How many wizards are in middle earth




















They were sent to Middle-Earth to help fight against Sauron. There were two blue wizards who were briefly mentioned in the series. Not much known about these two wizards but they get their names because of the color of robes they were said to wear.

Each of these wizards had a certain mission and part they were to play in fighting Sauron. Tolkien also suggested that they were likely founders of magic cults with followers. Radagast the Brown is one of the five wizards who came to Middle-Earth on a mission to oppose Sauron. He was a friend of Gandalf in the series. Instead of focusing his energy on helping the humanoid creatures of Middle-Earth, he turned instead to helping plants and animals.

He was clearly powerful, but he not as much as some of the others. He is one of the wizards who is most committed to the mission of stopping Sauron, so even at this early stage, he is still at work wandering around and trying to accomplish this mission.

However, he became prideful and jealous of the power and purity of Gandalf's spirit and reputation. Saruman slowly came to betray the original purpose of the Wizards and sought power for himself. At the end of the Third Age , the Wizards passed from sight because with the fall of Sauron their work was done. Radagast remained in Middle-earth, tending to the wilderness. The fate of the Blue Wizards is unknown. The Wizards resembled elderly men, although they aged very slowly. Despite their aged appearance, they possessed physically strong bodies and highly intelligent minds.

Another thing that helps put Saruman of Many Colors so high on the list is the fact that he is able to capture Gandalf and keep him in his prison. In the Lord of the Rings movies, he even beats him in a wizard duel — which, if a bit painful to watch , still shows off the fact that he's got some chops even in face-to-face combat.

Apart from the fact that he wanders from his true purpose, pretty much everything about Saruman of Many Colors is bigger and more powerful than his past life as Saruman the White. Finally, we have Gandalf the White. Reincarnated after battling the Balrog, Gandalf kicks off the "white" part of his wizarding career in style.

He starts by showing that he's immune to the weapons of his friends when they accidentally attack him in the Old Forest. From there he helps to orchestrate a war against Saruman, which ends with him literally breaking the wizard's staff into bits and casting him out of both the Order of the Wizards and the White Council.

His star continues to rise as he rallies Gondor against an invasion and leads the defense of the White City of Minas Tirith. He ultimately rallies the men of the West in a desperate attempt to distract Sauron long enough to enable the ring bearer to finish his quest.

The cherry on top? In Unfinished Tales , Tolkien points out that Gandalf is the only wizard to actually reach retirement and head back to the west after his task is complete. From putting Saruman in his place to playing the part of the guiding hand in the war against Sauron, Gandalf the White ends up proving to be the most powerful wizard in all of Middle-earth history.

It's worth taking a moment to provide an honorable mention for a few of the other Maiar who, while not technically wizards, do show off some pretty fantastic powers over the course of Tolkien's stories. There are several good Maiar that make the list.

Melian, for instance, is a Maiar that marries the Elven King Thingol and, in the First Age , literally maintains a forcefield of sorts around their kingdom. Arien and Tilion are a pair of Maia that steer the sun and the moon respectively through the sky. On the villainous side of the ledger, we have Durin's Bane — that is, the Balrog that Gandalf fights in Moria. And then there's Gothmog, an even greater evil Maia known as the Lord of Balrogs who shows up multiple times throughout the First Age.

And last, but certainly not least, there's Sauron. The Dark Lord is one of the most powerful Maiar to ever walk Middle-earth, and it takes repeated defeats to finally humble him. All of these Maiar, good and bad, provide an interesting insight into the true potential that the five wizards have, even if it's carefully layered beneath their mortal forms.

It begs the question, which wizard would win if they were "unleashed" from their bodies and allowed to operate in their true spiritual form? Alas, with both Tolkien and his son both passed on , we'll likely never know. The Valar and the Maiar. The origin of the Order of the Wizards.

The Wizards of Middle-earth. Ground rules. The Blue Wizards. Radagast the Brown. Gandalf the Grey. Saruman the White. Gwaihir lord of eagles in Middle Earth rescues Gandalf. Saruman raised an army of mighty Uruk-hai stronger than ordinary orcs so they could walk in daylight. After some time he was released because he lost his powers. To get revenge on the hobbits who participated in the War of the Ring he did many bad things in the Shire by the power of his malice, until the fellowship came back and defeated him.

Gandalf was one of the older wizards who was sent to Middle Earth to resist Sauron. During his two thousand years in Middle Earth, Gandalf began to understand the way these inhabitants lived, especially The Hobbit. Gandalf was constantly working on plans to counter Sauron himself, and he himself launched a chain of events that eventually resulted in the fall of the Lord of Darkness.

Gandalf was one of the Maiars, incarnations at the service of the Valars.



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