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- Warg - Wikipedia
In Old English, a wearh is an outcast who may be strangled to death Through Tolkien's influence, wargs have featured in fantasy books by authors including George R R Martin, and in media such as video games and role-playing games
- Wargs | The One Wiki to Rule Them All | Fandom
Wargs were a breed of wolves, commonly living in the Misty Mountains, that served Sauron the Dark Lord and his agents in the conflicts of the Third Age Often in league with the nearby Northern Orcs, they were also used as mounts by the Orcs of Isengard and Mordor
- Wargs - Tolkien Gateway
In Old Norse mythology, wargs (vargr, a synonym for "wolf", ulfr) are in particular the wolf Fenrir and his sons Skoll and Hati Tolkien mentioned in a letter that the episode of wargs in The Hobbit was "in part derived from a scene" in S R Crockett 's novel The Black Douglas
- Skinchanger - A Wiki of Ice and Fire
They were wargs as well, as you are, and the greatest of them could wear the skins of any beast that flies or swims or crawls, and could look through the eyes of the weirwoods as well, and see the truth that lies beneath the world
- Folklore Fact – Wargs (or vargs or worgs) – Maegan A. Stebbins . . .
Ultimately, the modern concept of wargs is yet another major fantasy element that Tolkien alone conceptualized into what it is now in broader popular culture Yes, it is certainly based on Norse myth, but Tolkien is the one who gave us our popular concepts of them today
- Wargs: Tolkien’s Monstrous Wolves of Malevolence and Wit
These are wargs: not the stuff of simple animal terror, but a deliberate, almost human menace layered beneath thick pelts and snapping jaws Tolkien gave them form and hunger, but he seeded them deep with older roots, drawing from the darkest corners of Norse and Old English myth
- The Lord of the Rings Wargs, Explained - CBR
Wargs, the canine monsters that Orcs rode into battle, were some of Middle-earth 's most memorable creatures They have appeared prominently in nearly every adaptation of J R R Tolkien's work, including The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit film trilogies as well as The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power
- Warg | Wiki of Westeros | Fandom
The wargs among the wildlings have loosely developed three rules to govern their power: never enter the mind of an animal while it is having sex, never enter the mind of an animal while it is eating human flesh, and never attempt to enter the mind of another human
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