fbpx
Wikipedia

Naming of weapons in Middle-earth

The naming of weapons in Middle-earth is the giving of names to swords and other powerful weapons in J. R. R. Tolkien's legendarium. He derived the naming of weapons from his knowledge of Medieval times; the practice is found in Norse mythology and in the Old English poem Beowulf. Among the many weapons named by Tolkien are Orcrist and Glamdring in The Hobbit, and Narsil / Andúril in The Lord of the Rings. Such weapons carry powerful symbolism, embodying the identity and ancestry of their owners.

Beowulf fights the dragon with the sword Nægling. 1908 illustration by Joseph Ratcliffe Skelton

There are multiple parallels between Tolkien's usage of named weapons in his Middle-earth writings, and the Medieval epics. These include their inheritance as heirlooms, sometimes royal; their rediscovery in ancient treasure-hoards; their being broken and reforged; their adornment with runic inscriptions; and their interlinking with the lives of their owners.

Background edit

Naming of Medieval weapons edit

In Medieval epics, heroes gave names to their weapons. The name, lineage, and power of the weapon reflected on the hero. Among the major tales are those of Sigurd the Volsung and his sword Gram that he used to kill the dragon Fafnir;[a][1] Beowulf and the swords Hrunting and Nægling;[2] King Arthur's Excalibur, the "Sword in the Stone";[2] Roland's Durendal; Waldere's Mimming;[2] and the Elder Edda's account of the "Waking of Angantyr" (the Hervararkviða) and the sword Tyrfing.[3][4]

Heroic literature did not always name its weapons; in ancient Greece, Homer describes the shield and spear of Achilles in detail but does not give them names. He does not name the crucial bow of Odysseus: the weapon that allows him to demonstrate his own identity, his own name as he returns home to Ithaca, functions anonymously in the story. The case is different in the stories and myths of medieval Northern Europe, where the name of a weapon, especially of a sword, gave it an identity, almost a personality. The name, writes the Tolkien scholar Janet Brennan Croft, "marks a weapon as an heirloom tying generations together and legitimizing the heir who holds it."[4] Some 200 sword names are recorded in medieval writings, in line with the Norse practice of naming objects in stories, such as the Dwarf-made chain Gleipnir that unbreakably fastened Fenris the giant wolf.[4]

Powerful swords edit

The Sæbø sword's inscription[5]
 
Runes in silver on the 8th-century Sæbø sword
 
The runic inscription has been interpreted as reading right-to-left Oh Þurmuþ, "Thurmuth owns me", the swastika standing for "Thor".

Such weapons were praised both for their strength and for their history. For example, Nægling is repeatedly described with epithets such as "sharp", "gleaming", "bright", "mighty", and "strong", while its history is explicitly recalled in phrases such as "excellent ancient sword", "ancient heirloom", and "old and grey".[6] They might have magical powers: Excalibur shines[2]

so bryght in his enemyes eyen that it gaf light lyke thirty torchys, and therwith he put hem on bak and slew moche peple".

in Modern English:
so bright in his enemies' eyes that it gave light like thirty torches, and therewith he drove them back and killed many people.[7]

In Norse mythology, similarly, a sword may shine like the sun, as in the Poetic Edda: "Surt from the south comes / With flickering flame; Shines from his sword / The Val-god’s sun."[8]

Swords may be heirlooms within a royal family, or may be recovered from ancient hoards of treasure, in either case having a lineage and story of their own.[3] A sword-blade could be adorned with runes; these might attach power, history, and magic spells to the weapon, just as Sigurd was instructed to engrave runes of wisdom and victory on his sword Gram.[3][9] The historian of arms Ewart Oakeshott described the sword as having "a potent mystique which sets it above any other man-made object".[2] Swords had two attributes which made them especially highly prized: they were costly to manufacture, and effective as weapons.[4][10]

In Middle-earth edit

Weapons of power edit

Tolkien named many weapons, mainly swords, but also including Aeglos, the spear of the Elf-king Gil-Galad; Belthronding, Beleg's bow;[4] Dramborleg, Tuor's axe;[4] and Grond, the name both of the evil battering-ram from Minas Morgul, and of the mace of the first Dark Lord, Morgoth, in his Middle-earth writings.[3] As in medieval epics, the sword in particular symbolised the heroism and position of its owner. As the Tolkien scholar Verlyn Flieger put it, the sword "proclaims the emergence of the hero";[11] further, "the fates of sword and man are linked, and the destruction of one signals the end of the other".[3][2][11]

Such themes can be seen clearly with Aragorn's sword Andúril, but they run similarly through Tolkien's accounts of many other named weapons. The swords Glamdring and Orcrist named in The Hobbit fit two strands of the Medieval pattern, as they are both ancient, having been forged in the First Age, and were retrieved from a treasure-hoard, having been held by the three Trolls in their cave.[3][T 1] Reforging and rediscovery effectively pass old power to the new weapon and its new owner, and renew that power.[3][2]

Comparison of Glamdring and Orcrist with swords in Medieval legend
Attribute The Lord of the Rings Medieval legend
Age Forged in the First Age for Turgon, King of Gondolin Ancient
Source Troll-cave Treasure-hoard

These two swords actually each have three names (polyonymy): in the high and ancient tongue; a translation into the Common Speech, rendered as English; and a goblin nickname.[4]

Polyonymy of swords in The Hobbit
Language Gandalf's sword Thorin's sword
Sindarin, an Elvish language Glamdring Orcrist
Common Speech Foe-hammer Goblin-cleaver
Goblin nickname Beater Biter

Glamdring and Orcrist, and Bilbo's knife used as a sword, which he named Sting, gleam when Orcs are nearby;[2] the ancient swords terrify the Orcs, and are recognised by them; indeed, the Orcs have their own nicknames for the two famous swords, Biter and Beater.[3] These weapons have numerous connections to the famous swords of Medieval mythology, including, according to the Tolkien scholars K. S. Whetter and R. Andrew McDonald, the style and content of their names, which recall the names of swords in Norse mythology such as Fotbitr and Dragvandil ("Leg-biter" and "Slicer").[2] Indeed, in The Hobbit, when Bilbo's party arrive at Rivendell, Elrond reads the swords' runic inscriptions and describes the heroic history and lineage of the recovered weapons:[T 2]

They are old swords, very old swords of the High Elves of the West, my kin. They were made in Gondolin for the Goblin-wars. They must have come from a dragon's hoard or goblin plunder, for dragons and goblins destroyed that city many ages ago. This, Thorin, the runes name Orcrist, the Goblin-cleaver in the ancient tongue of Gondolin; it was a famous blade. This, Gandalf, was Glamdring, Foe-hammer that the king of Gondolin once wore. Keep them well!"[T 2]

"Renewed shall be blade that was broken" edit

The Lord of the Rings hero Aragorn, heir of the kingdoms of Gondor and Arnor, carried the shards of the sword Narsil, broken when his ancestor Elendil died in battle with the Dark Lord Sauron.[T 3][3] Its name, Narsil, contained the roots for "fire" and "white light", meaning "Sun and Moon" in Quenya.[T 4] It had been forged in the First Age by the greatest of the Dwarf-smiths, Telchar. He worked into the enchanted sword the ability to shine "with the light of the sun and of the moon", with the result that "the sword of Elendil filled Orcs and Men with fear".[T 3] After it was broken "its light was extinguished and it was not forged anew",[T 3] until Aragorn brought it to Rivendell at the end of the Third Age and the quest to destroy the One Ring. It was then remade as Andúril, meaning "Flame of the West" in Quenya:[T 4]

The Sword of Elendil was forged anew by Elvish smiths, and on its blade was traced a device of seven stars set between the crescent Moon and the rayed Sun, and about them was written many runes; for Aragorn son of Arathorn was going to war upon the marches of Mordor. Very bright was that sword when it was made whole again; the light of the sun shone redly in it, and the light of the moon shone cold, and its edge was hard and keen. And Aragorn gave it a new name and called it Andúril, Flame of the West.[T 5]

The seven stars were Elendil's heraldic device, which in turn denoted the stars, one per ship, for the seven ships that carried the seven palantirs from Númenor, the island of the West, to Middle-earth. The sword thus carried the symbolism of the lineage of Elendil and the power of the kingdom of Númenor.[12] In addition, Tolkien wrote that the sword's original name, Narsil, "symbolised the chief heavenly lights [Sun and Moon], as enemies of darkness".[T 4]

The poem that Aragorn says goes with his own name, "The Riddle of Strider", calls the sword the "blade that was broken":[2][T 6]

Renewed shall be blade that was broken,
The crownless again shall be king.[T 6]

 
"King Arthur asks the Lady of the Lake for the sword Excalibur". 1911 illustration by Walter Crane
Comparison of Narsil / Andúril with Excalibur, the Sword in the Stone
Attribute The Lord of the Rings Arthurian legend
Broken At Elendil's death When Arthur fights King Pellinore
Delimits an era Third Age begins as Isildur uses shards of Narsil to cut the One Ring
from Sauron's hand; ends as Andúril helps to end Sauron's reign
King Arthur comes to power with Excalibur;
Bedivere casts away the sword on Arthur's death
Accompanies King leading people to victory King leading people to victory
Magical scabbard Blade shall not be stained or broken Wearer shall never lose blood

There are multiple parallels here with Arthurian legend. The Sword in the Stone is broken. Just as Excalibur delimits King Arthur's reign, so Narsil delimits the Third Age, beginning when Isildur cuts the Ring from Sauron's hand, and ending when the remade Andúril helps to end Sauron's power and restore Aragorn as King.[2] Both Kings lead their peoples to victory.[13] The sword's magical scabbard, too, which the Elf-queen Galadriel gives to Aragorn as he leaves Lothlórien with the words "The blade that is drawn from this sheath shall not be stained or broken even in defeat",[T 7] parallels Excalibur's sheath, which guarantees that its wearer "shall never lose no blood, be ye never so sore wounded".[13] The elven scabbard describes the sword it was made for:[T 7]

It was overlaid with a tracery of flowers and leaves wrought of silver and gold, and on it were set in elven-runes formed of many gems the name Andúril and the lineage of the sword.[T 7]

 
The Dwarf-smith Regin watches as Sigurd proofs the sword Gram that he has reforged for him.[14] Illustration by Johannes Gehrts (1901)
Comparison of Narsil / Andúril with swords in Norse mythology
Attribute The Lord of the Rings Norse mythology
Making Narsil was made by Dwarves Tyrfing was made by Dwarves Dvalin and Durin
Shining Andúril shines like Sun and Moon Tyrfing shines like fire
Remade Elves reforge Narsil as Andúril The Dwarf-smith Regin remakes Gram, at Sigmund's dying wish

The theme of the sword that was broken is found in various places in Norse mythology. Burdge and Burke write that Tyrfing, like Narsil, was Dwarf-forged, in its case by Dvalin and Durin. They made Tyrfing shine like fire; Andúril shines like Sun and Moon.[3][15] Sigurd's sword Gram, too, was remade, by the Dwarf-smith Regin;[14] Sigurd's father Sigmund's dying wish was for his sword to be reforged; and flames leapt from Gram's edges.[3][16][10] Aragorn's sword thus combines the natures of the Norse sword Gram and the Arthurian Excalibur.[2]

The reforged and renamed Narsil / Andúril pair has a parallel, too, within Tolkien's legendarium. The hero of the First Age, Túrin's sword, is similarly renamed: Anglachel becomes Gurthang.[4] The Tolkien scholars K. S. Whetter and Andrew McDonald call these weapons almost "living personalities";[2] Croft notes that at the end, Gurthang actually speaks to Túrin. However, while the reforging of Andúril symbolizes the remaking of Middle-earth and the transformation of Aragorn from Ranger to King, the mere renaming of Gurthang fails to change its "essentially malefic"[4] nature. Like the flawed hero Túrin, who likewise takes on different names, its character cannot be changed by giving it a new name. In contrast, Aragorn's sword represents the true hero.[4][2]

Comparison of Aragorn's and Túrin's swords and characters[4][2]
Attribute Aragorn Túrin
Character True hero Flawed, violent warrior
Sword was Narsil ("Red and white flame", i.e. Sun and Moon) Anglachel, "Iron of the flaming star"
Sword belonged to His ancestor Elendil His friend the Elf Beleg
Sword's owner is killed Fighting the Dark Lord Sauron, hand-to-hand Accidentally, by Túrin
Sword is Reforged as Andúril, "Flame of the West", symbol of hope Renamed as Gurthang, "Iron of Death"
Owner Was "Strider", a Ranger, becomes King; is given many names – Elessar (elfstone), Envinyatar (the renewer), Estel (hope), Thorongil (eagle of the star) Is unable to reform himself, despite taking on many names – Neithan (the wronged), Gorthol (dread helm), Agarwaen (bloodstained), Adanedhel (elf-man), Thurin (the secret), Mormegil (black sword), Turambar (master of doom), Dagnir Glaurunga (Glaurung's bane), Naeramarth (evil-fated)
Sword kills Only at need Indiscriminately: Dragon Glaurung; Beleg by accident; Brandir, unjustly; finally, Túrin himself
Outcome Renewal of his people, kingdom, and Middle-earth Disaster to his people

Notes edit

  1. ^ Gram is indeed so strong and sharp that it can cut an anvil in half.[1]

References edit

Primary edit

  1. ^ Tolkien 1937, The Hobbit, ch. 2 "Roast Mutton"
  2. ^ a b Tolkien 1937, The Hobbit, ch. 3 "A Short Rest"
  3. ^ a b c Tolkien 1977, The Silmarillion, "Of the Rings of Power and the Third Age"
  4. ^ a b c Carpenter 2023, #347 to Richard Jeffery, 17 December 1972
  5. ^ Tolkien 1954a, The Fellowship of the Ring, book 2, ch. 3 "The Ring Goes South"
  6. ^ a b Tolkien 1954a, The Fellowship of the Ring, book 1, ch. 10 "Strider"
  7. ^ a b c Tolkien 1954a, The Fellowship of the Ring, book 2, ch. 8 "Farewell to Lórien"

Secondary edit

  1. ^ a b Ogden 2013, p. 265.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Whetter & McDonald 2006, article 2.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Burdge & Burke 2013, pp. 703–705
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Croft 2015, article 1.
  5. ^ Stephens 1866–1867, p. 407.
  6. ^ Culbert 1960, pp. 13–20.
  7. ^ Malory 2014, p. 30.
  8. ^ Guerber 1909, pp. 1–15.
  9. ^ Byock 1990, pp. 67–68.
  10. ^ a b Brisbois 2008, article 9.
  11. ^ a b Flieger 1981, pp. 40–62.
  12. ^ Hammond & Scull 2005, p. 263.
  13. ^ a b Hall 2012, article 6.
  14. ^ a b Arvidsson 2002, pp. 45–52.
  15. ^ Terry 1969, pp. 250–253.
  16. ^ Byock 1990, pp. 53–54.

Sources edit

naming, weapons, middle, earth, naming, weapons, middle, earth, giving, names, swords, other, powerful, weapons, tolkien, legendarium, derived, naming, weapons, from, knowledge, medieval, times, practice, found, norse, mythology, english, poem, beowulf, among,. The naming of weapons in Middle earth is the giving of names to swords and other powerful weapons in J R R Tolkien s legendarium He derived the naming of weapons from his knowledge of Medieval times the practice is found in Norse mythology and in the Old English poem Beowulf Among the many weapons named by Tolkien are Orcrist and Glamdring in The Hobbit and Narsil Anduril in The Lord of the Rings Such weapons carry powerful symbolism embodying the identity and ancestry of their owners Beowulf fights the dragon with the sword Naegling 1908 illustration by Joseph Ratcliffe SkeltonThere are multiple parallels between Tolkien s usage of named weapons in his Middle earth writings and the Medieval epics These include their inheritance as heirlooms sometimes royal their rediscovery in ancient treasure hoards their being broken and reforged their adornment with runic inscriptions and their interlinking with the lives of their owners Contents 1 Background 1 1 Naming of Medieval weapons 1 2 Powerful swords 2 In Middle earth 2 1 Weapons of power 2 2 Renewed shall be blade that was broken 3 Notes 4 References 4 1 Primary 4 2 Secondary 5 SourcesBackground editNaming of Medieval weapons edit In Medieval epics heroes gave names to their weapons The name lineage and power of the weapon reflected on the hero Among the major tales are those of Sigurd the Volsung and his sword Gram that he used to kill the dragon Fafnir a 1 Beowulf and the swords Hrunting and Naegling 2 King Arthur s Excalibur the Sword in the Stone 2 Roland s Durendal Waldere s Mimming 2 and the Elder Edda s account of the Waking of Angantyr the Hervararkvida and the sword Tyrfing 3 4 Heroic literature did not always name its weapons in ancient Greece Homer describes the shield and spear of Achilles in detail but does not give them names He does not name the crucial bow of Odysseus the weapon that allows him to demonstrate his own identity his own name as he returns home to Ithaca functions anonymously in the story The case is different in the stories and myths of medieval Northern Europe where the name of a weapon especially of a sword gave it an identity almost a personality The name writes the Tolkien scholar Janet Brennan Croft marks a weapon as an heirloom tying generations together and legitimizing the heir who holds it 4 Some 200 sword names are recorded in medieval writings in line with the Norse practice of naming objects in stories such as the Dwarf made chain Gleipnir that unbreakably fastened Fenris the giant wolf 4 nbsp Hervor wakes her father Angantyr s ghost from his barrow to demand the cursed sword Tyrfing as an heirloom nbsp Sigurd holding the sword Gram on the Ramsund carving c 1030Powerful swords edit The Saebo sword s inscription 5 nbsp Runes in silver on the 8th century Saebo sword nbsp The runic inscription has been interpreted as reading right to left Oh THurmuth Thurmuth owns me the swastika standing for Thor Such weapons were praised both for their strength and for their history For example Naegling is repeatedly described with epithets such as sharp gleaming bright mighty and strong while its history is explicitly recalled in phrases such as excellent ancient sword ancient heirloom and old and grey 6 They might have magical powers Excalibur shines 2 so bryght in his enemyes eyen that it gaf light lyke thirty torchys and therwith he put hem on bak and slew moche peple in Modern English so bright in his enemies eyes that it gave light like thirty torches and therewith he drove them back and killed many people 7 In Norse mythology similarly a sword may shine like the sun as in the Poetic Edda Surt from the south comes With flickering flame Shines from his sword The Val god s sun 8 Swords may be heirlooms within a royal family or may be recovered from ancient hoards of treasure in either case having a lineage and story of their own 3 A sword blade could be adorned with runes these might attach power history and magic spells to the weapon just as Sigurd was instructed to engrave runes of wisdom and victory on his sword Gram 3 9 The historian of arms Ewart Oakeshott described the sword as having a potent mystique which sets it above any other man made object 2 Swords had two attributes which made them especially highly prized they were costly to manufacture and effective as weapons 4 10 In Middle earth editWeapons of power edit Further information List of weapons and armour in Middle earth Tolkien named many weapons mainly swords but also including Aeglos the spear of the Elf king Gil Galad Belthronding Beleg s bow 4 Dramborleg Tuor s axe 4 and Grond the name both of the evil battering ram from Minas Morgul and of the mace of the first Dark Lord Morgoth in his Middle earth writings 3 As in medieval epics the sword in particular symbolised the heroism and position of its owner As the Tolkien scholar Verlyn Flieger put it the sword proclaims the emergence of the hero 11 further the fates of sword and man are linked and the destruction of one signals the end of the other 3 2 11 Such themes can be seen clearly with Aragorn s sword Anduril but they run similarly through Tolkien s accounts of many other named weapons The swords Glamdring and Orcrist named in The Hobbit fit two strands of the Medieval pattern as they are both ancient having been forged in the First Age and were retrieved from a treasure hoard having been held by the three Trolls in their cave 3 T 1 Reforging and rediscovery effectively pass old power to the new weapon and its new owner and renew that power 3 2 Comparison of Glamdring and Orcrist with swords in Medieval legend Attribute The Lord of the Rings Medieval legendAge Forged in the First Age for Turgon King of Gondolin AncientSource Troll cave Treasure hoardThese two swords actually each have three names polyonymy in the high and ancient tongue a translation into the Common Speech rendered as English and a goblin nickname 4 Polyonymy of swords in The Hobbit Language Gandalf s sword Thorin s swordSindarin an Elvish language Glamdring OrcristCommon Speech Foe hammer Goblin cleaverGoblin nickname Beater BiterGlamdring and Orcrist and Bilbo s knife used as a sword which he named Sting gleam when Orcs are nearby 2 the ancient swords terrify the Orcs and are recognised by them indeed the Orcs have their own nicknames for the two famous swords Biter and Beater 3 These weapons have numerous connections to the famous swords of Medieval mythology including according to the Tolkien scholars K S Whetter and R Andrew McDonald the style and content of their names which recall the names of swords in Norse mythology such as Fotbitr and Dragvandil Leg biter and Slicer 2 Indeed in The Hobbit when Bilbo s party arrive at Rivendell Elrond reads the swords runic inscriptions and describes the heroic history and lineage of the recovered weapons T 2 They are old swords very old swords of the High Elves of the West my kin They were made in Gondolin for the Goblin wars They must have come from a dragon s hoard or goblin plunder for dragons and goblins destroyed that city many ages ago This Thorin the runes name Orcrist the Goblin cleaver in the ancient tongue of Gondolin it was a famous blade This Gandalf was Glamdring Foe hammer that the king of Gondolin once wore Keep them well T 2 Renewed shall be blade that was broken edit The Lord of the Rings hero Aragorn heir of the kingdoms of Gondor and Arnor carried the shards of the sword Narsil broken when his ancestor Elendil died in battle with the Dark Lord Sauron T 3 3 Its name Narsil contained the roots for fire and white light meaning Sun and Moon in Quenya T 4 It had been forged in the First Age by the greatest of the Dwarf smiths Telchar He worked into the enchanted sword the ability to shine with the light of the sun and of the moon with the result that the sword of Elendil filled Orcs and Men with fear T 3 After it was broken its light was extinguished and it was not forged anew T 3 until Aragorn brought it to Rivendell at the end of the Third Age and the quest to destroy the One Ring It was then remade as Anduril meaning Flame of the West in Quenya T 4 The Sword of Elendil was forged anew by Elvish smiths and on its blade was traced a device of seven stars set between the crescent Moon and the rayed Sun and about them was written many runes for Aragorn son of Arathorn was going to war upon the marches of Mordor Very bright was that sword when it was made whole again the light of the sun shone redly in it and the light of the moon shone cold and its edge was hard and keen And Aragorn gave it a new name and called it Anduril Flame of the West T 5 The seven stars were Elendil s heraldic device which in turn denoted the stars one per ship for the seven ships that carried the seven palantirs from Numenor the island of the West to Middle earth The sword thus carried the symbolism of the lineage of Elendil and the power of the kingdom of Numenor 12 In addition Tolkien wrote that the sword s original name Narsil symbolised the chief heavenly lights Sun and Moon as enemies of darkness T 4 The poem that Aragorn says goes with his own name The Riddle of Strider calls the sword the blade that was broken 2 T 6 Renewed shall be blade that was broken The crownless again shall be king T 6 nbsp King Arthur asks the Lady of the Lake for the sword Excalibur 1911 illustration by Walter CraneComparison of Narsil Anduril with Excalibur the Sword in the Stone Attribute The Lord of the Rings Arthurian legendBroken At Elendil s death When Arthur fights King PellinoreDelimits an era Third Age begins as Isildur uses shards of Narsil to cut the One Ringfrom Sauron s hand ends as Anduril helps to end Sauron s reign King Arthur comes to power with Excalibur Bedivere casts away the sword on Arthur s deathAccompanies King leading people to victory King leading people to victoryMagical scabbard Blade shall not be stained or broken Wearer shall never lose bloodThere are multiple parallels here with Arthurian legend The Sword in the Stone is broken Just as Excalibur delimits King Arthur s reign so Narsil delimits the Third Age beginning when Isildur cuts the Ring from Sauron s hand and ending when the remade Anduril helps to end Sauron s power and restore Aragorn as King 2 Both Kings lead their peoples to victory 13 The sword s magical scabbard too which the Elf queen Galadriel gives to Aragorn as he leaves Lothlorien with the words The blade that is drawn from this sheath shall not be stained or broken even in defeat T 7 parallels Excalibur s sheath which guarantees that its wearer shall never lose no blood be ye never so sore wounded 13 The elven scabbard describes the sword it was made for T 7 It was overlaid with a tracery of flowers and leaves wrought of silver and gold and on it were set in elven runes formed of many gems the name Anduril and the lineage of the sword T 7 nbsp The Dwarf smith Regin watches as Sigurd proofs the sword Gram that he has reforged for him 14 Illustration by Johannes Gehrts 1901 Comparison of Narsil Anduril with swords in Norse mythology Attribute The Lord of the Rings Norse mythologyMaking Narsil was made by Dwarves Tyrfing was made by Dwarves Dvalin and DurinShining Anduril shines like Sun and Moon Tyrfing shines like fireRemade Elves reforge Narsil as Anduril The Dwarf smith Regin remakes Gram at Sigmund s dying wishThe theme of the sword that was broken is found in various places in Norse mythology Burdge and Burke write that Tyrfing like Narsil was Dwarf forged in its case by Dvalin and Durin They made Tyrfing shine like fire Anduril shines like Sun and Moon 3 15 Sigurd s sword Gram too was remade by the Dwarf smith Regin 14 Sigurd s father Sigmund s dying wish was for his sword to be reforged and flames leapt from Gram s edges 3 16 10 Aragorn s sword thus combines the natures of the Norse sword Gram and the Arthurian Excalibur 2 The reforged and renamed Narsil Anduril pair has a parallel too within Tolkien s legendarium The hero of the First Age Turin s sword is similarly renamed Anglachel becomes Gurthang 4 The Tolkien scholars K S Whetter and Andrew McDonald call these weapons almost living personalities 2 Croft notes that at the end Gurthang actually speaks to Turin However while the reforging of Anduril symbolizes the remaking of Middle earth and the transformation of Aragorn from Ranger to King the mere renaming of Gurthang fails to change its essentially malefic 4 nature Like the flawed hero Turin who likewise takes on different names its character cannot be changed by giving it a new name In contrast Aragorn s sword represents the true hero 4 2 Comparison of Aragorn s and Turin s swords and characters 4 2 Attribute Aragorn TurinCharacter True hero Flawed violent warriorSword was Narsil Red and white flame i e Sun and Moon Anglachel Iron of the flaming star Sword belonged to His ancestor Elendil His friend the Elf BelegSword s owner is killed Fighting the Dark Lord Sauron hand to hand Accidentally by TurinSword is Reforged as Anduril Flame of the West symbol of hope Renamed as Gurthang Iron of Death Owner Was Strider a Ranger becomes King is given many names Elessar elfstone Envinyatar the renewer Estel hope Thorongil eagle of the star Is unable to reform himself despite taking on many names Neithan the wronged Gorthol dread helm Agarwaen bloodstained Adanedhel elf man Thurin the secret Mormegil black sword Turambar master of doom Dagnir Glaurunga Glaurung s bane Naeramarth evil fated Sword kills Only at need Indiscriminately Dragon Glaurung Beleg by accident Brandir unjustly finally Turin himselfOutcome Renewal of his people kingdom and Middle earth Disaster to his peopleNotes edit Gram is indeed so strong and sharp that it can cut an anvil in half 1 References editPrimary edit Tolkien 1937 The Hobbit ch 2 Roast Mutton a b Tolkien 1937 The Hobbit ch 3 A Short Rest a b c Tolkien 1977 The Silmarillion Of the Rings of Power and the Third Age a b c Carpenter 2023 347 to Richard Jeffery 17 December 1972 Tolkien 1954a The Fellowship of the Ring book 2 ch 3 The Ring Goes South a b Tolkien 1954a The Fellowship of the Ring book 1 ch 10 Strider a b c Tolkien 1954a The Fellowship of the Ring book 2 ch 8 Farewell to Lorien Secondary edit a b Ogden 2013 p 265 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Whetter amp McDonald 2006 article 2 a b c d e f g h i j k Burdge amp Burke 2013 pp 703 705 a b c d e f g h i j k Croft 2015 article 1 Stephens 1866 1867 p 407 Culbert 1960 pp 13 20 Malory 2014 p 30 Guerber 1909 pp 1 15 Byock 1990 pp 67 68 a b Brisbois 2008 article 9 a b Flieger 1981 pp 40 62 Hammond amp Scull 2005 p 263 a b Hall 2012 article 6 a b Arvidsson 2002 pp 45 52 Terry 1969 pp 250 253 Byock 1990 pp 53 54 Sources editArvidsson Hakan November 2002 The Ring An essay on Tolkien s mythology Mallorn 40 45 52 JSTOR 45321616 Brisbois Michael J 2008 The Blade Against the Burden The Iconography of the Sword in The Lord of the Rings Mythlore 27 1 article 9 ISSN 0146 9339 Byock Jesse 1990 The Saga of the Volsungs the Norse epic of Sigurd the dragon slayer University of California Press ISBN 978 0520069046 Burdge Anthony Burke Jessica 2013 2007 Weapons Named In Drout Michael D C ed J R R Tolkien Encyclopedia Scholarship and Critical Assessment Routledge pp 703 705 ISBN 978 0415865111 Carpenter Humphrey ed 2023 The Letters of J R R Tolkien Revised and Expanded Edition New York Harper Collins ISBN 978 0 35 865298 4 Croft Janet Brennan 2015 Noms de Guerre The Power of Naming in War and Conflict in Middle earth Mythlore 34 1 article 9 ISSN 0146 9339 Culbert Taylor 1960 The Narrative Functions of Beowulf s Swords Journal of English and Germanic Philology 59 1 13 20 JSTOR 27707401 Flieger Verlyn 1981 Frodo and Aragorn The Concept of the Hero In Isaacs Neil D Zimbardo Rose A eds Tolkien New Critical Perspectives University Press of Kentucky pp 40 62 ISBN 978 0813114088 Guerber Helene A 1909 1 The Beginning Myths of the Norsemen From the Eddas and Sagas London George G Harrap and Co pp 1 15 Hall Mark R 2012 Gandalf and Merlin Aragorn and Arthur Tolkien s Transmogrification of the Arthurian Tradition and Its Use as a Palimpsest for The Lord of the Rings Inklings Forever Published Colloquium Proceedings 1997 2016 8 article 6 OCLC 825553191 Hammond Wayne G Scull Christina 2005 The Lord of the Rings A Reader s Companion HarperCollins ISBN 978 0007209071 Malory Sir Thomas 2014 Delphi Complete Works of Sir Thomas Malory Illustrated Delphi Classics ISBN 978 1910630358 Ogden Daniel 2013 Dragons Serpents and Slayers in the Classical and Early Christian Worlds A Sourcebook Oxford University Press p 265 ISBN 978 0 19 992509 4 Stephens George 1866 1867 Handbook of the Old Northern Runic Monuments of Scandinavia and England Vol Part 3 London a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Terry Patricia 1969 Poems of the Vikings The Elder Edda Bobbs Merrill ISBN 978 0672603327 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 1977 Christopher Tolkien ed The Silmarillion Boston Houghton Mifflin ISBN 978 0 395 25730 2 Whetter K S McDonald R Andrew 2006 In the Hilt is Fame Resonances of Medieval Swords and Sword lore in J R R Tolkien s The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings Mythlore 25 1 article 2 ISSN 0146 9339 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Naming of weapons in Middle earth amp oldid 1204579409, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.