Denethor

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Character from J. R. R. Tolkien's Legendarium
Name Denethor II
Titles Steward of Gondor, Lord of Gondor, Lord of Minas Tirith
Race Men
Culture Dúnedain, Gondorian, House of Húrin
Date of birth T.A. 2930
Date of death March 15, T.A. 3019 (age 89)
Realm Gondor
Book(s) The Return of the King

This article is about the Steward of Gondor in the time of the War of the Ring. For the king of the Laiquendi, see Denethor (First Age). For the first Steward of Gondor of this name, see Denethor I.

Denethor II is a fictional character in J. R. R. Tolkien's The Return of the King. In the novel, he is the 26th and last ruling Steward of Gondor.

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[edit] Appearances

[edit] Literature

As stated in the early chapters and the Appendices of The Return of the King, Denethor was widely considered a man of great will, foresight, and strength. However, he was ever placed second in the hearts and minds of the people (and his father, Ecthelion II) to Thorongil, an outsider who served Denethor's father with great renown. Thorongil vanished from Gondor after great deeds four years before Denethor would succeed his father as Ruling Steward. Thorongil (who was secretly Aragorn, the heir to Gondor's throne) had advised Ecthelion to put faith in the wizard (Gandalf), whom Denethor distrusted.

He married Finduilas, daughter of Prince Adrahil of Dol Amroth. She gave birth to two sons: Boromir and Faramir. Denethor never remarried after his wife's death, and became more grim and silent than before.

In the novel, he began secretly using a palantír to probe Sauron's strength. The effort aged him quickly, and the knowledge of Sauron's overwhelming force depressed him greatly. Unlike Saruman, Denethor was too great to be corrupted by Sauron's lies. However, it served Sauron well enough for the palantír to show Denethor the truth of the vast forces arrayed against him. Boromir's death depressed Denethor further, and he became ever more grim. Nonetheless he continued to fight Sauron with every resource at his disposal.

Near the novel's climactic battle, the warning beacons of Gondor were lit, and forces were called in from all of Gondor's provinces. The civilian population of Minas Tirith was sent away to safety. As invasion seemed imminent, Denethor sent the Red Arrow to the Rohirrim. The Council decided that Gondor could make no stroke of its own but Denethor ordered Gondor's forces to the outer defences of Osgiliath and the great wall of the Rammas Echor. He wanted to make a stand, since the defences had been built at great expense and not yet been overrun. His son Faramir and the other commanders objected due to the Enemy's overwhelming numerical superiority and preferred instead to defend the city itself, but Faramir nonetheless obeyed out of respect for his father and late brother. Faramir's apparently lifeless body was returned during the retreat, as the capital city was under siege by vastly superior forces.

This last loss finally broke Denethor's spirit. Denethor committed suicide, having ordered his men to burn him alive on a pyre prepared for him and Faramir. He took the white rod of his office and broke it on his thigh bone, casting it into the flames. He laid himself down on the pyre and so perished, clasping the palantír in his hands. He also attempted to take the grievously injured and apparently dying Faramir with him, but was thwarted by the timely intervention of Peregrin Took, with help from Gandalf and the guard Beregond.

The Stewardship passed to Faramir, who remained in the Houses of Healing for a time.

[edit] Adaptations

Denethor was voiced by William Conrad in Rankin/Bass's 1980 animated adaptation of The Return of the King, and by Peter Vaughan in BBC Radio's 1981 serialization.

In Peter Jackson's live-action movie trilogy, Denethor was played by John Noble. In The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King, his role is substantially different from the novel. Apart from being more uncouth and rash than in the novel, Denethor appears to be irrational from the onset, although news of Boromir's death leads to gloom and sorrow and ultimately to insanity. He refuses to light the beacons of Gondor to call for the aid of Rohan (Gandalf has to send Pippin to light the city's beacon). He openly admits his preference for his dead son Boromir, and sends his remaining son Faramir and all of his cavalry on a suicidal mission to enemy-captured Osgiliath. He calls for the city's defenders to flee when he sees Sauron's army, but Gandalf incapacitates him and takes command of the defence.

Later, when attempting to burn himself and his son Faramir to death in what seems to have been a fit of insanity, Denethor is set ablaze when Gandalf and Pippin rescue Faramir, who is still alive. At this point Denethor realizes what he has done and said as he looks at Faramir. Consumed in flame and regret, Denethor runs from the pyre chamber and hurls himself from the top of Minas Tirith. In the extended edition of the film, after Denethor's death, Aragorn discovers a palantír next to his throne, implying that Denethor had lost hope and became depressed after viewing the strength and numbers of Sauron's forces in the palantír, as it is told in the book.

This is all quite different from the novel, in which Denethor does everything in his power to prepare and defend the city, even at the great risk of using the palantír, and did not go mad until after Faramir was wounded (apparently mortally) and the war situation appeared hopeless. Unfortunately he died an ignoble death despite his wise handlings and capabilities during the prime of his life.

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Preceded by
Ecthelion II
Stewards of Gondor Succeeded by
Faramir