Battle of Dagorlad

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Battle of Dagorlad
Date 3434 S.A.
Location Plains of Dagorlad
Result Victory for the Last Alliance
Combatants
Last Alliance of Elves and Men Mordor
Commanders
Gil-galad, Elendil, Oropher†, Amdir†, Durin IV Sauron
Strength
100,000 Elves, Númenóreans and other inhabitants of Middle-earth 500,000 Orcs, Men from the East and the South, Black Númenóreans, the Nazgûl and other inhabitants of Middle-earth
Casualties
Unknown, 2/3 of the Silvan, including their king Oropher Most of original force
War of Sauron and the Elves
Battle of DagorladSiege of Barad-dûrDisaster of the Gladden Fields

The Battle of Dagorlad took place in the Middle-earth fantasy world created by J.R.R. Tolkien.

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

The Battle of Dagorlad occurred in the year 3434 of the Second Age. It was fought between the army of the Last Alliance of Elves and Men under Gil-galad and Elendil and an army of Orcs and other creatures loyal to Sauron. The battle took place on the great, treeless, open plain between Emyn Muil and Cirith Gorgor. The army of the Last Alliance won the battle and was able to attack the Morannon, the entrance to Sauron's land of Mordor. Later, in the Third Age, the Dagorlad was the site of many battles between Gondor and various Easterling armies. A resulting legend grew up that Gondor could never be defeated if a Battle took place on the Dagorlad.

The bodies of the dead decayed as normal, but over time the field became a wetland, and many a passerby has been known to see the bodies in the water, perfectly preserved. Gollum informs the hobbits that the dead bodies seen resting at the bottom of the Marshes are incorporeal, merely the images of those who have fallen - as Gollum says, "Only shapes to see, perhaps, not to touch." The area had long been known as the Dead Marshes by the time Frodo crossed it at the end of the Third Age.

The word dagorlad means 'battle plain' in the Sindarin language.

Note: In Peter Jackson's movie adaptation of The Lord of the Rings, Dagorlad is misspelled as Dagorland on various maps shown in the films and in the appendices of the special extended DVD editions.