The Rings Of Power: 8 essential locations you should know before you watch

The A.V. Club takes a detailed look at the most important realms and lands in the new version of Middle-earth

TV Features The Lord of the Rings
The Rings Of Power: 8 essential locations you should know before you watch
Photo: Courtesy of Prime Video

This week, The Lord Of The Rings: The Rings Of Power will finally take us back to the Second Age, the era before The Lord of the Rings trilogy, and bring with it a new live-action version of the Middle-earth landscape. Though we’re talking about the same continent and many of the same creatures, the Middle-earth of the series is, politically and sometimes even geographically, very different from the one fans know from Peter Jackson’s films. So, before you dig into the two-part series premiere, we’ve put together a handy guide to some of the most important locations in Middle-earth (and beyond) during the Second Age, because there’s nothing worse than confusing your Eregions and your Rhovanions.

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Lindon
(From left) Galadriel (Morfydd Clark) and High king Gil-galad (Benjamin Walker) in Lindon Photo Courtesy of Prime Video

By the time of The Lord Of The Rings, the Elves of Middle-earth are somewhat scattered into individual dominions like Rivendell, Lothlorien, and Mirkwood. While they’re still found all over the map in The Rings Of Power, a key feature of the Second Age is the centralized power of Lindon, the realm of High King of the Elves Gil-galad (Benjamin Walker). And as you might expect, it’s glorious to behold.Located on the far western edge of the continent, Lindon represents a link between Middle-earth and the home realm of the Elves, Valinor, also known as the Undying Lands. By the Second Age, Morgoth’s War of Wrath had whittled away parts of western Middle-earth, leaving Valinor further away and Lindon as the seat of power bridging the divide between mortal realms and the eternal paradise where the Elves were born. That context means that Lindon is both vitally important politically, as the seat of Elven power in Middle-earth, and spiritually, as it’s where Elves sent back to the Undying Lands will bid farewell to the continent. It’s also, as gateways to paradise should be, a beautiful realm filled with structures made in harmony with the earth, and tributes to Elven achievements and losses in their struggle against the forces of Evil. By the Third Age, Lindon will have been reduced to little more than a port where ships depart for Valinor. But here in the Second Age, it’s a gleaming realm of peace.

14 Comments

  • fanamir23-av says:

    Literally the first image released for the show was of Valinor – albeit, Valinor in the First Age. That shot of the Two Trees, and the city of Tirion in front of them. It has also been shown in more than one trailer.

  • theguyfromtheplace-av says:

    Read the first 2 slides and had to stop   so many things wrong……..

  • hasselt-av says:

    I know the timeline of this show is the Second Age, but wasn’t there some side-story in the appendices about the last remnants of Arnor being wiped out in the Northern Wastes? I remember something about snow, ice and wolves.

    • rev-skarekroe-av says:

      That was the war against the evil kingdom of Angmar, ruled by the Nazgul Witch King.  It’s about 1300 years after this show, but I don’t know how much that matters since they pretty much bunched up the whole second half of the Second Age together.

      • deathonkinja-av says:

        ARNOR’S LAST REMNANT FELL IN THE THIRD AGE, ~TA1974, SO IT IS VERY UNLIKELY THAT STORY WOULD BE TOLD IN THIS SHOW.

  • carrercrytharis-av says:

    Places I’d like to see:CuivienenGondolinDoriathThe Gates of NightAngbandDor-LominCabed-en-ArasAnyway, there’s some really beautiful official art of these places on the Tolkien wiki and such.

  • dr-frahnkunsteen-av says:

    A map would be helpful, which is why they are typically included in the books. Does anyone know a good map for this era?

  • martyfunkhouser1-av says:

    I don’t know why I thought this wouldn’t be a slide show. 

  • sgur-av says:

    The lifespan of Númenóreans has nothing to do with “half-elven blood”. Long life is a part of their gift from Valar for their help in defeating Morgoth.

    1. There are only a few known half-elves even though all Númenóreans were gifted with long life.2. Being half-elf doesn’t give people hybrid abilities – it gives them the choice to be counted either among elves (eternal life in the Undying Lands) or among humans (mortality = Gift of Men). Half-elves who choose to be counted among humans have their lifespan determined by their human parent, not their elf parent. So Elros (and his descendants like Aragorn) lived longer because they had Númenórean blood, not because they had elven blood.

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