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  1. The Silmarillion (Quenya: [silmaˈrilːiɔn]) is a book consisting of a collection of myths [ a ][ T 1 ] and stories in varying styles by the English writer J. R. R. Tolkien. It was edited, partly written, and published posthumously by his son Christopher Tolkien in 1977, assisted by Guy Gavriel Kay, who became a fantasy author.

    • Explaining The Silmarillion: So, The Silmarils… What Are They?
    • Explaining The Silmarillion: So What?
    • Explaining The Silmarillion: Bummer…
    • Explaining The Silmarillion: OH, I See How That Could End Badly…
    • Explaining The Silmarillion: Yeesh… All This For Three Jewels?
    • Explaining The Silmarillion: Yeah… Okay… So How Did Things Turn out?
    • Explaining The Silmarillion: So These Things Were A Big Deal, Huh?

    The Silmarils were three jewels crafted by Feanor, one of the greatest of the Noldor, an elder family of elves. Feanor had the greatest skill in craftsmanship of all the elves. So as a challenge for himself, he sought to capture the light of the Trees of Valinor, which provided light to the whole world. More than that, the light of the Trees was be...

    The evil Valar, Melkor, hated the light from the Trees of Valinor. So he recruited Ungoliant, the greatest and most evil giant spider in the history of creation. (Shelob in Lord of the Rings is the last and least of Ungoliant’s lineage.) Together, Melkor and Ungoliant caught the Valar unawares and destroyed the Trees, plunging the world into darkne...

    Oh, it gets worse. Feanor wasn’t just the most gifted craftsman among the elves. He was also the biggest hothead. He, along with his seven sons, swore an incredibly rash and unbreakable oath. They swore in the name of Illuvatar(God) himself that they would never rest until the Silmarils were back in their possession, and that they would make unceas...

    Yep. Throughout the course of the First Age, EVERYBODY wanted to get the Silmarils. And some were successful. A man named Beren wanted to marry Luthien, daughter of King Thingol and the most beautiful elf maiden in the world. He asked Thingol’s permission to marry Luthien, and Thingol told him that if he could bring back a Silmaril from Melkor’s cr...

    Don’t forget, the Silmarils were the last remaining vestige of the light from the Trees of Valinor in creation. They were beautiful beyond compare, and exceedingly rare. Perhaps Tolkien was making a statement about humanity and our propensity towards avarice and destruction…

    Well, there was a prophecy that the fate of the whole world would be wrapped up in the Silmarils, and that one jewel would remain in each of the main three domains of Arda – earth, air, and water. The Silmaril that Beren stole from Melkor’s crown eventually ended up in the hands of Earendil, a man, who sailed west with it to seek out the Valar’s he...

    Well, yeah. Ultimately, like 90% of the war and conflict that happens during the First Age can be traced back to the Silmarils in some way. They were the defining element of the First Age of Middle Earth, the cause of tons of conflict and war (including all three times that elf has killed elf in the history of Middle Earth), and the ruin of what sh...

  2. Sep 2, 2024 · The Silmarillion is a book which is a collection of J.R.R. Tolkien 's works, edited and published posthumously by his son Christopher Tolkien and published in 1977, with assistance from fantasy fiction writer Guy Gavriel Kay. It covers the history of the world of Arda from the birth of Eä to the end of the Third Age.

    • J.R.R. Tolkien
    • 15 September 1977
    • Christopher Tolkien
  3. This lecture offers a guided tour through the development of J.R.R. Tolkien’s ‘ Silmarillion’ corpus, inclusive of The Silmarillion (1977) and the earlier versions of the same work published in the History of Middle Earth series (1983−1996). The most mythological and magisterial of Tolkien’s major works, the 1977 Silmarillion (and its antecedents) gives the reader a very different ...

  4. The Silmarillion is a published collection of J.R.R. Tolkien's works, edited and released posthumously by his son, Christopher, with the assistance of fantasy fiction writer Guy Gavriel Kay. It is the primary source for Middle-earth's ancient history and the First Age, and for the downfall of the Kingdom of Númenor. "Silmarillion" is also a broad term for the whole corpus of such accounts, in ...

  5. There are a huge numbers of characters in The Silmarillion. The main Valar are Manwë, Ulmo, Aüle, Varda, and Yavanna. The main Elves are Fëanor, Thingol, Finrod, Lúthien, and Eärendil (half-elven). The main Men are Beren, Tuor, and Turin. The main antagonists are Melkor / Morgoth, Sauron, and Ungoliant.

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  7. Later Silmarillion (ca. 1948-1960): After the completion of The Lord of the Rings, Tolkien returns to the mythology with more revisions and additions. The text of The Silmarillion edited by C. Tolkien mostly draws from this material with the exception of chapters 22-24, which had to be created based on suppositions mostly from Tolkien's earlier plans and versions.

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