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#lotr elros
braxix · 14 days
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Elrond: Just a reminder. I choose the kindness. I am willing to pursue other options if kindness doesn't work out.
Elros: And he has a knife.
Elrond: And I have a knife.
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thelien-art · 3 days
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Elrond Peredhel; in Imladris
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Elrond Peredhel, in the Second age, in the newly established Imladris which stood finished in S.A. 1700 Of the Sun (1697-1700)
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tilions · 2 months
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→ elros & elrond — the first king of númenor and the lord of the last homely house
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shitty-tolkien-aus · 4 months
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Elros didn't really exist, Elrond just ran back and forth really fast
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wisesnail · 1 day
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I always loved twins, and Elrond and Elros have a special place in my heart - I wonder when Elros made his choice, and I like the take that it did so when both were still fairly young. I imagine it must not have been easy 💔
Soundtrack: Sigur Rós - Varðeld
Prints and other stuff on my RedBubble and Threadless
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fabulous-feanorians · 24 days
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I always felt that Elros was closer to Maglor and Elrond to Maedhros, because Maglor needed a king and Maedhros, a healer.
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elven-sisters · 2 months
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I've always wandered how it happened that Maedhros and Maglor adopted twins, so why not like this?
If it comes to their tails... maybe just don't ask (or ask if you want, but it's kinda silly story) ✨
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Anyway, I think Elrond had a breakdown on Elladan and Elrohir's sixth birthday because they're so young, which means that he and Elros were that young when—
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ela-draws · 1 month
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@feanorianweek Day 1 : Maedhros (with Elrond and Elros)
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mamwieleimion · 3 months
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Headcannon:
In Numenor the Fëanorians are remembered as tragic characters/heroes.
They talk all about their crimes all right. But they also talk about their tragedy and their pain and the world being set against them from the very start.
The Fëanorians aren't some boogyman. They are protectors who broke, who couldn't go on and stumbled down a line they shouldn't.
They are the symbol of oath wrongly sworn. They symbolise the importance of oaths' and they caution all who attempt to swear something.
The Fëanorians aren't just kinslayers. They are so much more. And that knowledge is passed down all the way to Gondor.
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braxix · 10 days
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Maedhros: Someone asked how to tell Elrond and Elros apart. It's quite simple when you know what to look for.
Maglor: Elros is the crazed raccoon that infests Himring. His only goal in life is property damage. He is some sort of divine pest or curse for wrong doings on a cosmic level that I can only guess at.
Maedhros: And Elrond has dark hair and dimples when he smiles.
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wombywoo · 1 year
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forgiveness. 
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thethirdtreeofvalinor · 7 months
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I like to think that the real reason Elrond left to Valinor was because Aragorn and Arwen’s daughters were actually twins and he wasn’t ready to face the chaos the first girl twins of the House of Finwë would unleash upon Midde Earth
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istaricelebelasse · 17 days
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There is a horn. It is nothing special, made from the tusk of some beast that Aredhel barely even recalls felling.
There had been many such beasts on The Ice after all.
The horn had found its way into her luggage and over so many restless nights watching over little Idril she had made it.
It does not compare to those that The Hunt had used in Aman, bound as it is with scant strips of leather and metalwork repurposed from a necklace that she could not wear on The Ice.
But it is hers. And it is precious, in a strange way.
She does not take it when she leaves her brother’s city. It remains, untouched, in her rooms.
It watches as she slowly fades from a poison bestowed by her husband.
The horn is given to her son, yet he has no use for it. A love of hunting and the great outdoors was not anything she passed on to her only child.
It is gifted to another, to a child borne of his cousin, a more precious gift than perhaps his cousin realises.
(One of the few pieces he has of his mother. A wish and a warning and an apology all at once.)
Somehow it survives the Fall. Somehow it ends up in Sirion.
It does not burn in the destruction. Nor is it taken by the Sons of Feanor as they take their hostages.
It lies, abandoned on the floor, until the King comes (too late) to the aid of the city.
There are too few survivors, but they can ill afford to leave any supplies behind. And besides, Gil-Galad can recall his cousin placing a strange solemn honour upon the hunting horn.
It sits, unused, until the Sons of Earendil are returned to their king, whereupon it, aged and yet bearing a presence is returned to them.
There is little argument over which of them gets that piece of their father when it is time for them to separate. The elder twin takes it, as he took their foster father’s sword. The younger is content with a silver harp and the book of their mother’s herblore.
Elros takes it with him. A symbol of his House, and honour for his heir to bear.
Down it goes, down down down the generations until there is little but a drop of Numenorian blood left in its bearer.
It crosses oceans and continents and Ages of the World, survives battles and sieges and the falls of Great Cities and Great Kings until all that is left is a Steward upon his throne sending a son to find answers for a dream.
Finally, on the shores of a river, overlooked by statues of the Kings of Old, the horn is blown for the last time.
It is blown to summon aid, to draw attention, to allow those it’s bearer would protect the chance to escape.
It takes three arrows to take down the horn’s bearer, and the Falls of Rauros to finally grant the horn rest.
The Horn of Aredhel Maeglin Earendil Elros Numenor Gondor is no more.
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velvet4510 · 2 months
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I must say that the fact that Elrond and Elros both turned out so well says a lot about Maglor. He took them from their parents when they were very young. He raised them. He essentially shaped them into the great people that they grew up to be. Which is astounding to me. How did he possibly gain their trust to the point of love growing between them, after they watched him kill their people and drive their mother into the sea? How did they ever go from Point A to Point B? Somehow they did, and neither Elrond nor Elros repeated any of the great mistakes Maglor made in his life. They turned out alright. Which brings such complexity to Maglor. He did horrible and unforgivable things, but the boys he raised became true heroes in every sense of the word.
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overlord-of-fantasy · 2 months
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Mr. Snuffles plotts a murder
Maedhros: Come on, you need to go to bed. Elros, holding his stuffed bunny: Mr. Snuffles says that I can stay up as long as I want. And that you need to die! Maedhros: … Maglor, in the background: What the hell, Mr. Snuffles—
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