Subject: Some thoughts...
Author:
Posted on: 2019-04-17 06:29:00 UTC

Hey! I don't think I ever knew you, but I'm always up for talking to new people! (Especially about The Lord of the Rings.)

Okay so I had a frankly ridiculous essay typed out here about theoretical stairs in Minas Tirith. It was excessive. The short version is that it's unlikely that there are stairs at the gates, and I believe one could make it all the way to the citadel gate without necessarily having to encounter a staircase (at which point there are probably stairs going from the sixth level up to the seventh).

My reasoning is this: The Houses of Healing are in the sixth circle, just shy of the gate to the seventh, and, being the primary location for medical care in Minas Tirith, they must have had a great deal of supplies moving in and out, especially in wartime. And the easiest way to move large quantities of supplies in a medieval world is by cart. Horse-drawn carts were not a thing inside the city, but handcarts were, and you wouldn't want any obstructions in the way of herbs and bandages and food coming up, not to mention water (Tolkien never did explain how they got water to the higher levels of the city, but I imagine there was a whole economic system dedicated to it. Unless they had something like modern plumbing. Tolkien never said they didn't.), or, shall we say, waste products going back down.

Tolkien never told us where the major markets are, but there's at least one inn in the fifth or sixth circle which would have the same need of transporting large quantities of supplies, presumably in handcarts.

Additionally, I scanned and uploaded a page from Karen Wynn Fonstad's The Atlas of Middle-earth which has a diagram of Minas Tirith on it. (Mz. Fonstad's work, while not strictly canon, is exceptionally well researched and exhaustively cited, and generally a Good Resource.) The point of this picture is that it demonstrates quite well the massive size of Minas Tirith, especially its width. So, while it was quite tall, it was also very wide and the incline was not necessarily steep enough to really require stairs.

But if we're just looking at what's cool, I love that ramp/stair combo and it is absolutely my new headcanon for the architecture in parts of Minas Tirith. So. Thank you. You made my night a little brighter by introducing that idea into my life.

Anyhow, hope this helps. Have a wonderful evening or whatever time of day it is for you!

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