Revision as of 13:24, 28 January 2020 editChiswick Chap (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Page movers, New page reviewers, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers297,207 edits ce, but to be honest it's hard to see the justification for this article, it's all quite literally in-universe background detail← Previous edit | Revision as of 13:27, 28 January 2020 edit undoChiswick Chap (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Page movers, New page reviewers, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers297,207 edits redir, the Cosmology article says quite enough on the subject, and even that is a minor background topic reallyTag: New redirectNext edit → | ||
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{{Infobox fictional location | |||
| name = ''Arda'' | |||
| source = ] ] | |||
| image = | |||
| image_size = 240px | |||
| blank_label2 = Founder | |||
| blank_data2 = ] | |||
| ruler = ] | |||
| first = '']'' | |||
}} | |||
In ]'s ], '''Arda''' is the name given to the ] in an imaginary period of prehistory, wherein the places mentioned in '']'' and related material once existed. It included several seas and oceans, and the continents of ], the Dark Lands, ] (the Undying Lands), the island of ], and other lands left largely unnamed by Tolkien. | |||
== Overview == | |||
{{see also|Middle-earth}} | |||
Arda, Earth, was part of ], the universe. Eä was created through the ] for the ] (that is, ] and ]). | |||
Because the Sun, Moon, stars, and other objects orbited the planet in the ] of Middle-earth they were considered part of Arda, leading to Arda sometimes being called the 'Solar System' of Middle-earth. The term for the Earth itself, excluding these celestial bodies, was '''Ambar''' or '''Imbar'''. | |||
Originally the Earth (Arda) was flat, the continents were surrounded by a mighty ] (or perhaps by ]), ] or Vaiya, the Encircling Sea. The central and western continents - respectively ] and ] - were separated by '''Belegaer''', also called the '''Great Sea''' and the '''Sundering Seas'''. In the ], the area in the northwest of Middle-earth was occupied by the large region of ], but this was mostly destroyed and submerged in the ] at the end of that Age. | |||
Belegaer represents a loose mythical view of the ]. Before the ], Belegaer stretched from the Gap of ] in the far north, where a bridge made of ice known as the ] connected Middle-earth and ], to the far south, where it also connected with Ilmen and froze. Belegaer was narrower in the north than in the south, with its widest part near the ] of Arda. The full extent of Belegaer after the ] is never made clear, but it reaches far enough to the north to be ice-covered, and far to the south. The name is ], and has the elements ''beleg'' ("might") and ''aer'' or ''eär'' ("sea"). The ] name of Belegaer, never used in published writing, is '''Alatairë'''. | |||
Before the end of the Second Age, the continent of Aman, home of the ], formed the western edge of Belegaer. Before the ruin of ] at the end of the ], the sea was narrow and ice-filled in the north, forming the strait of Helcaraxë, the Grinding Ice. It was thus possible to cross from Aman to Middle-earth on foot, though with difficulty, as did ] and his people of the ] when fleeing ].<ref>{{ME-ref|Silm|"Of the Flight of the Noldor"}}</ref> | |||
After the ] Belegaer was widened by the drowning of a large part of Middle-earth. During the Akallabêth in the Second Age, the seas were "bent" and the world was made round. Aman was removed from the world, Belegaer washed "new lands", and only the chosen could find the "]" to Valinor. The new western reaches of Belegaer are never described in the narrative, although there are indications that Númenórean refugees reached them in search for Valinor. The "new lands" have been compared before to the ] by fans, although Tolkien himself never indicated whether that was what he intended. | |||
There was also a separate continent south and east of Middle-earth called the Dark Land. Another separate continent to the east of Middle-earth was the relatively small ], so called because when the world was flat the ] were near there, and it would be scorched. Information regarding both was vague. | |||
Most of Tolkien's stories take place in the north-west region of the continent of Middle-earth, also called the Hither Lands. Other regions included ], though "Harad" means "South" and while properly used for the region immediately south of ] and ] was often loosely used to refer to every land to the south. There were many stretches of sun-scorched desert in Near Harad, but there was supposedly a jungle beyond it which few had ever ventured to, from which the great Oliphaunts were found. Men of Far Harad are also described as being black skinned. The vast lands of the East were collectively referred to as ], though this may have only referred to those immediately east of the ] and ]. The ], like the Haradrim, were a diverse collection of many races. There was even less knowledge of the extreme eastern end of Middle-earth, where the land was supposed to stop at another sea. It is known that in ancient times the great chain of the ] ran north to south near here, and was roughly analogous to the ] of the west (the world was once symmetrical at the dawn of time). The race of Elves originated near here, though their original home of ] no longer existed by the ]. It is not known if the Red Mountains survived into the Third Age, either intact or in some reduced form (like the Blue Mountains). It is said that the ] went far into the east of Rhûn and beyond to stir up rebellions against ] in the lands he held sway over, though the tales of these struggles never reached the west in detail. | |||
In the ], Númenor was raised in the Great Sea for the ]. This island existed through most of the Second Age, but was destroyed as a result of the ] of the Númenórean people in defying the Ban of the ] and sailing to Aman in the west. | |||
After the ], Arda was made round. Aman was taken out of the world, and could only be reached by the ], following the ''straight road'' that was granted to them. As Aman was taken away from Arda, new lands and continents were created east and west of Middle-earth. | |||
== Name == | |||
Tolkien derived the ] word Arda from prehistoric ] *''gardā'', Quenya regularly losing initial G and shortening long final vowels. The term basically meant "any more or less bounded or defined place, a region". Its use as a proper name for the World was due to ] ''Aþāraphelūn''".<ref>{{ME-ref|WJ|p. 402}}</ref> This word from ] was said to mean ''appointed dwelling'', referring to the Earth as the abode of the Valar and/or Elves and Men.<ref>{{ME-ref|WJ|p. 401}}</ref> A common noun ''arda'' "realm" turns up in Tolkien's writings on Elvish from the 1930s,<ref>{{ME-ref|LR|p. 360}}</ref> but there is not yet any hint that he conceived it as a Quenya name of the world. This seems to be a later usage in the real and the imaginary timeline alike. | |||
== Cosmology == | |||
⚫ | |||
In Tolkien's conception, ''Arda'' (Earth), was created specifically as "the Habitation" (''Imbar'' or ''Ambar'') for the ] (Elves and Men). It is envisaged in a ] cosmology, with the sun, moon and stars revolving around it. Tolkien's sketches show a disc-like face for the world which looked up to the stars. | |||
However, Tolkien's legendarium addresses the ] paradigm by depicting a catastrophic transition from a flat to a spherical world, in which Aman was removed "from the circles of the world". | |||
The '']'' says that the Númenóreans who survived the catastrophe sailed as far west as they could in search of their ancient home, but their travels only brought them around the world back to their starting points. Hence, before the end of the Second Age, the transition from "flat Earth" to "round Earth" had been completed. New lands were also created in the west, analogous to the ]. | |||
Tolkien wrote that Middle-earth or Endor originally conformed to a largely symmetrical scheme that was marred by ]. The various conflicts with Melkor (as well as by the action of the Valar on one occasion) resulted in the shapes of the lands being distorted. | |||
Originally, Arda began as a single flat world and the Valar created two lamps to illuminate it, Illuin and Ormal. The Vala ] forged great towers, Helcar in the furthest north, and Ringil in the deepest south. Illuin was set upon Helcar and Ormal upon Ringil. In the middle, where the light of the lamps mingled, the Valar dwelt at the island of ] in the midst of a Great Lake. | |||
When Melkor destroyed the Lamps of the Valar, two vast inland seas (Helcar and Ringil) and two major seas (Belegaer and the Eastern Sea) were created, but Almaren and its lake were destroyed. | |||
The Valar left Middle-earth and went to the newly formed continent of Aman in the west, where they created their home called ]. To discourage Melkor from assailing Aman, they thrust the continent of Middle-earth to the east, thus widening Belegaer at its middle and raising five major mountain ranges in Middle-earth which adopted a relatively symmetrical distribution, namely the Blue, Red, Grey, Yellow Mountains and the Mountains of the Wind. This act, however, ruined the symmetry of the shape of the continents and their intervening seas. | |||
A few years after publishing ''The Lord of the Rings'', in a note associated with the unique narrative story "]" (which is said to occur in Beleriand during the War of the Jewels), Tolkien equated Arda with the Solar System; because Arda by this point consisted of more than one heavenly body (Valinor being another planet and the Sun and Moon being celestial objects in their own right and not objects orbiting the Earth). | |||
== Various states of Arda == | |||
=== Arda Unmarred === | |||
The original world as built by the ] is called '''Arda Unmarred''' (], ''Arda Alahasta''). This world was effectively destroyed by the wars of the Valar and ], and only ] still resembled it in part. Arda Unmarred was a flat symmetrical world with everlasting light. | |||
=== Arda Marred === | |||
'''Arda Marred''' (], ''Arda Hastaina'') is the name given to the world as it is: the world after the wars of the Valar and Melkor, and the dispersing of Melkor's fëa in the entire world. It is this world from which are formed the hröa of the ], and therefore it is at times a cruel and evil world with plagues, extreme colds, heat, and other concepts which do not exist in Arda Unmarred. | |||
Arda Marred also broke the design of Elvish immortality: in Arda Marred, Elves slowly fade, until at last they are naught but wraiths. Only in Valinor was this fading delayed, which is one reason all Elves had no choice but to go to Valinor in the end. One of the special abilities of the ] was that they could delay time, and as such were used by ] and ] to preserve their realms. After the loss of the ], the Elves had no choice left, and therefore in the ], the last Eldar either left for Valinor or faded to shadows of their former selves. | |||
=== Arda Healed === | |||
After the Dagor Dagorath, a new world will then be created, which will be '''Arda Healed''' (], ''Arda Envinyanta''). This world will resemble Arda Unmarred, except superior, since it will also incorporate all the good aspects of Arda Marred. | |||
]'s words while parting with ] at ] in '']'' are "Not in ], nor until the lands that lie under ] are lifted up again. Then in the willow-meads of Tasarinan we may meet in the spring. Farewell!". This might imply that ] will be recovered after the Dagor Dagorath. It is however unknown, since Arda Healed will contain all the good things of Arda Marred, whether ] will also be recovered or not. | |||
== See also == | |||
{{Portal|Speculative fiction}} | |||
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== Works cited == | |||
*{{cite book|chapter=Arda|last=Bolintineanu|first=Alexandra|pages=24–25|title = ]|editor = Drout, Michael D. C.|editor-link = Michael D. C. Drout|isbn = 0-415-96942-5|publisher = ]|date=2006}} | |||
== References == | |||
{{Reflist|30em}} | |||
== External links == | |||
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{{Middle-earth}} | |||
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Revision as of 13:27, 28 January 2020
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