

As you can notice from my shot, there's a whole bunch of options, including the armies of "The Enemy". This way I think, I'm not going to bore those already acquainted with the fiction and keep the majority of the setting(other than our chosen faction) still strange and mystical for the rest. When the Third Age came to an end, both Galadriel and Elrond departed into the West, and as the Fourth Age dawned, few of the Deep Elves indeed remained behind in the Wide World of Middle-earth.I could have made a shot for each possible choice, or provide the lengthy background of each possible army, but I prefer instead to cover their strengths in my own words, and explain the fluff as we go into play. Others dwelt at Rivendell, the House of Elrond, and Elrond himself was in part descended from the Deep Elves through his grandmother Idril. The most powerful of them was Galadriel, who was the daughter of Fëanor's half-brother Finarfin. Most of these Rings would later be taken by Sauron, but the Three Rings were kept in secret until the end of the Third Age.ĭuring the Third Age, few Deep Elves remained in Middle-earth. This was the origin of the land of Eregion, where Fëanor's grandson Celebrimbor led his people in the making of the Rings of Power, including the Three Rings of the Elves. They dwelt at first in Lindon on the shores of the Great Sea, but some of these later moved eastward to establish realms of their own. Eventually that Siege was broken, and the Noldor were driven back to the point of defeat, but at last the Valar were persuaded to act directly and bring about Melkor's ultimate defeat.Īfter the War of Wrath and the end of the First Age, many of the Deep Elves remained in Middle-earth. The Elves could not breach Melkor's defences, but they held the Dark Lord in the long Siege of Angband. The returning Deep Elves found Melkor secure in his old northern fortress of Angband, and there followed centuries of warfare. When Melkor stole the Jewels and murdered Finwë, Fëanor and his sons made a dreadful binding Oath to recover the Silmarils, and led a great part of the Deep Elves back into Middle-earth in pursuit of them. Greatest among the Deep Elves was Fëanor son of Finwë, and greatest among Fëanor's achievements was the making of the Silmarils, Three Jewels that captured the Light of the Two Trees of Valinor. Once they reached Valinor, they grew wiser still, learning much from the Vala Aulë. As a people, they placed great value on wisdom, knowledge and invention, and this is the source of the name 'Deep Elves' (referring to the depth of their knowledge).

A name for the Noldor, the second of the three clans of the Eldar, who joined the Great Journey into the West under the leadership of Finwë.
