SHA
shadowy_blue
Senior Member
How did the hobbits come to middle earth?
I've read The Silmarillion.. and unless I totally missed it, I dont believe it said anything in there. I've also read "Unfinished Tales" and "The Book of Lost Tales", but nothing still. I don't believe it's in the Appendices either. I mean, the tale of how the other races originated was explored and we know where they come from and how they came out to be, but I don't think I've read anything about Hobbits.
Men and Elves - Eru
Ents (Sheperds of the Forest) - Eru for Yavanna
Orcs - Elves mutilated and corrupted by Melkor
Eagles - Manwë
Dwarves - Aulë
Uruk-Hai - orcs+goblin men (Saruman)
Dragons - they served for Melkor
Trolls - Melkor
Olog-Hai - Sauron
Wargs - Melkor
How about Hobbits, along with Tom, they are the ones that confuse me of their origins? Anyone? 😕
EXA
Re: How did the hobbits come to middle earth?
Originally posted by shadowy_blue
Uruk-Hai - orcs+goblin men (Saruman)
Trolls - Melkor
Olog-Hai - Sauron
Not exactly
The Uruk-hai are not invented or first breeded by Sauron. They are a far older race (their name only meaning "orc-people"😉, just a bigger sort of orcs, like the Snaga were a smaller one. What Saruman did is mixing goblinmen (which means they were already half orcs!) and orcs, giving halforcs. Uruk-hai usually were only the leaders as they were stronger than the others. Yet they appear far earlier than in the war of the ring, like in the attacks on Osgiliath (TA 2475, more than 500 years before the war of the ring).
Ologhai ("Trollpeople"😉 are a race of trolls in Mirkwood Sauron breeded based on Melkors trolls.
About your original question
I dont think Tolkien explains that anywhere. He somewhere said that they're a race of Men that left the others early to dwell in the vales of Anduin where they lived for some time, rather reducing their size from generation to generation than growing like most other races did. Some also say that they are rather like Elves then like men, but this is perhaps rather interesting in the combination with the early idea that Men might be Elves that had fallen under the shadow of Melkor and Ilúvatar gave them the gift - or the bane - of Mortality.
Maybe they are really a race of men that stayed behind while the Edain travelled to Beleriand in the first age (they said they had fled from a great darkness nobody wanted to talk about later).
I think very interesting for this question is the Conversation between Finrod and Andreth in the History Of Middle-earth, though it's not connected with the hobbits.