In
J. R. R. Tolkien's
Middle-earth, the Eagles or Great Eagles,
[ " The Council of Elrond"][, "Of the Ruin of Doriath"] were immense birds that were sapient and could speak. The Great Eagles resembled actual
eagle
Eagle is the common name for many large birds of prey of the family Accipitridae. Eagles belong to several groups of genera, some of which are closely related. Most of the 68 species of eagle are from Eurasia and Africa. Outside this area, just ...
s, but were much larger. Thorondor is said to have been the greatest of all birds, with a wingspan of .
[, "Of the Return of the Noldor"] Elsewhere, the eagles have varied in nature and size both within Tolkien's writings and in later adaptations.
Scholars have noticed that the Eagles appear as agents of ''
eucatastrophe'' or ''
deus ex machina'' throughout Tolkien's writings, from ''
The Silmarillion'' and the accounts of
Númenor to ''
The Hobbit'' and ''
The Lord of the Rings''. Where Elves are good, and fully sentient, and Orcs bad, Eagles and other races are in between; the
Hobbit Bilbo Baggins fears he will become their supper, torn up
like a rabbit, and is indeed served rabbit for supper. The scholar
Marjorie Burns notes, too, that
Gandalf's association with Eagles is reminiscent of the god
Odin
Odin (; from non, Óðinn, ) is a widely revered Æsir, god in Germanic paganism. Norse mythology, the source of most surviving information about him, associates him with wisdom, healing, death, royalty, the gallows, knowledge, war, battle, v ...
in
Norse mythology
Norse, Nordic, or Scandinavian mythology is the body of myths belonging to the North Germanic peoples, stemming from Old Norse religion and continuing after the Christianization of Scandinavia, and into the Nordic folklore of the modern period ...
. Others have seen
Biblical echoes, especially when the Eagle-messenger sings of the final victory to
Faramir in phrases reminiscent of
Psalm 24.
Context
J. R. R. Tolkien was an English author and
philologist of ancient
Germanic languages, specialising in Old English; he spent much of his career as a professor at the
University of Oxford. He is best known for his novels about his invented
Middle-earth, ''
The Hobbit'' and ''
The Lord of the Rings'', and for the posthumously published ''
The Silmarillion'' which provides a more mythical narrative about earlier ages. He invented
several peoples for Middle-earth, including
Elves,
Dwarves,
Hobbits,
Orcs,
Trolls
A troll is a being in Nordic folklore, including Norse mythology. In Old Norse sources, beings described as trolls dwell in isolated areas of rocks, mountains, or caves, live together in small family units, and are rarely helpful to human be ...
, and Eagles, among others. A devout
Roman Catholic, he described ''The Lord of the Rings'' as "a fundamentally religious and Catholic work",
rich in Christian symbolism.
Appearances
First Age
Throughout ''
The Silmarillion'', the Eagles are associated with
Manwë Manwë refers to:
* Manwë (Middle-earth), the husband of the Elvish goddess Varda in Tolkien's mythology
*385446 Manwë
385446 Manwë , or (385446) Manwë–Thorondor , is a binary resonant Kuiper belt object in a 4:7 mean-motion resonance with ...
, the ruler of the sky and Lord of the
Valar. It is stated that "spirits in the shape of hawks and eagles" brought news from Middle-earth to his halls upon Taniquetil, the highest mountain in
Valinor,
[, "Of the Beginning of Days"] and in the ''
Valaquenta'' of "all swift birds, strong of wing".
[, "Valaquenta"] Upon their first appearance in the main narrative, it is stated that the Eagles had been "sent forth" to Middle-earth by Manwë, to live in the mountains north of the land of
Beleriand, to "watch upon"
Morgoth
Morgoth Bauglir (; originally Melkor ) is a character, one of the godlike Valar, from Tolkien's legendarium. He is the main antagonist of ''The Silmarillion'', ''The Children of Húrin'', ''Beren and Lúthien'' and ''The Fall of Gondolin''.
...
,
and to help the exiled
Noldor
In the works of J. R. R. Tolkien, the Noldor (also spelled Ñoldor, meaning ''those with knowledge'' in his constructed language Quenya) were a kindred of Elf (Middle-earth), Elves who migrated west to the blessed realm of Valinor from the conti ...
in Elves "in extreme cases".
[, "The Annals of Aman"] The Eagles were ruled by Thorondor, "Lord of the Eagles", and "mightiest of all birds that have ever been".
[, "Of the Noldor in Beleriand"][, "Of the Ruin of Beleriand"] When Turgon built the Hidden City of
Gondolin, the eagles of Thorondor became his allies, bringing him news and keeping spies and
Orcs off the borders.
[, "Of Tuor and the Fall of Gondolin"][, "Of Tuor and His Coming to Gondolin", and note 25] The eagles' watch was redoubled after the coming of
Tuor,
enabling Gondolin to remain undiscovered the longest of all Elven realms. When the city fell, the eagles protected the fugitives from ambushing orcs.
The Eagles fought alongside the army of the Valar, Elves, and Men during the
War of Wrath at the end of the
First Age
In J. R. R. Tolkien's legendarium, the history of Arda, also called the history of Middle-earth, began when the Ainur entered Arda, following the creation events in the Ainulindalë and long ages of labour throughout Eä, the fictional univer ...
. In ''The Silmarillion'' it is recounted that after the appearance of winged
dragons, "all the great birds of heaven" gathered under the leadership of Thorondor to
Eärendil, and destroyed the majority of the dragons in an aerial battle.
[, "Of the Voyage of Eärendil"]
Second Age
On the island of
Númenor in the
Second Age, three eagles guarded the summit of Meneltarma, appearing whenever anyone approached the hallow, and staying in the sky during the Three Prayers. The Númenóreans called them "the Witnesses of Manwë", believing he had sent them from Aman "to keep watch upon the Holy Mountain and upon all the land".
[, "A Description of Númenor"] Another eyrie upon the tower of the King's House in the capital Armenelos was always inhabited by a pair of eagles, until the days of Tar-Ancalimon and the coming of Shadow to Númenor.
Many eagles lived upon the hills around Sorontil in the north of the island.
When the Númenóreans began to speak openly against the
Ban of the Valar, Manwë appeared as eagle-shaped storm clouds, called the "Eagles of the Lords of the West", to try to reason with or threaten them.
[, " Akallabêth"]
Third Age
By the end of the
Third Age, a colony of Eagles lived in the north of the
Misty Mountains, as described in ''The Hobbit''. These Eagles opposed the goblins; however, their relationship with the local
Woodmen was only cool, as the eagles often hunted their sheep.
They rescued
Thorin's company from a band of goblins and
Warg
In the philologist and fantasy author J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth fiction, a warg is a particularly large and evil kind of wolf that could be ridden by orcs. He derived the name and characteristics of his wargs by combining meanings and myth ...
s,
ultimately carrying the dwarves to the Carrock.
[, "Queer Lodgings"] Later, having seen the mustering of goblins in the Mountains, a great flock of Eagles participated in the Battle of the Five Armies.
[, "The Return Journey"]
In ''The Lord of the Rings'', the Eagles of the Misty Mountains helped the Elves of Rivendell and the
Wizard Radagast to gather news of the Orcs.
[, "The Ring Goes South"; "A Journey in the Dark"] Gwaihir
In J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth, the Eagles or Great Eagles, "The Council of Elrond", "Of the Ruin of Doriath" were immense birds that were sapient and could speak. The Great Eagles resembled actual eagles, but were much larger. Thorondor is s ...
the Windlord carries news to
Isengard, rescues Gandalf from the top of the tower there, and again rescues Gandalf from the top of Celebdil after searching for him at
Galadriel
Galadriel (IPA: �aˈladri.ɛl is a character created by J. R. R. Tolkien in his Middle-earth writings. She appears in ''The Lord of the Rings'', ''The Silmarillion'', and ''Unfinished Tales''.
She was a royal Elf of both the ...
's request.
[, "The White Rider"] and he and his Eagles appear in great numbers towards the end of the book. The Eagles similarly arrive at the
Battle of the Morannon, helping the Host of the West against the
Nazgûl, while Gwaihir, Landroval, and Meneldor rescue
Frodo Baggins and
Samwise Gamgee
Samwise Gamgee (, usually called Sam) is a fictional character in J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth. A hobbit, Samwise is the chief supporting character of ''The Lord of the Rings'', serving as the sidekick of the protagonist Frodo Baggins. Sam ...
from
Mount Doom after the
One Ring had been destroyed.
[ "The Field of Cormallen"]
Analysis
Origins

Tolkien's painting of an eagle on a crag appears in some editions of ''The Hobbit''. According to
Christopher Tolkien
Christopher John Reuel Tolkien (21 November 1924 – 16 January 2020) was an English academic editor, becoming a French citizen in later life. The son of author and academic J. R. R. Tolkien, Christopher Tolkien edited much of his father' ...
, the author based this picture on a painting by the Scottish
ornithological artist
Archibald Thorburn[ plate 9] of an immature
golden eagle, which Christopher found for him in
Thomas Coward's 1919 book ''The Birds of the British Isles and Their Eggs''.
[, Foreword to the 50th-anniversary edition]
The Great Eagles appeared in "The Fall of Gondolin", the first tale about Middle-earth that Tolkien wrote in the late 1910s.
[ "The Fall of Gondolin"] In Tolkien's early writings, the eagles were distinguished from other birds:
Eä, the World, was bounded by the Walls of Night, and the space above the Earth up to the Walls was divided into three regions;
[, "Ambarkanta"] common birds could keep aloft only within the lower layer,
[, "The Fall of Númenor", (i)] while the Eagles of Manwë could fly "beyond the lights of heaven to the edge of darkness".
[, "Ainulindalë"] The eagle-shaped clouds that appeared in Númenor formed one of Tolkien's recurring images of the
downfall
Downfall may refer to:
Books
* ''The Downfall'' (novel), an 1892 book by Émile Zola
* ''Downfall: The End of the Imperial Japanese Empire'', a 1999 book by Richard B. Frank about the last days of World War II
* ''Downfall'', a 2001 Dragonlance ...
of the island;
[, "The Notion Club Papers"] they appear, too, in his
abandoned time-travel stories, ''
The Lost Road
''The'' () is a grammatical article in English, denoting persons or things that are already or about to be mentioned, under discussion, implied or otherwise presumed familiar to listeners, readers, or speakers. It is the definite article in ...
'' and ''
The Notion Club Papers''.
[, "The Lost Road", (ii)]
Sentient beings
Tolkien faced the question of the Great Eagles' nature with apparent hesitation. In early writings there was no need to define it precisely, since he imagined that, beside the Valar, "many lesser spirits... both great and small" had entered the
Eä upon its creation;
[, "Quenta Silmarillion", §2] and such sapient creatures as the Eagles or
Huan the Hound, in Tolkien's own words, "have been rather lightly adopted from less 'serious' mythologies".
[, "Myths Transformed", VIII] The phrase "spirits in the shape of hawks and eagles" in ''The Silmarillion'' derives from that stage of writing.
After completing ''The Lord of the Rings'', Tolkien moved toward a more carefully defined "system" of creatures. At the top were incarnates or Children of Ilúvatar: Elves and Men, those who possessed ''
fëar'' or souls, with the defining characteristic of being able to speak;
[, "Quendi and Eldar"] next were self-incarnates, the
Valar and
Maiar, "angelic" spirits that "arrayed" themselves in bodily forms of the incarnates or of animals,
[, "Myths Transformed", (VIII)] and were able to communicate both by thought and speech;
and finally animals, mere beasts, unable to speak. For some time Tolkien considered the Eagles as bird-shaped Maiar;
however, he realised that the statement about Gwaihir and Landroval's descent from Thorondor had already appeared in print in ''The Lord of the Rings'',
while he had long before rejected the notion of their being "Children" of the Valar and Maiar.
[, "The Annals of Aman"; "The Later ''Quenta Silmarillion''", ch. 1] In the last of his notes on this topic, dated by his son Christopher to the late 1950s, Tolkien decided that the Great Eagles were animals that had been "taught language by the Valar, and raised to a higher level—but they still had no ''fëar''
ouls"
The Tolkien scholars
Paul Kocher and
Tom Shippey note that in ''The Hobbit'', the narrator provides a firm moral framework, with good elves, evil goblins, and the other peoples like dwarves and eagles somewhere in between. Shippey remarks that the eagles are in the narrator's "euphemistic" words, "not kindly birds".
[, "Out of the Frying-Pan and into the Fire"] Marjorie Burns comments that the "threat of being eaten
y the Eagle
Y, or y, is the twenty-fifth and penultimate Letter (alphabet), letter of the Latin alphabet, used in the English alphabet, modern English alphabet, the alphabets of other western European languages and others worldwide. According to some auth ...
is so dominant" that the Hobbit Bilbo, who the Eagle described as being
rather like a rabbit, is afraid of being torn up and eaten; he is relieved that he is not to become their supper, "but rabbit is precisely what the eagles do bring them for supper".
Norse mythology

In
Norse mythology
Norse, Nordic, or Scandinavian mythology is the body of myths belonging to the North Germanic peoples, stemming from Old Norse religion and continuing after the Christianization of Scandinavia, and into the Nordic folklore of the modern period ...
, eagles were associated with the god
Odin
Odin (; from non, Óðinn, ) is a widely revered Æsir, god in Germanic paganism. Norse mythology, the source of most surviving information about him, associates him with wisdom, healing, death, royalty, the gallows, knowledge, war, battle, v ...
; for example, he escapes from
Jotunheim back to
Asgard as an eagle. Burns remarks the similarity with Gandalf, who repeatedly escapes by riding on an eagle. She comments that Tolkien's Eagles, like his Dwarves, Dragons, and Trolls, all signal Norse influence on his stories.
''Deus ex machina''
Burns notes that Tolkien uses the Eagles three times to save his protagonists: to rescue Bilbo and company in ''The Hobbit''; to lift Gandalf from imprisonment by Saruman in the tower of
Orthanc; and finally, to save Frodo and Sam from
Mount Doom when they have destroyed the
One Ring. The Tolkien scholar
Jane Chance Jane Chance (born 1945), also known as Jane Chance Nitzsche, is an American scholar specializing in medieval English literature, gender studies, and J. R. R. Tolkien. She spent most of her career at Rice University, where since her retirement she ha ...
describes these interventions as a ''
deus ex machina'', a sudden and unexpected mechanism to bring about a
eucatastrophe. The screenwriter Brad Johnson, writing on ''Script'', argues that this last ''deus ex machina'' instance is a complete surprise to the audience, and undesirable as the sudden appearance of the Eagles "takes the audience out of the scene emotionally".
Tolkien was aware of this problem, recognising the risky nature of the mechanism; in one of his
letters, he wrote:
Biblical messenger

Shippey notes that throughout ''The Lord of the Rings'' Tolkien carefully avoided direct reference to Christianity, so as not to make the story an
allegory
As a literary device or artistic form, an allegory is a narrative or visual representation in which a character, place, or event can be interpreted to represent a hidden meaning with moral or political significance. Authors have used allegory th ...
. He comments however that in one place "Revelation seems very close and allegory does all but break through", namely the eucatastrophic moment when the eagle-messenger sings to
Faramir about Frodo and Sam's destruction of the One Ring:
Shippey writes that this is certainly Biblical, indeed that it is specifically in the style of
Psalm 24 in the
King James Version of the Bible, with its phrases "Lift up your heads, O ye gates, and be ye lift up, ye everlasting doors, for the King of glory shall come in". E. L. Risden, making a different connection with Christianity, describes the Eagles' rescue of Frodo and Sam as a "ritual rebirth", and the rescuing bird as "a symbol of the spirit",
John the Evangelist's traditional symbol.
Adaptations
Different adaptations of Tolkien's books treated both the nature of the Eagles and their role in the plots with varying level of faithfulness to originals. The first scenario for an animated motion-picture of ''The Lord of the Rings'' proposed to Tolkien in 1957 was turned down because of several cardinal deviations, among which Tolkien's biographer
Humphrey Carpenter recorded that "virtually all walking was dispensed with in the story and the Company of the Ring were transported everywhere on the backs of eagles".
According to the fantasy artist
Larry Dixon, the digitally animated eagles in
Peter Jackson
Sir Peter Robert Jackson (born 31 October 1961) is a New Zealand film director, screenwriter and producer. He is best known as the director, writer and producer of the ''Lord of the Rings'' trilogy (2001–2003) and the ''Hobbit'' trilogy ( ...
's
''The Lord of the Rings'' film trilogy were based on a stuffed
golden eagle he had provided to
Weta Workshop.
A genus of
Diapriid wasps in Australia was named ''
Gwaihiria
''Gwaihiria'' is a genus of wasps belonging to the family Diapriidae
The Diapriidae are a family of parasitoid wasps. These tiny insects have an average length of 2–4 mm and never exceed 8 mm. They typically attack larvae and pupae ...
'' in 1982.
In ''
The Lord of the Rings: War in the North'', an eagle named Beleram acts as a supporting character, aiding the players in battle.
References
Primary
::''This list identifies each item's location in Tolkien's writings.''
Secondary
Sources
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Eagle (Middle-Earth)
Middle-earth races
Middle-earth animals
Fictional birds of prey
Talking animals in fiction