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SarnGebirLOTRO

The Rapids of Sarn Gebir as depicted in The Lord of the Rings Online

The Rapids of Sarn Gebir,[1] or simply the Rapids, were an impassible part of the great river Anduin.

History[]

The rapids passed through the highlands of the Emyn Muil, above the Argonath and Falls of Rauros. As the Rapids of Sarn Gebir was filled with spiky rocks and stony eyots, a portage-way was built on the western bank of the river in order for travelers to avoid the rapids and go southward.[2]

On February 23 in TA 3019, the Fellowship of the Ring encountered a number of Orc archers and a Nazgûl, whose winged steed was shot down by Legolas, just prior to approaching the Rapids of Sarn Gebir. The Fellowship afterwards used the portage-way to carry their light boats past the rapids. On February 25, Boromir remarked during the passage that there are no boats that can withstand the Rapids of Sarn Gebir.[2]

Etymology[]

Sarn Gebir means "stone-spiked" in the Sindarin language.[3]

Other versions[]

In an early draft to The Lord of the Rings, J.R.R. Tolkien originally used the names Rapids of Pensarn, Sarn Ruin, and Ruinel for the rapids. Sarn Gebir originally referred to the Emyn Muil.[4]

In adaptations[]

The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring[]

The ambush at the Rapids of Sarn Gebir were originally set to appear in Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001), but on the night before filming was set to begin, torrential rains and twenty feet high floodwaters washed away the set. Due to time and budgeting constraints, the scene was then cut from the screenplay.

The Lord of the Rings Online'[]

The Rapids of Sarn Gebir appears in The Lord of the Rings Online as a playable location.

Translations[]

Foreign Language Translated name
Amharic ሳርን ገቢር
Arabic سارن جبير
Armenian Սառն Գեբիր
Belarusian Cyrillic Сарн Гебір
Bengali সার্ন জাবির
Bulgarian Cyrillic Сарн Гебир
Danish Sarn Gebir ("Klippeskærene")
Georgian საარნ ღებირ
Gujarati સાર્ન ગેબીર
Hebrew סארן גביר
Hindi सर्न गेबीर
Japanese サーン ゲビル
Kannada ಸರ್ನ್ ಗೆಬೀರ್
Kazakh Сарн Гебир (Cyrillic) Sarn Gebïr (Latin)
Kyrgyz Cyrillic Сарн Гэбир
Macedonian Cyrillic Сарн Гебир
Marathi सरन गेबीर
Mongolian Cyrillic Сарн Гебир
Nepalese सर्न गेबिर
Persian سارن جبریر
Punjabi ਸਬਰ ਗਬੀਰ
Russian Сарн Гебир
Serbian Сарн Гебир (Cyrillic) Sarn Gebir (Latin)
Sinhalese සර්න් ගෙබීර්
Tajik Cyrillic Сарн Гебир
Tamil ஸர்ந கெபிர்
Tatar Сарн Гебир
Telugu సర్న్ జబీర్
Ukrainian Cyrillic Сарн Гебір
Urdu سارن جابر
Uzbek Сарн Гебир (Cyrillic) Sarn Gebir (Latin)
Yiddish סאַרן געביר

References[]

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