The Encyclopedia of Arda - an interactive guide to the world of J.R.R. Tolkien
Dates
Immortal; in Middle-earth c. III 1000 to 29 September III 3021 (approximately 2,000 years)
Origins
A Maia sent to Middle-earth by the Valar
Race
Division
Order
Pronunciation
ga'ndalf (a note in Appendix E of The Lord of the Rings that final 'f' should be pronounced 'v' leads some to mispronounce this name 'gandalv'; Gandalf is not an Elvish name, however, and this rule does not apply)
Meaning
'Elf of the Wand' (but note that this name was given mistakenly by Men; Gandalf was a Maia, not an Elf)
Other names
Titles

Indexes:

About this entry:

  • Updated 14 August 1999
  • Updates planned: 114

The Five Wizards

The Company of the Ring

In origin a Maia of Manwë and Varda, Gandalf came to the northwest of Middle-earth after a thousand years of the Third Age had passed, with four others of his order. At the Grey Havens, Círdan entrusted him with the Red Ring, Narya, to aid him in contesting the will of Sauron.

Gandalf wandered widely in Middle-earth, and learned much of its races and peoples. Unlike his fellow Wizards Saruman and Radagast, he never settled in a single place. He helped to lead the resistance against Sauron, and was instrumental in the victory of the War of the Ring. During that conflict he battled with a Balrog and, while he defeated his foe, his spirit left his body. His wandering spirit was sent back to Middle-earth to complete his task as Gandalf the White.

Gandalf finally left Middle-earth in III 3021, when he departed over the Sea with the Ring-bearers.

Arrival in Middle-earth, c. III 1000

The Wizards arrived in Middle-earth after the end of the first millennium of the Third Age. They were sent by the Valar to aid Elves and Men, but none knew this but Círdan the Shipwright, Master of the Grey Havens where their ships put in. Though Saruman was at that time the acknowledged leader of the Wizards, Círdan saw that Gandalf was in fact the greater, and secretly gave him the Red Ring Narya to aid him in his quest.

Exploration of Middle-earth, c. III 1000 to III 2463

For almost fifteen centuries, Gandalf wandered the northern and western regions of Middle-earth, learning of its lands and cultures. He was closest in friendship with the Elves, and especially Elrond, who had learned of his origins from Círdan.

The White Council, III 2463 to III 2953

At almost the same time as Gandalf had arrived in Middle-earth, a dark power had appeared in southern Mirkwood, at the evil place known as Dol Guldur. After a thousand years of his wanderings, Gandalf went there and drove the darkness into the East for a while. Soon it returned, and in III 2463 the most learned and powerful Wizards and Elves formed a White Council, with Gandalf as a prominent member, to counter the growing threat.

In 2850, he revisited Dol Guldur, to find that the power that held it had grown indeed during the eight hundred years since his last visit, and he now recognised the dark power as Sauron returned. Before he departed to inform the White Council, he found Thráin II broken in the pits of Dol Guldur, and though Thráin died before Gandalf could help him, he did surrender a map and a key into the Wizard's keeping.

The Year III 2941

2941 was an important year for Gandalf. Not only did he take part in the White Council's expulsion of the Necromancer from Dol Guldur, but he had also arranged for a party of Dwarves, accompanied by Bilbo Baggins, to travel to their ancient home of Erebor and free it from the Dragon Smaug.

Gandalf and the Hobbits

The Hobbits first appeared in the records of Men and Elves shortly after the arrival of the Wizards, but of all the Wise, Gandalf was the only one to pay them great heed. After the foundation of the Shire, he would visit periodically and was responsible for '...quiet lads and lasses going off into the Blue for mad adventures' (The Hobbit, Chapter 1, An Unexpected Party). Given this description, we are forced to wonder whether he had a hand in the exploits of Hildifons and Isengar Took, both of whom are recorded as having become involved in adventures of this kind.

Of all the Hobbit families, Gandalf seems to have been most closely associated with the Tooks; he was a close friend of Gerontius, the Old Took (Frodo Baggins' great-grandfather), and was said to have given him a gift of magical diamond studs, which fastened and unfastened on command. After Gerontius' death in III 2920, Gandalf was not seen in the Shire for more than twenty years, until he returned with Thorin and the Dwarves to involve Bilbo Baggins in the Quest of Erebor.

Gandalf’s Appearance

Like all the Wizards, Gandalf had the appearance of an old man, who grew old slowly with the passage of the centuries. His hair was white, and his long white beard grew down below his waist. His eyebrows were particularly noticeable; they were so long and bushy that they stuck out from beneath the rim of his hat.

He dressed in a long grey cloak, which is perhaps the origin of his title 'The Grey'. He is also described as wearing a tall shady-brimmed pointed blue hat, a silver scarf, and long black boots. He carried at all times a spiked staff.

The Magic of Gandalf

Tolkien at no point defines what the limits of Gandalf's magic were. As a Maia, he had many natural abilities that would seem magical to mortal races, but he also had a great store of knowledge of more 'mechanical' magic, worked through spells and incantations, and especially through the agency of his staff. It is clear that he had far greater power, especially after his return as Gandalf the White, than he ever displayed in Middle-earth.

His magical powers seem to be particularly associated with fire, a fact that is perhaps related to the Ring of Fire, Narya, that he bore.

A Gandalf Miscellany

  • Gandalf adopted the habit of pipe-smoking from the Hobbits. He often used his magical arts while smoking; he could change the colour of his smoke-rings, or send them in any direction he pleased.
  • Gandalf's preferred drink was red wine.

Notes

1

This is based on a note given in Unfinished Tales associating each of the five Wizards with one or more Valar, which connects Gandalf's name explicitly with Manwë and Varda. There is good reason to see this as definitive (for example, the same list also connects Saruman with Aulë, who is well established as that Wizard's original 'patron' Vala) but it is not absolutely conclusive. There are hints in other sources that make Gandalf ultimately a Maia of the people of Lórien, otherwise known as Irmo. On balance, though, the association with Manwë and Varda seems most likely.

See also...

Aiwendil, Alatar, Aman, Amon Sûl, An Unexpected Party, Anor, Aragorn Elessar, Arahael, Ashes, Atanatar II Alcarin, Baggins Family, Balin, Balrogs, Base Master of Treachery, Basso Boffin, [See the full list...]

Indexes:

About this entry:

  • Updated 14 August 1999
  • Updates planned: 114

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