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Legolas

From The Archmaester's Archive
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Legolas
Legolas Greenleaf; Prince of the Woodland Realm
House / Order The Fellowship; the Galadhrim of Mirkwood (Sindar)
Race / Culture Elf (Sindar of the Woodland Realm)
Status Departed
Origin The Woodland Realm of Northern Mirkwood
Born Unknown (First or Second Age)
Died Sailed over Sea (after F.A. 120)
Weapon Bow of the Galadhrim; white knife; later a Lórien-bow
Fate Founded an Elf-colony in Ithilien; sailed West after Aragorn's death, taking Gimli with him
Portrayed by Orlando Bloom
A red sun rises. Blood has been spilled this night.

Legolas was an Elf of the Woodland Realm of northern Mirkwood, son of its king Thranduil, and the Elven member of the Fellowship of the Ring. Swift, keen-eyed, and matchless with the bow, he was among the Three Hunters who ran across Rohan in pursuit of orcs and fought in many of the great battles of the War of the Ring.

He is remembered above all for the unlikely and lasting friendship he forged with Gimli the Dwarf — a bond that healed, in two persons, the ancient estrangement of their kindreds — and for being one of the few Sindarin princes whose deeds are told in the tale of the Ring.

Origins

Legolas was a Sindarin Elf, son of Thranduil King of the Woodland Realm, the wood-elf kingdom of northern Mirkwood (Greenwood the Great of old). His people were Silvan Elves ruled by a Sindarin house, less lordly than the High Elves of Rivendell or Lothlórien but deeply skilled in woodcraft and archery. He came to Rivendell as a messenger of his father, bearing the unwelcome news that the creature Gollum, whom his folk had been set to guard, had escaped.

Biography

The Council and the Fellowship

Present at the Council of Elrond, Legolas was chosen to represent the Elves among the Nine Walkers of the Fellowship of the Ring. He brought to the company the gifts of his kind: the keenest sight of any save perhaps the Eldar of old, tirelessness on the march, the power to walk lightly upon snow that swallowed the others on Caradhras, and unfailing aim. In Moria and at the Bridge of Khazad-dûm he fought beside his companions; in Lothlórien he was at last among his own kind, and there received a great bow of the Galadhrim.

The Three Hunters

After the breaking of the Fellowship at Amon Hen, Legolas joined Aragorn and Gimli as one of the Three Hunters, chasing the Uruk-hai who had carried off Merry and Pippin across the plains of Rohan. He fought at the Battle of Helm's Deep, keeping a friendly tally of slain foes with Gimli, and rode with the host through the campaigns that followed.

The Paths of the Dead and the sea-longing

Legolas dared the Paths of the Dead with Aragorn and came up the Anduin in the black ships to the Battle of the Pelennor Fields. Near the coast, hearing for the first time the crying of the gulls, he was seized by the sea-longing — the deep Elvish yearning for the West that, once awakened, never wholly departs. He went on with the host to the Black Gate and saw the war to its end.

Ithilien and the last voyage

After the War of the Ring, Legolas led a company of his folk south and founded an Elf-colony in Ithilien, helping to heal the war-scarred land and to beautify the city of Minas Tirith. He and Gimli travelled together to the Glittering Caves of Aglarond and the forest of Fangorn, each marvelling at what the other loved. By the tradition recorded in the Appendices, after Aragorn's death in F.A. 120 Legolas built a grey ship and sailed down Anduin over Sea to the Undying Lands — and, alone of all his kind, took the Dwarf Gimli with him.

Character

Legolas is light-hearted where his companions are grim, given to song and laughter, yet deadly in battle and tireless on any road. He embodies the grace, agelessness, and faint melancholy of the Elves — quick to wonder, slow to despair, and increasingly drawn westward as the Third Age wanes. His openness of heart, more than any other Elf's in the tale, lets him overcome the old grievances between Elves and Dwarves.

Relationships

Appearances

In Peter Jackson's film trilogy (2001–2003), Legolas was portrayed by Orlando Bloom. The films greatly expand his acrobatic battle feats and add him to scenes (such as the defence of Helm's Deep set-pieces) beyond his role in the books.

Quotes

The wonder of the trees! For all my long years I have never thought of that.

Alas for the gulls! No peace shall I have again under beech or under elm.