Special Report

The Most Popular 'Lord of the Rings' Characters

Courtesy of New Line Cinema

The three-volume J. R. R. Tolkien novel known collectively as “The Lord of the Rings” is, at its core, an incredibly complex fairytale. Tolkien created a rich history and culture for his characters, and invented more than 15 original languages (he was a professional linguist) for the Elves, Orcs, Dwarves, Ents, and other inhabitants of Middle-earth in “The Lord of the Rings” and related works.

Tolkien’s masterpiece was brought to the attention of a new generation by Peter Jackson’s three films, two of which are considered among the 55 best movies ever made.

Middle-earth continues to claim even more hearts and minds through The Lord of the Rings Online, an extensive and constantly evolving multi-participant role-playing game, whose latest expansion is scheduled to be released later this year. (These are the 20 best-selling video games of all time.)

For many of us, though, Middle-earth first came to life on paper, through the thousands of pages that make up the body of work known as Tolkien’s Legendarium — encompassing not just “The Lord of the Rings,” but also its predecessor “The Hobbit” and the subsequently published “The Silmarillion” and “Unfinished Tales.”

One Tolkien expert has computed that there are some 888 named characters in the Legendarium. At least 218 of these appear in “The Lord of the Rings.” To help make sense of the most important of them, 24/7 Tempo has assembled a list of the most popular characters in the trilogy, based on Wiki page views over the past 12 months. 

Click here to see the Lord of the Rings characters ranked.

Courtesy of New Line Cinema

38. Éothain
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 578

Éothain was a Man of Rohan (Rohirrim) who rode in Éomer’s company, the same group that rescued Merry and Pippin from an Orc camp in “The Two Towers.”

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Courtesy of New Line Productions

37. Éomund
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 626

Éomund was the head of the Rohirrim under King Théoden. He would marry Théodwyn, the king’s sister, and they would have two children, Éowyn and Éomer.

Courtesy of New Line Productions

36. Beechbone
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 834

Beechbone was a famously handsome and tall Ent (tree-person) from Fangorn Forest who participated in the raid on Isengard in “The Two Towers.”

Courtesy of New Line Productions

35. Bregalad
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 1,400

Bregalad (“Quickbeam” in the common tongue) was a young Ent known for his hastiness. He was the first of his kind to support the decision to besiege Isengard and attack Sarumon’s forces, and was made to keep watch over Merry and Pippin while they were amongst the tree-people.

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Courtesy of New Line Productions

34. Khamûl
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 3,814

Khamûl was the second-most powerful of the nine Ringwraiths under the Witch-King. Khamûl held Dol Guldur and protected the Dark Lord Sauron while he posed as “the Necromancer” upon his return to Middle Earth.

Jackie.lck / Wikimedia Commons

33. Goldberry
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 8,722

Goldberry was a “River-Daughter” from Withywindle, a smaller tributary of the Brandywine River that was near The Shire. She was wed to Tom Bombadil, and no one knew the exact nature of either her or her husband.

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Courtesy of New Line Cinema

32. Déagol
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 23,890

Déagol found the One Ring while fishing with his cousin, Sméagol. The first Ring-Bearer in over 2,400 years was immediately strangled to death by his cousin, and his body was hidden well enough to avoid its ever being discovered.

Courtesy of New Line Productions

31. Glorfindel
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 28,136

Glorfindel was a hero of the First Age, and his spirit was re-embodied soon after his death. He returned to Middle-earth soon after the One Ring had been forged, and was a member of the party sent by Elrond to save an injured Frodo from the Ringwraiths and bring him to Rivendell.

Courtesy of New Line Cinema

30. Celeborn
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 46,352

Celeborn was an Elf who, as Lord of Lothlórien, received the Fellowship of the Ring and furnished them with ships to navigate the Anduin River. He attended the wedding of his granddaughter, Arwen, to Aragorn II Elessar.

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Courtesy of New Line Cinema

29. Elendil
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 49,496

Elendil was the King of Gondor during the War of the Last Alliance. He and Gil-Galad killed Sauron during the Siege of Barad-dûr, but both died for their efforts.

Courtesy of New Line Productions

28. Treebeard
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 85,420

Treebeard was the oldest Ent in Middle-earth when he met Peregrin and Merry in Fangorn Forest. When he learned that Sarumon was cutting down the forest’s trees to power his war machine, he led the Ents to war against the wizard.

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Courtesy of New Line Cinema

27. Merry Brandybuck
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 94,192

Meriadoc Brandybuck (“Merry”) was a cousin of Frodo Baggins and one of his best friends. Merry was one of the nine companions of the Fellowship of the Ring, and was seemingly attached at the hip to his very best friend, Pippin Took.

Courtesy of New Line Cinema

26. Pippin Took
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 97,699

Peregrin (“Pippin”) Took was another one of Frodo Baggins’s closest friends who would join him as a companion of the Fellowship of the Ring. Pippin had several misadventures during the larger quest with his best friend, Merry.

Courtesy of Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc.

25. Radagast
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 107,595

Radagast the Brown was one of the most powerful wizards in Middle-earth during the Third Age. He was known as “The Tender of Beasts”, and was indeed more invested in the wellbeing of plants and animals rather than the affairs of men.

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Courtesy of New Line Cinema

24. Théoden
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 116,626

Théoden was a King of Rohan in the Third Age, famously corrupted by his advisor Gríma (Wormtongue to most) on behalf of Sarumon the White. He would redeem himself upon his successful defense of Hornburg during the Battle of Helm’s Deep.

Courtesy of New Line Cinema

23. Isildur
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 119,375

Isildur was the eldest son of Elendil, who refused to destroy the One Ring after his father cut it from Sauron’s hand before his death. Isildur and his three eldest sons were killed during their return journey from Sauron’s defeat, and the Ring was lost for over two millennia.

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Courtesy of New Line Cinema

22. Denethor II
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 125,035

Denethor II was the final Steward of Gondor and father to Boromir and Faramir, both of whom would play significant roles in the War of the Ring. Driven to bitterness after using a Palantír (seeing-stone) to assess Sauron’s forces, he would die trying to take the grievously injured Faramir with him.

Courtesy of New Line Cinema

21. Gríma Wormtongue
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 146,475

Gríma Wormtongue was chief advisor to King Théoden of Rohan, later exposed as a spy on behalf of Saruman working to weaken the king and his forces. He was exiled from Rohan, and eventually killed Saruman in revenge for the years of degradation that he suffered at his hand.

Courtesy of New Line Cinema

20. Faramir
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 161,767

Faramir was the younger brother of Boromir, son of Denethor II. After Boromir’s death, Denethor sent his remaining son to defend an indefensible post. Faramir was injured and brought back to Gondor, only to have his father try to burn him on a funeral pyre.

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Courtesy of New Line Cinema

19. Boromir
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 176,604

Boromir was the first son of Denethor II of Rohan, elder brother of Faramir. Boromir tried to convince Frodo to use the One Ring in defense of Minas Tirith, and eventually tried to take it from him. Boromir was killed after Orcs raided his camp, fighting to defend Merry and Pippin.

Courtesy of New Line Cinema

18. Samwise Gamgee
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 184,690

Samwise (“Sam”) Gamgee was a gardener in The Shire, and Frodo Baggins’s best friend. Sam would join the group of Hobbits serving as companions of the Fellowship of the Ring. Sam was Frodo’s most dependable asset in his quest to destroy the One Ring.

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Courtesy of New Line Cinema

17. Gimli
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 197,377

Gimli, son of Glóin, was a dwarven emissary to Rivendell when he volunteered as a companion of the Fellowship of the Ring. Gimli was a respected warrior, and one of the only Dwarves who chose to fight alongside the Elves in the fight to come against Sauron.

Courtesy of New Line Productions

16. Shelob
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 241,614

Shelob was a giant spider, formerly of Mordor, that lived in the pass of Cirith Ungol next to an Orc stronghold. Gollum led Sam and Frodo to the pass in the hope that she would kill the Hobbits, but Sam successfully fought Shelob off after she stabbed Frodo through the abdomen.

Courtesy of New Line Cinema

15. Elrond
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 256,318

Elrond Half-Elven was the Lord of Rivendell in the Third Age. Elrond fought at the Battle of Dagorlad, and saw Isildur keep the One Ring. This failure colored Elrond’s perception of mortals and contributed to an underlying conviction that Sauron could not be defeated.

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Courtesy of New Line Cinema

14. Éowyn
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 257,980

Éowyn was a Shieldmaiden of Rohan, the daughter of Éomund and Théodwyn, who defied her father’s orders not to fight at Helm’s Deep by dressing as a man. Éowyn killed the Witch-King at the Battle of Pelennor Fields, fulfilling the prophecy that he would die “not by the hand of man”.

Courtesy of New Line Cinema

13. Saruman
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 277,962

Saruman the White was the first among the wizards of Middle-earth during the Third Age. His extensive study of dark magic led him to desire the One Ring, and he secretly allied Isengard to Mordor.

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Courtesy of New Line Productions

12. Nazgûl
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 302,195

The Nazgûl were the nine ringwraiths, Sauron’s most dangerous and devoted servants. They were originally the nine human recipients of Rings of Power, and Sauron was able to corrupt them over the course of their lives to the point that they became invisible to the physical world.

Courtesy of New Line Cinema

11. Éomer
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 305,553

Éomer, son of Éomund and Théodwyn, was a marshal in the Rohirrim during the War of the Ring. He became the King of Rohan and renewed the Oath of Eorl between his kingdom and Aragorn II’s Gondor for the first time since Isildur’s death.

Courtesy of New Line Cinema

10. Frodo Baggins
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 311,096

Frodo Baggins was a Hobbit of The Shire in the Third Age. He became Ring-Bearer after his “Uncle” Bilbo Baggins was convinced by Gandalf to surrender it to them voluntarily, and would be tasked with destroying the One Ring in Mount Doom.

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Courtesy of New Line Cinema

9. Bilbo Baggins
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 341,673

Bilbo Baggins was a Hobbit of The Shire in the Third Age, Ring-Bearer, survivor of the Quest of Erebor, veteran of the Battle of Five Armies, adopted guardian of Frodo Baggins, and author of “There and Back Again.”

Courtesy of New Line Cinema

8. Legolas
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 342,886

Legolas was the Elven Prince of Mirkwood, son of Elvenking Thranduil, and companion of the Fellowship of the Ring. Legolas was a master archer, and famously became friends with Gimli the dwarf in spite of the shared antipathy between their peoples.

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Courtesy of New Line Cinema

7. Arwen
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 377,214

Arwen, Half-Elven daughter of Elrond and Celebrían, married Aragorn II and became Queen of the Reunited Kingdom of Arnor and Gondor after the War of the Ring. Her choice to forego her immortality to live with Aragorn and her actions thereafter helped Elf and Human once more.

In Hobbiton / Tara Hunt / Wikimedia Commons

6. Tom Bombadil
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 410,434

Tom Bombadil is a famously old figure of famously unknown origins who lives along the Withywindle with his wife, a River-Spirit named Goldberry. Tom is a guardian of the forest, with unimaginable power and an irreverent wit, and is thought to be a Maia or some other spiritual figure.

Courtesy of New Line Cinema

5. Galadriel
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 412,648

Galadriel was an immensely powerful Elf in the Third Age who served as Lady of Lothlórien during the War of the Ring. She bore Nenya (one of the Three Elven Rings of Power), and used its powers to conserve and protect the Elven wood from evil until Sauron’s defeat.

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Courtesy of New Line Cinema

4. Gandalf
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 613,956

Gandalf the Grey was one of the wizards sent to Middle-earth to help fight Sauron in the Third Age. He was known to be kind, with an interest in Hobbits and their pipe-weed. Gandalf did not show much of his immense power, but upon his death he was returned as Gandalf the White.

Courtesy of New Line Cinema

3. Aragorn II Elessar
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 662,114

Aragorn II Elessar, Son of Arathorn II and Gilraen, husband of Arwen, was Chieftain of the Dúnedain of the North. Aragorn was made King Elessar Telcontar after serving as a companion of the Fellowship of the Ring, reuniting Arnor and Gondor for the first time since Isildur’s reign.

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Courtesy of New Line Cinema

2. Sauron
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 762,305

Sauron, The Second Dark Lord, created the Rings of Power to conquer Middle-earth in revenge for the death of his master. Defeated in the Second Age by the Last Alliance of Elves and Men, he would rest and recover for centuries until he was permanently beaten in the War of the Ring.

Courtesy of New Line Cinema

1. Gollum
> Wiki page views last 12 months: 771,702

Gollum began his unnaturally long life as Sméagol, an early Hobbit who was corrupted by the power of the One Ring. Gollum lost the ring to Bilbo Baggins under the Misty Mountains, and would search for it until he found Frodo Baggins and the Fellowship of the Ring a century later.

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