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Men in Middle-earth

In J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth fiction, Man and Men denote humans, whether male or female, in contrast to Elves, Dwarves, Orcs, and other humanoid races.[1] Men are described as the second or younger people, created after the Elves, and differing from them in being mortal. Along with Ents and Dwarves, these are the "free peoples" of Middle-earth, differing from the enslaved peoples such as Orcs.

Tolkien uses the Men of Middle-earth, interacting with immortal Elves, to explore a variety of themes in The Lord of the Rings, especially death and immortality. This appears throughout, but is the central theme of an appendix, "The Tale of Aragorn and Arwen". Where the Hobbits stand for simple, earthbound, comfort-loving people, Men are far more varied, from petty villains and slow-witted publicans to the gentle warrior Faramir and the genuinely heroic Aragorn; Tolkien had wanted to create a heroic romance suitable for the modern age. Scholars have identified real-world analogues for each of the varied races of Men, whether from medieval times or classical antiquity.

The weakness of Men, The Lord of the Rings asserts, is the desire for power; the One Ring promises enormous power, but is both evil and addictive. Tolkien uses the two Men in the Fellowship created to destroy the Ring, Aragorn and the warrior Boromir, to show the effects of opposite reactions to that temptation. It becomes clear that, except for Men, all the peoples of Middle-earth are dwindling and fading: the Elves are leaving, and the Ents are childless. By the Fourth Age, Middle-earth is peopled with Men, and indeed Tolkien intended it to represent the real world in the distant past.

Commentators have questioned Tolkien's attitude to race, given that good peoples are white and live in the West, while enemies may be dark and live in the East and South.[2][3][4] However, others note that Tolkien was strongly anti-racist in real life.[5]

In the fiction

Creation

The race of Men in J. R. R. Tolkien's fictional world, in his books The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings and The Silmarillion, is the second race of beings, the "younger children", created by the One God, Ilúvatar. Because they awoke at the start of the Years of the Sun, long after the Elves, the elves called them the "afterborn", or in Quenya the Atani, the "Second People". Like Elves, Men first awoke in the East of Middle-earth, spreading all over the continent and developing a variety of cultures and ethnicities. Unlike Tolkien's elves, Men are mortal; when they die, they depart to a world unknown even to the godlike Valar.[1]

Free peoples

Men are one of the four "free peoples" in the list-poem spoken by the Ent Treebeard; the others being Elves, Dwarves, and Ents.[T 1] Hobbits, not included on that list, were a branch of the lineage of Men.[T 2][T 3][T 4] Hobbits were not known to the Ents, but on meeting Merry and Pippin, Treebeard at once worked that people into the list.[T 1]

The concept of the free peoples is shared by Elrond.[T 5] The Tolkien scholar Paul H. Kocher writes that, in the style of the medieval Great Chain of Being, this list places Men and the other speaking peoples higher than the beasts, birds, and reptiles which he lists next. "Man the mortal, master of horses" is listed last among the free peoples, who were created separately.[6]

Diversity

 
Tolkien modelled the Rohirrim, the Riders of Rohan, on the Anglo-Saxons (here in an 11th-century illustration).[7]

Although all Men in Tolkien's legendarium are related to one another, there are many different groups with different cultures. Those on the side of the hobbits in The Lord of the Rings are the Dúnedain, the men who fought on the side of the Elves in the First Age against Morgoth in Beleriand, from whom other friendly groups, the Rangers including Aragorn, and the men of Gondor are descended; and their allies the Rohirrim.[1]

 
The Variags of Khand are named for the Varangians, medieval Germanic mercenaries.[1] Painting by Viktor Vasnetsov
 
The Haradrim used battle-elephants, as Pyrrhus of Epirus did. Illustration by Helene Guerber[8]

The main human adversaries in The Lord of the Rings are the Haradrim and the Easterlings.[1] The Haradrim or Southrons were hostile to Gondor, and used elephants in war. Tolkien describes them as "swart",[4] meaning "dark-skinned".[9] The Easterlings lived in Rhûn, the vast eastern region of Middle-earth; they fought in the armies of Morgoth and Sauron. Tolkien describes them as "slant-eyed";[4] they ride horses or wagons, leading to the name "wain-riders".[1] The Variags of Khand formed a third but smaller group, who appear as vassals of Mordor in the Battle of the Pelennor Fields. Their name is from Russian: Варяги (Variag), meaning the Varangians, Viking or other Germanic warriors who served as mercenaries.[1] Other human adversaries include the Black Númenóreans, good men gone wrong;[10] and the Corsairs of Umbar, rebels of Gondor.[11]

Cultures of Men in the Third Age
Nation/group Culture Language Real-world analogues
Bree[T 6] Village; agriculture;
houses of wood, earth, stone
Westron Medieval England[12]
Beornings[T 7] Wooden hall; beekeeping,
dairy
Westron Norse myth (Bödvar Bjarki);
Beowulf[13]
Dale[T 8] Towns, trade, taverns their own Germanic medieval Europe
Drúedain[T 9][T 10]
Wild men,[T 10] Púkel-men,[T 9] Woses[T 10]
Forest their own Wild man legends
of medieval Europe[14]
Dunlendings[T 11]
Wild men of Dunland
Agriculture Westron,
Dunlendish
Celtic Britons[15]
Easterlings[T 12]
People of Rhûn, Wainriders
Horses, war-wagons their own Huns[16]
Gondor and the Dúnedain[T 13] Cities, stone architecture;
literature, music
Westron,
Sindarin,
Quenya
Byzantine Empire,[17]
Ancient Egypt,[18]
Goths,[17]
Langobards[17]
Haradrim[T 14]
Southrons
Desert; war-elephants; raiding in ships their own Enemies of Ancient Rome[8]
Riders of Rohan[T 15] Wooden mead-halls,
agriculture, horsemanship
Rohirric,
Westron
Anglo-Saxons,
Goths[19]
Variags of Khand[T 16] Mercenaries their own Varangians[1]

Sandra Ballif Straubhaar notes in The J. R. R. Tolkien Encyclopedia that Faramir, son of the Steward of Gondor, makes an "arrogant"[1] speech, of which he later "has cause to repent",[1] classifying the types of Men as seen by the Men of Númenórean origin at the end of the Third Age; she notes, too, that his taxonomy is probably not to be taken at face value.[1]

Faramir's taxonomy of Men of Middle-earth[1]
High Men
Men of the West
Númenóreans
Middle Men
Men of the Twilight
Wild Men
Men of the Darkness
The Three Houses of Edain who went to Númenor, and their descendants Edain of other houses who stayed in Middle-earth; they became the barbarian nations of Rhovanion, Dale, the House of Beorn, and the Rohirrim. All other Men, not connected to the Elves, including Easterlings and Dunlendings. Unclear if they were Edain, or separately created.[1][a]

History

In a world with other intelligent and cultured races, Men on Middle-earth interact with each other and with the other races in a complex history, narrated mainly in The Silmarillion. Men are in general friendly with the other free peoples, especially Elves; they are implacable enemies of the enslaved peoples, especially Orcs. In the First Age, Men, the Edain, lived in Beleriand on the extreme West of Middle-earth. They form an alliance with the Elves and join a disastrous war against the first Dark Lord, Morgoth, which destroys Beleriand. As a reward for fighting in the war, the creator, Eru Iluvatar, gives the Edain the new island of Númenor as their home.[20][T 17]

The key difference between Men and Elves now becomes central to the story: Elves are immortal, and return to Valinor, home of the godlike Valar, when they become weary of Middle-earth, or are killed in battle. Men, however, are mortal.[21][22] Morgoth's servant, Sauron, tempts the Men of Númenor to attack Valinor, in their search for immortality: Sauron has falsely insinuated that Men can become immortal just by being in that place. The Men and Númenor are destroyed: the island is drowned, Atlantis-like, beneath the waves; the world is made round; and Valinor is removed from the world so as to only be accessible by the Elves. Sauron's body is destroyed, but his spirit escapes to become the new Dark Lord of Middle-earth. A remnant of the Men of Númenor who remained faithful, under Elendil, sail to Middle-earth, where they found the kingdoms of Arnor in the North and Gondor in the South, remaining known as the Dúnedain, "Men of the West". Arnor becomes fragmented, and declines until its kings become Rangers in the wilds, but they retain their memory of Númenor or "Westernesse", through many generations down to Aragorn, a protagonist in The Lord of the Rings. The line of kings in Gondor eventually dies out, and the country is ruled by Stewards, the throne empty, until Aragorn returns.[20][T 17]

Intermarriage and immortality

Tolkien stated that the core theme of The Lord of the Rings was death and the human desire to escape it.[T 18][T 19] The theme, which recurs throughout the work, is sharply visible in an appendix, "The Tale of Aragorn and Arwen", in which the immortal Elf Arwen chooses mortality so that she can marry the mortal Man Aragorn. The result, as with the earlier intermarriage of their ancestors Lúthien and Beren in the First Age in Beleriand, was to make Aragorn's line exceptionally long-lived among Men, and as the royal family intermarried with other people of Gondor, to maintain or extend the lifespan of the entire race.[T 20][23][24][25]

Fading

 
Tolkien imagined Arda as the Earth in the distant past.[T 19][26] With the loss of all its peoples except Man, and the reshaping of the continents, all that is left of Middle-earth is a dim memory in folklore, legend, and old words.[27] Shapes of continents are purely schematic.

The overall feeling in The Lord of the Rings, however, despite the victories and Aragorn's long-awaited kingship and marriage, is of decline and fall, echoing the view of Norse mythology that everything will inevitably be destroyed.[28] As the Tolkien scholar Marjorie Burns put it, "Here is a mythology where even the gods can die, and it leaves the reader with a vivid sense of life's cycles, with an awareness that everything comes to an end, that, though [the evil] Sauron may go, the elves will fade as well."[29] This fits with Tolkien's equation of Middle-earth with the real Earth at some distant epoch in the past, and with his apparent intention to create a mythology for England. He could combine medieval myths and legends, hints from poems and nearly-forgotten names to build a world of Wizards and Elves, Dwarves, Rings of Power, Hobbits, Orcs, Trolls and Ringwraiths, and heroic Men with Elvish blood in their veins, and follow their history through long ages, provided that at the end he tore it all down again, leaving nothing, once again, but dim memories. By the end of The Lord of the Rings, the reader has learnt that the Elves have left for the Uttermost West, never to return, and that the other peoples, Dwarves, Hobbits, Ents and all the rest, are dwindling and fading, leaving only a world of Men.[27][29][23]

Kocher writes that the furthest look into Man's future in The Lord of the Rings is the conversation between the Elf Legolas and the Dwarf Gimli, close friends, at the moment when they first visit Minas Tirith, the capital city of the Men of Gondor, "and see the marks of decay around them".[30] Gimli says that the works of Men always "fail of their promise"; Legolas replies that even if that's so, "seldom do they fail of their seed", in marked contrast to the scarcity of children among Elves and Dwarves, implying that Men will outlast the other races. Gimli suggests again that Men's projects "come to naught in the end but might-have-beens". Legolas just replies "To that the Elves know not the answer".[30][T 21] Kocher comments that this "sad little fugue" is at variance with the hopeful tone of the rest of the work, remaining cheerful even in the face of apparently insuperable odds.[30]

Analysis

Ambition for power

Kocher writes that the Rings of Power reflected the characteristics of the race that was to wear them. Those for Men "stimulated and implemented their ambition for power". Whereas the tough Dwarves resisted Sauron's domination, and the Elves hid their Rings from him, with Men his plan "works perfectly", turning the ambitious kings into Ringwraiths, the nine Black Riders. With the One Ring to rule them, Sauron gains complete control over them, and they become his most powerful servants. Kocher comments that for Tolkien, the exercise of personal free will, the most precious gift, is "the distinguishing mark of his individuality". The wise, like the Wizard Gandalf and the Elf-queen Galadriel, therefore avoid putting pressure on anybody. In contrast, Sauron is evil exactly because he seeks to dominate the wills of others; the Ringwraiths, the nine fallen kings of Men, are the clearest exemplars of the process.[31]

Kocher states that the leading Man in The Lord of the Rings is Aragorn, though critics often overlooked him in favour of Frodo as protagonist.[32] Aragorn is one of two Men in the Fellowship of the Ring, the nine walkers from the Free Peoples opposed to the nine Black Riders. The other is Boromir, elder son of the Steward of Gondor, and the two Men are sharply opposed. Both are ambitious, and both intend one day to rule Gondor. Boromir means to fight valiantly, to save Gondor, with any help he can get, and to inherit the Stewardship. Aragorn knows he is in the line of kings by his ancestry, but he is unknown in Gondor. When they meet at the Council of Elrond, they dispute who has been holding back Sauron. Aragorn presents the shards of the broken sword of his ancestor, Elendil, and asks Boromir if he wants the House of Elendil (the line of kings) to return. Boromir evasively[33] replies that he would welcome the sword. The One Ring is then shown to the Council. Boromir at once thinks of using it himself. Elrond explains how dangerous the Ring is; Boromir reluctantly sets the idea of using it aside for the moment, and suggests again that Elendil's sword might help save Gondor, if Aragorn is strong enough. Aragorn replies gracefully to the tactless suggestion. Kocher comments that by being both bold and tactful, Aragorn has won all that he wanted from Boromir: the sword is genuine, as is Aragorn's claim to own it, and he has been invited back to Gondor. The Fellowship set off, temporarily united; when they reach Parth Galen, Boromir tries to seize the Ring from Frodo, causing Frodo to use the Ring to escape; the Fellowship is scattered. Orcs attack, seeking the Ring; Boromir repents, and dies trying to save the Hobbits, an act which redeems him.[34] Aragorn gives Boromir an honourable boat-funeral. The quest eventually succeeds, and Aragorn, growing in strength through many perils and wise decisions[35] is crowned King. Boromir gave in to the temptation of power, and fell; Aragorn responded rightfully, and rose.[T 22][33][36]

Race

The status of the friendly races has been debated by critics. David Ibata, writing in The Chicago Tribune, asserts that the protagonists in The Lord of the Rings all have fair skin, and they are mainly blond-haired and blue-eyed as well. Ibata suggests that having the "good guys" white and their opponents of other races, in both book and film, is uncomfortably close to racism.[3] The theologian Fleming Rutledge states that the leader of the Drúedain, Ghân-buri-Ghân, is treated as a noble savage.[37][38] Michael N. Stanton writes in The J. R. R. Tolkien Encyclopedia that Hobbits were "a distinctive form of human beings", and notes that their speech contains "vestigial elements" which hint that they originated in the North of Middle-earth.[39]

The scholar Margaret Sinex states that Tolkiens' construction of the Easterlings and Southrons draws on centuries of Christian tradition of creating an "imaginary Saracen".[4] Zakarya Anwar judges that while Tolkien himself was anti-racist, his fantasy writings can certainly be taken the wrong way.[5]

With his different races of Men arranged from good in the West to evil in the East, simple in the North and sophisticated in the South, Tolkien had, in the view of John Magoun, constructed a "fully expressed moral geography": Gondor is both virtuous, being West, and has problems, being South; Mordor in the Southeast is hellish, while Harad in the extreme South "regresses into hot savagery".[40]

Peter Jackson, in his The Lord of the Rings film trilogy, clothes the Haradrim in long red robes and turbans, and has them riding their elephants, giving them the look in Ibata's opinion of "North African or Middle Eastern tribesmen".[1][3] Ibata notes that the film companion book, The Lord of the Rings: Creatures, describes them as "exotic outlanders" inspired by "12th century Saracen warriors".[3] Jackson's Easterling soldiers are covered in armour, revealing only their "coal-black eyes" through their helmet's eye-slits.[3] Ibata comments that they look Asian, their headgear recalling both Samurai helmets and conical "Coolie" hats.[3]

From "clod" to hero

 
A sword fit for a hero: Andúril, "Flame of the West" is forged anew, "for Aragorn son of Arathorn was going to war upon the marches of Mordor".[T 23]

The Tolkien scholar Deborah C. Rogers compares the Men of The Lord of the Rings with the Hobbits. She notes that the Hobbits are to an extent the low, simple, earthbound "clods" of the story who like beer and comfort and do not wish to go on adventures;[b] they fit the antihero of modern literature and Northrop Frye's lower literary modes including various forms of humour.[41]

In contrast, Tolkien's Men are not all of a piece: Rogers mentions the "petty villain", Bill Ferny; the "loathsome" Grima Wormtongue; the "slow-thinking" publican Barliman Butterbur of Bree; "that portrait of damnation", Denethor, Steward of Gondor; and at the upper end of the scale, the kingly Théoden, brought back to life from Wormtongue's corruption; the "gentle warrior" Faramir and his brother the hero-villain Boromir; and finally the ranger Aragorn, who becomes king.[41]

Aragorn is the opposite of hobbitish: tall, not provincial, untroubled by the discomforts of the wild. At the start, in Bree, he appears as a Ranger of the North, a weatherbeaten man named Strider. Gradually the reader discovers he is heir to the throne of Gondor, engaged to be married to Arwen, an Elf-woman. Equipped with a named magical sword, he emerges as an unqualified hero, in Frye's "High Mimetic" or "Romantic" literary mode, making the whole novel indeed a heroic romance: he regains his throne, marries Arwen, and has a long, peaceful, and happy reign.[41][42]

Notes

  1. ^ It is unclear whether the friendly Lossoth (Snow-Men of the Ice Bay of Forochel) and Drúedain are part of this group.[1]
  2. ^ Rogers admits, though, that sometimes, as Gandalf said of Bilbo and Frodo, there is "more to them than meets the eye".[41]

References

Primary

This list identifies each item's location in Tolkien's writings.
  1. ^ a b Tolkien 1954, book 3, ch. 4 "Treebeard"
  2. ^ Tolkien 1954a, "Prologue"
  3. ^ Lobdell, Jared, ed. (1975). Guide to the Names in The Lord of the Rings, "The Firstborn". A Tolkien Compass. Open Court. p. 162. ISBN 978-0875483030.
  4. ^ Carpenter 1981, #131 to Milton Waldman, late 1951
  5. ^ Tolkien 1954a, book 2, ch. 3 "The Ring Goes South"
  6. ^ Tolkien 1954a, book 1, ch. 9 "At the Sign of the Prancing Pony"
  7. ^ Tolkien 1937, ch. 7 "Queer Lodgings"
  8. ^ Tolkien 1937, ch. 10 "A Warm Welcome"
  9. ^ a b Tolkien 1955, Book 5, ch. 3, "The Muster of Rohan"
  10. ^ a b c Tolkien 1955, Book 5, ch. 5, "The Ride of the Rohirrim"
  11. ^ Tolkien 1955, b, Appendix F, "The Languages and Peoples of the Third Age"
  12. ^ Tolkien 1954, book 4, ch. 5 "The Window on the West"
  13. ^ Tolkien 1955, book 5 ch. 1 "Minas Tirith"
  14. ^ Tolkien 1954, book 4, ch. 3 "The Black Gate is Closed"
  15. ^ Tolkien 1954, book 3, ch. 6 "The King of the Golden Hall"
  16. ^ Tolkien 1955, book 5, ch. 6 "The Battle of the Pelennor Fields"
  17. ^ a b Tolkien 1977, ch. 17 "Of the Coming of Men into the West" and subsequent chapters
  18. ^ Carpenter 1981, #203 to Herbert Schiro, 17 November 1957
  19. ^ a b Carpenter 1981, #211 to Rhona Beare, 14 October 1958
  20. ^ Tolkien 1955, Appendix A: "Annals of the Kings and Rulers": I "The Númenórean Kings": (v) "Here follows a part of the tale of Aragorn and Arwen"
  21. ^ Tolkien 1955, book 5, ch. 9 "The Last Debate"
  22. ^ Tolkien 1954a, book 2, ch. 2 "The Council of Elrond"
  23. ^ Tolkien 1954a, book 2, ch. 3, "The Ring Goes South"

Secondary

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Straubhaar, Sandra Ballif (2013) [2007]. "Men, Middle-earth". In Drout, Michael D. C. (ed.). The J. R. R. Tolkien Encyclopedia: Scholarship and Critical Assessment. Routledge. pp. 414–417. ISBN 978-1-135-88034-7.
  2. ^ Shippey 2005, pp. 131–133.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Ibata, David (12 January 2003). "'Lord' of racism? Critics view trilogy as discriminatory". The Chicago Tribune.
  4. ^ a b c d Sinex, Margaret (January 2010). ""Monsterized Saracens," Tolkien's Haradrim, and Other Medieval "Fantasy Products"". Tolkien Studies. 7 (1): 175–176. doi:10.1353/tks.0.0067. S2CID 171072624.
  5. ^ a b Anwar, Zakarya (June 2009). "An evaluation of a post-colonial critique of Tolkien". Diffusion. 2 (1): 1–9.
  6. ^ Kocher 1974, pp. 73–78.
  7. ^ Shippey 2005, pp. 144–149.
  8. ^ a b Kennedy, Maev (3 May 2016). "Tolkien annotated map of Middle-earth acquired by Bodleian library". The Guardian.
  9. ^ "swart in British English". Collins. Retrieved 25 July 2022. Old English sweart; related to Old Frisian swart, Old Norse svartr, Old High German swarz black, Latin sordēs dirt
  10. ^ Hammond, Wayne G.; Scull, Christina (2005). The Lord of the Rings: A Reader's Companion. HarperCollins. pp. 283–284. ISBN 978-0-00-720907-1.
  11. ^ Bowers, John M. (2019). Tolkien's Lost Chaucer. Oxford University Press. p. 170. ISBN 978-0-19-258029-0.
  12. ^ Shippey 2005, p. 124.
  13. ^ Shippey 2005, p. 91.
  14. ^ Shippey 2005, pp. 74, 149.
  15. ^ Panshin, Cory Seidman (1969). "Old Irish Influences Upon the Languages & Literature of The Lord of the Rings". Tolkien Journal. 3 (4). article 4.
  16. ^ Shippey 2005, pp. 18, 20.
  17. ^ a b c Librán-Moreno, Miryam (2011). "'Byzantium, New Rome!' Goths, Langobards and Byzantium in The Lord of the Rings". In Fisher, Jason (ed.). Tolkien and the Study of his Sources. McFarland & Company. pp. 84–116. ISBN 978-0-7864-6482-1.
  18. ^ Garth 2020, p. 41.
  19. ^ Shippey 2005, pp. 144–149".
  20. ^ a b Kocher 1974, pp. 109–116.
  21. ^ Parker, Douglass (1957). "Hwaet We Holbytla ...". Hudson Review. 9 (4): 598–609. JSTOR 4621633.
  22. ^ Burns, Marjorie (2005). "Two Norths and Their English Blend". Perilous Realms: Celtic and Norse in Tolkien's Middle-earth. University of Toronto Press. pp. 12–29. ISBN 978-0-8020-3806-7.
  23. ^ a b Hannon, Patrice (2004). "The Lord of the Rings as Elegy". Mythlore. 24 (2): 36–42.
  24. ^ Straubhaar, Sandra Ballif (2005). "Gilraen's Linnod: Function, Genre, Prototypes". Tolkien Studies. 2: 235–244. doi:10.1353/tks.2005.0032. S2CID 170378314.
  25. ^ Cunningham, Michael (2005). "A History of Song: The Transmission of Memory in Middle-Earth". Mallorn (43): 27–29.
  26. ^ Kocher 1974, pp. 8–11.
  27. ^ a b Lee, Stuart D.; Solopova, Elizabeth (2005). The Keys of Middle-earth: Discovering Medieval Literature Through the Fiction of J. R. R. Tolkien. Palgrave. pp. 256–257. ISBN 978-1403946713.
  28. ^ Ford, Mary Ann; Reid, Robin Anne (2011). "Into the West". In Bogstad, Janice M.; Kaveny, Philip E. (eds.). Picturing Tolkien. McFarland & Company. pp. 169–182. ISBN 978-0-7864-8473-7.
  29. ^ a b Burns, Marjorie J. (1989). "J.R.R. Tolkien and the Journey North". Mythlore. 15 (4): 5–9. JSTOR 26811938.
  30. ^ a b c Kocher 1974, p. 53.
  31. ^ Kocher 1974, pp. 55–57.
  32. ^ Kocher 1974, p. 117. "By some critics, like Roger Sale, he is completely neglected in favour of Frodo as central hero;".
  33. ^ a b Kocher 1974, pp. 125–143.
  34. ^ Kocher 1974, p. 132.
  35. ^ Kocher 1974, p. 139.
  36. ^ Pace, David Paul (1979). "The Influence of Vergil's Aeneid on The Lord of the Rings". Mythlore. 6 (2): 37–38, article 11.
  37. ^ Rutledge, Fleming (2004). The Battle for Middle-earth: Tolkien's Divine Design in The Lord of the Rings. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. p. 286. ISBN 978-0-8028-2497-4.
  38. ^ Stanton, Michael N. (2002). Hobbits, Elves, and Wizards: Exploring the Wonders and Worlds of J.R.R. Tolkien's "The Lord of the Rings". Palgrave Macmillan. p. 79. ISBN 978-1-4039-6025-2.
  39. ^ Stanton, Michael N. (2013) [2007]. "Hobbits". In Drout, Michael D. C. (ed.). The J. R. R. Tolkien Encyclopedia: Scholarship and Critical Assessment. Routledge. pp. 280–282. ISBN 978-1-135-88034-7.
  40. ^ Magoun, John F. G. (2006). "South, The". In Drout, Michael D. C. (ed.). The J. R. R. Tolkien Encyclopedia: Scholarship and Critical Assessment. Routledge. pp. 622–623. ISBN 1-135-88034-4.
  41. ^ a b c d Rogers, Deborah C. (1975). Lobdell, Jared (ed.). Everyclod and Everyhero: The Image of Man in Tolkien. A Tolkien Compass. Open Court. pp. 69–76. ISBN 978-0875483030.
  42. ^ Shippey 2005, pp. 238–243.

Sources

middle, earth, tolkien, middle, earth, fiction, denote, humans, whether, male, female, contrast, elves, dwarves, orcs, other, humanoid, races, described, second, younger, people, created, after, elves, differing, from, them, being, mortal, along, with, ents, d. In J R R Tolkien s Middle earth fiction Man and Men denote humans whether male or female in contrast to Elves Dwarves Orcs and other humanoid races 1 Men are described as the second or younger people created after the Elves and differing from them in being mortal Along with Ents and Dwarves these are the free peoples of Middle earth differing from the enslaved peoples such as Orcs Tolkien uses the Men of Middle earth interacting with immortal Elves to explore a variety of themes in The Lord of the Rings especially death and immortality This appears throughout but is the central theme of an appendix The Tale of Aragorn and Arwen Where the Hobbits stand for simple earthbound comfort loving people Men are far more varied from petty villains and slow witted publicans to the gentle warrior Faramir and the genuinely heroic Aragorn Tolkien had wanted to create a heroic romance suitable for the modern age Scholars have identified real world analogues for each of the varied races of Men whether from medieval times or classical antiquity The weakness of Men The Lord of the Rings asserts is the desire for power the One Ring promises enormous power but is both evil and addictive Tolkien uses the two Men in the Fellowship created to destroy the Ring Aragorn and the warrior Boromir to show the effects of opposite reactions to that temptation It becomes clear that except for Men all the peoples of Middle earth are dwindling and fading the Elves are leaving and the Ents are childless By the Fourth Age Middle earth is peopled with Men and indeed Tolkien intended it to represent the real world in the distant past Commentators have questioned Tolkien s attitude to race given that good peoples are white and live in the West while enemies may be dark and live in the East and South 2 3 4 However others note that Tolkien was strongly anti racist in real life 5 Contents 1 In the fiction 1 1 Creation 1 2 Free peoples 1 3 Diversity 1 4 History 1 5 Intermarriage and immortality 1 6 Fading 2 Analysis 2 1 Ambition for power 2 2 Race 2 3 From clod to hero 3 Notes 4 References 4 1 Primary 4 2 Secondary 4 3 SourcesIn the fiction EditCreation Edit Further information History of Arda The race of Men in J R R Tolkien s fictional world in his books The Hobbit The Lord of the Rings and The Silmarillion is the second race of beings the younger children created by the One God Iluvatar Because they awoke at the start of the Years of the Sun long after the Elves the elves called them the afterborn or in Quenya the Atani the Second People Like Elves Men first awoke in the East of Middle earth spreading all over the continent and developing a variety of cultures and ethnicities Unlike Tolkien s elves Men are mortal when they die they depart to a world unknown even to the godlike Valar 1 Free peoples Edit Further information Middle earth peoples Free peoples Men are one of the four free peoples in the list poem spoken by the Ent Treebeard the others being Elves Dwarves and Ents T 1 Hobbits not included on that list were a branch of the lineage of Men T 2 T 3 T 4 Hobbits were not known to the Ents but on meeting Merry and Pippin Treebeard at once worked that people into the list T 1 The concept of the free peoples is shared by Elrond T 5 The Tolkien scholar Paul H Kocher writes that in the style of the medieval Great Chain of Being this list places Men and the other speaking peoples higher than the beasts birds and reptiles which he lists next Man the mortal master of horses is listed last among the free peoples who were created separately 6 Diversity Edit Tolkien modelled the Rohirrim the Riders of Rohan on the Anglo Saxons here in an 11th century illustration 7 Although all Men in Tolkien s legendarium are related to one another there are many different groups with different cultures Those on the side of the hobbits in The Lord of the Rings are the Dunedain the men who fought on the side of the Elves in the First Age against Morgoth in Beleriand from whom other friendly groups the Rangers including Aragorn and the men of Gondor are descended and their allies the Rohirrim 1 The Variags of Khand are named for the Varangians medieval Germanic mercenaries 1 Painting by Viktor Vasnetsov The Haradrim used battle elephants as Pyrrhus of Epirus did Illustration by Helene Guerber 8 The main human adversaries in The Lord of the Rings are the Haradrim and the Easterlings 1 The Haradrim or Southrons were hostile to Gondor and used elephants in war Tolkien describes them as swart 4 meaning dark skinned 9 The Easterlings lived in Rhun the vast eastern region of Middle earth they fought in the armies of Morgoth and Sauron Tolkien describes them as slant eyed 4 they ride horses or wagons leading to the name wain riders 1 The Variags of Khand formed a third but smaller group who appear as vassals of Mordor in the Battle of the Pelennor Fields Their name is from Russian Varyagi Variag meaning the Varangians Viking or other Germanic warriors who served as mercenaries 1 Other human adversaries include the Black Numenoreans good men gone wrong 10 and the Corsairs of Umbar rebels of Gondor 11 Cultures of Men in the Third Age Nation group Culture Language Real world analoguesBree T 6 Village agriculture houses of wood earth stone Westron Medieval England 12 Beornings T 7 Wooden hall beekeeping dairy Westron Norse myth Bodvar Bjarki Beowulf 13 Dale T 8 Towns trade taverns their own Germanic medieval EuropeDruedain T 9 T 10 Wild men T 10 Pukel men T 9 Woses T 10 Forest their own Wild man legendsof medieval Europe 14 Dunlendings T 11 Wild men of Dunland Agriculture Westron Dunlendish Celtic Britons 15 Easterlings T 12 People of Rhun Wainriders Horses war wagons their own Huns 16 Gondor and the Dunedain T 13 Cities stone architecture literature music Westron Sindarin Quenya Byzantine Empire 17 Ancient Egypt 18 Goths 17 Langobards 17 Haradrim T 14 Southrons Desert war elephants raiding in ships their own Enemies of Ancient Rome 8 Riders of Rohan T 15 Wooden mead halls agriculture horsemanship Rohirric Westron Anglo Saxons Goths 19 Variags of Khand T 16 Mercenaries their own Varangians 1 Sandra Ballif Straubhaar notes in The J R R Tolkien Encyclopedia that Faramir son of the Steward of Gondor makes an arrogant 1 speech of which he later has cause to repent 1 classifying the types of Men as seen by the Men of Numenorean origin at the end of the Third Age she notes too that his taxonomy is probably not to be taken at face value 1 Faramir s taxonomy of Men of Middle earth 1 High MenMen of the WestNumenoreans Middle MenMen of the Twilight Wild MenMen of the DarknessThe Three Houses of Edain who went to Numenor and their descendants Edain of other houses who stayed in Middle earth they became the barbarian nations of Rhovanion Dale the House of Beorn and the Rohirrim All other Men not connected to the Elves including Easterlings and Dunlendings Unclear if they were Edain or separately created 1 a History Edit Further information The Silmarillion In a world with other intelligent and cultured races Men on Middle earth interact with each other and with the other races in a complex history narrated mainly in The Silmarillion Men are in general friendly with the other free peoples especially Elves they are implacable enemies of the enslaved peoples especially Orcs In the First Age Men the Edain lived in Beleriand on the extreme West of Middle earth They form an alliance with the Elves and join a disastrous war against the first Dark Lord Morgoth which destroys Beleriand As a reward for fighting in the war the creator Eru Iluvatar gives the Edain the new island of Numenor as their home 20 T 17 The key difference between Men and Elves now becomes central to the story Elves are immortal and return to Valinor home of the godlike Valar when they become weary of Middle earth or are killed in battle Men however are mortal 21 22 Morgoth s servant Sauron tempts the Men of Numenor to attack Valinor in their search for immortality Sauron has falsely insinuated that Men can become immortal just by being in that place The Men and Numenor are destroyed the island is drowned Atlantis like beneath the waves the world is made round and Valinor is removed from the world so as to only be accessible by the Elves Sauron s body is destroyed but his spirit escapes to become the new Dark Lord of Middle earth A remnant of the Men of Numenor who remained faithful under Elendil sail to Middle earth where they found the kingdoms of Arnor in the North and Gondor in the South remaining known as the Dunedain Men of the West Arnor becomes fragmented and declines until its kings become Rangers in the wilds but they retain their memory of Numenor or Westernesse through many generations down to Aragorn a protagonist in The Lord of the Rings The line of kings in Gondor eventually dies out and the country is ruled by Stewards the throne empty until Aragorn returns 20 T 17 Intermarriage and immortality Edit Further information The Tale of Aragorn and Arwen Tolkien stated that the core theme of The Lord of the Rings was death and the human desire to escape it T 18 T 19 The theme which recurs throughout the work is sharply visible in an appendix The Tale of Aragorn and Arwen in which the immortal Elf Arwen chooses mortality so that she can marry the mortal Man Aragorn The result as with the earlier intermarriage of their ancestors Luthien and Beren in the First Age in Beleriand was to make Aragorn s line exceptionally long lived among Men and as the royal family intermarried with other people of Gondor to maintain or extend the lifespan of the entire race T 20 23 24 25 Fading Edit Further information Decline and fall in Middle earth Tolkien imagined Arda as the Earth in the distant past T 19 26 With the loss of all its peoples except Man and the reshaping of the continents all that is left of Middle earth is a dim memory in folklore legend and old words 27 Shapes of continents are purely schematic The overall feeling in The Lord of the Rings however despite the victories and Aragorn s long awaited kingship and marriage is of decline and fall echoing the view of Norse mythology that everything will inevitably be destroyed 28 As the Tolkien scholar Marjorie Burns put it Here is a mythology where even the gods can die and it leaves the reader with a vivid sense of life s cycles with an awareness that everything comes to an end that though the evil Sauron may go the elves will fade as well 29 This fits with Tolkien s equation of Middle earth with the real Earth at some distant epoch in the past and with his apparent intention to create a mythology for England He could combine medieval myths and legends hints from poems and nearly forgotten names to build a world of Wizards and Elves Dwarves Rings of Power Hobbits Orcs Trolls and Ringwraiths and heroic Men with Elvish blood in their veins and follow their history through long ages provided that at the end he tore it all down again leaving nothing once again but dim memories By the end of The Lord of the Rings the reader has learnt that the Elves have left for the Uttermost West never to return and that the other peoples Dwarves Hobbits Ents and all the rest are dwindling and fading leaving only a world of Men 27 29 23 Kocher writes that the furthest look into Man s future in The Lord of the Rings is the conversation between the Elf Legolas and the Dwarf Gimli close friends at the moment when they first visit Minas Tirith the capital city of the Men of Gondor and see the marks of decay around them 30 Gimli says that the works of Men always fail of their promise Legolas replies that even if that s so seldom do they fail of their seed in marked contrast to the scarcity of children among Elves and Dwarves implying that Men will outlast the other races Gimli suggests again that Men s projects come to naught in the end but might have beens Legolas just replies To that the Elves know not the answer 30 T 21 Kocher comments that this sad little fugue is at variance with the hopeful tone of the rest of the work remaining cheerful even in the face of apparently insuperable odds 30 Analysis EditAmbition for power Edit Further information Addiction to power in The Lord of the Rings Kocher writes that the Rings of Power reflected the characteristics of the race that was to wear them Those for Men stimulated and implemented their ambition for power Whereas the tough Dwarves resisted Sauron s domination and the Elves hid their Rings from him with Men his plan works perfectly turning the ambitious kings into Ringwraiths the nine Black Riders With the One Ring to rule them Sauron gains complete control over them and they become his most powerful servants Kocher comments that for Tolkien the exercise of personal free will the most precious gift is the distinguishing mark of his individuality The wise like the Wizard Gandalf and the Elf queen Galadriel therefore avoid putting pressure on anybody In contrast Sauron is evil exactly because he seeks to dominate the wills of others the Ringwraiths the nine fallen kings of Men are the clearest exemplars of the process 31 Kocher states that the leading Man in The Lord of the Rings is Aragorn though critics often overlooked him in favour of Frodo as protagonist 32 Aragorn is one of two Men in the Fellowship of the Ring the nine walkers from the Free Peoples opposed to the nine Black Riders The other is Boromir elder son of the Steward of Gondor and the two Men are sharply opposed Both are ambitious and both intend one day to rule Gondor Boromir means to fight valiantly to save Gondor with any help he can get and to inherit the Stewardship Aragorn knows he is in the line of kings by his ancestry but he is unknown in Gondor When they meet at the Council of Elrond they dispute who has been holding back Sauron Aragorn presents the shards of the broken sword of his ancestor Elendil and asks Boromir if he wants the House of Elendil the line of kings to return Boromir evasively 33 replies that he would welcome the sword The One Ring is then shown to the Council Boromir at once thinks of using it himself Elrond explains how dangerous the Ring is Boromir reluctantly sets the idea of using it aside for the moment and suggests again that Elendil s sword might help save Gondor if Aragorn is strong enough Aragorn replies gracefully to the tactless suggestion Kocher comments that by being both bold and tactful Aragorn has won all that he wanted from Boromir the sword is genuine as is Aragorn s claim to own it and he has been invited back to Gondor The Fellowship set off temporarily united when they reach Parth Galen Boromir tries to seize the Ring from Frodo causing Frodo to use the Ring to escape the Fellowship is scattered Orcs attack seeking the Ring Boromir repents and dies trying to save the Hobbits an act which redeems him 34 Aragorn gives Boromir an honourable boat funeral The quest eventually succeeds and Aragorn growing in strength through many perils and wise decisions 35 is crowned King Boromir gave in to the temptation of power and fell Aragorn responded rightfully and rose T 22 33 36 Race Edit Further information Tolkien and race The status of the friendly races has been debated by critics David Ibata writing in The Chicago Tribune asserts that the protagonists in The Lord of the Rings all have fair skin and they are mainly blond haired and blue eyed as well Ibata suggests that having the good guys white and their opponents of other races in both book and film is uncomfortably close to racism 3 The theologian Fleming Rutledge states that the leader of the Druedain Ghan buri Ghan is treated as a noble savage 37 38 Michael N Stanton writes in The J R R Tolkien Encyclopedia that Hobbits were a distinctive form of human beings and notes that their speech contains vestigial elements which hint that they originated in the North of Middle earth 39 The scholar Margaret Sinex states that Tolkiens construction of the Easterlings and Southrons draws on centuries of Christian tradition of creating an imaginary Saracen 4 Zakarya Anwar judges that while Tolkien himself was anti racist his fantasy writings can certainly be taken the wrong way 5 With his different races of Men arranged from good in the West to evil in the East simple in the North and sophisticated in the South Tolkien had in the view of John Magoun constructed a fully expressed moral geography Gondor is both virtuous being West and has problems being South Mordor in the Southeast is hellish while Harad in the extreme South regresses into hot savagery 40 Peter Jackson in his The Lord of the Rings film trilogy clothes the Haradrim in long red robes and turbans and has them riding their elephants giving them the look in Ibata s opinion of North African or Middle Eastern tribesmen 1 3 Ibata notes that the film companion book The Lord of the Rings Creatures describes them as exotic outlanders inspired by 12th century Saracen warriors 3 Jackson s Easterling soldiers are covered in armour revealing only their coal black eyes through their helmet s eye slits 3 Ibata comments that they look Asian their headgear recalling both Samurai helmets and conical Coolie hats 3 From clod to hero Edit Further information Heroism in The Lord of the Rings A sword fit for a hero Anduril Flame of the West is forged anew for Aragorn son of Arathorn was going to war upon the marches of Mordor T 23 The Tolkien scholar Deborah C Rogers compares the Men of The Lord of the Rings with the Hobbits She notes that the Hobbits are to an extent the low simple earthbound clods of the story who like beer and comfort and do not wish to go on adventures b they fit the antihero of modern literature and Northrop Frye s lower literary modes including various forms of humour 41 In contrast Tolkien s Men are not all of a piece Rogers mentions the petty villain Bill Ferny the loathsome Grima Wormtongue the slow thinking publican Barliman Butterbur of Bree that portrait of damnation Denethor Steward of Gondor and at the upper end of the scale the kingly Theoden brought back to life from Wormtongue s corruption the gentle warrior Faramir and his brother the hero villain Boromir and finally the ranger Aragorn who becomes king 41 Aragorn is the opposite of hobbitish tall not provincial untroubled by the discomforts of the wild At the start in Bree he appears as a Ranger of the North a weatherbeaten man named Strider Gradually the reader discovers he is heir to the throne of Gondor engaged to be married to Arwen an Elf woman Equipped with a named magical sword he emerges as an unqualified hero in Frye s High Mimetic or Romantic literary mode making the whole novel indeed a heroic romance he regains his throne marries Arwen and has a long peaceful and happy reign 41 42 Notes Edit It is unclear whether the friendly Lossoth Snow Men of the Ice Bay of Forochel and Druedain are part of this group 1 Rogers admits though that sometimes as Gandalf said of Bilbo and Frodo there is more to them than meets the eye 41 References EditPrimary Edit This list identifies each item s location in Tolkien s writings dd a b Tolkien 1954 book 3 ch 4 Treebeard Tolkien 1954a Prologue Lobdell Jared ed 1975 Guide to the Names in The Lord of the Rings The Firstborn A Tolkien Compass Open Court p 162 ISBN 978 0875483030 Carpenter 1981 131 to Milton Waldman late 1951 Tolkien 1954a book 2 ch 3 The Ring Goes South Tolkien 1954a book 1 ch 9 At the Sign of the Prancing Pony Tolkien 1937 ch 7 Queer Lodgings Tolkien 1937 ch 10 A Warm Welcome a b Tolkien 1955 Book 5 ch 3 The Muster of Rohan a b c Tolkien 1955 Book 5 ch 5 The Ride of the Rohirrim Tolkien 1955 b Appendix F The Languages and Peoples of the Third Age Tolkien 1954 book 4 ch 5 The Window on the West Tolkien 1955 book 5 ch 1 Minas Tirith Tolkien 1954 book 4 ch 3 The Black Gate is Closed Tolkien 1954 book 3 ch 6 The King of the Golden Hall Tolkien 1955 book 5 ch 6 The Battle of the Pelennor Fields a b Tolkien 1977 ch 17 Of the Coming of Men into the West and subsequent chapters Carpenter 1981 203 to Herbert Schiro 17 November 1957 a b Carpenter 1981 211 to Rhona Beare 14 October 1958 Tolkien 1955 Appendix A Annals of the Kings and Rulers I The Numenorean Kings v Here follows a part of the tale of Aragorn and Arwen Tolkien 1955 book 5 ch 9 The Last Debate Tolkien 1954a book 2 ch 2 The Council of Elrond Tolkien 1954a book 2 ch 3 The Ring Goes South Secondary Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Straubhaar Sandra Ballif 2013 2007 Men Middle earth In Drout Michael D C ed The J R R Tolkien Encyclopedia Scholarship and Critical Assessment Routledge pp 414 417 ISBN 978 1 135 88034 7 Shippey 2005 pp 131 133 a b c d e f Ibata David 12 January 2003 Lord of racism Critics view trilogy as discriminatory The Chicago Tribune a b c d Sinex Margaret January 2010 Monsterized Saracens Tolkien s Haradrim and Other Medieval Fantasy Products Tolkien Studies 7 1 175 176 doi 10 1353 tks 0 0067 S2CID 171072624 a b Anwar Zakarya June 2009 An evaluation of a post colonial critique of Tolkien Diffusion 2 1 1 9 Kocher 1974 pp 73 78 Shippey 2005 pp 144 149 a b Kennedy Maev 3 May 2016 Tolkien annotated map of Middle earth acquired by Bodleian library The Guardian swart in British English Collins Retrieved 25 July 2022 Old English sweart related to Old Frisian swart Old Norse svartr Old High German swarz black Latin sordes dirt Hammond Wayne G Scull Christina 2005 The Lord of the Rings A Reader s Companion HarperCollins pp 283 284 ISBN 978 0 00 720907 1 Bowers John M 2019 Tolkien s Lost Chaucer Oxford University Press p 170 ISBN 978 0 19 258029 0 Shippey 2005 p 124 Shippey 2005 p 91 Shippey 2005 pp 74 149 Panshin Cory Seidman 1969 Old Irish Influences Upon the Languages amp Literature of The Lord of the Rings Tolkien Journal 3 4 article 4 Shippey 2005 pp 18 20 a b c Libran Moreno Miryam 2011 Byzantium New Rome Goths Langobards and Byzantium in The Lord of the Rings In Fisher Jason ed Tolkien and the Study of his Sources McFarland amp Company pp 84 116 ISBN 978 0 7864 6482 1 Garth 2020 p 41 Shippey 2005 pp 144 149 a b Kocher 1974 pp 109 116 Parker Douglass 1957 Hwaet We Holbytla Hudson Review 9 4 598 609 JSTOR 4621633 Burns Marjorie 2005 Two Norths and Their English Blend Perilous Realms Celtic and Norse in Tolkien s Middle earth University of Toronto Press pp 12 29 ISBN 978 0 8020 3806 7 a b Hannon Patrice 2004 The Lord of the Rings as Elegy Mythlore 24 2 36 42 Straubhaar Sandra Ballif 2005 Gilraen s Linnod Function Genre Prototypes Tolkien Studies 2 235 244 doi 10 1353 tks 2005 0032 S2CID 170378314 Cunningham Michael 2005 A History of Song The Transmission of Memory in Middle Earth Mallorn 43 27 29 Kocher 1974 pp 8 11 a b Lee Stuart D Solopova Elizabeth 2005 The Keys of Middle earth Discovering Medieval Literature Through the Fiction of J R R Tolkien Palgrave pp 256 257 ISBN 978 1403946713 Ford Mary Ann Reid Robin Anne 2011 Into the West In Bogstad Janice M Kaveny Philip E eds Picturing Tolkien McFarland amp Company pp 169 182 ISBN 978 0 7864 8473 7 a b Burns Marjorie J 1989 J R R Tolkien and the Journey North Mythlore 15 4 5 9 JSTOR 26811938 a b c Kocher 1974 p 53 Kocher 1974 pp 55 57 Kocher 1974 p 117 By some critics like Roger Sale he is completely neglected in favour of Frodo as central hero a b Kocher 1974 pp 125 143 Kocher 1974 p 132 Kocher 1974 p 139 Pace David Paul 1979 The Influence of Vergil s Aeneid on The Lord of the Rings Mythlore 6 2 37 38 article 11 Rutledge Fleming 2004 The Battle for Middle earth Tolkien s Divine Design in The Lord of the Rings Wm B Eerdmans Publishing p 286 ISBN 978 0 8028 2497 4 Stanton Michael N 2002 Hobbits Elves and Wizards Exploring the Wonders and Worlds of J R R Tolkien s The Lord of the Rings Palgrave Macmillan p 79 ISBN 978 1 4039 6025 2 Stanton Michael N 2013 2007 Hobbits In Drout Michael D C ed The J R R Tolkien Encyclopedia Scholarship and Critical Assessment Routledge pp 280 282 ISBN 978 1 135 88034 7 Magoun John F G 2006 South The In Drout Michael D C ed The J R R Tolkien Encyclopedia Scholarship and Critical Assessment Routledge pp 622 623 ISBN 1 135 88034 4 a b c d Rogers Deborah C 1975 Lobdell Jared ed Everyclod and Everyhero The Image of Man in Tolkien A Tolkien Compass Open Court pp 69 76 ISBN 978 0875483030 Shippey 2005 pp 238 243 Sources Edit Carpenter Humphrey ed 1981 The Letters of J R R Tolkien Boston Houghton Mifflin ISBN 978 0 395 31555 2 Garth John 2020 The Worlds of J R R Tolkien The Places that Inspired Middle earth Frances Lincoln amp Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 7112 4127 5 Kocher Paul 1974 1972 Master of Middle earth The Achievement of J R R Tolkien Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 003877 4 Shippey Tom 2005 1982 The Road to Middle Earth Third ed Grafton HarperCollins ISBN 978 0261102750 Tolkien J R R 1937 Douglas A Anderson ed The Annotated Hobbit Boston Houghton Mifflin published 2002 ISBN 978 0 618 13470 0 Tolkien J R R 1954a The Fellowship of the Ring The Lord of the Rings Boston Houghton Mifflin OCLC 9552942 Tolkien J R R 1954 The Two Towers The Lord of the Rings Boston Houghton Mifflin OCLC 1042159111 Tolkien J R R 1955 The Return of the King The Lord of the Rings Boston Houghton Mifflin OCLC 519647821 Tolkien J R R 1977 Christopher Tolkien ed The Silmarillion Boston Houghton Mifflin ISBN 978 0 395 25730 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Men in Middle earth amp oldid 1142597295 Easterlings, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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