After Húrin went to war, he left only a few servants in his house: old Grithnir and Gethron, lame Sador and blind Ragnir. When news came to Dor-lómin that the war had turned to the disaster of the Nirnaeth Arnoediad, Húrin's wife Morwen sent her son Túrin away with Grithnir and Gethron, leaving only Sador and Ragnir, and certain old women, to support her.
Years later, Morwen took her chance to leave her house herself, and escaped to Doriath. At that time Brodda the Easterling ransacked the house and took her servants, so it seems that, if Ragnir survived so long, he would have entered Brodda's service at that time. Of Ragnir's final fate, no story tells.
Notes
1 |
Ragnir's name is not explained, but in The Etymologies (in volume V of The History of Middle-earth) there's a record of a Sindarin word ragna, meaning 'crooked'. Though the form of this word appears very similar to the name Ragnir, we have no way to know whether it part of the intended meaning. Indeed, in principle the name Ragnir may not have been Elvish at all, and it is at least possible that it derived from the native Mannish tongue of the Men of the House of Hador.
|
Indexes:
About this entry:
- Updated 8 February 2024
- This entry is complete
For acknowledgements and references, see the Disclaimer & Bibliography page.
Original content © copyright Mark Fisher 2008, 2024. All rights reserved. For conditions of reuse, see the Site FAQ.