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Belegost was one of two Dwarven cities in located in either the Blue Mountains during the First Age in Middle-earth, or eastern Beleriand.[1]

History

Belegost was one of the seven great kingdoms of the Dwarves and home to the Dwarvish clan the Broadbeams.[2] With her sister realm, Nogrod, Belegost was dug deep beneath Mount Dolmed in the Blue Mountains in the Ages of Stars.

Amongst the Dwarves of Belegost were the finest smiths and stone-carvers in Middle-earth. In their armourer's halls they made many bright weapons and were the first people to forge chain-mail. The Dwarves of Belegost traded with the Sindar Elves of Beleriand and supplied them with weapons of incomparably tempered steel; furthermore these Dwarves carved the stone chambers of Menegroth. One of their payments for these services was Nimphelos, a great pearl.[3]

In the First Age of the Sun, the Dwarves of Belegost and their lord, Azaghâl, won great fame in the War of the Jewels. In the Nírnaeth Arnoediad, the Dwarves alone could withstand the heat of the Dragon-fire because being a race of smiths were used to great heat and on their helms they wore masks of steel. Their axes too that they forged were strong enough to hold the Dragons in check. Though Azaghâl was slain, he wounded Glaurung, the Father of Dragons and the Dragon brood fled the battleground, all the way back to Angband.[4] The Dwarves of Belegost were asked by the Dwarves of Nogrod for aid in their war against Doriath, but were refused.[5]

Yet as valiant as the Dwarves were, neither Belegost nor Nogrod survived the First Age of the Sun. For when the War of Wrath was fought at the end of the Age, Beleriand and the Blue Mountains were broken apart in the struggle and all the land and mountains shifted and collapsed into the sea. Those Dwarves that did not perish in this ruin fled to the mansions of Khazad-dûm.[6]

Etymology

Belegost was a Sindarin word for "mighty or great fortress". Its name in Westron was Mickleburg and the Khuzdul name for it was Gabilgathol.[7]

Translations around the World

Foreign Language Translated name
Amharic በለጎስት
Arabic بيليغوست
Armenian Բելեգոստ
Belarusian Белегоста
Bengali বেলেগস্ত
Bulgarian Белегост
Chinese (Hong Kong) 貝磊勾斯特
Czech Belegost
Georgian ბელეგოსთ
Greek Βελεγοστ
Gujarati બેલેગોસ્ત
Hebrew ביליגוסת
Hindi बेलेगोस्त
Kazakh Белегост
Kurdish به‌له‌گۆست (Arabic script) Belegost (Latinised)
Kyrgyz Бэлэгост
Macedonian Белегост
Marathi बेलेगोस्त
Mongolian Белегост
Nepali बेलेगोस्त
Pashto بېلېګوست
Persian بهلهگوست
Russian Белегост
Sanskrit बेलेगोस्त्
Sinhala බෙලෙගොස්ත්
Serbian Белегост (Cyrillic) Belegost (Latinised)
Tajik Белегост
Tamil பெலெகொஸ்த் ?
Telugu బెలెగొస్త
Tibetan བེལེགོསྟ
Tigrinya በለጎስት
Ukrainian Белеґост
Urdu بالیگوسٹ ?
Uzbek Белегост (Cyrillic) Belegost (Latinised)
Yiddish בעלעגאָסט
Dwarven realms of Middle-earth throughout the Ages
Years of the Trees and First Age Amon Rûdh | Belegost | Khazad-dûm | Mount Gundabad | Nogrod | Narukuthûn | Blue Mountains
Second Age Khazad-dûm | Belegost | Nogrod | Mount Gundabad | Blue Mountains | Iron Hills
Third Age Grey Mountains | Iron Hills | Khazad-dûm | Lonely Mountain | Blue Mountains | Dunland
Fourth Age Glittering Caves | Khazad-dûm | Lonely Mountain | Blue Mountains | Iron Hills


References

  1. 1.0 1.1 The Silmarillion (inside cover), "Map of Beleriand and the Lands to the North"
  2. 2.0 2.1 The History of Middle-earth, Vol. 12: The Peoples of Middle-earth, X: "Of Dwarves and Men"
  3. The Silmarillion, Quenta Silmarillion, Chapter X: "Of the Sindar"
  4. The Silmarillion, Quenta Silmarillion, Chapter XX: "Of the Fifth Battle: Nirnaeth Arnoediad"
  5. The Silmarillion, Quenta Silmarillion, Chapter XXII: "Of the Ruin of Doriath"
  6. The Atlas of Middle-earth, The Second Age, "Refugee Relocation"
  7. The Silmarillion, Index of Names


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