Why was Gandalf afraid when he saw Grond at Minas Tirith? During the battle after he sends Pippin back up to the Citadel, three lard rams and trolls push the battering ram known as Grond toward the gate of Minas Tirith and Orcs are shouting Grond, there i
Grond? : r lotrmemes - Reddit Grond, the battering ram? Oh yes, Grond, also fondly known as "Mister Bashy Stick" among his closest friends, is more than just an oversized log with wolfish good looks Sure, the tales might tell you that Grond was used by those meanie Orcs to break down the gates of Minas Tirith
Who is Grond? : r lotr - Reddit Grond was the hammer of the Dark Lord Morgoth, in the First Age ”Grond, hammer of the Underworld” After Morgoth downfall, Sauron became the second Dark Lord and at some point created (or delegated Angmar to create) a great enchanted battering ram that was used in the siege of Minas Tirith, and named the battering ram after his masters famous weapon of war
GROND! GROND! GROND! : r lotrmemes - Reddit "Grond, also known as the Wolf's Head, was a one hundred-foot long battering ram with a head in the shape of a ravening wolf Though named for Morgoth's warhammer it was created in the likeness of the Wolf of Angband, Carcharoth "
Does the Grond battering ram have magical properties? Why is . . . - Reddit The Grond battering ram was just a way of terrifying the gondorian troops defending Mina’s tirith via psychological warfare, and the reference of the name to people who knew about it (no one there was basically old enough, I bet Gandalf got the reference)
the lord of the rings - Where was Grond made? Barad-dûr? Orodruin . . . Grond was forged in Mordor by Smithies of Barad-dûr during the final years of the Third Age, specifically for use by the army besieging the city of Minas Tirith in Gondor It shared its name, in homage, with the "Hammer of the Underworld," a great mace wielded by Morgoth, Sauron's former master
GROND. GROND. GROND. : r lotr - Reddit 1 7K votes, 83 comments 934K subscribers in the lotr community A place to discuss Lord of the Rings, the Hobbit, and any of Tolkien's work!