Subject: ????! FONDY!
Author:
Posted on: 2019-04-17 09:45:00 UTC

Wow, hi! Great to see you! How've you been? How long's it been?

Coming to your question, because you know I'm always here for LotR discussion, I think Snowy has covered the textual evidence pretty well. I will draw your attention to this quote from RotK:

For the people of the City used horses very little and they were seldom seen in their streets, save only those ridden by the errand-riders of their lord. And they said: ‘Surely that is one of the great steeds of the King of Rohan? Maybe the Rohirrim will come soon to strengthen us.’ But Shadowfax walked proudly up the long winding road.

As Snowy says, horses weren't much used in the city - but Shadowfax was still able to walk easily up to the top. I'm sure he could climb gentle stairs, but it doesn't fit the 'walked proudly' image for me.

A paragraph later, we read that The entrance to the Citadel also looked eastward, but was delved in the heart of the rock; thence a long lamp-lit slope ran up to the seventh gate. That 'slope' definitely suggests a ramp rather than a staircase; we know Tolkien wasn't afraid of using the word 'stair' when appropriate!

That's not to say that there weren't stairs in the White City. Gandalf and Pippin's room is on the first floor of their building, 'up a wide carven stair'. The storehouses of the Tower Guard are down a staircase, too - and access to the tombs on Rath Dinen is by steps. But for simply navigating the main highways of the city, they don't seem to be necessary.

Taking the Fonstad images as a basis, and doing some very rough measuring, I find the road from the Great Gate to the Citadel to be ca. 6400 feet long. Tolkien tells us the Citadel is 700 feet above the gate, which means you're looking at a continuous slope of about 1 in 10. In road sign terms, that's a 10% grade. I actually had to walk about 5000 feet up a ~10% hill to get to uni from town, back in the day, so I can confirm that it's quite tiring, but also perfectly doable, even laden down with shopping.

(Of course, in practice you'd expect the general slope to be shallower, with steeper areas around the gates - not only does it make urban planning easier, it's an extra defense mechanism if you're attacked.)

But.

Medieval walled cities in general have a huge problem: space. Some of them solve it by expanding outside their walls (London), but Minas Tirith doesn't seem to have done this - there's some settlement in the Pelennor, but pretty much just farms. So where do you put your growing population, and their increasing needs?

Simple: you build up.

Not too long ago we visited Chester, which developed an interesting solution to its cramped streets: one storey up, they built balconies/walkways that run the length of the street, and stuck shops off there, above the shops at ground level. Minas Tirith doesn't really have space for your classic street market, but an extra level on the front of the houses would work perfectly - and be a nightmare if you couldn't climb stairs easily.

Another thought I had is that people looooove shortcuts, and that winding path through the gates sounds horrible. The wall was still a functioning defensive structure, so you wouldn't have shortcut-stairs through it - but you can bet some enterprising Gondorians have stuck ladders up from their rooftops to the next level. After all, there's plenty of time to take them down in the unlikely event that the city is attacked. All well and good if you're able-bodied, but your character would have to take ten times as long to ascend the city.

hS

Reply Return to messages