Angainor

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In the fiction of J. R. R. Tolkien, Angainor is the chain used to contain Melkor (who was later known as Morgoth) in the Halls of Mandos. It was constructed by the Vala Aulë and held Melkor for three ages. At the end of the First Age, Melkor was again bound by Angainor, and his iron crown was made into a collar.

Little is said of the chain in The Silmarillion, Tolkien's published work (albeit posthumously), other than that said in the first paragraph. But there does exist a wonderful description of its creation in The Book of Lost Tales:

"Behold, Aulë now gathered six metals, copper, silver, tin, lead, iron and gold, and taking a portion of each made with his magic a seventh which he named therefore tilkal, and this had all the properties of the six and many of its own. Its colour was bright green or red in varying lights and it could not be broken, and Aulë alone could forge it. Therefter he forged a mighty chain, making it of all seven metals welded with spells to a substance of uttermost hardness and brightness and smoothness...":The Book of Lost Tales, The Chaining of Melkor.

It is also said later in the same book that after Tulkas and Aulë had grappled with Melkor, "straight was he wrapped thirty times in the fathoms of Angaino".