The Encyclopedia of Arda - an interactive guide to the world of J.R.R. Tolkien
Location
The east of Middle-earth, lying eastward of the Sea of Helcar
Race
The first Elves awoke beneath their western slopes
Source
Numerous streams rose among these mountains
Outflow
Many of the streams out of these mountains flowed into the Sea of Helcar
Other names

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  • Updated 29 November 2016
  • This entry is complete

Mountains of the East

The far Red Mountains of Middle-earth

Map of the Mountains of the East
Partially conjectural1
Partially conjectural1

A range of mountains running north to south in the distant eastern parts of Middle-earth, far beyond its more familiar regions. They were also known as the Orocarni, the Red Mountains. From their western slopes, many streams ran down into a great lake or inland sea, and it was on the shores of this lake that the first Elves awoke, in a place that they called Cuiviénen, the Water of Awakening. Beneath the Mountains of the East, Oromë encountered the Elves for the first time, and many of them left the land beneath the Mountains to pass into the West.

In the original, highly symmetrical, conception of Arda, Middle-earth had four great ranges of mountains. In the northwest, these were the familiar Blue Mountains, and the Red Mountains, or Mountains of the East, were their counterpart in the east. Two further ranges ran into the far south: the Grey Mountains (which were quite distinct from the Grey Mountains of the north) and the Yellow Mountains. The primeval destruction wrought by Melkor broke this design for the world, but it is clear that at least some part of the Mountains of the East survived at least until the time of the awakening of the Elves.


Notes

1

The mountains shown on the map are based on the range marked 'Red Mountains' on a sketch map reproduced in volume IV of The History of Middle-earth. The identity of the Red Mountains with the Mountains of the East is almost certain, but the original sketch map provides very little detail. The streams shown running down from the mountains into the Sea of Helcar are clearly established by textual references, but the details of their numbers and courses are unknown.

See also...

Orocarni

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About this entry:

  • Updated 29 November 2016
  • This entry is complete

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