Subject: The purpose of the Nazgul.
Author:
Posted on: 2014-08-05 11:44:00 UTC
So, Ringwraiths. Sauron's uber-warriors, right? Lethally-effective undead cavalry who can murder their way through absolutely anything? Right? ... right?
I'm not so sure (obviously, or this wouldn't be a thread). Think about the missions Sauron sends the Nazgul on. In rough order, from the first time they appear in the history of Middle-earth:
-Taking Minas Ithil (in the first century of its existence).
-Establishing a kingdom (Angmar) to weaken Arnor. This is achieved by causing divisions between the three sub-kingdoms, subverting one, conquering another, and destroying the third.
-Taking over the old Elven stronghold on Amon Lanc to be Dol Guldur. (Hey, did you know Dol Guldur was Thranduil's old home? Cool, huh?)
-Looking for the One Ring in the Shire.
--And chasing the Ringbearer.
-Scouting across the Anduin.
-Communicating with Saruman and/or claiming his prisoners.
-Running interference in the leadup to the Battle of the Pelennor.
-(The Witch-King) Breaking the gates of Minas Tirith.
-Running interference over the Battle of Dagorlad.
-Trying to stop Frodo destroying the Ring.
The traits that really spring out of that list, to me, are stealth and manipulation. The Nazgul were often sent into situations where their presence or identity had to be hidden - the Witch-King went unidentified until the end of his reign, and (obviously!) the Black Riders weren't revealing themselves as agents of the Dark Lord. Even more, they spend their time manipulating people: again, the Witch-King sowed dissent between the Arnorian successor kingdoms, and the Winged Nazgul did most of their work by invoking fear, not by actually attacking.
Yes, there are several 'take a city' missions in there - but it's instructive to look back to Sauron's own city-conquering days. In the First Age, he 'conquered' Minas Tirith on Tol Sirion with a shadow of fear, which drove the elves out and let him take the city without even having to fight. Could Minas Ithil have fallen the same way? Dol Guldur certainly could have, since it seems to have been mostly abandoned before the Nazgul arrived.
There are other traits displayed by the Nazgul - speed, sorcery - but they seem to be attributes of convenience. The Ringwraiths were sent after Frodo at Orodruin because they were the fastest servants Sauron had available. As to sorcery - that power is only attested in the Witch-King himself. Again, the sorcerous power is essentially independent from his Ringwraith nature.
The Nazgul were stealth commandos and semi-political maneuverers, not warriors. Yes, they could fight - but in both situations where they did so, Weathertop and the Witch-King on the Pelennor, they lost.
And I'm reminded of Gollum's very first use of the One Ring: sneaking around, eavesdropping on his relatives and neighbours...
hS