Beorn

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Character from Tolkien's Legendarium
Name Beorn
Race Men
Culture Northmen
Date of birth Unknown
Date of death Before War of the Ring
Book(s) The Hobbit

In J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth legendarium, Beorn was a shape-shifter, a man who could assume the appearance of a great black bear.

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He lived with his animals (horses, dogs and ponies among others) in a wooden house between the Misty Mountains and Mirkwood, to the east of the Anduin.

Beorn was of immense size and strength for a man, and retained his size and strength in bear-form. He had brown hair and a thick black beard and broad shoulders.

Beorn often left his home, for hours or days at a time, for purposes not completely known. It is possible he could have left to drive out or eliminate enemies and other threats from the surrounding lands, and/or to find edible vegetation from further away. Beorn could be nocturnal as well, as he seemed to leave at night in bear-form. His origins lay in the distant past, and Gandalf the Grey suspected he and his people had originally come from the mountains.

Beorn named the Carrock and created the steps that led from its base to the flat top.

In The Hobbit, Beorn received Gandalf, Bilbo Baggins, and the thirteen Dwarves and aided them in their quest. In the Battle of Five Armies, Beorn came in bear-form and rescued Thorin Oakenshield from the goblins and killed their leader Bolg.

Before the time of the War of the Ring, Beorn had become a leader of Men, including other shape-shifters, and woodsmen. His people were known as the Beornings, and they helped defend Thranduil's kingdom at northern Mirkwood. He died some time before the War of the Ring itself began, and was succeeded by his son Grimbeorn the Old.

Beorn does not appear in the Rankin-Bass animated adaptation of The Hobbit.

Beorn was a skilled woodworker and builder, especially within his property, as he was also adroit with hand tools. He was very protective of his trained animals, who were of high intelligence. He was usually suspicious and distrustful of strangers, so Gandalf had to trick him into giving his party shelter (which he received in good humour). He was also fearless and intimidating, and a fearsome enemy (capturing an orc and a wolf, he put the orc's head on a pike and skinned the wolf).

Beorn lived on bread, honey and clotted cream.

In naming his character, Tolkien used beorn, the Old English word for "bear", which later came to mean "man" and "warrior" (with implications of "freeman" and "nobleman" in Anglo-Saxon society). It is related to the Scandinavian names Björn (Icelandic and Swedish) and Bjørn (Norwegian and Danish), meaning "bear". The word baron is indirectly related to beorn.

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