Of course, in the book, having made the choice of Luthien, Arwen chooses to die at Cerin Amroth in the year 121 of the Fourth Age, one year after Aragorn dies.
they died out. Middle earth is supposed to be a fictional prehistoric europe, but take whatever interpretation suits you.If this was supposed to be our past, what happened to hobbits, immortal elves and the fantasy creatures such as goblins, orcs, dragons etc? What might have been interesting if Middle-Earth is our Earth in the distant past is that during the time lapse scene from I want to say 'Return of the King' where Arwen is imagining what life will be like with Aragorn and it shows her by his tomb at various periods, if the last scene had been her standing in a street in our time, supposedly on the site of his tomb, surrounded by cars and other modern things.
Tolkien's Earth was flat at one point. That takes more explaining than potatoes.
Pipeweed isn'the tobacco - it's weed. Good weed.
If this was supposed to be our past, what happened to hobbits, immortal elves and the fantasy creatures such as goblins, orcs, dragons etc
Except that the Red Book of Westmarch is then difficult to explain away.So yeah it's really not Earth.
Except that the Red Book of Westmarch is then difficult to explain away.![]()
Wasn't there also a mention that Hobbits are still around, just really rare and they actively avoid the noisy, stupid humans? I always assumed that was meant to be a reference to the various "little people" of European folklore like gnomes, fairies, pixies, brownies etc.Magic faded with the destruction of the ring and the departure of the elves. Not sure what you mean by your second question.
I think JirinPanthosa's second question pertains to the fact that if LOTR was sufficiently far back in the past, there would be no ethnic diversity and everyone should be black. However, from what others have said in this thread, the Middle Earth sagas are set close enough to our own era that there are white and other people in Europe.Magic faded with the destruction of the ring and the departure of the elves. Not sure what you mean by your second question.
The Lord of the Rings isn't the past ... it's the distant future.
The Hyborian age of Conan the Barbarian leads from the fourth age of Middle Earth into our known pre-history, of course.
The Silmarillion covers the creation myth - it's relationship to the 'reality' of Middle Earth than the Bible does to real reality...Morgoth "burnt it down" by toppling the great lamps at both ends of Middle Earth. The planet was 'remade' in a new form that was easier to let spin on it's own.
So yeah it's really not Earth.
The Silmarillion covers the creation myth - it's relationship to the 'reality' of Middle Earth than the Bible does to real reality...
Religions still claim physical evidence for their myths. The Silmarillion is only different from the Bible in that there are beings that remember that far back. Which is, admittedly a pretty big difference.Not really, we're being told what happened in the early days of their universe. The lore is supported by the fact the eldest of Elves remember these things as having happened and signs of the events still etched in Middle Earth.
The stumps of the great lamps are meant to be there as cracked mountain ranges, the gods and Valar may have ironed out the wrinkles from Morgoths wrath, but not entirely fixed it.
I wonder if Sauron is re-forming, even in a very reduced form post ring destruction...
Wait? Is that Homeopathic Sauron?There's a school of thought in Tolkien fandom that by melting the Ring in the lava of Mount Doom that Sauron's evil "infected" the magma and became present throughout the Earth. The power of the Ring would be so diffuse that he couldn't reform, but his evil would have been everywhere.
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