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07-11-2015, 09:52 AM | #1 |
Regal Dwarven Shade
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Fantasy Counterpart Culture
Rohan is consciously a version of the Anglo-Saxons. The Shire is rural England. Gondor is sort of a hybrid Egypt and late Roman Empire. The dwarves are commonly held to be a Viking themed culture (although I personally do not subscribe to this view).
My question is, what seems to have influenced Tolkien the most in his conception of elven culture? Of all the cultures in his work this is the one that seems to have the most originality, although there are certainly aspects of heroic Northern culture that are in their make up.
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07-11-2015, 10:11 AM | #2 |
Gruesome Spectre
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Did Elven society have any real world correlation?
I think Tolkien may have discussed this a bit in Letters, but it seems to me that mostly Elves represent his idealized views of the best parts of Mankind. They don't appear to generally possess negative traits; the one I see repeated is a feeling of superiority over other races. I think that's an unavoidable consequence of having immortal beings in cohabitation with those who quickly grew old and died. To the Elves' credit though, we don't see them taking that superiority to the point of conquering and enslaving.
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07-11-2015, 10:27 AM | #3 | ||
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At the same time, I'd argue that virtually everything in Professor Tolkien's work is fundamentally influenced by ancient Germanic literature. Almost all cultures in Western Middle-earth (apart from the Shire) have something of an early Medieval Northern European flavour. In that regard I'd suggest that, even though I'm aware Professor Tolkien explicitly compared Gondor to the Egyptians and the Byzantines, in a sense I'd argue that the Dúnedain evoke to a significant extent the idea of "if Norse/Ancient German peoples had built and operated the way the Egyptians and Byzantines did." Quote:
As we know, Professor Tolkien compared the Dwarves to the Jews, which I think is an interesting comparison, but again they have very Norse/Germanic traits as well. Overall I'd suggest that it might be possible to say that in a sense most of at least Western Middle-earth is essentially less a counterpart of real world cultures and more an exercise, in some respects, of imagining a world deriving from the style of the Germanic world rather than, as occurred in reality, the Graeco-Roman Classical world.
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07-11-2015, 10:36 PM | #4 |
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I know we're now getting a bit off your actual question, but do you mind if I, too, quibble on your use of "is"? I'm not sure if there's really meant to be that kind of literal 1:1 relationship between Middle-earth and actual societies. For example- well, I am hampered by not having the books with me, but isn't there a bit in either "On Translation" or the "Letters" where Tolkien says that his use of Anglo-Saxon to stand in for the "real" Rohirric language *shouldn't* be taken to imply a close equivalency between the cultures?
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07-12-2015, 10:58 AM | #5 | ||
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07-12-2015, 12:19 PM | #6 | |
Blossom of Dwimordene
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If, however, you want to provide a different angle on the LOTR Elves or Silmarillion Elves and their real world counterparts, I would be interested to hear it.
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07-12-2015, 12:27 PM | #7 | |
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If those deeds surrounding the Silmarils had not been deviant in the eye of most Elves, the histories would have been notably changed.
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07-12-2015, 07:50 PM | #8 | |
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The short jesting conversation between Lindir and Bilbo in the Hall of Fire has, to me, the same flavour as the songs of the Elves of Rivendell in The Hobbit. But different people may perceive the same events in tales very differently from one another. I don’t see any particular likeness between Elvish civilization and any historic civilization. Last edited by jallanite; 07-12-2015 at 07:55 PM. |
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07-16-2015, 09:24 AM | #9 |
Loremaster of Annúminas
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I think the LR is certainly written from a very Northern/Teutonic POV, but that doesn't mean that everything in it must correspond to peoples who spoke a descendant of Primitive Germanic. Certainly the Haradrim and Easterlings don't; the former have very clearly a Saracen/Persian flavor, and what little we see of the latter suggests Slavs.
Similarly, Gondor was (to our main characters) foreign, the great but distant and nearly legendary civilization of which most had heard but few visited. Its climate and vegetation are very explicitly Mediterranean, its scale and architecture unparalleled in the North; why shouldn't it occupy the same place relative to our protagonists as Constantinople to the Anglo-Saxons, the great if somewhat decayed capital of the surviving half of the mighty Empire which had once ruled their own land??
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07-16-2015, 01:22 PM | #10 |
Blossom of Dwimordene
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Interesting. May I ask why? I always saw it differently - I think the Easterlings have more of a Saracen/Middle Eastern base, while Haradrim parallel RL lands farther south. Hard as I try, I really can't see Slavs anywhere among those races. Could you elaborate?
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07-16-2015, 02:40 PM | #11 |
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Well, we get a very Mideast/North African impression, I think, from Sam's POV description of the dead Southron in 'Of Herbs and Stewed Rabbit' (The mumakil aren't a problem: think Hannibal, probably Tolkien's inspiration).
We get very little about the Easterlings (Rhunians? Rhunrim????), besides the fact that they were bearded and carried axes, which would also qualify Vikings and even Dwarves. But who else would they be calqued on, but the Slavic peoples from the East? They certainly don't appear to be Scythians/Sarmatians/Huns.
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07-16-2015, 03:24 PM | #12 | |
Blossom of Dwimordene
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Ok, I agree with the North African part about Haradrim.
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Saying that, though, Tolkien didn't have to base anyone on just one culture, whether consciously or not. It is entirely possible that there is a combination of more than one influence.
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07-16-2015, 09:46 PM | #13 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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I'd say so. I get the impression that Rhûn is meant to be pretty vast. The axe-bearing Easterlings were of a kind previously unknown to the Men of Gondor, which suggests to me that many cultures were imagined to exist in the Eastern regions of Middle-earth.
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07-20-2015, 09:13 AM | #14 | |||
Regal Dwarven Shade
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However, to me the Axemen referenced at the Battle of the Pelennor do seem to me have a bit of a Slavic flavor. I agree with Zigûr that the East was huge enough to have many different cultures in it.
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07-20-2015, 10:14 AM | #15 |
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In regards to the Wainriders, I also considered steppe peoples, but the ancient Celts are also up for consideration, primarily for their armies confederated in a tribal manner and the use of chariots, an important facet of their form of combat preceding their arrival in the British Isles. Their migration from the East into Europe also mirrors their movements in Middle-earth.
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07-20-2015, 02:07 PM | #16 | |
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07-21-2015, 07:52 PM | #17 |
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My recollections of some of Tolkien's thoughts on this matter include that he wrote his Elves in part as a reaction to, and corrective of, the way "elfs" were described in 19th century romantic literature, in which they were diminutive figures living in buttercups and such. He wanted Elves to be raised to their former high place in the literature, namely the Northern epics, such as the Elder and Lesser Eddas, I believe.
As such, Elves are not based upon a historic culture, but upon a mythical folk derived from northern myth. |
07-24-2015, 05:00 PM | #18 |
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The use of "war-wagons" as opposed to mere chariots is a far more Germanic practice, associated with both the Teutones and the much later Goths. (Of course, there was also Attila's fortified wagon-camp at the Battle of Chalons)
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07-27-2015, 09:37 AM | #19 |
Regal Dwarven Shade
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That is exactly what I was thinking of in regard to the Wainriders.
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07-27-2015, 11:54 AM | #20 |
Loremaster of Annúminas
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OTOH, the wagons in that case may well have belonged to the Goths who made up nearly half of Attila's army on that occasion; there is little to suggest, in other accounts of the Huns, that their armies used anything for transport besides packhorses and travois.
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07-28-2015, 11:38 AM | #21 | |
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