Dimholt: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:Dimholt.jpg|thumb|300px|Dimholt from [[Peter Jackson's The Return of the King]]]]
[[Image:Dimholt.jpg|thumb|300px|Dimholt from [[The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King]]]]
'''Dimholt''', within [[Dunharrow]], was a double row of standing stones marked an ancient roadway that led away into the east, towards the [[Dwimorberg]] and the [[Paths of the Dead]]. A traveller taking that road would soon come under the trees of a dark fir-wood. This was the Dimholt, a name that comes from old words literally meaning "Dark Wood". Deep within the wood stood a single great stone to mark the way, and beyond that, among the roots of the Dwimorberg, lay the Dark Door of [[The Dead]].
'''Dimholt''', within [[Dunharrow]], was a double row of standing stones marked an ancient roadway that led away into the east, towards the [[Dwimorberg]] and the [[Paths of the Dead]]. A traveller taking that road would soon come under the trees of a dark fir-wood. This was the Dimholt, a name that comes from old words literally meaning "Dark Wood". Deep within the wood stood a single great stone to mark the way, and beyond that, among the roots of the Dwimorberg, lay the Dark Door of [[The Dead]].



Revision as of 21:36, 3 July 2010

Dimholt, within Dunharrow, was a double row of standing stones marked an ancient roadway that led away into the east, towards the Dwimorberg and the Paths of the Dead. A traveller taking that road would soon come under the trees of a dark fir-wood. This was the Dimholt, a name that comes from old words literally meaning "Dark Wood". Deep within the wood stood a single great stone to mark the way, and beyond that, among the roots of the Dwimorberg, lay the Dark Door of The Dead.