The most famous union of Men and Elves was the marriage of Aragorn and Arwen from The Lord of the Rings. Aragorn strove to become worthy of Arwen in the eyes of her father, Elrond, and Arwen sacrificed her Elven immortality so that she could spend a mortal lifetime with him. Their story paralleled that of their ancestors from the First Age, Beren and Lúthien. Beren stole a Silmaril from the Dark Lord Morgoth to win the approval of her father, Elu Thingol, and Lúthien sacrificed her Elven immortality to bring Beren back to life when he fell in battle. Despite hardships, everything worked out for these couples in the end, but the romance between mortals and immortals more commonly ended in tragedy. Nothing from Tolkien’s legendarium captured that idea better than the doomed love story of Aegnor and Andreth. Tolkien mentioned Aegnor in The Silmarillion, but his relationship with Andreth was instead detailed in Morgoth’s Ring, which Tolkien’s son, Christopher, published after his father’s death. The story of Aegnor and Andreth demonstrated the danger of Men and Elves falling for one another.
Love Bloomed in the Midst of One of Middle-earth’s Deadliest Conflicts
Aegnor was an Elf born in the Undying Lands during the Years of the Trees. He was the second-youngest son of Finarfin, making him the older brother of Galadriel from The Lord of the Rings and the younger brother of Finrod and Angrod. Like his uncle, Fëanor, Aegnor was a mighty warrior with a fiery spirit; his name even meant “Fell Fire” in the Elvish language of Sindarin. But he was not as aggressive or as immoral as Fëanor, and he stood firmly against his uncle’s violent actions, such as the Kinslaying. After Morgoth destroyed the Two Trees of Valinor, Aegnor was one of the Elves who sailed to Middle-earth and participated in the Wars of Beleriand against Morgoth and his forces. He and his brothers led a group of Elves to the forested highlands of Dorthonion and settled there. Finrod eventually left to establish a realm of his own, but Aegnor and Angrod continued to rule over the region.
One day, Aegnor wandered beside a lake called Tarn Aeluin and saw the reflection of a beautiful woman in the water. He did not know who she was, but he immediately fell in love. This woman was named Andreth. She hailed from the House of Bëor, the same clan of Men to which Beren belonged; in fact, she was Beren’s cousin. Andreth was renowned for her wisdom and her knowledge of history, much of which she learned from her aunt, Adanel. The Elves referred to her as Saelind, meaning “Wise-heart” in Sindarin. Like her aunt before her, she was a deeply respected member of the community, and others frequently came to her for advice. According to The Peoples of Middle-earth, she even possessed a degree of foresight, as she prophesied that the mighty warrior Túrin Turambar would one day return from the dead and kill Morgoth during the Dagor Dagorath. Though Andreth reciprocated Aegnor’s feelings, their love was not meant to be.
Aegnor and Andreth Gave In to Despair
Andreth’s father was named Boromir, though he was unrelated to the character of the same name from The Lord of the Rings.
Aegnor and Andreth met during the Siege of Angband, an assault against Morgoth’s fortress that lasted nearly 400 years. Elves were not supposed to wed during times of war because the chance of dying in battle and leaving behind a widow or orphan was too great. Love also served as a potential distraction that could lead to soldiers neglecting their duties. Further, even in times of peace, the romance between mortals and immortals was frowned upon since their lifespans and other traits were so different from one another. Aegnor believed that he and Andreth could not be together, and in an attempt to spare her feelings, he left without explanation, but this only broke Andreth’s heart. Neither of them ever found love again, and they spent the rest of their lives alone. Despite Andreth’s tragedy, she remained a respected member of the House of Bëor. She also befriended Aegnor’s brother, Finrod, when he returned to Dorthonion.
As Andreth neared the end of her life, she and Finrod had a long, philosophical conversation known as “Athrabeth Finrod ah Andreth,” or “The Debate of Finrod and Andreth.” They discussed a wide array of topics, including religion, life after death, the nature of humanity, and other similarly lofty concepts. They compared the perspectives of Men and Elves in an attempt to come to a greater understanding of one another. But their conversation also touched upon Andreth’s relationship with Aegnor, or more accurately, her lack thereof. For readers, “Athrabeth Finrod ah Andreth” was the main source of information about both characters. Andreth was bitter about what happened, assuming that Aegnor disrespected her because she was not an Elf: “We are children to you also: to be loved a little maybe, and yet creatures of less worth, upon whom ye may look down from the height of your power and your knowledge, with a smile, or with pity, or with a shaking of heads.” Finrod disagreed with her assessment. He tried to comfort her by telling her that Aegnor loved her dearly and still thought of her even during the war.
Aegnor and Andreth Were Doomed From the Start
Finrod also pointed out that their love would have inevitably ended in tragedy. As an immortal, Aegnor would have been forced to watch Andreth grow old and die without him, which would have been excruciating. In Peter Jackson’s The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers film, Elrond expresses a similar sentiment to Arwen to dissuade her from pursuing a relationship with Aragorn. Finrod believed that his brother had made the right choice by breaking off his relationship with Andreth before it truly began. By contrast, Andreth thought that the pain of grief would have been worth it. She pointed out that all mortals had to deal with losing people they loved and that only Elves had the luxury of avoiding it. She proclaimed, “For one year, one day, of the flame, I would have given all: kin, youth, and hope itself: [a mortal woman] I am.” The sad irony is that Aegnor did not outlive Andreth anyway. In the year 455 of the First Age, both he and Angrod were killed by Morgoth’s forces in the Battle of the Sudden Flame, and Andreth passed away from natural causes soon after.The tragic story of Aegnor and Andreth showed the true stakes of romance between Men and Elves. The stories of Beren and Lúthien and Aragorn and Arwen were exceptions to the usual fate that such unions met. By all rights, their stories should have ended in tragedy — it took hard work, sacrifice, and a great deal of luck to make their relationships work. Characters like Elrond and Thingol would have been well aware of such stories, which partially explained their hesitation to approve of their daughters marrying mortal Men. Prime Video’s The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power also explored a romance between a mortal and an immortal, and like the story of Aegnor and Andreth, it ended in tragedy. Between seasons, Bronwyn died from wounds she sustained during Adar’s attack on Tirharad. In the episode “The Eagle and the Sceptre,” Arondir explained that a fellow Elf likely could have survived the same injury: “There is a foulness in Orc arrows not easily forgotten by human flesh.” The odds were against Aragorn and Arwen, which made the success of their love in The Lord of the Rings feel all the more triumphant.