![]() ![]() ![]() After he and his cousin Merry drank the Ent-draught in Farngorn forest, they began to grow – so much so that they became the tallest hobbits in history, even surpassing the famed Bandobras “Bullroarer” Took, one of Pippin’s ancestors and hero of the Shire.Īmong the people of Minas Tirith, Gondor’s capital city, Pippin was known as Ernil i Pheriannath or Prince of the Halflings. He was only 28 years old at the time, and hobbits consider adulthood to start at the age of 33. When the Fellowship began in Rivendell, Pippin was the youngest in the group. This might explain this family’s adventurous nature. There was a rumor among the hobbits that one ancestor of the Tooks may have married an elf long ago. Faramir Took eventually married Goldilocks Gardner, one of Sam’s daughters. Here, both Pippin and Merry would eventually be buried alongside Aragorn. Faramir Took, Pippin’s only son and heir, also inherited this title after his father’s departure to Gondor. After the War of the Ring and the death of his father, Pippin took up the role of Thain of the Shire, and was also made Counselor of the North Kingdom by Aragorn, King of Gondor. This is the grand hobbit military leader, a title that has been passed down through the generations ever since the fall of Fornost and the Dúnedain Kingdom. His family lived in a place called the Great Smials in Tookland, and the head usually held the title of Thain. Like his first cousin and best friend, Meriadoc Brandybuck, Pippin’s family was one of the wealthiest in the Shire. Peregrin Took, or more commonly known as Pippin, was one of the four hobbits that joined the Fellowship of the Ring. But in adapting such expansive works of fiction to the silver screen means you’re going to miss some of the richest character development for anyone outside of the primary two or three characters. This is the second part in this series in which we give you a little more depth and lore about some of the best characters to emerge from the mind of Tolkien – including some that never made the jump from page to screen. The Lord of the Rings trilogy, and later the three Hobbit movies, translated the work of JRR Tolkien to the big screen with… well, mostly great success. ![]()
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