1. In J R R Tolkein's writings, the "prison of iron" in which Morgoth, (the lord of darkness, evil, and nasty things) resided in the First Age.

2. A really excellent roguelike game with a large variety of variants, in which the goal is usually to kill Morgoth. Unlike Nethack, focus is more on combat tactics, with a more serious flavour and no "special-case" puzzles.
Download angband at (real url) www.thangorodrim.net!
by Zhou Fang August 21, 2003
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1. In J R R Tolkein's writings, the "prison of iron" in which Morgoth, (the lord of darkness, evil, and nasty things) resided in the First Age.

2. A really excellent roguelike game with a large variety of variants, in which the goal is usually to kill Morgoth. Unlike Nethack, focus is more on combat tactics, with a more serious flavour and no "special-case" puzzles.
Download Angband at thangorodrim.com!
by Zhou Fang August 18, 2003
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Fortress in the wilderness to the north of Beleriand, originally built by Melkor/Morgoth prior to the birth of the elves, overrun but not fully explored by the Valar in this period, and later reoccupied by Morgoth and his followers, including Sauron and the Balrogs. Angband was a large iron fortress with deep and complicated dungeons in which Morgoth kept prisoners and slaves and bred foul creatures such as dragons, werewolves and orcs.

Included Utumno and was surrounded by a second defensive perimeter, Thangorodrim. It is a central location in JRR Tolkien's The Silmarillion.

Angband was virtually unassailable, and was used by Morgoth as a base of operations for his infiltration and conquest of Beleriand. Beren and Luthien succeeded by means of magic in entering the fortress, beguiling Morgoth and stealing a Silmaril, but elvish military operations in the First Age were necessarily defensive, and the areas between Angband and the elven realms, such as the Passes of Sirion, Ard-Galen, Dorthonion and the plains of Lothlann, were the site of battles throughout the First Age. Angband, along with Beleriand, was destroyed at the end of the First Age.

There is also an action/RPG computer game named "Angband" and a second named "Utumno", based loosely on Morgoth's fortress.
After his capture, Maedhros son of Feanor was strung up from the face of Angband.

The Orcs were bred in the pits of Angband from elves lured into the fortress and then imprisoned by Morgoth.

Morgoth's lieutenant Sauron was sent to a fortress nearer the elves, on the river Sirion. He fled back to Angband after this fortress was destroyed by Luthien.
by Andy April 27, 2004
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1323 kb of pure, roguelike joy. Inspiration for another roguelike game, zangband.
Angband will even run on your inferior computer, dude.
by Akasha January 21, 2005
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