About: Ringló   Sponge Permalink

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The river Ringló was counted as the fourth of the Seven Rivers of Gondor in the land of Lamedon in Gondor. The Ringló began in the White Mountains, and arose as two smaller rivers (unnamed) on the southern arm that bend towards Belfalas. It flowed through the Gondor city of Ethring and passed north of the Hills of Tarnost where it was met by its tributary Ciril, and met the sea at Edhellond, near Cobas Haven above Dol Amroth in southern Gondor. It's main tributary was the river Blackroot According to Karen Wynn Fonstad's The Atlas of Middle-earth, its length was almost one-hundred and fifty miles.

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  • Ringló
  • Ringló
  • Ringló
rdfs:comment
  • Der Ringló war einer der größten Flüsse Gondors und der größte, der in den Morthond mündete. Auch durch seine geografische Beschaffenheit, kann sein Name Kaltfenn erklärt werden: Während der Schneeschmelze im Frühling, flossen große Teile des kalten Wassers in den Ringló, der so zu einem gewaltigen Fluß anschwoll, jedoch immer sehr flach, aber dafür um so breiter war. Er hatte eine stattliche Größe, da andere Flüsse wie zum Beispiel der Ciril in ihn mündeten. Kurz vor dem Meer mündete der Ringló in den Morthond.
  • The river Ringló was counted as the fourth of the Seven Rivers of Gondor in the land of Lamedon in Gondor. The Ringló began in the White Mountains, and arose as two smaller rivers (unnamed) on the southern arm that bend towards Belfalas. It flowed through the Gondor city of Ethring and passed north of the Hills of Tarnost where it was met by its tributary Ciril, and met the sea at Edhellond, near Cobas Haven above Dol Amroth in southern Gondor. It's main tributary was the river Blackroot According to Karen Wynn Fonstad's The Atlas of Middle-earth, its length was almost one-hundred and fifty miles.
  • The Ringló rose in the White Mountainse near Iathring from where it flew southwest until it joined the Morthond. Small craft could navigate the Ringló, but most of the White Mountain ores traveled by land to Linhir , where they were loaded aboard ships bound for the rest of Gondor.
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dbkwik:lotr/proper...iPageUsesTemplate
abstract
  • Der Ringló war einer der größten Flüsse Gondors und der größte, der in den Morthond mündete. Auch durch seine geografische Beschaffenheit, kann sein Name Kaltfenn erklärt werden: Während der Schneeschmelze im Frühling, flossen große Teile des kalten Wassers in den Ringló, der so zu einem gewaltigen Fluß anschwoll, jedoch immer sehr flach, aber dafür um so breiter war. Er hatte eine stattliche Größe, da andere Flüsse wie zum Beispiel der Ciril in ihn mündeten. Kurz vor dem Meer mündete der Ringló in den Morthond.
  • The river Ringló was counted as the fourth of the Seven Rivers of Gondor in the land of Lamedon in Gondor. The Ringló began in the White Mountains, and arose as two smaller rivers (unnamed) on the southern arm that bend towards Belfalas. It flowed through the Gondor city of Ethring and passed north of the Hills of Tarnost where it was met by its tributary Ciril, and met the sea at Edhellond, near Cobas Haven above Dol Amroth in southern Gondor. It's main tributary was the river Blackroot According to Karen Wynn Fonstad's The Atlas of Middle-earth, its length was almost one-hundred and fifty miles.
  • The Ringló rose in the White Mountainse near Iathring from where it flew southwest until it joined the Morthond. Small craft could navigate the Ringló, but most of the White Mountain ores traveled by land to Linhir , where they were loaded aboard ships bound for the rest of Gondor.
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