Badgers: Difference between revisions
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[[ | [[File:Mark Evans - Badgers.jpg|thumb|Badgers in ''[[The Lord of the Rings Roleplaying Game|LOTRRPG]]'']] | ||
{{quote|There must have been a mighty crowd of dwarves here at one time and every one of them busier than badgers for five hundred years to make all this, and most in hard rock too!|[[Samwise Gamgee|Sam Gamgee]]<ref name=FRII4/>}} | |||
'''Badgers''' were known in Northwestern [[Middle-earth]] for being excellent hole-diggers.<ref name=FRII4>{{FR|II4}}</ref> [[Men]] used traps to catch these animals.<ref>{{TT|III7}}</ref> | '''Badgers''' were known in Northwestern [[Middle-earth]] for being excellent hole-diggers.<ref name=FRII4>{{FR|II4}}</ref> [[Men]] used traps to catch these animals.<ref>{{TT|III7}}</ref> | ||
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{{references}} | {{references}} | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:Badgers]] |
Revision as of 14:28, 10 July 2012
- "There must have been a mighty crowd of dwarves here at one time and every one of them busier than badgers for five hundred years to make all this, and most in hard rock too!"
- ― Sam Gamgee[1]
Badgers were known in Northwestern Middle-earth for being excellent hole-diggers.[1] Men used traps to catch these animals.[2]
A mysterious kind of apparently sentient badgers, only told of in legends, were called the Badger-folk.
Portrayal in adaptations
1982-97: Middle-earth Role Playing:
- Badgers (which are given game statistics) are carnivorous animals of the fauna of Rhovanion. They are timid but can be dangerous if cornered.[3]
2002-5: The Lord of the Rings Roleplaying Game:
- Badgers (which are given game statistics) can be find in the Shire and throughout Eriador.[4]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 J.R.R. Tolkien, The Lord of the Rings, The Fellowship of the Ring, "A Journey in the Dark"
- ↑ J.R.R. Tolkien, The Lord of the Rings, The Two Towers, "Helm's Deep"
- ↑ Zachariah Woolf (1995), Lake-town (#2016), p. 149
- ↑ Scott Bennie, Mike Mearls, Steve Miller, Aaron Rosenberg, Chris Seeman, Owen Seyler, and George Strayton (2003), Fell Beasts and Wondrous Magic, p. 56