Early history in the
First Age. The Elves awaken at Cuiviénen, on the Sea of
Helcar (right) in
Middle-earth, and migrate westwards towards
Valinor in Aman, some not arriving there.
Fëanor's people of the Noldor, return to
Beleriand (top) in stolen
Falmari ships, leaving an angry
Fingolfin to return over the Grinding Ice. Locations are diagrammatic.
The Silmarillion tells the history of the Noldor. The Elves are placed, asleep, in Cuiviénen on
Middle-earth by the creator,
Ilúvatar. According to Elven-lore, the Noldor as a clan is founded by Tata, the second Elf to awaken, his spouse Tatië and their 54 companions. The fate of Tata and Tatië is not recorded; it is Finwë who leads the Noldor to
Valinor, where he becomes their King, and their chief dwelling-place is the city of Tirion upon Túna. In Valinor "great became their knowledge and their skill; yet even greater was their thirst for more knowledge, and in many things they soon surpassed their teachers. They were changeful in speech, for they had great love of words, and sought ever to find names more fit for all things they knew or imagined." But Melkor sows lies, and in the end the peace in Tirion is poisoned. Fëanor, having assaulted his half-brother
Fingolfin and thus broken the laws of the Valar, is banished to his fortress Formenos, and with him goes Finwë his father. Fingolfin remains as the ruler of the Noldor of Tirion. slays Finwë, steals the Silmarils and departs from
Aman. Driven by vengeance, Fëanor rebels against the Valar and rouses the Noldor to leave Valinor, follows Melkor to
Middle-earth and wages war against him for the recovery of the Silmarils. Though the greater part of the Noldor still hold Fingolfin as the rightful leader, they follow Fëanor out of kinship and to avenge Finwë. Fëanor and his sons swear an
oath of vengeance against Melkor (whom Fëanor renames Morgoth) or anyone who comes into possession of a Silmaril.
Flight of the Noldor: exile to Middle-earth In the port city of Alqualondë, the Noldor hosts led by Fëanor demand that the
Falmari, those of the Teleri who had come to Valinor, let them use their ships. When the Teleri refuse, Fëanor's forces take the ships by force, committing the first Kinslaying. A messenger from the
Valar comes later and delivers the
Prophecy of the North, pronouncing the Doom of Mandos on the Noldor for the Kinslaying, and warning that a grim fate awaits them should they proceed with their rebellion. Some of the Noldor who had had no hand in the Kinslaying, including Finarfin, son of Finwë and Indis, return to Valinor, and the Valar forgive them. The majority of the Noldor, some blameless for the Kinslaying, remain determined to leave Valinor for Middle-earth. Among them are Finarfin's children, Finrod and
Galadriel, who choose to follow Fingolfin instead of Fëanor and his sons. The Noldor cross the sea to Middle-earth in the stolen ships, leaving Fingolfin and his people behind. Upon his arrival in Middle-earth, Fëanor has the ships burned. When the Noldor led by Fingolfin discover their betrayal, they go far to the north and cross the sea at the
Grinding Ice or Helcaraxë. Suffering substantial losses along the way, this greatly adds to their animosity for Fëanor and his sons. and in 495 Nargothrond too is conquered. Turgon had already withdrawn to Gondolin, which had been kept hidden from both Morgoth and other Elves; his realm is betrayed to Morgoth by his nephew Maeglin in 510. Turgon dies during
the Fall of Gondolin, though his daughter Idril leads many of his people to escape and find their way south.
Gil-galad, son of Fingon, succeeds Turgon and becomes the fourth and last High King of the Noldor in Middle-earth. Between 545 and 583, the
War of Wrath is fought between Morgoth and the host of the Valar. As the result of the cataclysmic destruction from the war, Beleriand sinks into the sea, except for a part of Ossiriand later known as Lindon, and a few islands. The defeat of Morgoth marks the end of the
First Age and the start of the
Second, when most of the Noldor return to Aman, though some like Galadriel or
Celebrimbor, grandson of Fëanor, refuse the pardon of the Valar and remain in Middle-earth.
Second and Third Ages Gil-galad founds a new kingdom at
Lindon and rules throughout the
Second Age, longer than any of the High Kings before him. After Sauron re-emerges and manipulates Celebrimbor and the smiths of Eregion into forging the
Rings of Power, he fortifies
Mordor and begins the long war with the remaining Elves in Middle-earth. His forces attack Eregion, destroying it, but are repelled at
Rivendell and Lindon. With the aid of the
Númenóreans, the Noldor manage to defeat him for a time. In the year 3319 of the Second Age, Sauron manipulates the Númenóreans and their King, Ar-Pharazôn, to rebel against the Valar.
Númenor is destroyed.
Elendil escapes to the mainland with his sons Anárion and
Isildur, who establish the realms of Arnor and
Gondor. Gil-galad sets out for Mordor in the
Last Alliance of Elves and Men with Elendil's forces and defeats Sauron in the Siege of Barad-dûr, though Gil-galad himself perishes with no successors as High King of the Noldor. Among the lineal descendants of Finwë in Middle-earth, only Galadriel and some
Half-elven remain. In the
Third Age, the Noldor in Middle-earth dwindle, and at the end of the Third Age the remaining Noldor depart to Valinor. == House of Finwë ==