Dates A remnant of the great western forest of Middle-earth, which was otherwise largely destroyed by the Númenóreans during the Second Age Location The eastern slopes of the southern Misty Mountains, to the north of Rohan Race Ents Settlements Wellinghall and other Ent-houses Sources The rivers Limlaith and Onodló both flowed out of this forest Meaning A reference to the forest as the outlying eastern survivor of the great forests of earlier Ages Other names Aldalómë, Ambaróna, Entwood, Fangorn Forest, Fangorn's Wood, Forest of Fangorn, Tauremorna, Tauremornalómë Indexes: Alphabetical: E Forests About this entry: Updated 10 September 2022 This entry is complete An old name for Fangorn Forest Years of the TreesFirst AgeISecond AgeIIThird AgeIIIFourth AgeIV Fangorn Forest, the East End of the great forests of the Second Age (somewhat conjectural) Fangorn Forest, the East End of the great forests of the Second Age (somewhat conjectural) "Aye, aye, there was all one wood once upon a time: from here to the Mountains of Lune, and this was just the East End." Words of TreebeardThe Two Towers III 4_Treebeard_ Until the later Second Age, most of the lands of Eriador had been thickly forested. In those days the woods stretched from Ered Luin (the Blue Mountains, or Mountains of Lune), running southwards and eastwards across the lands where the Shire would one day lie, to meet the Misty Mountains in the east. One outlying patch of forest even succeeded in growing beyond the barrier of the Misty Mountains, a region that would eventually become known as Fangorn Forest. During the latter half of the Second Age, most of the great western forest was felled, but while the trees still stood Fangorn had been merely an easterly outgrowth of that vast wood, and so Treebeard remembered it simply as the East End. See also... Ambaróna, Fangorn Forest, Misty Mountains Indexes: Alphabetical: E Forests About this entry: Updated 10 September 2022 This entry is complete For acknowledgements and references, see the Disclaimer & Bibliography page. Original content © copyright Mark Fisher 2009, 2020, 2022. All rights reserved. For conditions of reuse, see the Site FAQ. Website services kindly sponsored by Discus from Axiom Software Ltd.Become a DISC expert with DISC The Complete Introduction, including extensive reference resources. |