Mount Doom
In
J. R. R. Tolkien's
fictional universe of
Middle-earth,
Mount Doom, or
Orodruin, is a
volcano in
Mordor where the
One Ring was forged in the
Crack of Doom, a fiery chasm within the mountain.
Frodo's quest to destroy the Ring at Mount Doom occupies the bulk of
The Lord of the Rings.
Orodruin is
Sindarin for "Fire Mountain". The Sindarin equivalent of
Mount Doom is
Amon Amarth, meaning "Mountain of Fate".
When Sauron chose the land of
Mordor as his dwelling-place in the
Second Age, Orodruin was the reason for his choice. He 'used the fire that welled there from the heart of the earth in his sorceries and his forging.' The most famous result of his forging, and in fact the only one we know of for sure, was the One Ring.
Orodruin was far more than a natural volcano - Sauron seems to have extended his own power into it, and was able to control its fires. It seems to have lain dormant when
Sauron was away from Mordor, and sprung into life when his power grew.
In
Peter Jackson's trilogy of movies, the
New Zealand volcano Mount
Ngauruhoe was used as Mount Doom in some scenes. In long shots the mountain is either a large model or a
CGI effect, or a combination. It was not permitted to film the summit of Ngauruhoe because it is sacred to
Māori of the region. However, some scenes on the slopes of Mount Doom were filmed on the actual slopes of Mt.
Ruapehu.