Lonely Mountain Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
In J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth legendarium, the Lonely Mountain (Sindarin Erebor) is a mountain in the northeast of Rhovanion. It is also the source of the Celduin river.
The ancestral home of the King under the Mountain, it became a Dwarven stronghold, where the Dwarves became a populous and prosperous people. The Dwarves of that time were skilled with Masonry and stone work, and contracted their work out to surrounding races and peoples. Clearly through this the Dwarves got very rich and amassed a large amount of Gold and treasure. This is what attracted Smaug to the mountain.
Whilst Thorin Oakenshield was one day out hunting, Smaug came from the mountains as a child dragon, and took over the mountain, hoarding all the gold. Thráin II and several companions escaped by (as was later known) a secret door. For many years the dwarves lived in exile in the Ered Luin until by a chance meeting, Gandalf the Grey met Thorin Oakenshield, and they planned to reclaim the mountain.
In The Hobbit, Bilbo and Thorin's company travel to the Lonely Mountain to regain the treasure Smaug had stolen. Set into the side of the mountain was a secret door, five feet high and wide enough for three to walk abreast. Gandalf had managed to obtain the door's key, which would only open it when the setting sun and the last moon of autumn were in the sky together. By a fortunate coincidence, this happened just as Bilbo and the Dwarves arrived.
By more luck than wisdom Smaug was eventually slain — shot out of the sky with a well-targeted arrow to his only weakspot by Bard the Bowman, a man of Esgaroth — and Thorin claimed the mountain. Bard later became king of the area in the shadow of the Lonely Mountain, known as the Dale. However Elves of Mirkwood and Men of Esgaroth claimed a part of the treasure, which Thorin refused to share. This led to the Battle of Five Armies, where Dáin II Ironfoot came to the aid of his cousin Thorin, but Dwarves, Elves, and Men joined ranks together with the Eagles against the Orcss. During the battle, Thorin was mortally injured, and the titles King under the Mountain and King of Durin's Folk passed to Dáin.
Following all the violence and desolation of Smaug, Dáin made the area prosperous again, and Dwarves and Humans reforged their friendship. Dáin was killed during the War of the Ring, and was followed by his son Thorin III Stonehelm.
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