Why make an object to contain power of any sort?
If one person does not have power or wants present
power
increased, he/she can add on to his strength with the object. If he
wants to hide his power to appear less
dangerous,
he can place it elsewhere to re-attain later. For instance, Sauron
placed
much of his power in the One Ring. Also, a person who carries such
power
could pass the strength on to another who can put it to better use, as
Cirdan
gave the ring of fire to Gandalf as he would have greater need of it.
Also,
some people just enjoy making amazing, beautiful things, perhaps
attuned
to the singing of Aule.
Why put power into rings as opposed to other objects?
If he does not want the power to be lost at his
death
or given to one he considers unworthy, he can hand it over to a person
of
his choosing. Bilbo passed the One Ring on to his adopted heir, Frodo.
Speculation: Rings are small, beautiful, may
appear
to be an ordinary item of clothing, are easy to show off or to hide,
and
are easy to pass on to someone else physically and secretly. A staff is
obvious
so that some doorward like Hama may ask for it to be left at the gate
unless
talked into letting the person keep it.
Who made the Rings of Power?
In Eregion, which human men called Hollin, lived
Noldor
elves, craftsmen of the Gwaith-i-Mirdain, the People of the
Jewel-smiths. They were unusual among elves in their interest in
crafts, and held a cautious friendship with the dwarves of like mind
who lived not far away in what the
elves called Hadhodrond, and the dwarves first called Khazad-dum and
later
called Moria. Only Feanor, creator of the Silmarils, had ever shown
greater
skill among the Children of Iluvatar. Celebrimbor, son of Curufin, was
greatest
in skill of these Jewel-smiths. Celebrimbor eschewed the evil deeds of
his
father, remaining in Nargothrond when his father and Celegorm were
exiled.
Times seemed peaceful, with Melkor (called Morgoth
by
Feanor after the proof of his evil) overthrown some years back, and the
Valar
allowing the people to live their own lives. The Children of Iluvatar
felt
safe. The elves who stayed behind in their beloved Middle-earth did,
however,
feel uneasy that they had not heeded the call of the Valar as others
had
and gone on to Valinor.
However, Melkor left Sauron with his mind still
bound
by evil words and having done evil deeds. Sauron felt that the Valar
had
forgotten Middle-earth, and that his offer to repent had been stopped
by
the fear of humiliation if he had to face the judgement of Manwe as
Eonwe
had suggested. So he used his ability to assume a fair, noble, wise
form,
his knowledge of people's desires, his remembrance of his time as a
Maiar
working with Aule in Valinor, and his fair words to sway others into
letting
his will be theirs. He stayed away from Lindon, where Elrond and
Gil-galad
doubted him, still leaving him much room to work. He took on another
name,
Annatar, the Lord of Gifts.
Annatar motivated the Jewel-smiths into making the
rings
of power, saying that together they could make the dark, desolate land
fair
as Eressea or even Valinor, and to raise the scattered, less-civilized
elves
up along with them to the greatness of power and knowlege of those in
Valinor.
The Jewel-smiths gladly learned to improve their skill and subtlety and
yet
also gain some or even much of the bliss they feared they had lost by
not
entering Valinor. Annatar's great knowledge did indeed improve their
abilities,
even as he had said, and their works improved vastly, until they took
thought
and made Rings of Power. Annatar/Sauron knew all of this and guided
them,
planning to bond the elves to him and to be able to always see what
they
did.
The elves made many rings at this time, having
magical abilities. The power was very great, the three greatest being
made by Celebrimbor, the best of the Jewel-smiths. Therefore, when
Annatar created a One Ring to bind all of the other rings to it
and thus to him, it had to have immense
power. The only way to do this was to pass much of his own strength and
will
into the One Ring, the Ruling Ring, the Great Ring. This act took much
daring.
While wearing it, he was aware of all that was done with the other
rings.
He could even see and govern the thoughts of those wearing those rings.
The
One Ring, having so much of Sauron in it, would try to return to him so
that
they could both be whole.
What happened to the Rings of Power?
But as soon as Annatar placed the One Ring on his
finger,
the elves became aware of him and his designs. They took off their
rings,
and he considered himself betrayed. In fury, he started an open war
demanding
all the rings for himself, since the elves could not have made them
without
his teaching. The elves fled, saving the three greatest of the
Elven-rings
(Narya, Nenya, and Vilya) and hiding them with
the Wise.
Sauron wanted these rings the most, as they warded off the decay of
time
on the user and the land. In the war, Eregion was destroyed,
Celebrimbor
slain, and Moria's doors shut.
The Wise never used the rings openly as long as
Sauron
wore the Ruling Ring, so the Rings were never defiled by Sauron who
never
touched them, so he did not win the object of his war. At this time,
Elrond
Half-elven, one of the Wise, founded Imladris, also called Rivendell
and
the Last Homely House, his Ring safe-guarding the place.
Unfortunately, Sauron collected all the other Rings
of
Power, giving them out as he saw fit. He gave the Seven to the Dwarves,
and
the Nine to Men. He perverted the rings so that they betrayed their
users
in the end.
Sauron's giving of the Seven Rings may have
been
allied to the idea of the Seven Fathers of the Dwarves, the original
seven
created by Aule whom Eru endued with life, who started the Seven
Houses.
But the Dwarves proved hard to dominate, and they could not be turned
to
shadows. They used their rings only to gain wealth, but this caused
greed
for gold and wrath to rise up in them, creating terrible mischief. The
Seven
Hoards of the Dwarves were apparently created with the Rings, the
hoards
eventually falling to the ownership of dragons. Some of the rings were
destroyed
by fire, the others eventually regained by Sauron.
The Men who used their gifts of the Nine Rings
became
mighty warriors, sorcerers, or kings. They could be invisible to normal
men,
yet see things of other worlds. Their lives lengthened tremendously,
but
those lives became unendurable, their bodies becaming ghost-like
wraiths in
the realm of shadows, slowed in the transformation if their original
intentions
had been good and their strength high. They were called the Ulairi, and
named
by Sauron the Nazgul, the Ringwraiths. They were the most fearsome of
Sauron's
servants, able to send out a sickening darkness some called the Black
Breath,
and their voices could cause numbing fear.
Sauron became a king and god to the men outside of
the
elf-lands of Lindon and the Grey Havens, ruling by force and fear,
although
still able to put on a mask of wisdom and fairness. In those elf-lands
he
was called the Dark Lord, the Enemy, and many fled through the Havens
on
to Valinor. But Gil-galad and Elrond remained, keeping up the places
Sauron
could not yet overcome. The men of Numenor then rose up, and Sauron
went
on to become a hostage in their land, his wiles overcoming his captors,
making
them fear death and causing terrible consequences even he could not
foresee,
in a short-lived war of part of the Numenoreans against the Valar. He
had
not expected his own death in all this, and his spirit fled back to
Middle-earth.
There he eventually built a new form, no longer able
to
make one that appeared fair. Once again he took up the Great Ring. Few
of
Elves or Men could endure his Eye's malice. Once again he built up
power,
warring on the Elves and the survivors of the Numenoreans faithful to
the
Valar, the men of Westernesse. Many other Numenoreans he took to
himself
as servants, the Haradrim. After Minas Ithil fell to Sauron and
Osgiliath
held and threw back his forces, the Last Alliance was created by
Gil-Galad
and Elendil against Sauron. After a terrible war, ending with Sauron in
a
hand-to-hand fight against Gil-Galad and Elendil leading to the deaths
of
all three, Isildur, Elendil's son, cut off the One Ring from
Sauron's
hand. He refused to hand it over to Elrond and Cirdan (Ring-bearers
both)
standing nearby who wished it destroyed. Instead he kept it as
were-guild
(a payment by a murderer to the family of the victim) for his father
Elendil
and brother Anarion, and as an "heirloom" of his house. For the first
time,
Sauron no longer had control of the One Ring. Much of his will and
strength
continued to survive in this metal band, so that he was not himself
destroyed.
His spirit hid in waste places for long years before he again took
shape.
On his way back to Eriador in the Misty Mountains,
orcs
attacked Isildur's party in his unguarded camp, for he believed all his
foes
overthrown. Most of his people, and three of his sons were killed in
the
attack. Fortunately for his line, his wife and youngest son, Valandil,
were
in Imladris where he had left them when he went to war. Three of his
people
escaped, including Ohtar, his esquire who carried Elendil's sword which
had
broken, which eventually went to Isildur's heir, Valandil. Isildur
himself
escaped the attack by putting on the One Ring and becoming invisible.
The
orcs, however, tracked him by scent. He tried to escape by swimming the
river,
where they could not smell him, but the Ring betrayed him and avenged
its
maker by slipping from his finger. The orcs killed Isildur.
The One Ring now had no finger and no mind to
influence to help it return to Sauron, sitting in the Anduin river. And
Sauron had no
finger to place it upon.
The Ringwraiths with the Nine Rings returned to
Minas
Ithil, and a plague came on the winds from the east killing the
King
of Gondor, his children, and many of the people. Minas Ithil was
renamed
Minas Morgul, warring with Minas Anor, renamed Minas Tirith. Deserted
Osgiliath
became a place of ghosts. The Stewards took up the defense against the
forces
of the East, aided openly by the Rohirrim and in secret by ancient
powers
to the north which could not be beaten until Sauron himself should come
again.
Meanwhile, the Three Elven-rings worked. Elrond
kept the Ring of Sapphire, Ring of Air, Vilya, strengthening
Imladris/Rivendell where the line of the High Kings was fostered and
trained, and elf-life continued
as before. Gil-Galad may have worn it first, then given it to
Elrond.
The Noldor Lady Galadriel, fairest and mightiest of the Elves
still
in Middle-earth, kept the Ring of Adamant, Ring of Water, Nenya
, in Lothlorien, where she was married to Celeborn of Doriath of the
Woodland
Elves, also protecting the land. The Red Ring of Fire, Narya,
Narya
the Great was held at this time by Cirdan the Shipwright of the
Grey
Havens.
Sauron rose again in what had been Greenwood the
Great
under the Elven-king Thranduil, known to Bilbo. Under Sauron, the
forest
became known as Mirkwood, from the shadow of Sauron. Thranduil and his
people
held off the shadow where they could, not knowing the true nature of
the
Sorceror of Dol Guldur.
As his shadow rose, the Istari appeared in the west
of
Middle-earth. Cirdan knew they had come from Valinor, and told only
Elrond
and Galadriel of this, although later it was told among the Elves that
they
were messengers from the Valar to contest Sauron by moving the Children
of
Iluvatar and all living things of good will to do great deeds. Cirdan
passed
on the Ring of Fire to Gandalf, so secretly that only Elrond,
Galadriel,
and Cirdan knew of it. The Red Ring of Fire rekindled hearts. Gandalf
refused
to have any ties or allegience except to the Valar who had sent him, so
he
refused to lead the White Council./Council of the Wise, the leadership
of
which went instead to Saruman who soon began to study the Rings.
Gandalf looked in on the shadow in Mirkwood, and
discovered
it was not a Ringwraith, but Sauron himself, and that he was gathering
the
Rings, hunting the One, and looking for the heir(s) of Isildur who
might
have the One Ring. The One was believed lost in the Anduin and then on
out
to the Sea.
But actually, hobbits took control of the One Ring,
the
hobbits being a race overlooked but of such strong constitution that
they
could not easily be turned into wraiths. The first to find the One Ring
was
a hobbit of the Stoor house, named Deagol, while out fishing.
He saw
the gleam in the mud under the water and decided to keep it. But his
brother
Smeagol saw the ring, and required it of him for his birthday present,
but
Deagol refused. Smeagol killed his brother for the bright and beautiful
gold.
When he returned to his family, the One Ring gave him power according
to
his stature, so that he could sneak invisibly and learn secrets of
others
for blackmail, until he was exiled from his people. They nicknamed him
Gollum, for a self-pitying noise he made in his throat. He had
always
been interested in the roots of things and went to check out what those
of
the Misty Mountains were like. But he found no roots and was bottled in
the
caverns by orcs. His life was stretched by the Ring, as it waited its
chance
to return to Sauron.
The Ring could not go to a greedy orc and hope to go
towards
its Master, but when new creatures entered the caves, mostly dwarves,
it
dropped from Smeagol's finger in order to find a new carrier. But the
power
of the Valar caused the scheme to go awry, so that another hobbit of a
good
nature, named Bilbo Baggins, picked it up instead. He carried
it eventually
to one of the most protected regions in Middle-earth, called the Shire.
It
was far from Mordor, protected by Rangers who were men of Westernesse,
and
a study place of Gandalf's. The Istari, Gandalf, eventually learned
what
his friend, Bilbo, really had, and determined that events should cause
the
Ring to be unmade in the place where Sauron had originally made it.
By that time, Bilbo's life had been stretched
unnaturally long so that he was not strong enough for such an arduous
adventure. Instead, his orphaned nephew and adopted heir, Frodo
Baggins, greatest of the hobbits in his nature, became the hope of all
Middle-earth. He alone was capable of
bearing it for a very great length of time without being taken over by
it,
a feat not even the Istari could do. The other beings of power, save
one,
could not keep from using it. That one, Tom Bombadil, did not have
power
outside his own lands, although within them the ring had no power over
him,
and if he had kept the Ring, he would have been careless with it, and
if
he still had it, Sauron would have eventually bent and twisted him as
he
did the trees and land. Only a hobbit could do the deed required.
Frodo had the indispensable help of SamWise
Gamgee
, who had the love, loyalty, and responsibility needed to bear the Ring
during Frodo's capture, return it in an uprecedented action,
and to help Frodo
survive the journey. Also, Frodo unwittingly caused the Ring to destroy
itself
when the time came.
For it was the Ring that destroyed itself in the
end,
due to the oath of one hobbit to another. To Frodo, Gollum swore by the
One Ring, which he called "The
Precious", that he would never let Sauron have the Ring, and he would
serve the Master of the Ring. Frodo warned him that the Ring was
treacherous and would twist his words.
Frodo stated to Gollum that the Ring could make him leap from a cliff
or jump into fire if he broke his oath by harming the Master of the
Ring, the one on whose finger it was. At the Crack of Doom, Frodo
claimed the Ring as its Master, putting it on his finger. Gollum bit
off Frodo's finger with the Ring still on it, harming Frodo. As Gollum
danced in joy, the Ring did its pre-set duty against the one who harmed
the one whose finger it was on, forcing both the actions Frodo had
spoken of, leaping from the cliff and into fire. The Ring did not seem
to understand that the finger it was on was not attached to Frodo, and
would not have expected to be destroyed. Gollum, with Frodo's
bitten-off finger in hand, fell into the Crack of Doom, destroying the
Ring, Sauron, and the
works of Sauron in which the Ring and its controlled Rings had been
involved.