in place or Sauron did, the Watcher had been put there to prevent the colonists from Erebor from getting away, so it was only by ill chance that it noticed the Company trying to get in that way. (It reminds me of “Ed, the Vault Guard” on the old Jack Benny show in the 1940s and ’50s: “Is the war over?” “Yes, Ed, it is.” “What did they do with the Kaiser?” The Watcher was stuck there.) Once the orcs and the Balrog realized they had a problem inside Moria, they responded rather quickly; but strategy was not well-planned, and old defenses (like the fire across the fissure in the floor of the Second Hall) were used instead. Pickets and chokepoints were not well-manned; even if they were, orcs are notoriously ill-disciplined, and a report that the Balrog had been killed, injured, or crushed might well have distracted any pickets set to stop the invaders at the bridge. Finally, cutting the Company off at the Bridge was exactly what the Balrog was attempting to do. He was very nearly successful. Did he wish he’d left a garrison at the bridge? Probably. But it was simply something he’d never had to deal with before. Did he sense that there was something very serious underway? Undoubtedly: there was another Maia in the group: Gandalf sensed him, and he sensed Gandalf. Did he sense the Ring? Maybe, although I seriously doubt that he realized what was passing though his little tyranny. Unprepared, unrehearsed, unsuspecting: the whole affair was thrown together on the spur of the moment, and the Balrog was simply responding to an event he had not foreseen. That’s my position. (Which makes it similar to Olmer’s.) As for intruders like Aragorn, who said he had entered Moria before, they came through the Great Gates, and as he said, the memory was very evil. |
12-09-2008, 12:13 PM | #5 |
Leaf-Crowned Lord Of Elvenpath
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Or then there just weren't any usable passages to the bridge. to Orcs.
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12-09-2008, 05:48 PM | #6 | |
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Quote:
I wonder how irritated he was to have been buried under the roof of the Chamber of Mazarbul? I can’t imagine that he was in a very good mood when he arrived… |
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12-10-2008, 03:29 PM | #7 |
Swan-Knight of Dol Amroth
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I suspect that the Balrog regarded Sauron as an equal, just another rebel Maiar, and not someone he/she took orders from.
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12-11-2008, 12:47 PM | #8 |
Lady of the Ulairi
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It might indeed have been a she-Balrog with an old grudge against both Olorin and Sauron.
That's why she attacked Gandalf straight away, without exchanging some preliminary insults as males usually do. And Sauron had likely hurt her tender feelings back in Angband, preferring Turingwethil.... Last edited by Gordis : 12-11-2008 at 04:52 PM. |
12-11-2008, 01:49 PM | #9 |
Leaf-Crowned Lord Of Elvenpath
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Poor thing.
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12-11-2008, 03:24 PM | #10 | |
Elf Lord
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Quote:
Barlog was not lazy. He just did not give a damn. In a whole time since he has been awakened, he clearly shows his neutrality through the whole history of events, has never ventured into any actions, never helped to anyone. He is, like a dark prototype of Tom Bombadil, took Moria as a place of his dwelling, played host for everybody, who is seeking a refuge, but taking nobody's side. And of course, he did not want to share his domain with anyone powerful, and especially with Sau. This is why Sau can't use Moria's tunnels for his military plans, otherwise Elrond's living wouldn't be so peaceful and cozy.
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Uruk-hai, or the journey to there. Last edited by Olmer : 12-11-2008 at 03:32 PM. |
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12-11-2008, 04:36 PM | #11 |
Princess of the Noldor (and Administrative Empress of the Lone Islands)
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Wasn't he (or she ) dozing again, until Pippin woke him up by that stone he dropped down the well?
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12-11-2008, 04:51 PM | #12 |
Elf Lord
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That's what I've often thought. Or perhaps it was a combination of the stone drop and the presence of the rings and Gandalf that disturbed him.
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12-11-2008, 10:56 PM | #13 |
Elf Lord
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So..in summary.
Lazy, slothful, slack, proud, stubborn, a self-centred she-Balrog, with potential history of love interests / issues... Liked a sleep, Had all his Best Orcs guarding his fiery teddy bear in an inner chamber... exceptional hearing..could hear a rock drop from miles away.. perhaps explaining her insomnia?? Hmmm. Sounds like an Adolescent Balrog... EMO Balrogs? Last edited by Butterbeer : 12-11-2008 at 10:57 PM. |
12-20-2008, 12:12 PM | #14 |
Elf Lady
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Or no one ever expected intruders to be able to escape the notion of the swarms of Orcs wandering the place and thus didn't have people stand guard at the bridge.
The whole organization seemed a bit haphazard to me.
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12-20-2008, 04:02 PM | #15 |
Lady of the Ulairi
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Mordor order, that's what they need. Real good Mordor order!
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01-14-2009, 01:57 PM | #16 |
Elven Warrior
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I really like that idea. An even better order is one led by the forces of Angband!
The Balrog of Moria was like a Witch-King sort of figure, except he was such that of Morgoth. Although his ally is Sauron and he would be the master, the Balrog was now either the last Balrog alive, or may have been just one of two who were still left. I've heard both ways, not sure which to believe. Since Gothmog (the Balrog) was gone, Durin's Bane now had his position, in a manner of speaking. The Witch-King ruled over Angmar, and the Balrog ruled over Moria. Both of them were more of a direct threat to Middle Earth than Sauron was because Sauron was quite a bit incapacitated since what he would refer to as "the incident". There was also some evidence of the Balrog perhaps 'speaking' words to nullify a spell from Gandalf. The Balrog was dead-set on keeping his kingdom under the mountains, and Moria to the Balrog was like Mordor to Sauron. The Balrog would respond to Sauron's influence I think, but he also has a similar influence. I doubt the Ring was very fascinating to him, but it could have been. But the Balrog was ancient, and knew of powers far greater than that of the Ring - his master who had been caste out. Most in Middle Earth at this time weren't around to witness the great power of Morgoth, once the greatest of the Valar. Sauron was little more than a magician in comparison but the Balrog was probably on a similar level to Sauron.
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01-14-2009, 07:58 PM | #17 |
Lady of the Ulairi
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Hmm... interesting thoughts, Ingwe.
But if you compare Barlogs with Nazgul, the equivalent of the WK would be Gothmog, the late (and much regretted ) head of the army of Morgoth. As for Durin's Bane, he was like one of the lesser nazgul, number 6 or 8...a former underling and the last of his kind maybe. He was not too keen on building kingdoms, he was more set on survival and keeping his caves free of vermin. |
01-20-2009, 03:28 AM | #18 | |
Elven Warrior
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Quote:
Even evil spirits like Balrogs have a place they call "home", as dank and dreary as it was. Having been 'evicted' from his previous home in Angband because his master didn't pay the rent to the Valar, the Balrog found a new place to make his domain. Durin's Bane works best alone. The orcs and goblins guarding it justt happened to be an added bonus. |
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12-20-2008, 06:09 PM | #19 |
Elf Lady
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Right
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01-05-2009, 07:05 PM | #20 |
Sapling
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I pretty much agree with the general thrust of the arguments here concerning the balrog, but read more below. However, I would say that the Orcs did guard a "choke point". There was a guard left at the gate. Aragorn slew the captain and the rest fled shrieking. Remember, the orcs were sent there to seize the hobbits (or kill them and bring back the bodies). And Moria is huge, so the Orcs probable feared most the Fellowship getting lost in there and taking weeks to root out. So what do they do? They try to trap them. They open a fiery chasm in teh hall leading to the bridge (the fire is more impassable than a line of orcs) and they leave a guard at the front Gate.
If by chance the fellowship got across the bridge they should have had orcs behind them, pursuing across the bridge and orcs in front blocking the exit. That way they could have trapped them. So in fact the Orcs set up two choke points. The fiery chasm and the Main gate. Why did the fellowship get around the fiery chasm? Because the orcs had no map of Moria, they just knew the main routes, and they are orcs not "the Wise" so they really figured they would root them out somewhere in Moria and if any got away the guards at the gate would get them. The balrog was just a wild card. He was a Maia too, a servant of Sauron only slightly less in stature. The balrog stays in Moria because he is painfully aware of his mortality. He doesn't know what the world is like outside these days, but he does know that the Noldor were the biggest balrog bane of all time (the only balrogs that got killed were killed by Noldor like Glorfindel and Ecthelion) and for all he knows Lorien is full of them. He might dispatch a few dozen, but in the end, if he goes to fight High Elves alone, he will die. So my assumption is that Sauron sent in the orcs, said, find Mr. Balrog if you can and tell him i ask for his assistance in this and then Moria will be his. so the balrog comes along for the fun, because it will help ensure another age of peace for himself. |
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