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01-11-2004, 05:11 PM | #1 |
Pile O'Bones
Join Date: Jan 2004
Posts: 25
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Arda was never flat
Reading the Silmarillion recently, it referred to 'the globe of the earth', but this was definately before the fall of Numenor. Can anyone explain this?
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01-11-2004, 07:14 PM | #2 |
Hungry Ghoul
Join Date: Jun 2000
Posts: 1,719
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The different layers of the atmosphere enveloped the then flat Arda as in a globe amid the void. Take a look at one of the drawings in History of Middle-earth IV or in the Atlas of Middle-earth.
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01-12-2004, 03:54 AM | #3 |
Illustrious Ulair
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: In the home of lost causes, and forsaken beliefs, and unpopular names,and impossible loyalties
Posts: 4,240
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I have wondered about this. It occurred to me that maybe it could have had to do with the way Elves percieved reality. Maybe they saw differently. Maybe they always experienced the world as flat - perhaps the reason they could still take the Straight Road even when men couldn't. Perhaps what we have is the Sil accounts of the flat world relating the Elvish peception & the post Numenor accounts being the Mannish perception, & the story of a change in the shape of the world being a mannish 'invention', an attempt to fit their perception with the Elven accounts.
Of course, one would then have to ask why Elrond didn't put Bilbo right! Possibly he felt that as men would be 'running' things from then on, then the Mannish account could be left to stand. Elvish perceptions have interested me for a while - they don't seem to see the world/reality in the way men do. Legolas sees the 'crown' of flame on Aragorn's head for instance, or his ability to pick out the number of Rohirrim & Frodo's perception of Glorfindel, as a being of shining light is said by Gandalf to be a vision of him as he is on the other side. Which begs the question, do Elves see each other in that way? I'm sure someone is going to offer lots of quotes to show this is all wrong - as happened when I wrote into Amon Hen (Tolkien Society bulletin), but I still wonder if there is something in it. |
01-12-2004, 05:07 AM | #4 |
Hidden Spirit
Join Date: May 2000
Location: Oklahoma
Posts: 1,424
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What Sharku said, and also that Tolkien's ideas about the world changed as the years passed. The passage that references the globe of the earth could be from a later writing than the ones wherin the world was ever flat.
<font size=1 color=339966>[ 6:08 AM January 12, 2004: Message edited by: burrahobbit ]
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07-28-2004, 02:26 PM | #5 | |||||
Animated Skeleton
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Signs in the Akallabęth and 'Aldarion and Erendis' that the world was already round
I finally found something in the Akallabęth that could be a sign of it being written in a Round Earth context:
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07-28-2004, 03:21 PM | #6 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Pennsylvania, WtR, passed Sarn Gebir: Above the rapids (1239 miles) BtR, passed Black Rider Stopping Place (31 miles)
Posts: 1,548
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From "Letters"
#154 25 September 1954 "Actually in the imagination of this story we are now living on a physically round Earth. But the whole 'legendarium' contains a transition from a flat world (or at least an olkovuevn with borders all about it) to a globe: an inevitable transition, I suppose, to a modern 'mythmaker' with a mind subjected to the same 'appearances' as ancient men, and partly fed on their myths, but taught that the Earth is round from the earliest years." |
07-28-2004, 05:11 PM | #7 | |
Corpus Cacophonous
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: A green and pleasant land
Posts: 8,390
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07-29-2004, 03:05 AM | #8 | ||||
Animated Skeleton
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Yes, it was. But my point was that there are actual hints in the Akallabęth (and 'Aldarion and Erendis') that the world was round before the Downfall, even though most readers seem to think that according to the Akallabęth the world was made round at that point. But I now think it clear that it was written in a Round Earth context; even Elendil who wrote it seems to have known that the world was round before the Downfall:
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In the passages concerning the actual Downfall there is no explicit mention of the world becoming round either: Quote:
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Last edited by Ardamir the Blessed; 07-29-2004 at 03:55 AM. |
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