Difference between revisions of "The Silmarillion"

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It is set in the First and Second ages of [[Middle Earth]] and describes the creation of world through the music of the Ainur to the Sundering of Valinor from Middle Earth at the end of the Second Age. It introduces characters such as Sauron the Great and Elrond Halfelvin who appear in his other novels.
 
It is set in the First and Second ages of [[Middle Earth]] and describes the creation of world through the music of the Ainur to the Sundering of Valinor from Middle Earth at the end of the Second Age. It introduces characters such as Sauron the Great and Elrond Halfelvin who appear in his other novels.
  
The writing of The Silmarillion was started by Tolkien during the First World War and continued until his death in 1972. It provides a great deal of the back-drop to his other popular novels, [[The Hobbit]] and [[The Lord of the Rings]]. Originally conceived as a setting for the Elvish languages of Quenya and Sindarin that Tolkien had devised The Silmarillion can be seen as the 'Old Testament' to the Lord of the Rings' Gospels. Tolkien was first and foremost a philologist, which is a historian of languages and their development so the creation of his own languages was a development of this.
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The writing of The Silmarillion was started by Tolkien during [[World War I]] and continued until his death in 1972. It provides a great deal of the back-drop to his other popular novels, [[The Hobbit]] and [[The Lord of the Rings]]. Originally conceived as a setting for the Elvish languages of Quenya and Sindarin that Tolkien had devised The Silmarillion can be seen as the 'Old Testament' to the Lord of the Rings' Gospels. Tolkien was first and foremost a philologist, which is a historian of languages and their development so the creation of his own languages was a development of this.
 
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Silmarillion, The}}
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[[Category:Book]]
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[[Category:Middle-Earth]]
  
  

Revision as of 19:09, April 12, 2007

The Silmarillion, by Professor J.R.R._Tolkien, is not a novel but an exploration of the mythos and the linguistic background against which the action of The Lord of the Rings trilogy and The Hobbit takes place. Indeed, those books could be said to have sprung from the creation of the mythology rather than vice versa.

It is set in the First and Second ages of Middle Earth and describes the creation of world through the music of the Ainur to the Sundering of Valinor from Middle Earth at the end of the Second Age. It introduces characters such as Sauron the Great and Elrond Halfelvin who appear in his other novels.

The writing of The Silmarillion was started by Tolkien during World War I and continued until his death in 1972. It provides a great deal of the back-drop to his other popular novels, The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings. Originally conceived as a setting for the Elvish languages of Quenya and Sindarin that Tolkien had devised The Silmarillion can be seen as the 'Old Testament' to the Lord of the Rings' Gospels. Tolkien was first and foremost a philologist, which is a historian of languages and their development so the creation of his own languages was a development of this.