The Paths of the Dead was a haunted pass through the White Mountains. The paths started at the Dark Door at the end of the long valley of Harrowdale. The Door lay beyond the grassy encampment of Firienfeld, the clifftop refuge of Dunharrow, and the haunted forest of Dimholt, wedged between the mountains Írensaga, Starkhorn, and Dwimorberg. The Paths led to the home of the Dead Men of Dunharrow.
After the Dark Door, the pass went under the Dwimorberg, past another door where Aragorn and the Grey Company would find the remains of of Baldor, son of the second King of Rohan, Brego. The pass then continued past forgotten cities, emerging at the southern end of the White Mountains in Morthond vale, near the Stone of Erech.
History[]
In the Second Age, a people related to the Dunlendings lived in the White Mountains, and had for a time served the Dark Lord Sauron. They later swore allegiance to Isildur of Gondor, but betrayed him during the War of the Last Alliance and refused to fight on either side. For this reason, Isildur cursed them, proclaiming that, if the Alliance triumphed, they would linger in the mountains until one of his heirs called them again to fight against Sauron.
Isildur's curse succeeded: their people dwindled and eventually died out, until only their ghosts remained at the end of the Third Age. In the early days of Rohan, Brego and his son Baldor rode up to the paths and made to enter. At that point a man so withered they had mistaken him for stone spoke: "The way is shut, his voice said again. It was made by those who are Dead, and the Dead keep it, until the time comes. The way is shut." Baldor asked when that time would be, but at that moment the man fell on his face and died. Later, at the feast celebrating the completion of Meduseld, Baldor rashly vowed to walk the Paths of the Dead. He never returned.
When Aragorn and company took the Paths of the Dead and, deep within the mountains, summoned them to the Stone of Erech, their shades followed him. At the Stone at midnight, Aragorn unfurled his banner, declared himself the Heir of Isildur, and commanded the dead to aid him.[1] In this they obeyed, and defeated the Corsairs of Umbar who were invading southern Gondor. (Supposedly, the only weapon that they required was fear, driving their enemies to cast themselves madly into the sea.) When those foes were defeated and Aragorn could claim the black ships of the Corsairs for his own, he declared that the curse was lifted, and the dead departed forever.[2]
In adaptations[]
Peter Jackson's The Return of the King[]
In the theatrical release of Peter Jackson's film The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King, the battle with the Corsairs occurs off-screen and the Army of the Dead accompanies Aragorn to Minas Tirith to defeat Sauron's Orcs, after which Aragorn declares their curse lifted.
The Paths are depicted with an unnatural mist, mass crypts, and piles of skulls. As Aragorn and company travels through, Legolas senses the Dead closing in behind them. When entering a vast clearing in front of a necropolis, the Army of the Dead appears and surrounds them until Aragorn threatens them with a reforged Narsil, holding them to their oaths. The Dead refused at first, but later reappeared by the Anduin river and agreed to fight for Aragorn. The Stone of Erech is not featured.
Peter Jackson used the same location for his movie Braindead in 1992.
Translations[]
Foreign Language | Translated name |
Afrikaans | Paaie van die Dooie |
Albanian | Shtigjet e të Vdekurit |
Amharic | ሙታንን ዱካዎች |
Arabic | مسارات للموتى |
Armenian | Պատհս ոֆ տհե Դեադ |
Basque | Hildakoen Bidezidorrak |
Belarusian Cyrillic | Сцежкамі Мёртвых |
Bengali | ডেড এর পাথ |
Bosnian | Staze Mrtvih |
Bulgarian Cyrillic | Пътища на мъртвите |
Catalan | Camins dels Morts |
Cebuano | mga alagianan sa mga Patay |
Chichewa | Njira kwa akufa |
Chinese (Hong Kong) | 亡者之路 |
Corsican | Spassighjate di i Mortu |
Croatian | Staze Mrtvih |
Czech | Stezky mrtvých |
Danish | De Dødes Stier |
Dutch | Paden van de Doden |
Esperanto | Vojoj de la Mortintoj |
Estonian | Surnudе rajad |
Filipino | Landas ng mga Patay |
Finnish | Kuolleiden kulkutiet |
French | Chemin des Morts |
Frisian | Paden fan 'e Deaden |
Galician | Sendas dos Mortos |
German | Pfade der Toten |
Greek | Μονοπάτια των νεκρών |
Gujarati | ડેડ ઓફ પાથ |
Haitian Creole | Chemins moun mouri |
Hawaiian | Ala o ka poe make |
Hebrew | נתיבי המתים |
Hindi | मृतकों के रास्तों |
Hungarian | Holtak ösvénye |
Icelandic | Slóðir Dauðra |
Indonesian | Jalan kematian |
Irish Gaelic | Cosáin na Marbh |
Italian | Sentieri dei Morti |
Japanese | 死者の道 |
Javanese | Dalan saka ing antarane wong mati ? |
Kannada | ಸತ್ತವರ ಮಾರ್ಗಗಳು |
Kazakh | Өлі жолдар (Cyrillic) Öli joldar (Latin) |
Korean | 죽음의 경로 |
Kurdish | Riyên ji nav Miriyan (Kurmanji) |
Kyrgyz Cyrillic | Өлгөндөрдүн жолдору |
Laotian | ເສັ້ນທາງຂອງການຕາຍ |
Latvian | Mirušo takas |
Lithuanian | Keliai Mirusiųjų |
Luxembourgish | Bunne vun de Verstuerwen |
Macedonian Cyrillic | патеки на мртвите |
Malagasy | Lalan'ny ny Maty |
Malaysian | Jalan-jalan mati ? |
Malayalam | മരിച്ചവരുടെ പാതകളെ |
Maltese | Mogħdijiet tal-mejjet |
Marathi | मृत मार्ग |
Mongolian Cyrillic | Сөнөсөн замаар ? |
Nepalese | मृतकहरूको बाटो |
Norwegian | De Dødes Stier |
Persian | راههای مردگان |
Polish | Ścieżka Umarłych |
Portuguese | Sendas dos Mortos |
Punjabi | ਮਰੇ ਦੇ ਮਾਰਗ |
Romanian | Cărările Morții |
Russian | Тропы мертвых |
Serbian | Стазе мртвих (Cyrillic) Prolazu mrtvih (Latin) |
Sesotho | Bafu tsa Litsela |
Scottish Gaelic | Frith-rathaidean nam Marbh |
Shona | Makwara Vakafa |
Sindhi | مردار جا رستا |
Sinhalese | මළවුන්ගේ පථ |
Slovak | Cesty mŕtvych |
Slovenian | Poti od Mrtvih |
Somalian | Waddooyinka Dhimatay |
Swahili | Mapito ya Wafu |
Swedish | Dödens stig |
Tajik Cyrillic | мурдагон Роҳчаҳо |
Tamil | டெட் பாதைகள் |
Telugu | డెడ్ యొక్క మార్గాలు |
Thai | เส้นทางแห่งความตาย |
Turkish | Ölülerin Yolları |
Ukrainian Cyrillic | шляху мертвих |
Uzbek | Марҳумлар йўллари (Cyrillic) Marhumlar yo'llari (Latin) |
Vietnamese | Con đường của người chết |
Welsh | Llwybrau y Meirw |
Yiddish | פּאַטס פון די טויט |
Yoruba | Awọn ọna ti awọn okú |
References[]
- ↑ The Lord of the Rings, The Return of the King, Book Five, Ch. II: "The Passing of the Grey Company"
- ↑ The Lord of the Rings, The Return of the King, Book Five, Ch. IX: "The Last Debate"