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Radagast, like the other Wizards, came from ] around the year 1000 of the Third Age of ] and was originally one of the ]. His name as a Maia was ''Aiwendil'', meaning "bird-friend" in ]. The ] ] forced ] to accept Radagast as a companion, making Saruman contemptuous of him. Radagast, like the other Wizards, came from ] around the year 1000 of the ] of ] and was originally one of the ]. His name as a Maia was ''Aiwendil'', meaning "bird-friend" in ]. The ] ] forced ] to accept Radagast as a companion, making Saruman contemptuous of him.


Radagast's name means "tender of beasts" in a language of ]. Radagast's name means "tender of beasts" in a language of ].

Revision as of 04:53, 2 January 2004

Radagast the Brown is one of the Wizards in J. R. R. Tolkien's fantasy epic The Lord of the Rings and is mentioned in The Hobbit. He was a good friend of Gandalf, and had a strong affinity for animals. He lived at Rhosgobel.


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Radagast, like the other Wizards, came from Valinor around the year 1000 of the Third Age of Middle-earth and was originally one of the Maiar. His name as a Maia was Aiwendil, meaning "bird-friend" in Quenya. The Vala Yavanna forced Saruman to accept Radagast as a companion, making Saruman contemptuous of him.

Radagast's name means "tender of beasts" in a language of Númenor.

Radagast was unwittingly used by Saruman to lure Gandalf to Orthanc, where Gandalf was captured.

It is not known when or if he left Middle-earth. Tolkien writes that he forsook his mission as one of the Wizards by becoming too obsessed with animals, so presumably he was not allowed to return.