So Gimli is older than Aragorn, but certainly younger than Legolas.
Ahh. So he owes nothing to the ring, then, save his continued relationship with his dad.
Frodo: Please, what does it always mean, this... this "Aragorn"? Elrond: That's his name. Aragorn, son of Arathorn. Aragorn: I like "Strider." Elrond: We named the *dog* "Strider".
A discussion of Lord of the Rings - The Return of the King. If you're a pervy hobbit fancier, this is the place for you.
So Gimli is older than Aragorn, but certainly younger than Legolas.
Ahh. So he owes nothing to the ring, then, save his continued relationship with his dad.
Hmm? What do you mean?
Jess had said:
[Which means, ironically, that Gimli has the Ring to thank for his existance, since without it, Bilbo wouldn't have been able to get the dwarves out of prison.]
Hmm? What do you mean?
Somebody earlier brought up the possibility that Gimli owes his existence to the Ring, as Bilbo used it to get his dad out of Thranduil's hall.
Ah! Right.
I'm glad someone looked this up, cause I was just sitting around idly thinking that Gimli was born before the Hobbit. But I a) didn't bother to look it up and b) didn't bother to post, so now I just look like a latecomer chiming in. But I am amazingly apathetic at the moment.
So Gimli is older than Aragorn, but certainly younger than Legolas.
Cradle-robbing elf...
But in elf-years, Legolas certainly is a lad. So maybe it's an early instance of Gimli's race-sensitivity.
That and the fact he knows the word for "ladders" in elvish.
Well, that'll teach me to say things without looking them up in the Appendices first. I'd just assumed that Gimli had to be born post-Hobbit because otherwise, he would have been included on the trip.
I actually have some vague memory of him complaining about not getting to go - either on that trip or on the attempt to resettle Moria - because he was too young. I'm not motivated enough to try to find it, though. (The ages were easy. Yay, family trees!)