The Lord of the Rings
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Orcs: Men or Elves?
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Tahca
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Sep 06, 2013 09:21AM

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Hi my name is Daisy
I am an author and a complete and total Lord of the Rings devotee.
The orcs don't have the extended lifespan of the eldar.
Men too had lost much of their capacity for extended life. Only Aragorn and the Rangers, the last of the men of Numenour still had that capacity. Faramir had inherited it too but his brother Bormir had not.
The first orcs were from tortured elves forcibly bred with goblins. This is explained in the Two Towers as Saruman goes one better and creates the Urukhi army.
I believe its also said as the group cross the darkness of Moria that Thorin's grandfather was also slain by Orc's.
I do hope you don't mind me jumping in on this one.
Cheers
I am an author and a complete and total Lord of the Rings devotee.
The orcs don't have the extended lifespan of the eldar.
Men too had lost much of their capacity for extended life. Only Aragorn and the Rangers, the last of the men of Numenour still had that capacity. Faramir had inherited it too but his brother Bormir had not.
The first orcs were from tortured elves forcibly bred with goblins. This is explained in the Two Towers as Saruman goes one better and creates the Urukhi army.
I believe its also said as the group cross the darkness of Moria that Thorin's grandfather was also slain by Orc's.
I do hope you don't mind me jumping in on this one.
Cheers

It's been a while ..." The Orcs were once elves until Sauron corrupted them. It's not explained how.


The foreword to "The Lord of the Rings" says that Goblins are Orcs, Tolkien used originally the word Goblins in "The Hobbit", but changed it to Orcs when he wrote LotR.

Orcs seem not to be known to be long lived, though there are a couple of orc chieftains (father and son) who lived in excess of 100 years.

On the longevity scale, orcs would be at the bottom and elves at the top.

Those who never started the journey (the Avari), had to live on their own, without any support from the Valar. When Morgoth (Sauron's master during the First Age) came to Middle-earth, he found and captured some of them. They have been tortured and corrupted for a long time and in the end, they became foul and spiteful creatures that are now called orcs.
(source: The Silmarillion)

You are absolutely correct. But does this corruption shorten their lifespan? Elves only die of natural causes when they "fade" - what happens to orcs? I can't remember it ever being stated.

Edit: Found this link as a reference: http://tolkien.cro.net/orcs/origin.html

Very interesting link, thank you. I suppose the answer depends on whether an intention by Tolkien to change the version given in The Silmarillion, as referenced in Morgoth's Ring: The Later Silmarillion, Part One : The Legends of Aman can be considered canonical, in the absence of a written alternate version.
And the case for orcs having the same quasi-immortality as elves was well-argued. My feeling is that we have to take the Silmarillion version; although Tolkien may have dithered, he does not seem to have definitively changed it.
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