Radagast

Radagast, known as Radagast the Brown, was a Wizard of Middle-earth, one of the Istari.

Biography
Radagast was originally a Maia spirit of Yavanna and was called Aiwendil, meaning 'bird-friend'. He was chosen as one of the Istari who came to Middle-earth in the year TA 1000.Radagast protects the great forests. He was little concerned with the affairs of Men and Elves but was far more knowledgeable in plants, birds and beasts in the forest. During the Council of Elrond, Gandalf refers to Radagast as "master of shapes and changes of hue", but the meaning of this is open to question. He at one time dwelt at Rhosgobel, on the western eaves of southern Mirkwood, possibly near the Gladden Fields on the Great River.

Radagast, like the other wizards, came from Valinor around the year 1000 of the Third Age of Middle-earth and was one of the Maiar. The Vala Yavanna forced Saruman to accept Radagast as a companion, which may have been one of the reasons Saruman was contemptuous of him.

Radagast was unwittingly used by Saruman to lure Gandalf to Orthanc, where Gandalf was captured. However, Radagast also unwittingly helped rescue the grey wizard by alerting the eagles of Gandalf's journey there. This was his only real known contribution to the War of the Ring.

When messengers from Elrond tried to approach Radagast for his aid in the fight against Sauron, they found his dwellings at Rhosgobel empty. His fate after the War of the Ring is not known.

In The Hobbit, Gandalf says that Radagast is his cousin, though this may mean refer to friendship or the fact that they are both Istari, and not actual close kinship, except in they are both Maiar.

Behind the Scenes
It is not known when or if Radagast left Middle-earth. Tolkien writes that he forsook his mission as one of the Wizards by becoming too obsessed with animals and plants, so presumably he failed, and might not be allowed to return with honour. Tolkien also wrote that he did not believe that Radagast's failure was as great as Saruman's and that he may eventually have been allowed (or chose) to return to the Undying Lands. On the other hand, however, the primary mission of Radagast appointed by Yavanna may have actually been to watch over many of the flora and fauna of Middle-earth and to ensure their survival in the likely case if Sauron conquered Middle-earth, and in this, he succeeded.

However, in a later note Tolkien said that the name is in the language of the Men of the Vales of Anduin, and that its meaning is not interpretable. The name Radagast may actually be Anglo-Saxon, and could have several interpretations, but, according to The Languages of Middle-earth, this name is derived from a Slavic pagan god. The name Radegast was a name for one of West Slavic lesser gods. He is a god of the Sun, war, fertility and harvest. He is also called Radigost, Radhost, Radhošť, Redigast.

According to the essay "The Istari" from the Unfinished Tales, Radagast means "tender of beasts" in Adûnaic, the language of Númenor.

The Hobbit trilogy
The character Radagast and virtually all references to him (with the exception of the presence of benign Eagles directed by an unseen force) were not used in the film versions of The Lord of the Rings directed by Peter Jackson. The character is also absent from the 1978 animated movie of the same name.

Radagast does appear in Peter Jackson's first Hobbit film, although none of the incidents involving Radagast in the movie were ever mentioned in any of Tolkien's writings; they are original to the movie. In the book, Radagast is mentioned only once in passing, as Gandalf's "cousin." . In the movie he is portrayed by actor Sylvester McCoy of Doctor Who fame. In The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, Radagast can communicate with animals and shows a great knowledge of herbs and medicines, including being able to restore a recently deceased hedgehog to life. He is also shown to posses formidable combat abilities, such as being able to ward off an attack by the Witch-king of Angmar (or his summoned shade) while investigating Dol Guldur. His preferred form of transportation is a sled made of sticks and pulled by "Rhosgobel rabbits". The sled is fast enough to outrun a pack of Gundabad Wargs, which were ridden by Orcs under command of Azog in the film.

Radagast is first alluded to in the film The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey (2012) when Bilbo Baggins enquirers to Gandalf about whether there are any other wizards within Middle-Earth. Gandalf responds by stating there are five wizards, of whom Radagast is amongst. Gandalf states that he believes Radagast is a great wizard in his own particular way in which he prefers the solitude of standing guard over the Greenwood forest preferring the company of animals over men.

Radagast is then seen investigating the Greenwood noting that much of the vegetation is beginning to decay with much of the animal life lying sick or dying among the forest floor. Radagast finds a hedgehog that he refers to as Sebastian lying sick and dying within the forest. Radagast brings Sebastian back to his woodland house of Rhosgobel and is able to nurse the hedgehog back to health. Radagast comes to the realisation that is a type of powerful witchcraft that has caused the decay of the Greenwood and its transformation into what it would now become to be known as Mirkwood. After Rhosgobel is swarmed by Giant Spiders, Radagast consults his animal friends as to the origin of these spiders which is identified to be the supposed abandoned fortress of Dol Guldur.

Radagast makes his way to Dol Guldur aboard a sled pulled by Rhosgobel rabbits. While Radagast is investigating Dol Guldur he is attacked by the spirit of the Witch-king of Angmar. Radagast is able to ward off his attacks and force the Witch-King to drop his Morgul-blade and retreat. Radagast takes the Morgul-blade but before he leaves he notices a dark spirit within the fortress, whom he believes to be the Necromancer.

He immediately goes on the search for Gandalf to inform him of the new found threat within Mirkwood and is able to locate him within the Trollshaws alongside Thorin and Company. Radagast begins to inform Gandalf of the threat the Necromancer is posing to Middle-Earth from within Dol Guldur and presents the Morgul-Blade as evidence. Shortly after the company is attacked by a battalion of Warg Riders in which Radagast volunteers to create a diversion from the company with his sled of Rhosgobel rabbits. The Warg Riders are distracted from their main target by Radagast and are drawn away from Gandalf and Thorin's Company buying them time into moving into the safety in the Hidden Valley of Imladris. Radagast's rabbit sled's superiority in speed and maneuverability allows him to escape the Warg Riders before they are driven off by elven horseman lead by Elrond.

At the White Council meeting in Rivendell, Gandalf backs Radagast's claim that the Necromancer posed a serious threat to Middle-Earth, yet the head of the White Council, the white wizard Saruman remained skeptical claiming there was no evidence to support such a theory despite Radagast's findings of the Morgul-blade. Furthermore Saruman claimed that excessive consumption of mushrooms had addled the judgement and reliability of Radagast's findings.

Somehow, over the course of the next two Hobbit films, Radagast mysteriously dissapears and Gandalf acquires Radagast's Wizard Staff.

Video games
Radagast also appears in the trading card game connected to Jackson's Lord of the Rings Trilogy, and in the video games The Lord of the Rings: War in the North and The Lord of the Rings Online.

He also appears in the game LEGO Lord of the Rings as a playable character and can be purchased near Bree, however he does tend to wander and is not always in a set location. His equipment includes only a staff which is unique to this character.

Etymology
His original name was Aiwendil, meaning "bird-friend" in Quenya (Tengwar: full spelling or vowel-abbreviated spelling ; IPA: ).

External link


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