Éowyn's exact age at death isn't stated, but she was born in TA 2995, was 24 during the War of the Ring, and likely lived to old age (possibly 90+) due to her Númenórean lineage, dying sometime in the early Fourth Age after marrying Faramir and ruling Ithilien.
Éomer: 28 years. Éowyn: 24 years. Diamond of Long Cleeve: 24 years. Lothíriel: 20 years.
As with all weapons that touch the Witch-king, the sword and the Barrow-blade were both destroyed. Her constitution already weakened by loneliness and despair, combined with physical injuries, Éowyn then succumbed to the Black Breath.
We have a date of death for Faramir in 82 of the fourth age. We don't have a date for Eowyn but Eomer died in 63, she probably was similar date. Faramir was 12 years older than her so if she died in around 63 it would be a 35 year difference in life span.
"The Tale of Aragorn and Arwen" relates that Aragorn and Arwen had a son, Eldarion, and at least two unnamed daughters. One year after Aragorn's death, Arwen dies at the age of 2,901.
Faramir lived to be 120 years old, due to the large percentage of pure Dúnedain ancestry he possessed as a member of the Gondorian nobility.
If Gandalf had stayed dead after his sacrifice in The Fellowship of the Ring, then his demise would be the saddest in the trilogy, but since he came back, the saddest single death scene of all three movies goes to Boromir's.
And just to add specifics to this- Boromir died about a mile from where they'd shored the boats. Legolas and Gimli traveled to the boats from the site of Boromir's death to retrieve the boats. Then they came back and the funeral was held for Boromir.
Éowyn passes out from the pain in her arm, and is believed dead until Prince Imrahil realizes she still lives. Éowyn is brought to the Houses of Healing, hovering near death from the effects of having struck the Nazgûl. There Éowyn meets Faramir, with whom she soon falls in love.
He admitted to the other Hobbits, on the spot, that healing Frodo of that wound was "beyond [his] skill". It was a psychological- injury plus an actual wound also, as opposed to Merry and Eowyn's psyche injuries... The hands of the king are the hands of a healer.
The witch king Nazgul was killed by Eowyn with the help of Merry. But one of the nine rings given to man was on the finger.
“But no living man am I! I stand in Minas Anor, the Tower of the Sun; and behold! the Shadow has departed! I will be a Shieldmaiden no longer, nor vie with the great Riders, nor take joy only in the songs of slaying.
Unfinished Tales explains that Radagast, like the other Wizards, came from Valinor around the year 1000 of the Third Age of Middle-earth and was one of the angelic Maiar.
"In sorrow we must go, but not in despair. Behold! we are not bound for ever to the circles of the world, and beyond them is more than memory".
Since the release of the films, it seems that everyone believes that Éowyn stabbed the Witch-king in the face, since that's how it's depicted there.
Faramir, with his quiet thoughtfulness and troublesome integrity, was hard for Denethor to love because doing so didn't add to Denethor's power and influence. But love Faramir Denethor did, to the extent that the shame of his cruelty and contempt for Faramir provided Denethor his final push into madness.
Tolkien's description of Gollum conforms to a Catholic – and Thomistic – account of envy, which is a “sadness of the soul”; and it is Gollum's unbearable sadness and his unquenchable desire for the one Ring that marks his character.
Though Dwarves and Elves are traditionally rivals, he and the Dwarf Gimli form a close friendship during their travels together.
Therefore it is feasible that he would have never actually had a wound before, especially as it took all that from Bolg to get the smallest nosebleed. Therefore seeing his own blood came as quite a shock. And demonstrated the violent nature of his foe to both Legolas and the audience.
The Posttraumatic Stress Disorder of Frodo Baggins
J.R.R. Tolkien in The Lord of the Rings accurately portrayed the signs and symptoms of what is currently labeled Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. Frodo's condition logically follows his experiences of less than a year in the War of the Ring.
Beneath Meliodas' frank and bawdy demeanor hides immense amounts of emotional pain from having witnessed Elizabeth die over 106 times.
Why did Fili and Kili have to die? There are a few different theories as to why Tolkien had Fili and Kili die at the end of The Hobbit. One theory is that he was emphasizing the important and loyal role that Fili and Kili had as sister-sons of Thorin, an important relationship in medieval literature.