Dates Made during the Years of the Trees; at least two1 survived into the Fourth Age Locations Amon Sûl, Annúminas, Elostirion, Minas Anor (later Minas Tirith), Minas Ithil (later Minas Morgul), Orthanc, Osgiliath, Origins Made by Fëanor Other names Palantíri, Seeing-stones, Seven Seeing Stones, Seven Stones Indexes: Alphabetical: S Items About this entry: Updated 17 August 2017 Updates planned: 1 A name for the palantíri Years of the TreesFirst AgeISecond AgeIIThird AgeIIIFourth AgeIV The original locations of the seven Stones of Seeing in Middle-earth. The original locations of the seven Stones of Seeing in Middle-earth. A name of the palantíri, the seven stones brought out of the destruction of Númenor by Elendil and his sons. For a complete list of the seven Stones of Seeing, see the entry for Palantíri. Notes 1 The two Stones that survived into the Fourth Age in Middle-earth were the Orthanc-stone and the Anor-stone. The Elendil Stone of the Tower Hills was also intact at the end of the Third Age, but it was carried away from Middle-earth on the White Ship. The fate of the Ithil-stone is not absolutely certain: it was in Barad-dûr when the Dark Tower fell, and so was probably destroyed, but the palantíri were made from an incredibly resilient material, and so it might just possibly have survived. See also... Beacons of Gondor, Citadel of the Stars, Elendil, Elendil Stone, Elf-towers, Elostirion, Eye of Mordor, Fornost Erain, Master Stone, Palantíri, Rhymes of Lore, River Anduin, Seeing-stones, Seeing-stones of Númenor, Seven Seeing Stones, [See the full list...]Seven Stones, Stone of Amon Sûl, Stone of Annúminas, Stone of Anor, Stone of Minas Tirith, Stone of Orthanc, Stone of Osgiliath, Stones of Arnor, Stones of Gondor, Tower Hills, Tower of the Dome of Osgiliath, Towers of Gondor Indexes: Alphabetical: S Items About this entry: Updated 17 August 2017 Updates planned: 1 For acknowledgements and references, see the Disclaimer & Bibliography page. Original content © copyright Mark Fisher 1998, 2001, 2014, 2017. All rights reserved. For conditions of reuse, see the Site FAQ. Website services kindly sponsored by Discus from Axiom Software Ltd.The powerful, accurate, cost-effective DISC personality test developed and improved for 30 years. |