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Old 05-22-2006, 09:00 AM   #1
Celuien
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Celuien has just left Hobbiton.
Of the Origins of Hobbits

The earliest origins of the Hobbits are shrouded in mystery, their tales lost in the mists of time. Though it is spoken that Hobbits are a branch of the race of Men, few know from whence they came in their beginnings long ago. But now, new discoveries have been made by the historians Nilpaurion Felagund and Celuien that have shed new light on the origin and development of the Hobbits.

For it is now known that in addition to the usually cited Harfoots, Stoors and Fallohides, there was another branch on the Hobbit genealogical tree – a Hobbit group known as the Hobrogs. This little known division of Hobbit kind has been found to be the ultimate stage of the Hobbit lifecycle (egg/Hobbit -> Hobbit (in which form the Hobbit can remain indefinitely – even permanently) -> Hobrog -> egg or Hobbit) in which the Hobbit becomes an amphibious being. Thus, their name is translated from a word in the Hobbit language denoting Hobbit and Frog. Hobrogs may also change form, sometimes appearing as an almost entirely typical Hobbit, save for webbed feet, and sometimes as a curly haired frog, though this metamorphosis takes considerable time and energy to achieve. One point is clear, however. In any shape, the Hobrogs were always amphibious.

Hobrogs were known as beings of great power. But unfortunately, this stage (thought to be brought about by contact with rivers or other natural bodies of water), came to be feared by the Hobbits, and they sought to ignore and evade their destinies. Thus, they avoided water and the ancient legends of the Hobrogs passed out of knowledge. Until now. It is our goal to uncover the true history of the Hobrogs and undo the injustice that has led to their being forgotten by history.

Of the origins of Hobrogs:

This fragment of the Quenta Silmarillion, omitted from translations by Bilbo Baggins, sheds light on the origin of Hobbits and Hobrogs:
Quote:
And Melkor came into the waters and turned them to a dark and festering slime. Then Ulmo’s heart was troubled; for he loved the seas and rivers above all else in Arda, and he foresaw with the wisdom of the Valar that in time Men should come to fear the waters, though they were fair and filled with life, and he sought the counsel of Manwë.

And Manwë went to his seat on high Taniquetil, and long he pondered Ulmo’s trouble until lo! The Music of the Ainulindalë echoed again in his thought, and a vision of the Children of Iluvatar came to him. And he spoke to Ulmo of his vision.

“Fear not! For not the least of the troubles of Arda have gone unplanned for by Eru Iluvatar. Your love of the waters was known in the making of the Music, and has not been unheeded. There will come, in good measure, a branch of the younger Children, and they will take to the waters, and love them, and guard them from evil while their time lasts.”

And so when the Children awakened in the East of Middle-earth, the Hobrogs were among them, and as was foretold, their eyes fell first upon the waters, and they loved them. And they followed the waters to the West of Middle-earth, seeking the echo of the Music yet placed by Ulmo in advance of their coming. And so it came to pass that the Hobrogs, first of all the Mortal Children of Iluvatar, came into Beleriand, and there they met Ulmo, Vala of the Waters, and hearkened unto his words, and as they journeyed to and from the East, first brought word of the Valar to Men.
The Hobrogs were truly noble beings. In the First Age, they came into Doriath, where they aided in the defense against the Spiders of Nan Dungortheb. The Hobrogs were terrifyingly powerful hunters, said to have great ability in battles against large arachnids, which they easily (and literally) ate for breakfast, second breakfast, elevensies, and so forth. Indeed, they were so feared by Morgoth that he named his chief servants, the Balrogs, in mockery of the Hobrogs (though his reasoning was faulty, as the names are not connected linguistically). In the Second Age, they fought in the Last Alliance. They were grieved by the corruption of the Dead Marshes, though little is known at this point about their settlements in that region. And in the Third Age, though they were mostly in hiding and forgotten at this point in history, they played an important role. Hobrog settlements near Laketown allowed the transport of barrels from Mirkwood. And Hobrogs were entrenched in underwater Smials along the Brandywine, where they held great friendship with the Brandybucks (from whom they were largely derived). Other smaller settlements existed at the Grey Havens and along the Anduin into Ithilien, though less in known about their role in those locales.

And finally, two of the most famous Hobbits of the Third Age may actually have acheived Hobrog status at the time of their greatest fame. Note the following description of Gollum:
Quote:
Originally Posted by The Two Towers
Suddenly, with startling agility and speed, straight off the ground with a jump like a grasshoppen or frog, Gollum bounded forward into the darkness.
Note too, this passage from the diary of an Orc in Cirith Ungol, discovered and translated by Nilpaurion Felagund:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Anonymous Orcish Diary
Giant frog helps small tark in Torech Ungol. Licks chops. Shelob is now frog lunch.
This is clearly a reference to Sam's defense of Frodo. And so there is no other possible conclusion: Samwise Gamgee was a Hobrog who appeared in Frog shape to save Frodo during the encounter with Shelob!

The Hobrog contribution to Third Age life did not stop there. Hobrogs also kept the insect population near the Shire under control, greatly aiding Hobbit agriculture. They rescued drowning Hobbits who entered the water before being able to transform. And they generally helped keep Hobbit society running smoothly, though they usuallyacted from a distance as, unfortunately, the Hobbits grew distant from their origins and they forgot the nobility of the Hobrog stage of development.

That concludes our current research, though I can say that there is a developing chapter on the implications Hobrogs have for the Balrog wing debate to be fully presented at a later date.

Does anyone else have Hobrog discoveries to share?
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