What are the Nameless Things below Moria?

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  • Опубликовано: 18 мар 2023
  • “Far, far below the deepest delving of the Dwarves, the world is gnawed by nameless things. Even Sauron knows them not. They are older than he. Now I have walked there, but I will bring no report to darken the light of day. In that despair my enemy was my only hope (…)"
    This is all that Gandalf will tell of the horrors he encountered after falling after the Balrog, into the deepest depths beneath Moria. With this mysterious statement, Gandalf manages to spark in us our curiosity and the first embers of a great fascination with the most mysterious beings in all of Arda.
    But what were these monstrosities? Where did they come from and how powerful are they?
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Комментарии • 694

  • @SignumInterriti
    @SignumInterriti Год назад +715

    I know Gandalf probarbly just followed the Balrog to find a way out, but I love the idea that the two Maia, who were enemies but also knew each other literally forever, teamed up for a moment to fight their way out of the depths against the nameless things.

    • @samuelfaiman1387
      @samuelfaiman1387 Год назад +113

      Can't explain why but this manifested in my mind as gandalf and the balrog in a particularly heated poker game or basketball match against some ancient void beings. Real talk, if anyone below the valar could duke it with these nameless horrors briefly enough to excape them it would be an old fire wizard and an old fire demon, determined to kill each other no matter what, just not down there with those primordial freaks. While their power may be lacking to genuinely clash with such beings, I'd wager even with their ancient void strength the nameless ones got a hell of a flashbang when big G and the big B dropped in like the sun after presumed millenia in pitch darkness

    • @bradoncrandall6840
      @bradoncrandall6840 Год назад +13

      @@samuelfaiman1387 Ill second this, a high stakes poker game

    • @SignumInterriti
      @SignumInterriti Год назад +69

      @@samuelfaiman1387 I agree, I don't think Tolkien was thinking in terms of powerscaling half as much as we do. An elf hero duelled morgoth at one point and the fight was close. In his style of storytelling, light as bright as Gandalfs and even the Balrog's fire should do well driving back things that hide from the world in a deep darkness below.

    • @enigma9971
      @enigma9971 Год назад +29

      They ran! Gandalf pursued the Balrog as it fled from them

    • @dj44640
      @dj44640 Год назад +17

      he probably said - Fly you fool

  • @secla_SC
    @secla_SC Год назад +373

    My interpretation of these Nameless Things is simply that they were so grotesque that just looking at them traumatized Gandalf, and so in that moment of despair he mentions, the Balrog was the only semblance of the world he knew.

    • @BastiatC
      @BastiatC Год назад +54

      I think he mentions the balrog as his only hope of escaping the tunnels, rather then being particularly afraid of the nameless things.

    • @rakantopinibl5736
      @rakantopinibl5736 Год назад

      ​@@BastiatC damn it says everything about the nameless ones

    • @bigbangrafa8435
      @bigbangrafa8435 Год назад +33

      I believe they are beings of the Void like Ungoliant, It's heavily implied that the Void was there even before Eru sang the great song, and they are definitelly not something he would voluntarily create.

    • @dionmcgee5610
      @dionmcgee5610 Год назад +21

      @@BastiatC why this reluctance to accept the implication of what Tolkien wrote?
      It is very obvious that Gandalf himself was terrified of the creatures. So much so he never says another word on the matter- why? Because he worries that if their existence became generally known - that that knowledge would cast a shadow over all the people of the world.
      By hinting at some form of Lovecraftian horror he instantly, with just a couple sentences, made middle earth richer, deeper and darker.
      As mysterious as our reality is. Flowing with subtext.
      Take the menace away. Make the nameless ones ugly but powerless and Gandalf's reaction is silly. Embarrassing even. Makes no sense.

    • @ThePipojp
      @ThePipojp Год назад +5

      ​@@dionmcgee5610 No my dude, he also doesn't want them to name the Balrog since names have power. Non named creatures aren't powerful. It would be far more Tolkien like if they are terrible because they are corruptions of Eru's creations.

  • @Uulfinn
    @Uulfinn Год назад +158

    I think Ungoliant was one of these creatures. She seems to predate the valar and maiar entering Arda. She has no loyalty for Morgoth. She begins as a shapeless darkness before taking a form similar to a spider. Morgoth and Sauron are characterized by their desire for order and mechanization. The nameless things are chaos and have no order.

    • @the17thvoyager89
      @the17thvoyager89 Год назад +12

      Yes, I think this is the correct conclusion to draw. It’s been assumed for a while now that Ungoliant was a manifestation of the discord in Illuvatar’s song, so it’s reasonable that she was only one of many such beings.

    • @cainabel6356
      @cainabel6356 Год назад +8

      They don't predate the Valar and Maiar. When Eru gathered his Valar and Maiar for the song of creation, Melkore decided to change the tune. It was because of Melkore those things were created.

    • @Uulfinn
      @Uulfinn Год назад +22

      @@cainabel6356 predate the valar and maiar ENTERING Arda.

    • @darth3261
      @darth3261 Год назад +8

      Morgoth doesn't seek order and mechanization, that's just Sauron.
      Morgoth only cares to corrupt and destroy Eru Ilúvatar's work, granted he needed to organize an incredibly impressive military campaign to achieve it (which in turn convinced Sauron to join him), but order was never his ultimate objective.

    • @niftypunk7120
      @niftypunk7120 11 месяцев назад +1

      Wrong assumption! Ungoliant doesn't predate the valar in any way. The Valar were the first entities created from Illuvatar's thought before even the Maiar came into being. The Universe, the void, and Arda came into existence as a result of the music of the Ainur, and Ungoliant was possibly created along with the void and she remained in the void for an unfathomable amount of time before Melkor first met her in the void in his relentless pursuit of the secret fire. sho only later descended into Arda possibly thousands of years after the Valar had already made their presence known and was preparing Arda for the coming of the children of Illuvatar.

  • @gauthamramesh3373
    @gauthamramesh3373 Год назад +262

    Just imagine this.
    An author like JRR Tolkien who can give anything or anyone an amazing cool name with great significance and meaning behind it chose to name those things in the deep places of the world as “Nameless”
    Tolkien could have given them a kickass name but he chose not to. It’s because the fear of the unknown is the biggest fear there is.

    • @wolfyboy
      @wolfyboy Год назад +19

      yep. somethings are so terrible that names don't fit it, or you don't want to find a name for it because you don't wanna think about it.

    • @joemetzger7910
      @joemetzger7910 Год назад +26

      Very reminiscent of H. P. Lovecraft.

    • @Exnavyjay
      @Exnavyjay Год назад +4

      Same as Sauron never being described

    • @bobibobbobino
      @bobibobbobino Год назад +4

      as humans our strength is knowledge so it would make sense that our biggest fear is be the unknown

    • @lenardbordo9838
      @lenardbordo9838 Год назад +5

      Lovecraft agrees.

  • @Clonetrooper1139
    @Clonetrooper1139 Год назад +45

    Makes you wonder what would the Dwarves have unleashed if they kept digging downward.

  • @jamesw3413
    @jamesw3413 Год назад +268

    People forget that Tolkein was really good at writing horror when it did rarely appear in the legendarium.

    • @TheMeanMongoose
      @TheMeanMongoose Год назад +40

      I mean the whole concept of the orks being twisted elves is in itself bone chilling, at least for me it always was. Imagine turning the most serene, wise and beautiful creatures in creation into... that. The LOTR movie trilogy did a good job, because live action orks are scary as fuck.

    • @internetenjoyer1044
      @internetenjoyer1044 Год назад +9

      yeah he has a great sense of the deformed, how evil twists the mind and body, how ad why evil clings to darkness and shadows, and slow burning tension. he uses the uncanny valley really well to show have things are twisted against their original purpose in creation. The Nazgul, far from being these mere super soldiers in the films, and lesser entities that crawl on all fours and smell becuase of their diinished sight, and thats scarier

    • @CT-pi2gl
      @CT-pi2gl Год назад +6

      Yes. The Shelob's Lair passage

    • @enigma9971
      @enigma9971 Год назад +2

      ​@@TheMeanMongoose and that is an original idea. He invented orcs. So cool

    • @gholamdapantaloonsniffer8218
      @gholamdapantaloonsniffer8218 Год назад +4

      He was friends with Lovecraft, so I'm not surprised haga

  • @richardthiede6876
    @richardthiede6876 Год назад +183

    I've always felt that they were mindless beasts that existed in the void. That they were neither good or evil, just primodial.

    • @xyreniaofcthrayn1195
      @xyreniaofcthrayn1195 Год назад +10

      yeah they are more or less like ungoliant (who was a named nameless thing) old forgotten about ideas taken shape opposite to all illuvatar thought was nice but separate yet similar from melkors death metal antics in the choir of creation

    • @ENOCH_INSPIREDJ
      @ENOCH_INSPIREDJ Год назад +2

      I don't think their existence is like that. They are bound to the world at the end of the day not from beyond it.

    • @xyreniaofcthrayn1195
      @xyreniaofcthrayn1195 Год назад +1

      @@ENOCH_INSPIREDJ what is meant is they existed long before illuvatar deigned to multiply into valar and maia and song and obstinately persist until after ea and arda have become last/end earth.

    • @ENOCH_INSPIREDJ
      @ENOCH_INSPIREDJ Год назад +4

      @@xyreniaofcthrayn1195
      I disagree and reject that assumption about the Nameless Things. I don't believe their existence is like that and I don't believe Eru Illuvatar would have created something so perverse and such a defilement in existence that is dangerous to his creations like that.

    • @ENOCH_INSPIREDJ
      @ENOCH_INSPIREDJ Год назад +7

      @@theviewbot
      The void was just nothing really. There can be no chaos in a place of just plain nothingness. Nothing so abomniablly evil about a darkness that is just nothing in it. This isn't some occult or HP Lovecraft version of creation where there is primordial chaos within the so called darkness when that isn't how things work.
      It makes more sense if the Nameless Things were a product of Melkor's discord or marring of Arda. The other way around makes Eru Illuvatar look impotent when he isn't impotent and he doesn't create evil.

  • @khylerbane4523
    @khylerbane4523 Год назад +15

    “The greatest emotion is fear, and the greatest fear of man is the fear of the unknown.”
    -H.P. Lovecraft.
    I’m paraphrasing, but that line is what comes to mind when I think of, read about, or hear about the Nameless Things.

  • @thegingergrasshopper3908
    @thegingergrasshopper3908 Год назад +46

    I feel the second theory is the better one.
    If Tolkein, in his finished work, had just a couple sentences that only give a simple glimpse that something so powerful exists, Gandalf specifically mentions that he had to rely on a Balrog to escape there grasp. It would be reasonable to believe they were created out of the clash of the creation music, have no master but themselves, and thus would attack both Gandalf and the Balrog.
    UncleFester84s comment would also make sense for the second theory. Ungolianth only had an agreement with Melkor and upon devouring the two trees of Valinor, she turned her eyes on his power. It took every Balrog in Arda to fight her back and let Melkor escape.

  • @slayskool1964
    @slayskool1964 Год назад +34

    Gandalf swimming out of the water with an extinguished Balrog and fighting for 8 days is a movie in itself.

    • @bramverhees755
      @bramverhees755 Год назад +2

      Shhh! Don’t give Hollywood any ideas. I agree, but this movie is better in ny mind than any adaption could ever be.

    • @dionmcgee5610
      @dionmcgee5610 Год назад +2

      Perhaps the stop motion director of Mad God could give it justice, but not many others.

  • @UncleFester84
    @UncleFester84 Год назад +164

    I'm pretty convinced both Ungolianth and the Watcher in the Water are of the same "specie" of the Nameless things. The former is especially interesting because of her it is said that she arrived on the world when Melkor for the first time looked on Arda with envy, which makes me believe that she might be an incarnation of envy itself, and by definition therefore... insatiable.
    The other Nameless things could also be the incarnation of emotions and feelings that came during the building of Arda, if not at the time of the Music itself. As such they would be older than Sauron in that they arrived on the world before he entered it.

    • @matthewmoran1866
      @matthewmoran1866 Год назад +12

      that was my thought during the video, Ungoliant is the only other evil creature we know of that seems to predate melkor and his endless machinations of corrupting natural creatures, her being born of the discord of melkor is one of the more common theories I've seen about her origins.

    • @KAYCEE100992
      @KAYCEE100992 Год назад +4

      Ungoliant was a maia, like Gandalf and Sauron.

    • @gholamdapantaloonsniffer8218
      @gholamdapantaloonsniffer8218 Год назад +20

      ​@@KAYCEE100992 no she wasn't. She has been stated to be born of the void between worlds multiple times

    • @spenhaPot
      @spenhaPot Год назад +13

      The watcher in the Lake could be like Shelob. A Nameless One could have "breed" with an under water thing like Ungoliant did with the spiders. That would explain why it was not overwhelmingly dangerous and how it is not to afraid of the surface. Maybe it swam up as a baby.

    • @shadowhenge7118
      @shadowhenge7118 Год назад +1

      Wrong notes in the song

  • @g3heathen209
    @g3heathen209 Год назад +88

    Before time, before everything there was nothing. Before nothing there were monsters....

  • @Galimeer5
    @Galimeer5 Год назад +15

    I guess it's lucky the dwarves only ended up awakening a balrog

    • @wolfyboy
      @wolfyboy Год назад

      and that's saying something! "we have awoken a demon. but not the thing that is at the core of the planet, thank eru!" XD

  • @sakemp3480
    @sakemp3480 Год назад +13

    The Balrog knew his way around down there and no Nameless Ones challenged him. He was down there slumped up for thousands of years. He or she or it wasn't bothered at all. As far as the Nameless ones, directly makes me think of H.P. Lovecraft

  • @nickmedley4749
    @nickmedley4749 Год назад +75

    Tolkien's attention to detail is extraordinary.

    • @SmithCommaBenjamin
      @SmithCommaBenjamin Год назад

      That's the dumbest statement about Tolkien I always see... the dude left major plot holes, and couldn't hold continuity to save his life. His works are great, but let's not pretend his work was complete in the slightest

    • @nickmedley4749
      @nickmedley4749 Год назад

      @@SmithCommaBenjamin Tell us how you really feel.

    • @nillywilly2176
      @nillywilly2176 Год назад +3

      @@SmithCommaBenjamin You probably work for Amazon

    • @kerryberry5786
      @kerryberry5786 9 месяцев назад

      Please give examples.@@SmithCommaBenjamin

  • @richardsanchez5444
    @richardsanchez5444 Год назад +56

    I think Tolkien did a great job of adding an element of mystery and depth to the already amazing and mysterious world he created. In a way he left it up to us to imagine something that only we could come up with. Each one of us takes what we know about middle Earth and our interpretations of it and we come up with an idea of what these nameless things could be. Tolkien sort of gives us the ability to create or add to the lore of middle Earth ourselves. In essence we can write the story along with him. We can go on this journey together and it's lets us immerse ourselves even more into this amazing world we have grown to love.

    • @enigma9971
      @enigma9971 Год назад +5

      When even a character like Gandalf encounters things he doesn't really know about, but what he does know terrifies him

  • @wrathshorts2894
    @wrathshorts2894 Год назад +4

    Speak not of the nameless things.
    For to speak of them, is to try to know them.
    This grants their attention.
    And they will try to know you.

  • @tomcarney4930
    @tomcarney4930 Год назад +30

    The Nameless Things were older than Sauron because the concepts of Age and Time only exist in Ea. Even though Sauron helped sing the music that brought them into being, he did so from within the Timeless Halls. The Nameless things existed in the world and began to age before Sauron and the other Maiar and Valar descended into it.

    • @peppinogatsumiyamoto4117
      @peppinogatsumiyamoto4117 Год назад +2

      this is your personal interpretation and sorry to say but it's wrong... nothing existed before the music , the Ainur were the absolute first creations of Eru Iluvatar , and later he created a round mass called Arda .... read the Silmarillion and you will learn what you just said is a misconception.

    • @dionmcgee5610
      @dionmcgee5610 Год назад

      @@peppinogatsumiyamoto4117 "Nothing existed before..." Even if that was his intention, no one can alter the limitations of logic and the inability our own minds have in conceiving what the fundamental nature of reality is- and the inner meanings of concepts like "infinity" and "before time".
      There is no way of contemplating what existed before our perceived reality was created, intentionally or not. Logic fails us because we are foundationally unable to see beyond what our own evolutionary flawed various senses tell us.
      We can intuit and feel our way to a meaning or closer understanding of this subatomic mist of a world wherein we live- but there is no empirically provable final analysis to be offered.
      Even atheists seem to be ignoring what the newest information on the cognizant sciences has been revealing to us.
      A reality more quantum mechanics than traditional science in how it works.
      The only absolute was the one Descarte proposed a few centuries ago, everything else is conjecture and presumption- even the atheists ideal.
      Reality is functionally unknowable.

    • @jonathonfrazier6622
      @jonathonfrazier6622 Год назад +1

      @@peppinogatsumiyamoto4117 They created the music but did not immediately descend into it. If you recall words were spoken by Eru and they spent some "time" for lack of a better word admiring the creation. You dont know what that equated to in-universe in the created world. Therefore, the guy you are disagreeing with not only is definately correct, Ive never heard it explained more accurately or simply.

    • @peppinogatsumiyamoto4117
      @peppinogatsumiyamoto4117 Год назад

      @@jonathonfrazier6622 no man , we are talking about different things... if we mean that these creatures were in Arda before the Valar, well this is true... but they were not ALIVE before the Valar as i said already...

    • @jonathonfrazier6622
      @jonathonfrazier6622 Год назад

      @@peppinogatsumiyamoto4117 Thats not what we are talking about. This is acwell discussed topic in Tolkien circles. I would think you would be familiar with it.

  • @mm650
    @mm650 Год назад +54

    The nameless things, I suspect, are "older than Sauron"... in the sense that they predate his KNOWLEDGE. They were in/under middle Earth before he left the undying lands. Possibly like Bombadil, they are an emergent expression of that deep under-realm.

    • @Telcontar86
      @Telcontar86 Год назад +8

      This I agree with. It's the only way to make it make sense, since the Maiar and Valar predate the universe... and Time itself.

    • @granthudson5447
      @granthudson5447 Год назад +1

      Arda didn't come from nothing surely there must of been a unknown species there, before the Valar decided to create everything out of something. Nameless species prolly fled to the deep.

    • @B.Scruby
      @B.Scruby Год назад

      Well the only individual that could have created them would have had to have been Illuvitar himself. Creatures that would potentially be as old as the Valar. Ungoliant HAD to come from somewhere afterall, and if she exists then there must be others like her. Presenting a sort of an antithesis to the Valar.

    • @mm650
      @mm650 Год назад +2

      @@B.Scruby I am of the opinion that Ungoliant was a being of the same order as Bombadil... A manifestation or avatar of a basic elementary property of Arda... Bombadil is a manifestation of Life and the Joy of Life. Ungoliant of Hunger and Avarice. The Nameless things in turn of what ever exists in their realm below the roots of the mountains.

    • @sakemp3480
      @sakemp3480 Год назад +1

      @Grant Hudson Arda was the result of Eru and its shaping the result of Eru's and Melkor's songs. Then the Valar came down and remodeled and interior decorated... some fung shui.

  • @Mabon-sz9nz
    @Mabon-sz9nz Год назад +63

    If the nameless things were actually created when the discord of Melkor corrupting the songs of Eru Illuvatar and the Aiunar and they entered Arda at that time, then Tom Bombadil also during the concord of the Ainur could also have been created and entered Arda, which would explain that he is the oldest good being and has no father. Can you delve into 'that' theory? Excellent video btw.

    • @MysteriesOfWesternesse
      @MysteriesOfWesternesse  Год назад +17

      A wonderful theory, and yes, we will indeed touch upon Tom Bombadil in a future episode 😉

    • @enigma9971
      @enigma9971 Год назад +10

      Perhaps Tom battled them in the primordial darkness and whooped them good so they went to hide in the deepest, darkest hole from him

    • @znail4675
      @znail4675 Год назад +5

      Well, if the nameless was created in the discord between Eru Illuvatar and Melkors songs, then it makes sense that not only evil, but also some good if unplanned beings was created. That could be Tom's backstory.

  • @jonw8694
    @jonw8694 Год назад +62

    To me, the phrasing by Gandalf always made me think of H.P. Lovecraft, and how he alluded to nameless eldritch horrors that were beyond any sort of description. I'd like to think that somehow the writing of those two authors somehow existed in the same universe.

    • @bobvogel2009
      @bobvogel2009 Год назад +9

      I'm surprised that Lovecraft didn't come up even more in the comments. I wouldn't be surprised that much of the artwork in this video of the "old ones" wasn't inspired at all by Tolkien, but rather by Lovecraft, but the description doesn't link to the individual slides, unless I'm missing something.

    • @bulletsquier
      @bulletsquier Год назад +2

      Did they not though? I recall someone saying Lovecraft and Tolkien was really good friends.

    • @Wintertalent
      @Wintertalent Год назад +7

      @@bulletsquier There is absolutely no evidence to suggest they ever even met.

    • @dionmcgee5610
      @dionmcgee5610 Год назад +8

      @@Wintertalent There is no possibility that Tolkien and Lovecraft were acquainted with each other. Aside from Lovecraft being mostly a shut in- Tolkien's devout christianity would have antagonized Lovecraft's deep pessimism of the human race. Misanthropes and christians don't have a lot in common.
      However, Tolkien certainly would have heard or read about Lovecraft's mythos. Mythology was a great interest to him and as a voracious reader, he very likely would have read something of Lovecrafts work. Probably not very much, but then again, those of us who grew up loving books tend to read everything we can- especially in the genres we prefer.
      And if Tolkien himself never read Lovecraft- one of his many book loving friends would have had to tell him about the Cthulhu mythos concept.
      It's too close to Tolkiens area of expertise to have gone unnoticed - and those few lines of intrigue are Tolkien responding to it. Assimilating Lovecraft into his work- just like so many other writers have done. Myself included, recreationally.

    • @Wintertalent
      @Wintertalent Год назад

      @@dionmcgee5610 Or both Tolkien and Lovecraft were inspired by someone else that came before them.

  • @chojinnppp
    @chojinnppp Год назад +28

    Great, and the reference to Gandalf's speech regarding the one ring is well taken. That Gandalf was relying on Durin's Bane to make it out of there tells you something.

    • @TheMeanMongoose
      @TheMeanMongoose Год назад +10

      I also like how hesitant he is to even speak of them and careful not to say too much. Some things are just not meant for the minds of mortals, which is a very prevalent concept in cosmic horror.

    • @sakemp3480
      @sakemp3480 Год назад

      Could it be said too that he knew not the way out which is why he followed the Balrog... sort of like Bilbo following Gollum out of the deeps of the Misty Mountains

    • @chojinnppp
      @chojinnppp Год назад

      @@sakemp3480 Yes, that would make sense. I can't image, however, that the Balrog would have been retreating from Gandalf. So we have the Balrog just getting out of there and Gandalf trying to keep up to prevent from getting lost.

    • @sakemp3480
      @sakemp3480 Год назад

      @@chojinnppp He ran from Gandalf because his flame died... he wasn't the same after the cold bath he took from the fall. He needed time to reignite

  • @cobaltprime9467
    @cobaltprime9467 Год назад +8

    I didn’t know there was a Lovecraftian aspect in Tolkien’s world. I love cosmic horror like that. Something beyond mere demons and evil gods. Beings that cannot be comprehended, having forms beyond anything ever seen, and some no form at all.
    Eru Ilúvatar created from nothing, bringing Order to a ceaseless void of Chaos. Perhaps the remnants of Chaos corrupted the spirits and transformed them into the Nameless Ones. Becoming evil beyond all other Dark Lords. Existing only to sow terror in the hearts of those that witness them.

  • @jeremy1860
    @jeremy1860 Год назад +60

    Moria in general is just the most terrifying thing about LOTR to me, even more so than he likes of Sauron or Shelob. So, guess I have a brand new thing to fear them for 😅

    • @TheMeanMongoose
      @TheMeanMongoose Год назад +14

      Being stuck underground alone is terrifying. Being stuck underground surrounded by things that existed before names is a whole new level of horror.

    • @noldorwarrior7791
      @noldorwarrior7791 Год назад +1

      I suppose Utumno was far worse.

    • @captainjacksparrow200
      @captainjacksparrow200 Год назад

      @@noldorwarrior7791 Only if you were an elf. Orcs and Maiar at least are named.

    • @Chimpmanboom
      @Chimpmanboom 21 час назад

      isnt shelob a "nameless thing" also? or from where they are from? look up a book accurate shelob. She isnt just a giant spider its sick

  • @TKFKU
    @TKFKU Год назад +9

    Everyone from that era had "nameless elder things" lurking in the dark. Makes you wonder if he was a fan of Lovercraft too.

  • @daveblack1129
    @daveblack1129 Год назад +20

    Wow! I'm feeling Lovecraft's vibes!

    • @skoshman1
      @skoshman1 Год назад +2

      Apparently he and Lovecraft read a lot of the same books

  • @SouthernShodan
    @SouthernShodan Год назад +11

    I believe the 'Nameless Things' wereon par, power-wise, with Ungoliant. Ungoliant is thought to also be a result of the disharmony of the Music. If so, the Nameless Things are very strong. Remember Ungoliant aided Morgoth as equals, turned on him and almost destroyed him. And Morgoth far exceeded the power of the maia, so Gandalf and the Balrog had good reason to be afraid.

  • @MichaelMedici61W2
    @MichaelMedici61W2 Год назад +1

    Glad your channel was in my feed. Looking forward to your other videos, especially the Aragorn video.

  • @18laxX
    @18laxX Год назад +5

    Wow, I’m glad I found this new LOTR page! You deserve WAY more subs!

  • @abelingaw5070
    @abelingaw5070 Год назад +5

    If the Balrog stayed underneath Moria for thousands of years, you would think he would've dig deeper, but no.
    Maybe he did for a time but after feeling the presence of them nameless things, he stopped. Probably saying "It's not worth it."
    And then years later, he fell during a fight and not only running away from Gandalf (for a time) but also he doesn't wanna be trapped between an old goofy man and things that are even more powerful than the two of them.

    • @GuyChooo
      @GuyChooo 9 месяцев назад +4

      And the fact that the Balrog unironically saved the dwarves from digging deep to see this nightmarish creatures.

  • @KizzMyAbs
    @KizzMyAbs Год назад +2

    YASSSS WHERE HAVE YOU BEEN!? good stuff right here will be following all your content 🎉

  • @charlesdavis7087
    @charlesdavis7087 Год назад +8

    Before the great singing of Creation into being, I believe that these were the forms of discords and forms of disharmonies that Melkor sang into being. Far beyond the powers of the Miaer. Good job. Great voice for a Story Teller and Bard. I bet you speak Elvish, too.

    • @arasdabear8785
      @arasdabear8785 Год назад +1

      Problem is melkor explicitly did not have the power to create anything, only to corrupt

    • @wolfyboy
      @wolfyboy Год назад +1

      @@arasdabear8785 but this was made by DISSONANCE. a MIXED EFFORT if you will, by everyone. melkor didn't create it, he was just a part of it. i was I believe at least. :)

  • @oroki5409
    @oroki5409 Год назад +5

    Perhaps the Nameless Things are logical possibilities perceived by Eru but never morally allowed - which the discord allowed to be 'perceived' in the real world. Perhaps then they seek to gnaw upon 'reality' by making the created succumb to instead observing their horrid unreal possibilities - in some ways not unlike Melkor; just worse than what Eru would allow to ever properly exist.
    If Ungoliant was originally a Nameless Thing this would paint their experience differently - she may have overpowered Morgoth after consuming the trees merely because, for even a moment, he believed it possible she could at that point.
    This could also mean that Gandalf's hopes lied only in his enemy - because the fullness of his attention being spent on surviving the Balrog meant he could not be given a second to perceive the Nameless Ones' endless horrifying unrealities - and Durin's Bane knew the tunnels. Perhaps only Balrogs that clung absolutely onto Morgoth's own unreality could not be consumed by the Nameless Things other unrealities.
    Or not.

  • @CheesyTater
    @CheesyTater Год назад +7

    I always thought that these lines from Saruman in the Return of the King Extended version was about the Nameless Ones. "Something festers in the heart of Middle-Earth. Something that you have failed to see. But the Great Eye has seen it. Even now he presses his advantage. His attack will come soon. You're all going to die. But you know this don't you, Gandalf?".

    • @co94
      @co94 Год назад +1

      Somewhere in one of the “director’s cut” or similar versions of ROTK, Peter Jackson said this quote refers to Denethor.
      Specifically, it refers to Sauron’s corruption of Denethor. Sauron could not bend Denethor to his will but he screwed up Denethor’s mind enough to make Denethor a liability to Gondor.

  • @dabberowl
    @dabberowl Год назад

    Loved this!! just subscribed,well done!

  • @TheCopperkidd
    @TheCopperkidd Год назад

    Found your videos while searching for new Sauron content and I’m enjoying them all! There is an german channel with the same videos but I like the english ones better.

  • @That1505Guy
    @That1505Guy Год назад +4

    The narration and work put into this video is extraordinary! Watching from Albuquerque, New Mexico

  • @davidevans2863
    @davidevans2863 Год назад +29

    I think Tolkien is both paying homage to Cosmic Horror here aswell as tying in aspects of other religions. Níðhöggr and the other lindworms of Norse religion are enormous serpent like creatures that gnaw on the roots of the world, not only that but Níðhöggr specifically has an ongoing enemy that is a giant eagle. I believe the beings are unknowable and nameless as a nod too Cosmic horror but also tied into the concept of the lindworm of Norse mythology with tunneling and gnawing on the roots of the world.

    • @ENOCH_INSPIREDJ
      @ENOCH_INSPIREDJ Год назад +2

      I do not believe the nameless things are HP Lovecraft kind of horror. That's not how JRR Tolkien thinks about creation nor does he think a chaotic creation like HP Lovercraft does.

    • @wolfyboy
      @wolfyboy Год назад

      @@ENOCH_INSPIREDJ you can't know what tolkien though, no matter how much you know about him.

    • @ENOCH_INSPIREDJ
      @ENOCH_INSPIREDJ Год назад +2

      @@wolfyboy
      He's catholic for one and his general principle is "evil cannot create only mock". This isn't some outer god cosmic horror nonsense nor some primordial chaos nonsense. Those are doctrines he doesn't abide by. You can clearly see by his creation story with Eru Illuvatar for two is proof against that silly notion.

    • @wolfyboy
      @wolfyboy Год назад

      @@ENOCH_INSPIREDJ just because he was religious doesn't mean he couldn't have used other things in his works. also, melkor didn't make the nameless ones, he was just a part. every part is equally important in the creation, as it was the dissonance that did it. eru laid the foundation, and the good guys and bad guys created the cake. and in the middle of that cake, is the nasty, uncooked, rotten bits.

    • @davidevans2863
      @davidevans2863 Год назад +3

      I mean it's just my thoughts in what I've read, I'm probably well off the mark and I cant exactly ask the man. But just because he was a Christian does not mean that he would not give a nod to a fellow great writer by including literally unknowable beings of gloom, nor that he wouldnt base those beings loosely on mythological beings of other countries and ancient religions lest we be forgetting that both the race of dwarves and elves at the very minimum come from Tolkiens reading and understanding of Norse Mythology.

  • @jeffagain7516
    @jeffagain7516 Год назад +2

    Excellent presentation once more dear Sir! Thank-you!
    I think one of the conceits many of us hold, is a view to measuring everything by virtue of a "power scale".
    I think it may be unnecessary to do so in this circumstance (and others) though.
    It's quite common (and entertaining) for us to devise lists, charts, etc that 'rate' items, people, creatures and such, by virtue of their position on a scale.
    In some circumstances though, such as this topic, I feel it's probably a fruitless endeavour.
    The "nameless things" are, by virtue of their titled depiction, an enigma. One that perhaps eludes measurement and therefore are to be taken as an "event" more so than "beings".
    This provides them with a horrifying allure, that circumvents need for literal description or depiction. It's enough to know that even Gandalf was frightened by them. Any hope for mere mortals to successfully confront them is moot.
    This contradicts our nature for desiring to catalogue everything but sometimes, mysteries are best served shrouded. :)

  • @davidtatro7457
    @davidtatro7457 Год назад +14

    Very interesting analysis and well-done video. Thanks for the excellent content. I have subscribed and look forward to more.
    My only real response to this is to think that perhaps the nameless things were more horrfyingly grotesque than powerful. It seems that the Balrog knew the ways through their tunnels well, which implies that they were not more powerful than itself, and, by extension, not more powerful than Gandalf. Rather, l interpret what Gandalf said more in the spirit of them causing a deep existential disgust. That they were offensive on a level beyond that of the merely evil and/or powerful. One can only dimly imagine how horrifying they must have been to look upon, for someone as dedicated to life and light and beauty as Gandalf.
    Tolkien is as powerful for what he doesn't explain as for what he does.
    Anyway, l have often wondered if the Watcher in the water in the pool outside the gates of Moria might have been akin to the nameless things beneath it in some way.

    • @MysteriesOfWesternesse
      @MysteriesOfWesternesse  Год назад +5

      Thank you for this wonderful comment!
      As far as the lore goes, your interpretation is exactly as valid as ours 😉 A very good analysis!
      As for the Watcher in the Water, we will definitely do a future episode on that!

    • @davidtatro7457
      @davidtatro7457 Год назад +2

      @@MysteriesOfWesternesse I look forward to it!

    • @wolfyboy
      @wolfyboy Год назад +3

      i agree. something that was not made by evil, but by DISSONANCE, would be intolorable to look at, because it is WRONG, in every way!

  • @FumblsTheSniper
    @FumblsTheSniper Год назад +3

    I remember coming up with a short story as a kid based off someone falling into a pit full of creatures so powerful that they completely ignored the character. Not sure how it ended.

  • @MemoryTroll
    @MemoryTroll Год назад

    Love the content, mellon! Epic!

  • @corysmith8910
    @corysmith8910 Год назад +3

    Very cool man. Tolkien’s works and other fantasy stories benefit by having creatures that are outside the norms of creation. Things that clash with good and evil. Creatures that have unknown power and origins shake things up a bit. Thanks for an enjoyable experience.

  • @WarpRulez
    @WarpRulez Год назад +5

    I find it interesting how Tolkien wrote about so many creatures/entities that he left completely unstated where they came from. I believe that he stated that Eru created everything, but at no point does he mention him creating any of those creatures, or how they otherwise came into being. Tom Bombadil has no backstory of any kind, Ungoliant has no backstory of any kind (other than perhaps an extremely vague allusion of her coming "from the Darkness", whatever that means), and these nameless things below Moria, only mentioned briefly in a single passage.

  • @Zenas521
    @Zenas521 Год назад +9

    A hint of Lovecraft in the writings of Tolkien.

  • @g3heathen209
    @g3heathen209 Год назад +21

    What of the watcher in the water? Was it one of these nameless things that the Barlog placed there. Perhaps he brought it up from the mines to guard the west gate.

    • @kevinbell5674
      @kevinbell5674 Год назад +3

      In the books, we only see the watcher's tentacles. Which are semi-translucent and pulsating with strange light. It's likely that the main body of the watcher is deep underground and the tentacles are feelers being sent up through cracks in the earth.
      Also, the Balrog as no allegiance with the Nameless nor can it control them. They are primordial entities that existed within the Void before Iluvatar began his Song, making them more ancient then even the Valar.

  • @jeremyschroeder8987
    @jeremyschroeder8987 Год назад +32

    When Gandalf says "In that despair my enemy was my only hope", is he suggesting he and the Balrog somehow teamed up to escape the Nameless Ones?

    • @sebastianfuentes3482
      @sebastianfuentes3482 Год назад +18

      I always tought that gandalf "follows" the balrog to get out... his hope was not loosing the trail, since the balrog knows the exit. My two cents :D

    • @sampetrie340
      @sampetrie340 Год назад +4

      @@sebastianfuentes3482 That is my interpretation as well. In fact, it might suggest that the Nameless Ones are sub-Maiar in strength, as they were unable impede either the Balrog or Gandalf.

    • @thomassmith6232
      @thomassmith6232 Год назад +3

      I think more likely that the Balrog knew the wy back to the surface.

    • @friedit7862
      @friedit7862 Год назад +3

      @@sampetrie340 doubt it, the way gandalf described them made them seem powerful, more than likely the balrog was tanking hits as he escaped and gandalf followed it. It was weakened to the point where gandalf could defeat it.

    • @sampetrie340
      @sampetrie340 Год назад +1

      @@friedit7862 So you think that Gandalf would have been unable to defeat the Balrog without the Nameless Ones weakening it first? Interesting idea, and certainly possible…. Although if true, you have to wonder why Duran’s Bane was fleeing from Gandalf in the first place…

  • @VoiceoftheRings
    @VoiceoftheRings Год назад +2

    Duded this is Amazing! Love the Video! You got my Sub! From a Fellow Tolkien RUclipsr! ;D Keep it up Bro!

    • @MysteriesOfWesternesse
      @MysteriesOfWesternesse  Год назад

      Thanks man! Really liked your Tolkien Reading Day video. Wonderfully relaxing!

  • @kristinaF54
    @kristinaF54 Год назад +2

    Maybe they're like the dark gods of HP Lovecraft's mythos? But if they were created from the disharmony notes of Melkor, then they're the Discordant Ones, causing despair where there was hope, bringing sadness where there was joy, bringing darkness where there was light.

  • @HamsterFlex
    @HamsterFlex Год назад +2

    Love your narration!

  • @PeterVDale
    @PeterVDale Год назад +7

    There is/was a Nameless One with a name: Ungoliant.

    • @Michael-cf9cj
      @Michael-cf9cj Год назад +1

      That's a possibility. Where did she come from? She could be of the same or a similar strain and simply encountered Morgoth and spoke with him and either named herself or was named by Morgoth.

  • @josemiguelrodriguez3705
    @josemiguelrodriguez3705 Год назад +1

    Hearing the second theory that they arose from the clash during the music, having no master but only being inherently evil, makes me think about the origin of Ungoliant and if they were equals but in great numbers. That would even make Gandalf's remarks an understatement

  • @Do27gg
    @Do27gg Год назад +1

    Need some on screen thriller/horror about these. Even in a rings of power episode

  • @sakemp3480
    @sakemp3480 Год назад +1

    A thoughtful point is Melkor, Aule, and Ulmo had to have known of the Nameless Ones. Melkor lifted 3 gigantic mountains which I'm sure disturbed the Nameless. Ulmo is the master of the seas and the waters go everywhere. Lastly Aule is master of earth and all underneath... so he had to have known things were moving

  • @UtilemUnus
    @UtilemUnus Год назад

    Awesome video! 😊

  • @BlancheNeigefan
    @BlancheNeigefan Год назад +2

    Thank you for your video! It's interesting work and I don't get why people are being so rude in the comments. Please keep up what you're doing!

  • @e.d.m3076
    @e.d.m3076 Год назад +31

    Judging by the music you chose for the background, your mind also went to Lovecraft. I wonder whether the Nameless Ones were the same 'race' as Illuvatar. Tolkien almost definitely knew of and read Lovecraft and Dunsany, so this might be a possibility he entertained at some point.

    • @TheSorrel
      @TheSorrel Год назад +11

      I think Tolkien would strongly disagree with this notion. To him, Illuvatar was the one allmighty God of Christianity. The odea of eldrich Gods would be completely alien to his world view.

    • @Michael-cf9cj
      @Michael-cf9cj Год назад +4

      @@TheSorrel I agree. There's never a hint I've heard of that there was some part of Arda that wasn't ultimately from Iluvatar himself.

    • @john.premose
      @john.premose Год назад +2

      I really can't imagine Tolkien reading Lovecraft. I think you are mistaken in that.

    • @e.d.m3076
      @e.d.m3076 Год назад +5

      @@john.premose Why not? He almost definitely read Dunsany's work which The Silmarillion makes pretty obvious, and Lovecraft is only a hop, skip, and a jump away. On the other hand, Tolkien could just have come up with the idea of nameless horrors beyond description in a literary vacuum.

    • @cesarsalas8506
      @cesarsalas8506 Год назад +1

      ​​@@john.premose Well, he was aware and had read the works of Robert E Howard, and that's not very far away from Lovecraft himself.

  • @cald1421
    @cald1421 Год назад +2

    This made me think: what happened after Sauron’s defeat? All the heroes just left but things like the Balrog may still be lurking beneath the Earth: did they just leave these horrors and other nameless things for future, likely ignorant and clueless generations, to deal with when such foes became myth?

  • @jamth118
    @jamth118 Год назад +1

    Great video keep up the good work

  • @jennieteen
    @jennieteen Год назад +7

    Tolkien and Lovecraft were born around the same time- is it possible they were reading each other's works and drawing inspiration?

    • @wolfyboy
      @wolfyboy Год назад +2

      it's possible. although i doubt tolkien though highly of lovercraft as lovercraft was a MASSIVE racist, and tolkien (to my knowledge) was NOT.

    • @cha5
      @cha5 5 месяцев назад

      @@wolfyboy I think the only way that would have happened would be if Lovecraft had somehow read The Hobbit, which is unlikely being as he died in March 15 1937, The Hobbit was first published in September 21 1937.
      Or if Tolkien had come across some pulps that first published Lovecraft's stories in the 1920's and 1930's.

  • @lukastanisavljev1799
    @lukastanisavljev1799 Год назад

    What a beautiful velvety voice, it's a pleasure to listen it

  • @Bruelax11
    @Bruelax11 Год назад

    I have took to reading tolkein every Friday. So far I start with the Silmarillion and go to the fall of numenor now, tales from a perilous realm unfinished tale All the way to return of the king. Every time I pass I find new things. This is new…. Thank you

  • @TheMichaellathrop
    @TheMichaellathrop Год назад +42

    So to me the oliophant in the room is that between the creation of the Ainur and the singing of Arda into existence is that Melkor traveled into the void and was different on his return, to me this has always linked well with the nameless things that may be things Aluvatar created before the Ainur or things more akin to Aluvatar himself.

  • @berserkers88
    @berserkers88 Год назад +1

    I keep thinking of Lovecraft while watching this. He was writing about these sort of creatures in the mid 1920s.

  • @HeWhoShams
    @HeWhoShams Год назад +2

    Someone mentioned Tom and I believe he is a character that knows he exists outside the world of Middle Earth.
    He refers to himself as Eldest and Fatherless and First... because in fact he is a character that was made before any other character of the LOTR series. He is present in other stories that predate it.
    Or he is literally an embodiment of Chaos, since Tolkien was inspired by Norse Mythology, he could be the very representation of Ginnungagap, Yawning Void. His piece of the world is a "void" within the realms of Middle Earth. His forest is untouched and unclaimed with he as it's chaotic ruler.

    • @cha5
      @cha5 5 месяцев назад

      Well, at least Tom isn't Nyarlathotep.

  • @korndog87
    @korndog87 Год назад

    that was great well done

  • @dreamkiller1116
    @dreamkiller1116 Год назад

    ive only watched 30 min or so of the first movie but im hooked on these lil vids

  • @riverplate0101
    @riverplate0101 5 месяцев назад +1

    I think they are of an older version of the universe. They were in Ea like bacteria is in everything. They are deep down there and don't interfere. More mystery. More things unknown. Was this JRR's shout-out to Lovecraft? If so, that's friggin awesome.

  • @thejaredmyers
    @thejaredmyers 17 дней назад

    I'm dreaming up a story for Gandalf's time with the Balrog in the bones and stones of Arda. Would make a great game with levels representing the farther down they go and face the nameless things and each other eventually culminating in the final battle. The fact that Gandalf dies, comes back and wont speak about it would give you full creative licence to explore those depths and introduce an entire new sub plot with these creatures and not mess with the canon.

  • @danalden1112
    @danalden1112 Год назад +3

    Hard not to think of the book by von Junzt, Unaussprechlichen Kulten (Nameless Cults). I hope that the story of the Nameless Things summarized in this video will soon be discovered in an ancient tome in the Tolkien estate archives that he was translating.

  • @farahahmed8201
    @farahahmed8201 Год назад +1

    Great video, I actually like to think that they were ancient servants of Melkor

  • @c.rutherford
    @c.rutherford 10 месяцев назад +1

    I've heard of Ungoliant being described as a 'primordial'. Makes you wonder..... what are the odds that she was one of the Nameless Things, that got out so-to-speak?

  • @watermenlon3617
    @watermenlon3617 Год назад

    moria is like a classic dwarf fortress game where they had fun trying to get more candy

  • @kaboose111
    @kaboose111 Год назад +1

    This was awesome! Way to go!

  • @bjornjohansson1716
    @bjornjohansson1716 Год назад +1

    Imagination of the reader is an important piece of a great story.

  • @Bryon1187
    @Bryon1187 Год назад +2

    I like the idea of the clashes of the devine music!

  • @aaronbaron3155
    @aaronbaron3155 Год назад +5

    Maybe it just means that they came to arda before sauron did. That's one way they could be "older," since outside of the created world it is timeless. They could be of the ilk of Ungoliant.... creatures that were of the darkness but separated from melkor..

  • @JOECURR1488
    @JOECURR1488 Год назад +5

    The unknowable things that dwell deep.

  • @smartassforhire
    @smartassforhire Год назад +16

    The nameless ones existed in the primordial chaos before Illuvitar entered the void and brought forth his creations through the melodies and song. And it is only by his will and power that these unknowable abominations are held at bay from devouring all existence and returning things back into the formless chaotic void.

    • @theguybehindyou4762
      @theguybehindyou4762 Год назад +1

      Then they are unreality given form. The death of the universe, in the flesh. Try wrapping your head around that.

    • @smartassforhire
      @smartassforhire Год назад +1

      @the guy behind you what should concern all is that Illuvitar himself had to have escaped or separated himself from the things that existed before light and matter. Meaning he is one of them. But evolved into Tolkiens God almighty.

    • @emanuelosorio9610
      @emanuelosorio9610 Год назад +1

      ​@@smartassforhire this is interesting. Tolkien says that Eru, The One, is an exact definition of who and what He is: the only one to truly exist. Yet, it makes sense that while the Nameless ones existed after Iluvatar, they are born from an ancient primordial matter, as old as Iluvatar himself. And in Ëa, older things are more porweful than whatever succeed them. Iluvatar is the One, and the Nameless ones were permitted to exist.

    • @theguybehindyou4762
      @theguybehindyou4762 Год назад

      @@smartassforhire Makes you wonder about the origin of the real life God...

  • @Diamonddogusa
    @Diamonddogusa Год назад

    Great artwork.

  • @stunner9005
    @stunner9005 Год назад +2

    The nameless ones could be Jörmungandr and Níðhöggr.

  • @survivalanimations
    @survivalanimations Год назад +1

    If I was to do a spin-off in lord of the rings, I would do a group exploring this place. Could go as crazy as you like and still not mess with the lore of LOTR.

  • @metatronblack
    @metatronblack Год назад

    Great 👍

  • @Everliving69
    @Everliving69 Год назад +1

    My interpretation of the nameless ones is that he wrote that so if he wanted to he could come back and write more content after he finished the main story. Like a new book or new story altogether.

  • @mreyn17
    @mreyn17 Год назад

    If anyone is interested the song in the background is called : Cthulhu Awakens - Apollon de Moura

  • @blakewinter1657
    @blakewinter1657 Год назад +1

    I don't think Gandalf meant that it would literally magically block out the sun if he spoke of them. I think he just meant metaphorically it would darken everyone's day.

  • @onlyvoid
    @onlyvoid 10 месяцев назад +1

    I believe that they are of the same origin as ungolianth, the by-product that came to be when the music of the ainur and the discord of melkor got mixed up. Embodiments of true chaos.

  • @alvaro.martinez
    @alvaro.martinez Год назад +1

    To me, these nameless things are broken figments of Iluvatar's first song, like bugs in the Matrix. Glitches in the fabric of the universe the Middle Earth is located in. Tom Bombadil also belongs to this category, but he chose light instead of darkness.

  • @piotrmontgomerytv7786
    @piotrmontgomerytv7786 Год назад +2

    Did it surprised me? It terrified me.

  • @chenstormstout9456
    @chenstormstout9456 Год назад +1

    “There are older and fouler things than Orcs, in the deep places of the world.”

  • @colinspencer4914
    @colinspencer4914 Год назад +1

    When I was younger I tried contemplating these things, so I would think about the superficial sides like: I can't imagine being the low-class dwarves digging these mines like... you know boss, I think we may have gone a bit far??? We've found a tunnel about 20 miles into the earth, There's probably something really bad down here????

  • @justinhhp87
    @justinhhp87 Год назад +1

    Among the many mysteries of middle earth, there are unconfirmed named Nameless things
    Ungoliant a being at her full power easily threatened the strongest Valar and took a legion of fire demons ie balrogs to push back
    The Watcher in the water an evil monster who might have slipped thru a small well and took up residence outside the lake to moria
    And Tom Bombadil who was there when the earth was young, before even the dark lords descended

  • @richardsanchez5444
    @richardsanchez5444 Год назад +3

    I think there are things that can be older than sauron. Sauron was Maia of aüle. So he was created after the valar were created. I'm pretty sure I read that in the silmarillion

  • @Typhonis007
    @Typhonis007 Год назад +1

    The best way to make something terrifying is to give it only a brief description. Let the audience fill in the details with their own imagination. Like how they used the alien in the original movie Alien. You barely saw the thing and it was far more terrifying for it.

  • @khylerbane4523
    @khylerbane4523 3 месяца назад

    I like to thing that when the Dong was first sung, Eru sang a certain tempo and created the world, cleared his through leading to the nameless things and Ungoliant esk creatures, then after clearing his voice sung the Ainur into existence.

  • @piotrmontgomerytv7786
    @piotrmontgomerytv7786 Год назад +1

    Perhaps there is not just nameless ones who are below Moria. Perhaps there is entire dimension under Moria. Something like Upside down from "Stranger Things" or the Dark aether from Call of Duty Black Ops Cold War. It's just a theory but that would make sense because in this case they would never been made by neither Eru nor Melkor, they would be creatures from the different Universe that was located below Moria.

  • @renehollebrandse4151
    @renehollebrandse4151 Год назад

    what music is playing in the background?

  • @level9drow856
    @level9drow856 Год назад +2

    Excellent. Lovecraft in Tolkien.

  • @williamcainjr8496
    @williamcainjr8496 Год назад

    Best damn rabbit hole I ever fell in!

  • @johnaeryns5364
    @johnaeryns5364 Год назад +2

    I always thought the nameless things beneath moria were just animals and plants that hadn't been seen before. Kind of like deep sea creatures in our world. LOTR and tokens work in general has a much more simplistic theme of good vs. Evil without special nuances to it. He doesn't really seem like the kind of writer that would take inspiration from Lovecraft and go the route of cosmic horror, or fear of the unknown.

    • @panniguin862
      @panniguin862 11 месяцев назад

      counterpoint, the Watcher in the Water & Ungoliant exist

    • @johnaeryns5364
      @johnaeryns5364 11 месяцев назад

      @Panniguin that's not a counterpoint, neither of those things fall under the category of cosmic horror. They're neither unknown, nor mysterious. The only thing that gives them that quality is that they have loosely understood origins