Erebor (@erebor) • Hey
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#greece
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- Prompt : In the style of traditional artist Tim Maxwell or crypto artist Maxwellinked, add even more intricate details to the shadows, using ink on paper with three vanishing points that replicate into seeming infinite space, disorienting the viewer. The space is comprised of hundreds of imperceptibly uneven yet uniform straight lines, offsetting the compositional and architectonic balance. Include dozens of tiny figures with arms raised in the sky as humans as sleeping details, with further enhanced shadows casting towards the highly detailed mega monolithic megastructure.
- Gm Erebor frennn
- is that enough
Lonely Mountain31 languagesArticleTalkReadEditView historyToolsFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia"Erebor" redirects here. For other uses, see Dwarf (Middle-Earth).This article is about the fictional mountain. For the album, see Lonely Mountain (album).Lonely Mountain*Middle-earth* locationArtist's depictionIn-universe informationOther name(s)Erebor; the Kingdom under the MountainTypeisolated mountainRulerKings of Durin's Folk:
[1] T.A. 1999–2210,
[2] 2590–2770,
[3] 2941–Fourth Age;
Smaug: T.A. 2770–2941Locationsthe Chamber of Thrór, Dale, the Front Gate, the Great Hall, the Secret DoorLocationNortheast of MirkwoodFounderThráin I
In J. R. R. Tolkien's legendarium, the **Lonely Mountain** is a mountain northeast of Mirkwood. It is the location of the Dwarves' **Kingdom under the Mountain** and the town of Dale lies in a vale on its southern slopes. In *The Lord of the Rings*, the mountain is called by the Sindarin name **Erebor**.[T 1] The Lonely Mountain is the destination of the protagonists, including the titular Hobbit Bilbo Baggins in *The Hobbit*, and is the scene of the novel's climax.
The mountain is the goal of Bilbo's psychological quest in *The Hobbit*; scholars have noted that it and *The Lord of the Rings* are both structured as quests to a distant mountain, but that the quests have very different motivations. Further, the mountain is a symbol of adventure in *The Hobbit*, and of Bilbo's maturation as an individual, while to the Dwarves, it stands for the gain of beauty in return for loss of life.
Fictional mountain[edit]Further information: Tolkien's maps
Erebor stands hundreds of miles from the nearest mountain range. Tolkien's rendering of Thrór's map in *The Hobbit* shows it with six ridges stretching out from a central peak that was snowcapped well into spring. The whole mountain is some ten miles in diameter; it contains an immense wealth of gold and jewels.[T 2]
Origins[edit]
Erebor becomes the home of the Folk of Durin, a clan of Dwarves known as the Longbeards, after they are driven from their ancestral home of Khazad-dûm. In the latter days of the Third Age, this Kingdom under the Mountain holds one of the largest dwarvish treasure hoards in Middle-earth.[T 3] Dale, a town of Men built between the two southern spurs of Erebor, grew in harmony with the dwarves.[1] The Kingdom under the Mountain is founded by Thráin I the Old, who had discovered the Arkenstone there. His son, Thorin I, leaves the mountain with much of the Folk of Durin to live in the Ered Mithrin (Grey Mountains) on account of the great riches to be found in that range. After dragons plunder their hoards, the Longbeards, led now by Thrór, a descendant of Thorin, return to Erebor to take up the title King under the Mountain. Under Thrór's reign, Erebor becomes a great stronghold where the dwarves are numerous and prosperous.[T 3][2]
Erebor in *The Hobbit*[edit]Sketch map of Northeast Mirkwood, showing the Elvenking's Halls, the Lonely Mountain of Erebor, and Esgaroth upon the Long LakeFurther information: The Quest of Erebor
In the Third Age, while the young Thorin II Oakenshield is out hunting, the dragon Smaug flies south from the Grey Mountains, kills all the dwarves he could find, and destroys the town of Dale. Smaug takes over the mountain, using the dwarves' hoard as a bed. King Thrór, his son Thráin II, and several companions escape death by a secret door. While Thrór and Thráin later perish, Thorin lives in exile in the Ered Luin, far to the west. On a journey, he meets the wizard Gandalf. Together they form a plan to reclaim the mountain. Gandalf insists that burglary is the best approach and recommends the hobbit Bilbo Baggins.[2]
Bilbo, Thorin, and Thorin's company of twelve other Dwarves travel to the Lonely Mountain to regain the treasure. They plan to use the secret door, whose key and map Gandalf had obtained from Thráin, whom he had found at the point of death in the pits of Dol Guldur.[2][T 2] On Durin's Day, when the setting sun and the last moon of autumn are in the sky together, the day's last sunlight falls on the door and exposes its keyhole. The Hobbit enters the mountain and steals a golden cup.[2][T 4][T 5]
Smaug, enraged by the theft, emerges from the mountain and flies south to destroy Lake-town, which he suspects is the source of the "thieves". During this attack Smaug is killed by Bard the Bowman; Thorin claims the mountain on learning of Smaug's demise.[T 6] However, the Men of Esgaroth, supported by Thranduil and the Elves of Mirkwood, march in force to the mountain to demand a part of the dragon's hoard as recompense for the destruction. Thorin, mad with greed, refuses all claims and sends word to his second cousin Dáin II Ironfoot, chief of the Dwarves of the Iron Hills, who bring reinforcements. Before battle can begin, an army of Orcs and Wargs descends on Erebor. Dwarves, Elves, and Men join ranks against them, leading to the Battle of Five Armies. Thorin's nephews Fíli and Kíli are killed, and Thorin is mortally injured;[T 7] he dies shortly afterwards. The title of King under the Mountain passes to Dáin.[T 8]
Erebor in *The Lord of the Rings*[edit]
With the restoration of the Kingdom under the Mountain, the area becomes prosperous again. Dale is rebuilt under Bard's leadership, and Dwarves and Men reforge their friendship. Some of the Dwarves, led by Balin, leave Erebor to reclaim the ancient Dwarvish Kingdom of Moria.[T 9] They established a colony there but five years later Balin is killed by an Orc, and soon afterwards Moria is overrun by Orcs and the rest of the Dwarves are killed.[T 3] Gimli, a dwarf of Erebor and the son of Glóin, one of Thorin's twelve companions, is chosen to represent his people in the Fellowship of the Ring; he helps Aragorn regain the throne of Gondor.[T 10]
In the War of the Ring, an emissary from Sauron, the lord of Mordor, twice comes to Erebor and speaks to Dáin. The messenger asks for assistance in finding Bilbo Baggins and retrieving a stolen ring, and in return offers Moria and three of the seven Dwarf rings to Dáin, who declines to reply.[T 9] Sauron's northern army, including many Easterlings, then attacks; Dale is overrun, and many Dwarves and Men take refuge in Erebor, which is promptly surrounded. Dáin is killed before the gates of Erebor defending the body of his fallen ally King Brand of Dale. Dáin's son Thorin III Stonehelm and King Bard II withstand the siege and rout Sauron's forces.[T 3][T 11]
Analysis[edit]Goal of psychological quest[edit]Further information: Psychological journeys of Middle-earth
The Jungian psychoanalyst Dorothy Matthews, viewing *The Hobbit* as a psychological quest, writes that the Lonely Mountain is an apt symbol of Bilbo's maturation as an individual, as the place where he takes on a leadership role and acts and makes decisions independently.[3] The Tolkien scholar Jared Lobdell comments that he is "profoundly unsympathetic" to Matthews's approach, but that she "carries it off well". Lobdell explains, citing C. S. Lewis's essay "Psychoanalysis and Literary Criticism", that many different stories could, for instance, have the same Freudian interpretation, but be quite different as literature. He remarks on the other hand that a psychoanalytic approach is at least richer than a purely materialistic one.[4]
The scholar of children's literature William H. Green calls the Lonely Mountain the fourth and final stage of Bilbo's education. He identifies multiple parallels and repetitions of structure between the stages, each one involving a journey, privation, and "unlikely escape". The Lonely Mountain stage, too, symbolically echoes the first stage in the Shire: before setting out, Bilbo was peacefully smoking a pipe of tobacco at his own front door; at the mountain, the smoke is the dragon's, and its meaning is anything but peaceful.[5] The Christian writer Joseph Pearce views the journey to the Lonely Mountain as a "pilgrimage of grace", a Christian *bildungsroman*, at its deepest level. Pearce states further that Bilbo's quest to the mountain parallels Frodo's quest to a different mountain, Mount Doom, which he calls "a mirror of Everyman's journey through life".[6]
Two scholars of literature, Paul Kocher and Randel Helms analyse Bilbo's journey to the lonely mountain, describing it as the goal of his quest and the point at which it is achieved. Both compare the quest in *The Hobbit* with that of *The Lord of the Rings*, noting that the two novels, for all their differences including the reason for the quests, are structurally similar.[7][8]
- hello erebor fans
- could you send me some bonsai airdrop :)
- Erebor World
GM
- good morning erebor haters today
- gm erebor fam
- welcome all new frens :)
- happy valentines
- hi durin
durin son of thrain
- GM EREBOR WORLD
WE HAVE NO ANY NEW YEAR
ALWAYS OLD
- 2023 was foundational
2024 will be ______
- hey all
wht are you doinn
- i liked this new nft :)
- heyyyyyy
i have victory lens :) hahhahaha
- My city is hitting ATH temperatures these days, so we decided to spend the weekend by the lake, 5h drive.
Storm is coming. I've just done this shot.
- v2lens good but lens token not come yet when
- gm erebor family
- we need it
- @lens/galverse community is the best💯✨✨
I am open to selling 2 of mine if you like either of them 🖤👀
- `this week on lens.` edition 24 ✌️
gm gm ☀️ please share your #lens highlights of calendar week 44 in the comments :-).
`this week on lens` featuring https://share.lens.xyz/p/0x01cd6e-0x3c-DA-bfdd82bc by @lens/mchx_ .
the revenue of this week's post will go to the lucky winner 🥁🥁🥁 @lens/dmcsvn 🥳
thank you so much for sharing your highlights last week 🤍 @lens/pedrovilela @lens/cavernaeremita @lens/dmcsvn @lens/iamtherealyakuza @lens/huugo @lens/carstenpoetter @lens/punkess
#thisWeekOnLens
- erebor lovers gn
we need a new mysteric world
- Heyyy erebor
i thinnk lenster is better than Hey
- when momoka finish i will return to lens
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follow if you want :)
- Hello Lenster fammm
- GM EREBOR GUYS
- nabala quaste
- momoka is currenty on beta snnsnsnnsnnw
- GM Lens fam howare you
- screenshot vs snapshot
- finish the momoka it is enough
- zbammmm
- 🚀 Attraction Media Agency Genesis Post 🚀
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- The Collect module on the Lens API is adding new features:
• Put time limits on any Free Collect
• Define the supply and/or end date for exclusive Collects (Free or Paid)
Try it out today on @lenster.lens. Coming soon to @buttrfly.lens, @orbapp.lens, and other apps across the Lens ecosystem.
For devs looking to implement the new 'simpleCollectModule', dive into the docs: https://docs.lens.xyz/docs/create-post-typed-data#simplecollectmodule