The Etymologies is J. R. R. Tolkien's etymological dictionary of his constructed Elvish languages, written during the 1930s. As a philologist, he was professionally interested in the structure of languages, the relationships between languages, and in particular the processes by which languages evolve. He applied this skill to the construction of the languages of Middle-earth, especially the Elvish languages. The Etymologies reflects this knowledge and enthusiasm: he constantly changed the etymological relationships of his "bases", the roots of his Elvish words. The list of words covers several of his minor languages as well as the two major ones, greatly extending the vocabularies known before it was published in The Lost Road and Other Writings in 1987.
From his schooldays, J. R. R. Tolkien was in his biographer John Garth's words "effusive about philology"; his schoolfriend Rob Gilson called him "quite a great authority on etymology". [1] Tolkien was a professional philologist, a scholar of comparative and historical linguistics. He was especially familiar with Old English and related languages. He remarked to the poet and The New York Times book reviewer Harvey Breit that "I am a philologist and all my work is philological"; he explained to his American publisher Houghton Mifflin that this was meant to imply that his work was [T 1]
all of a piece, and fundamentally linguistic in inspiration. ... The invention of languages is the foundation. The 'stories' were made rather to provide a world for the languages than the reverse. To me a name comes first and the story follows." [T 1]
The Tolkien scholar Verlyn Flieger writes that [2]
it is important to remember that all of Tolkien's studies, the focus of his profession, was a concentration on the importance of the word. His profession as philologist and his vocation as writer of fantasy/theology overlapped and mutually supported one another". [2]
In other words, Flieger writes, Tolkien "did not keep his knowledge in compartments; his scholarly expertise informs his creative work." [2] This expertise was founded, in her view, on the belief that one knows a text only by "properly understanding [its] words, their literal meaning and their historical development." [2]
Tolkien is best known as the author of the high fantasy works The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings , both set in Middle-earth. [3] He created a family of invented languages for Elves, carefully designing the differences between them to reflect their distance from their imaginary common origin. He stated that his languages led him to create the invented mythology of The Silmarillion , to provide a world in which his languages could have existed. In that world, the splintering of the Elvish peoples mirrored the fragmentation of their languages. [4] [5]
The Etymologies is Tolkien's etymological dictionary of the Elvish languages, written during the 1930s. It was edited by Christopher Tolkien and first published in 1987 as the third part of The Lost Road and Other Writings , the fifth volume of the History of Middle-earth . It is a list of roots of the Proto-Elvish language, from which he built his many Elvish languages, especially Quenya, Noldorin and Ilkorin. It gives many insights into Elvish personal and place names not explained anywhere else. The Etymologies does not form a unified whole, but incorporates layer upon layer of changes. It was not meant to be published. [6]
The Etymologies has the form of a scholarly work listing the "bases" or "roots" of the protolanguage of the Elves: Common Eldarin and Primitive Quendian. [7] Under each base, the next level of words (marked by an asterisk) are "conjectural", that is, not recorded by Elves or Men (it is not stated who wrote The Etymologies inside Middle-earth) but presumed to have existed in the proto-Elvish language. After these, actual words which did exist in the Elvish languages of Danian, Doriathrin (a dialect of Ilkorin), Eldarin (the proto-language of the Eldar), (Exilic) Noldorin, Ilkorin, Lindarin (a dialect of Quenya), Old Noldorin, Primitive Quendian (the oldest proto-language), Qenya, and Telerin are listed. [6]
Absent from this list of languages is Sindarin, which Tolkien decided, soon after writing The Etymologies and the contemporaneous Lhammas , to make the major language of the Elves in exile in Beleriand. As such it largely replaced Noldorin; eventually Tolkien settled on the explanation that after the Noldor returned to Beleriand from Valinor, they adopted the language used by the Sindar (Grey Elves) already settled there. He decided that the new Noldorin was just a dialect of Quenya, little changed from it, while the old Noldorin essentially became Sindarin, inheriting the phonology, grammar, and syntax that he had developed for Noldorin, whether or not they fitted their new context. [6] [8] Carl F. Hostetter called this a "fundamental conceptual change", noting that Sindarin has "a radically different history and by the nature of Tolkien's own process of invention a necessarily different grammar in detail than Noldorin." [8] This means that The Etymologies encapsulate a stage in Tolkien's development of his Elvish languages which precedes that assumed in The Lord of the Rings and The Silmarillion . [6] [8] That in turn means, Hostetter writes, that The Etymologies cannot safely be used to draw conclusions about what "mature Sindarin" might be or for that matter what "mature Quenya" might be like. [8]
Some examples may illustrate how Tolkien worked with the "bases": [T 2]
Tolkien's manuscript of The Etymologies is handwritten, with crossings-out, sometimes overwritten, scrawled, or so faint as to be almost illegible. Christopher Tolkien undertook the challenging task of transcribing it. [6] [9] After publication, the linguist Helge Fauskanger identified a list of probable errors in the transcription. [9] Many of his suggestions were confirmed in 2003 and 2004, when Carl F. Hostetter and Patrick Wynne documented a substantial body of addenda and corrigenda to the published text in Vinyar Tengwar issues 45 and 46. [10] [11] [12]
With The Etymologies unpublished, Tolkien stated in a 1956 letter that his plans for the "specialist volume" of legendarium materials, which he had hoped to publish alongside The Lord of the Rings, were [T 4]
largely linguistic. An index of names [not identical to The Etymologies] was to be produced, which by etymological interpretation would also provide quite a large Elvish vocabulary; this is of course a first requirement. I worked at it for months, and indexed the first two vols [of The Lord of the Rings]. (it was the chief cause of the delay of Vol iii) until it became clear that size and cost were ruinous. [6]
He writes in a 1967 letter that while he is pleased that readers are so interested in the names used in The Lord of the Rings, they "often neglect" the evidence he provided in the text and the appendices. [T 5] He mentions that he has written a "commentary on the nomenclature for the use of translators"; and [T 5]
Desirable would be an onomasticon giving the meaning and derivation of all names and indicating the languages that they belong to. [T 5]
Tolkien adds, in the same letter, that he would find it "agreeable" to have a "historical grammar of Quenya and Sindarin. He at once states, however, that he does not "intend to engage in these projects, until my mythology and legends are completed". [T 5] In the 1956 letter already mentioned, Tolkien notes that "many [fans] want Elvish grammars, phonologies, and specimens; some want metrics and prosodies — not only of the brief Elvish specimens, but of the 'translated' verses in less familiar modes, such as those written in the strictest form of Anglo-Saxon alliterative verse (e.g. the fragment at the end of the Battle of the Pelennor, V vi 124)." [T 4] In short, Tolkien was much more interested in words than in grammars. [T 4] Thus The Etymologies is preoccupied with words, not with grammar: only a few Elvish phrases are included in the onomasticon. [T 2]
The organisation of The Etymologies reflects what Tolkien did in his career as a philologist. With English words, he worked backwards from existing words to trace their origins. With Elvish he worked both backward and forward, to create "fitting names" with appropriate meanings, and to devise suitable etymologies for them in Quenya and Sindarin. In theory he would create the root first and work forwards to the word; but if the word already existed, he worked backwards from there. [13] [7] Christopher Robinson gives as an example Elendil, founder of the Kingdom of Arnor. His name, The Etymologies reveals, unites el, meaning 'star', plural elen, with dil, 'friend', to give the meaning of "Elendil" as 'Star-lover'. [7]
The etymological development was always in flux as Tolkien ceaselessly tinkered with etymologies and the linguistic processes that brought about the changes from a language to its descendants. Arden Smith writes that Tolkien usually started with a detailed historical phonology of a language; then he created part of its morphology, before scrawling "a mass of incomplete notes", not bothering to move on to syntax: "by that time he would have already started revising everything from the beginning." [10] This means, Smith comments, that Tolkien scarcely created languages with grammar and lists of words at all. Instead, he created "outlines of [the] historical development" of his languages. Smith gives as an example the Green-elves' Danian language: it consists of about "two dozen attested words" and a bit of phonological development, which indicates that its sound structure resembles that of Old English. [10]
Christopher Tolkien called The Etymologies "a remarkable document". [6] He stated that his father "wrote a good deal on the theory of sundokarme or 'base structure' ... but like everything else it was frequently elaborated and altered". [6] In explanation, he wrote that his father was "more interested in the processes of change than he was in displaying the structure and use of the languages at any given time", and that "the successive phases of their intricate evolution were the delight of their creator." [6]
GAT(H)- N gath (*gattā) cavern; Doriath 'Land of the Cave' is Noldorin name for Dor. Eglador = Land of the Elves. The Ilkorins called [?themselves] Eglath = Eldar. Rest of Beleriand was called Ariador 'land outside'. N gadr, gador prison, dungeon; gathrod cave. Another name is Garthurian = Fenced Realm = N Ardholen (which was also applied to Gondolin). [Added to this later:] Dor. gad fence; argad 'outside the fence', the exterior, the outside. Cf. Argador, Falathrin Ariador. [See AR2, ÉLED, ӠAR, LED.]
The Etymologies; [material] added by Christopher Tolkien
Dimitra Fimi notes that under the root GAT(H)-, Tolkien mentions the place-name "Garthurian", meaning 'a fenced realm' such as Doriath, or the secret Elvish city of Gondolin. She comments that this seems to imply that at the time of writing The Etymologies, Tolkien still imagined the tale of Lúthien and Beren "as Celtic/Arthurian". In that case, Fimi writes, Tolkien was making a "historical pun" – given that Beleriand was originally the Arthurian-sounding Broceliand (derived from the forest of Brocéliande) – and he was obliged to work backwards from there to invent some roots that fitted. [13]
Mark T. Hooker writes that the word-roots which Tolkien uses in The Etymologies owe something to Sanskrit, the ancient literary language of northern India. This influence may have been indirect, with much of Tolkien's direct inspiration being taken from reconstructed roots of the Proto-Indo-European language, "the kind most frequently cited in philological scholarship"—which depend considerably on Sanskrit, a major Indo-European language. Tolkien frequently denotes older roots with asterisks in accordance with the conventions of historical linguists, where they indicate reconstructed vocabulary with no historical attestation, like that of Proto-Indo-European—the "meaning-elements of an unrecorded proto-language of the distant past". [14]
Hostetter, reflecting on half a century of Tolkienian linguistics, notes that in 1992 Anthony Appleyard used The Etymologies to attempt to systematise the grammar of Quenya for the first time. [15] [16] The linguist Arden R. Smith, in A Companion to J. R. R. Tolkien , calls The Etymologies "the most valuable source of Elvish vocabulary", covering "about a dozen" Elvish languages. [10]
The Cirth is a semi‑artificial script, based on real‑life runic alphabets, one of several scripts invented by J. R. R. Tolkien for the constructed languages he devised and used in his works. Cirth is written with a capital letter when referring to the writing system; the letters themselves can be called cirth.
The Elvish languages of Middle-earth, constructed by J. R. R. Tolkien, include Quenya and Sindarin. These were the various languages spoken by the Elves of Middle-earth as they developed as a society throughout the Ages. In his pursuit for realism and in his love of language, Tolkien was especially fascinated with the development and evolution of language through time. Tolkien created two almost fully developed languages and a dozen more in various beginning stages as he studied and reproduced the way that language adapts and morphs. A philologist by profession, he spent much time on his constructed languages. In the collection of letters he had written, posthumously published by his son, Christopher Tolkien, he stated that he began stories set within this secondary world, the realm of Middle-earth, not with the characters or narrative as one would assume, but with a created set of languages. The stories and characters serve as conduits to make those languages come to life. Inventing language was always a crucial piece to Tolkien's mythology and world building. As Tolkien stated:
The invention of languages is the foundation. The 'stories' were made rather to provide a world for the languages than the reverse. To me a name comes first and the story follows.
The English philologist and author J. R. R. Tolkien created several constructed languages, mostly related to his fictional world of Middle-earth. Inventing languages, something that he called glossopoeia, was a lifelong occupation for Tolkien, starting in his teens.
Eärendil the Mariner and his wife Elwing are characters in J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth legendarium. They are depicted in The Silmarillion as Half-elven, the children of Men and Elves. He is a great seafarer who, on his brow, carried the Morning Star, a jewel called a Silmaril, across the sky. The jewel had been saved by Elwing from the destruction of the Havens of Sirion. The Morning Star and the Silmarils are elements of the symbolism of light, for divine creativity, continually splintered as history progresses. Tolkien took Eärendil's name from the Old English name Earendel, found in the poem Crist I, which hailed him as "brightest of angels"; this was the beginning of Tolkien's Middle-earth mythology. Elwing is the granddaughter of Lúthien and Beren, and is descended from Melian the Maia, while Earendil is the son of Tuor and Idril. Through their progeny, Eärendil and Elwing became the ancestors of the Númenorean, and later Dúnedain, royal bloodline.
In the works of J. R. R. Tolkien, the Noldor are a kindred of Elves who migrate west to the blessed realm of Valinor from the continent of Middle-earth, splitting from other groups of Elves as they went. They then settle in the coastal region of Eldamar. The Dark Lord Morgoth murders their first leader, Finwë. The majority of the Noldor, led by Finwë's eldest son Fëanor, then return to Beleriand in the northwest of Middle-earth. This makes them the only group to return and then play a major role in Middle-earth's history; much of The Silmarillion is about their actions. They are the second clan of the Elves in both order and size, the other clans being the Vanyar and the Teleri.
The Black Speech is one of the fictional languages constructed by J. R. R. Tolkien for his legendarium, where it was spoken in the evil realm of Mordor. In the fiction, Tolkien describes the language as created by Sauron as a constructed language to be the sole language of all the servants of Mordor.
In J. R. R. Tolkien's legendarium, the Elves or Quendi are a sundered (divided) people. They awoke at Cuiviénen on the continent of Middle-earth, where they were divided into three tribes: Minyar, Tatyar and Nelyar. After some time, they were summoned by Oromë to live with the Valar in Valinor, on Aman. That summoning and the Great Journey that followed split the Elves into two main groups, which were never fully reunited.
The War of the Jewels (1994) is the 11th volume of Christopher Tolkien's series The History of Middle-earth, analysing the unpublished manuscripts of his father J. R. R. Tolkien. It is the second of two volumes—Morgoth's Ring being the first—to explore the later 1951 Silmarillion drafts.
The Lhammas, Noldorin for "account of tongues", is a work of fictional sociolinguistics, written by J. R. R. Tolkien in 1937, and published in the 1987 The Lost Road and Other Writings, volume five of The History of Middle-earth series.
The Elvish Linguistic Fellowship is a "Special Interest Group" of the Mythopoeic Society devoted to the study of J. R. R. Tolkien's constructed languages, headed by the computer scientist Carl F. Hostetter. It was founded by Jorge Quiñónez in 1988.
Carl Franklin Hostetter is a Tolkien scholar and NASA computer scientist. He has edited and annotated many of J. R. R. Tolkien's linguistic writings, publishing them in Vinyar Tengwar and Parma Eldalamberon.
The works of J. R. R. Tolkien have generated a body of research covering many aspects of his fantasy writings. These encompass The Lord of the Rings and The Silmarillion, along with his legendarium that remained unpublished until after his death, and his constructed languages, especially the Elvish languages Quenya and Sindarin. Scholars from different disciplines have examined the linguistic and literary origins of Middle-earth, and have explored many aspects of his writings from Christianity to feminism and race.
This is a list of all published works of the English writer and philologist J. R. R. Tolkien. Tolkien's works were published before and after his death.
Elvish languages are constructed languages used by Elves in a fantasy setting. The philologist and fantasy author J. R. R. Tolkien created the first of these languages, including Quenya and Sindarin.
In J. R. R. Tolkien's writings, Elves are the first fictional race to appear in Middle-earth. Unlike Men and Dwarves, Elves are immortal, though they can be killed in battle. If so, their souls go to the Halls of Mandos in Aman. After a long life in Middle-earth, Elves yearn for the Earthly Paradise of Valinor, and can sail there from the Grey Havens. They feature in The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings. Their history is described in detail in The Silmarillion.
Quenya is a constructed language, one of those devised by J. R. R. Tolkien for the Elves in his Middle-earth fiction.
Sindarin is one of the constructed languages devised by J. R. R. Tolkien for use in his fantasy stories set in Arda, primarily in Middle-earth. Sindarin is one of the many languages spoken by the Elves.
J. R. R. Tolkien derived the characters, stories, places, and languages of Middle-earth from many sources. Among these are the Celtic legends and languages, which for Tolkien were principally Irish and Welsh. He gave multiple conflicting reasons for his liking for Welsh. Tolkien stated directly that he had made use of Welsh phonology and grammar for his constructed Elvish language Sindarin. Scholars have identified multiple legends, both Irish and Welsh, as likely sources of some of Tolkien's stories and characters; thus for example the Noldorin Elves resemble the Irish Tuatha Dé Danann, while the tale of Beren and Lúthien parallels that of the Welsh Culhwch and Olwen. Tolkien chose Celtic names for the isolated settlement of Bree-land, to distinguish it from the Shire with its English names.
Philology, the study of comparative and historical linguistics, especially of the medieval period, had a major influence on J. R. R. Tolkien's fantasy world of Middle-earth. He was a professional philologist, and made use of his knowledge of medieval literature and language to create families of Elvish languages and many details of the invented world.