Influences on Tolkien

{{short description|Sources of Tolkien's fiction}}

{{good article}}

{{Use British English|date=September 2023}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2014}}

{{Tolkien influences timeline}}

J. R. R. Tolkien's fantasy books on Middle-earth, especially The Lord of the Rings and The Silmarillion, drew on a wide array of influences including language, Christianity, mythology, archaeology, ancient and modern literature, and personal experience. He was inspired primarily by his profession, philology; his work centred on the study of Old English literature, especially Beowulf, and he acknowledged its importance to his writings.

He was a gifted linguist, influenced by Germanic, Celtic, Finnish, Slavic, and Greek language and mythology. His fiction reflected his Christian beliefs and his early reading of adventure stories and fantasy books. Commentators have attempted to identify many literary and topological antecedents for characters, places and events in Tolkien's writings. Some writers were certainly important to him, including the Arts and Crafts polymath William Morris, and he undoubtedly made use of some real place-names, such as Bag End, the name of his aunt's home.

Tolkien stated that he had been influenced by his childhood experiences of the English countryside of Warwickshire and its urbanisation by the growth of Birmingham, and his personal experience of the First World War.

Philology

{{main|Philology and Middle-earth}}

File:Eala Earendel engla beorhtast - Exeter Book folio 9v top two lines.jpg, brightest of angels, over Middle-earth to men sent" (second half of top line, first half of second line) - part of the poem Crist 1 in the Exeter Book, folio 9v, top, which inspired Tolkien to start his mythology]]

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File:Crist I's influence on legendarium.svg{{!}}thumb{{!}}upright={{{upright|2.0}}}{{!}}center{{!}}{{{caption|Imagemap with clickable links. Crist 1's influence on Tolkien's legendarium
It has been called "the catalyst for Tolkien's mythology".{{sfn|Lee|Solopova|2005|p=256}}{{sfn|Garth|2003|p=44}} }}}

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Tolkien was a professional philologist, a scholar of comparative and historical linguistics. He was especially familiar with Old English and related languages. He remarked to the poet and The New York Times book reviewer Harvey Breit that "I am a philologist and all my work is philological"; he explained to his American publisher Houghton Mifflin that this was meant to imply that his work was "all of a piece, and fundamentally linguistic [sic] in inspiration. ... The invention of languages is the foundation. The 'stories' were made rather to provide a world for the languages than the reverse. To me a name comes first and the story follows."{{harvnb|Carpenter|2023|loc=#165 to Houghton Mifflin, 30 June 1955}}

= ''Crist 1'' =

{{main|Eärendil and Elwing#The beginning of Tolkien's mythology}}

Tolkien began his mythology with the 1914 poem The Voyage of Earendel the Evening Star, inspired by the Old English poem Crist 1.{{sfn|Carpenter|2000|p=79}}{{sfn|Lee|Solopova|2005|p=256}} Around 1915, he had the idea that his constructed language Quenya was spoken by Elves whom Eärendil meets during his journeys.{{sfn|Solopova|2009|p=75}} From there, he wrote the Lay of Earendel, telling of Earendel and his voyages and how his ship is turned into the morning star.{{sfn|Carpenter|2000|p=84}}{{harvnb|Tolkien|1984b|pp=266–269}}{{harvnb|Carpenter|2023|loc=#297, draft, to Mr Rang, August 1967 }}{{harvnb|Tolkien|1984b|p=266}} These lines from Crist 1 also gave Tolkien the term Middle-earth (translating Old English Middangeard). Accordingly, the medievalists Stuart D. Lee and Elizabeth Solopova state that Crist 1 was "the catalyst for Tolkien's mythology".{{sfn|Carpenter|2000|p=79}}{{sfn|Lee|Solopova|2005|p=256}}{{sfn|Garth|2003|p=44}}

= ''Beowulf'' =

{{main|Beowulf and Middle-earth}}

{{further|Impression of depth in The Lord of the Rings|Decline and fall in Middle-earth#Fading}}

File:Beowulf eotenas ylfe orcneas.jpg{{'}}s {{lang|ang|eotenas [ond] ylfe [ond] orcneas}}, "ogres [and] elves [and] devil-corpses" helped to inspire Tolkien to create orcs, Elves, and other races.{{sfn|Shippey|2005|pp=74}}]]

Tolkien was an expert on Old English literature, especially the epic poem Beowulf, and made many uses of it in The Lord of the Rings. For example, Beowulf{{'}}s list of creatures, {{lang|ang|eotenas ond ylfe ond orcnéas}}, "ettens [giants] and elves and demon-corpses", contributed to his creation of some of the races of beings in Middle-earth, though with so little information about what elves were like, he was forced to combine scraps from all the Old English sources he could find.{{sfn|Shippey|2005|pp=66–74}}

He derived the Ents from a phrase in another Old English poem, Maxims II, {{lang|ang|orþanc enta geweorc}}, "skilful work of giants";{{sfn|Shippey|2005|p=149}} The Tolkien scholar Tom Shippey suggests that Tolkien took the name of the tower of Orthanc (orþanc) from the same phrase, reinterpreted as "Orthanc, the Ents' fortress".{{sfn|Shippey|2001|p=88}} The word occurs again in Beowulf in the phrase {{lang|ang|searonet seowed, smiþes orþancum}}, "[a mail-shirt, a] cunning-net sewn, by a smith's skill": Tolkien used searo in its Mercian form *saru for the name of Orthanc's ruler, the wizard Saruman, incorporating the ideas of cunning and technology into Saruman's character.{{sfn|Shippey|2001|pp=169–170}} He made use of Beowulf, too, along with other Old English sources, for many aspects of the Riders of Rohan: for instance, their land was the Mark, a version of the Mercia where he lived, in Mercian dialect *Marc.{{sfn|Shippey|2001|pp=90–97}}

= ''Sigelwara'' =

{{further|Sigelwara Land}}

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File:Tolkien's Sigelwara Etymologies.svg{{!}}thumb{{!}}upright={{{upright|1.7}}}{{!}}right{{!}}{{{caption|Imagemap with clickable links. Tolkien's Sigelwara etymologies, leading to three strands in his writings on Middle-earth.{{sfn|Shippey|2005|pp=48–49}} }}}

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Several Middle-earth concepts may have come from the Old English word Sigelwara, used in the Codex Junius to mean "Aethiopian".{{cite web |title=Junius 11 "Exodus" ll. 68-88 |url=http://mcllibrary.org/Junius/exodus.html |publisher=The Medieval & Classical Literature Library |access-date=1 February 2020}}{{sfn|Shippey|2005|p=54}} Tolkien wondered why there was a word with this meaning, and conjectured that it had once had a different meaning, which he explored in detail in his essay "Sigelwara Land", published in two parts in 1932 and 1934.J. R. R. Tolkien, "Sigelwara Land" [https://www.jstor.org/stable/43625831 Medium Aevum Vol. 1, No. 3. December 1932] and [https://www.jstor.org/stable/43625895 Medium Aevum Vol. 3, No. 2. June 1934.] He stated that Sigel meant "both sun and jewel", the former as it was the name of the sun rune *sowilō (ᛋ), the latter from Latin sigillum, a seal.{{sfn|Shippey|2005|pp=48–49}} He decided that the second element was *hearwa, possibly related to Old English heorð, "hearth", and ultimately to Latin carbo, "soot". He suggested this implied a class of demons "with red-hot eyes that emitted sparks and faces black as soot". Shippey states that this "helped to naturalise the Balrog" (a demon of fire) and contributed to the sun-jewel Silmarils.{{sfn|Shippey|2005|pp=49, 54, 63}} The Aethiopians suggested to Tolkien the Haradrim, a dark southern race of men.{{efn|In drafts of The Lord of the Rings, Tolkien toyed with names such as Harwan and Sunharrowland for Harad; Christopher Tolkien notes that these are connected to his father's Sigelwara Land.J. R. R. Tolkien (1989), ed. Christopher Tolkien, The Treason of Isengard, Unwin Hyman, ch. XXV p. 435 & p. 439 note 4 (comments by Christopher Tolkien)}}

= Nodens =

File:Roman Temple - geograph.org.uk - 1318760.jpg at a place called "Dwarf's Hill" and translated an inscription with a curse upon a ring. It may have inspired his dwarves, Mines of Moria, rings, and Celebrimbor "Silver-Hand", an Elven-smith who contributed to Moria's construction.]]

{{further|Nodens|Ring of Silvianus}}

In 1928, a 4th-century Romano-British cult temple was excavated at Lydney Park, Gloucestershire.{{sfn|Shippey|2005|pp=40–41}} Tolkien was asked to investigate a Latin inscription there: "For the god Nodens. Silvianus has lost a ring and has donated one-half [its worth] to Nodens. Among those who are called Senicianus do not allow health until he brings it to the temple of Nodens."{{cite web |title=RIB 306. Curse upon Senicianus |publisher=Scott Vanderbilt, Roman Inscriptions of Britain website |url=https://romaninscriptionsofbritain.org/inscriptions/306 |access-date=17 February 2020}} funded by the European Research Council via the [https://latinnow.eu/ LatinNow project] The Anglo-Saxon name for the place was Dwarf's Hill, and in 1932 Tolkien traced Nodens to the Irish hero Nuada Airgetlám, "Nuada of the Silver-Hand".J. R. R. Tolkien, "The Name Nodens", Appendix to "Report on the excavation of the prehistoric, Roman and post-Roman site in Lydney Park, Gloucestershire", Reports of the Research Committee of the Society of Antiquaries of London, 1932; also in Tolkien Studies: An Annual Scholarly Review, Vol. 4, 2007

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File:Nodens Temple influence on Tolkien.svg{{!}}thumb{{!}}upright={{{upright|1.7}}}{{!}}right{{!}}{{{caption|Imagemap with clickable links. Apparent influence of archaeological and philological work at Nodens' Temple on Tolkien's Middle-earth legendarium }}}

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Shippey thought this "a pivotal influence" on Tolkien's Middle-earth, combining as it did a god-hero, a ring, dwarves, and a silver hand. The J.R.R. Tolkien Encyclopedia notes also the "Hobbit-like appearance of [Dwarf's Hill]'s mine-shaft holes", and that Tolkien was extremely interested in the hill's folklore on his stay there, citing Helen Armstrong's comment that the place may have inspired Tolkien's "Celebrimbor and the fallen realms of Moria and Eregion".{{cite encyclopedia |last=Anger |first=Don N. |editor-last=Drout |editor-first=Michael D. C. |editor-link=Michael D. C. Drout |title=Report on the Excavation of the Prehistoric, Roman and Post-Roman Site in Lydney Park, Gloucestershire |encyclopedia=J.R.R. Tolkien Encyclopedia: Scholarship and Critical Assessment |year=2013 |orig-year=2007 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0-415-86511-1 |pages=563–564}}{{cite journal |last1=Armstrong |first1=Helen |title=And Have an Eye to That Dwarf |journal=Amon Hen: The Bulletin of the Tolkien Society |date=May 1997 |issue=145 |pages=13–14}} The Lydney curator Sylvia Jones said that Tolkien was "surely influenced" by the site.{{cite web |title=Tolkien's tales from Lydney Park |url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/gloucestershire/films/tolkien.shtml |publisher=BBC |access-date=24 February 2021 |date=24 September 2014}} The scholar of English literature John M. Bowers notes that the name of the Elven-smith Celebrimbor is the Sindarin for "Silver Hand", and that "Because the place was known locally as Dwarf's Hill and honeycombed with abandoned mines, it naturally suggested itself as background for the Lonely Mountain and the Mines of Moria."{{cite book |last=Bowers |first=John M. |title=Tolkien's Lost Chaucer |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eGOtDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA132 |date=2019 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-884267-5 |pages=131–132}}

Christianity

{{further|Christianity in Middle-earth}}

Tolkien was a devout Roman Catholic. He once described The Lord of the Rings to his friend, the English Jesuit Father Robert Murray, as "a fundamentally religious and Catholic work, unconsciously so at first, but consciously in the revision."{{harvnb|Carpenter|2023|loc=#142 to Robert Murray, SJ, December 1953}} Many theological themes underlie the narrative, including the battle of good versus evil, the triumph of humility over pride, and the activity of grace, as seen with Frodo's pity toward Gollum. In addition the epic includes the themes of death and immortality, mercy and pity, resurrection, salvation, repentance, self-sacrifice, free will, justice, fellowship, authority and healing. Tolkien mentions the Lord's Prayer, especially the line "And lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil" in connection with Frodo's struggles against the power of the One Ring.{{harvnb|Carpenter|2023|loc=#181 to M. Straight, January 1956}} Tolkien said "Of course God is in The Lord of the Rings. The period was pre-Christian, but it was a monotheistic world", and when questioned who was the One God of Middle-earth, Tolkien replied "The one, of course! The book is about the world that God created – the actual world of this planet."{{cite news |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/film/film-news/11261158/JRR-Tolkien-Film-my-books-Its-easier-to-film-The-Odyssey.html |title=JRR Tolkien: 'Film my books? It's easier to film The Odyssey' |work=Daily Telegraph |access-date=15 December 2014}}

The Bible and traditional Christian narrative also influenced The Silmarillion. The conflict between Melkor and Eru Ilúvatar parallels that between Satan and God.{{harvnb|Chance|2001|p=192}} Further, The Silmarillion tells of the creation and fall of the Elves, as Genesis tells of the creation and fall of Man.{{cite book |last=Bramlett |first=Perry |title=I Am in Fact a Hobbit: An Introduction to the Life and Works of J. R. R. Tolkien |publisher=Mercer University Press |year=2003 |page=86 |isbn=0-86554-851-X}} As with all of Tolkien's works, The Silmarillion allows room for later Christian history, and one version of Tolkien's drafts even has Finrod, a character in The Silmarillion, speculating on the necessity of Eru Ilúvatar's eventual incarnation to save Mankind.{{harvnb|Tolkien|1993|loc="Athrabeth Finrod Ah Andreth", pp. 322, 335}}

A specifically Christian influence is the notion of the fall of man, which influenced the Ainulindalë, the Kinslaying at Alqualondë, and the fall of Númenor.

Mythology

{{anchor|Norse}}

=Germanic=

{{further|Tolkien and the Norse|Beowulf and Middle-earth}}

File:Sigurd the Volsung p389 detail.jpg's Sigurd the Volsung told (in this extract from page 389) of Dwarf-Rings and swords carried by dead kings. Tolkien was familiar with the poem, and with Morris and Magnússon's prose translation.{{cite book |last=Massey |first=Kelvin Lee |title=The Roots of Middle-Earth: William Morris's Influence upon J. R. R. Tolkien |publisher=University of Tennessee (PhD thesis) |year=2007 |page=24 |url=https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/238}} ]]

Tolkien was influenced by Germanic heroic legend, especially its Norse and Old English forms. During his education at King Edward's School in Birmingham, he read and translated from the Old Norse in his free time. One of his first Norse purchases was the Völsunga saga. While a student, Tolkien read the only available English translation{{harvnb|Byock|1990|p=31}}{{harvnb|Carpenter|1978|p=77}} of the Völsunga saga, the 1870 rendering by William Morris of the Victorian Arts and Crafts movement and Icelandic scholar Eiríkur Magnússon.{{cite book |editor-first=William |editor-last=Morris |editor1-link=William Morris |editor2-first=Eiríkur |editor2-last=Magnússon |editor2-link=Eiríkur Magnússon |title=Völsunga Saga: The Story of the Volsungs and Niblungs, with Certain Songs from the Elder Edda |url=https://archive.org/details/vlsungasagasto00eiruoft |publisher=F. S. Ellis |year=1870 |page=xi}} The Old Norse Völsunga saga and the Middle High German Nibelungenlied were coeval texts made with the use of the same ancient sources.Evans, Jonathan. "The Dragon Lore of Middle-earth: Tolkien and Old English and Old Norse Tradition". In {{harvnb|Clark|Timmons|2000|pp=24, 25}}{{harvnb|Simek|2005|pp=163–165}} Both of them provided some of the basis for Richard Wagner's opera series, Der Ring des Nibelungen, featuring in particular a magical but cursed golden ring and a broken sword reforged. In the Völsunga saga, these items are respectively Andvaranaut and Gram, and they correspond broadly to the One Ring and the sword Narsil (reforged as Andúril).{{harvnb|Simek|2005|pp=165, 173}} The Völsunga saga also gives various names found in Tolkien. Tolkien's The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrún discusses the saga in relation to the myth of Sigurd and Gudrún.{{cite book |last=Birkett |first=Tom |chapter=Old Norse |editor-last=Lee |editor-first=Stuart D. |editor-link=Stuart D. Lee |title=A Companion to J. R. R. Tolkien |title-link=A Companion to J. R. R. Tolkien |date=2020 |orig-year=2014 |publisher=Wiley |isbn=978-111965602-9 |page=247}}

{{anchor|Háma|Hama}}

Tolkien was influenced by Old English poetry, especially Beowulf; Shippey writes that this was "obviously"{{sfn|Shippey|2005|p=389}} the work that had most influence upon him. The dragon Smaug in The Hobbit is closely based on the Beowulf dragon, the points of similarity including its ferocity, its greed for gold, flying by night, having a well-guarded hoard, and being of great age.Shippey's discussion is at {{harvnb|Shippey|2001|pp=36–37}}; it is summarized in {{harvnb|Lee|Solopova|2005|pp=[https://archive.org/details/keysmiddleearthd00lees_471/page/n121 109–111]}}

Tolkien made use of the epic poem in The Lord of the Rings in many ways, including elements like the great hall of Heorot, which appears as Meduseld, the Golden Hall of the Kings of Rohan. The Elf Legolas describes Meduseld in a direct translation of line 311 of Beowulf (líxte se léoma ofer landa fela), "The light of it shines far over the land".{{sfn|Shippey|2005|pp=141–143}} The name Meduseld, meaning "mead hall", is itself from Beowulf. Shippey writes that the whole chapter "The King of the Golden Hall" is constructed exactly like the section of the poem where the hero and his party approach the King's hall: the visitors are challenged twice; they pile their weapons outside the door; and they hear wise words from the guard, Háma, a man who thinks for himself and takes a risk in making his decision. Both societies have a king, and both rule over a free people where, Shippey states, just obeying orders is not enough.{{sfn|Shippey|2005|pp=141–143}}

File:Georg von Rosen - Oden som vandringsman, 1886 (Odin, the Wanderer).jpg as an "Odinic Wanderer". Odin, the wanderer by Georg von Rosen, 1886]]

The figure of Gandalf is based on the Norse deity Odin{{harvnb|Chance|2004|p=169}} in his incarnation as "The Wanderer", an old man with one eye, a long white beard, a wide brimmed hat, and a staff. Tolkien wrote in a 1946 letter that he thought of Gandalf as an "Odinic wanderer".{{cite encyclopedia |last=Petty |first=Anne C. |editor-last=Drout |editor-first=Michael D. C. |editor-link=Michael D. C. Drout |title=Allegory |encyclopedia=J.R.R. Tolkien Encyclopedia: Scholarship and Critical Assessment |year=2013 |orig-year=2007 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0-415-86511-1 |pages=6–7}} The Balrog and the collapse of the Bridge of Khazad-dûm in Moria parallel the fire jötunn Surtr and the foretold destruction of Asgard's bridge, Bifröst.{{cite journal |last=Burns |first=Marjorie J. |author-link=Marjorie Burns |title=Echoes of William Morris's Icelandic Journals in J. R. R. Tolkien |journal=Studies in Medievalism |volume=3 |issue=3 |year=1991 |pages=367–373}}

The "straight road" linking Valinor with Middle-Earth after the Second Age further mirrors the Bifröst linking Midgard and Asgard, and the Valar themselves resemble the Æsir, the gods of Asgard.{{harvnb|Garth|2003|p=86}} Thor, for example, physically the strongest of the gods, can be seen both in Oromë, who fights the monsters of Melkor, and in Tulkas, the strongest of the Valar. Manwë, the head of the Valar, has some similarities to Odin, the "Allfather". The division between the Calaquendi (Elves of Light) and Moriquendi (Elves of Darkness) echoes the Norse division of light elves and dark elves.{{harvnb|Flieger|2002|p=83}} The light elves of Norse mythology are associated with the gods, much as the Calaquendi are associated with the Valar.{{harvnb|Burns|2005|pp=23–25}}{{sfn|Shippey|2004}}

Some critics have suggested that The Lord of the Rings was directly derived from Richard Wagner's opera cycle, Der Ring des Nibelungen, whose plot also centres on a powerful ring from Germanic mythology.{{cite magazine |last=Ross |first=Alex |title=The Ring and the Rings |magazine=The New Yorker |date=15 December 2003 |url=http://www.newyorker.com/archive/2003/12/22/031222crat_atlarge |access-date=27 January 2007}} Others have argued that any similarity is due to the common influence of the Völsunga saga and the Nibelungenlied on both authors.{{sfn|Shippey|2005|pp=388–389}}{{cite web |url=http://shelf1.library.cmu.edu/books/gloriana/bookreader#page/1/mode/2up |work=CMU Libraries | title=Tolkien's Cauldron: Northern Literature and The Lord of The Rings |first=Gloriana |last=St. Clair |publisher=Carnegie Mellon University}} Tolkien sought to dismiss critics' direct comparisons to Wagner, telling his publisher, "Both rings were round, and there the resemblance ceases."{{harvnb|Carpenter|2023|loc=#229 to Allen & Unwin, 23 February 1961}} According to Humphrey Carpenter's biography of Tolkien, the author claimed to hold Wagner's interpretation of the relevant Germanic myths in contempt, even as a young man before reaching university.{{harvnb|Carpenter|1978|p=54}} Some researchers take an intermediate position: that both the authors used the same sources, but that Tolkien was influenced by Wagner's development of the mythology,{{cite web |url=http://larryavisbrown.homestead.com/files/Ring/Ring1_Rhinegold.htm |work=Richard Wagner's The Ring of the Nibelung |title=An Introduction, Notes, and Musical Examples. Part 1: Rhinegold |first=Larry A. |last=Brown |date=January 2009 |access-date=23 October 2003}}{{harvnb|Shippey|2007|pp=97–114}} especially the conception of the Ring as conferring world mastery.{{cite web |url=http://tolkienonline.de/etep/1ring5.html |title=Tolkien's Ring and Der Ring des Nibelungen |first=David |last=Harvey |year=1995 |access-date=23 October 2003}} Wagner probably developed this element by combining the ring with a magical wand mentioned in the Nibelungenlied that could give to its wearer the control over "the race of men".{{harvnb|Byock|1990}}. "The source for this quality seems to have been a relatively insignificant line from the Nibelungenlied, which says that the Nibelung treasure included a tiny golden wand that could make its possessor the lord of all mankind. [http://www.viking.ucla.edu/volsungs/wagner.html]"{{cite web |url=http://www.authorama.com/nibelungenlied-22.html |publisher=authorama.com |title=Nineteenth Adventure – How the Nibelungen Hoard was Brought to Worms |editor-first=George Henry |editor-last=Needler |quote=The wish-rod lay among them, / of gold a little wand.
Whosoe'er its powers / full might understand,
The same might make him master / o'er all the race of men.}}
Some argue that Tolkien's denial of a Wagnerian influence was an over-reaction to statements about the Ring by Åke Ohlmarks, Tolkien's Swedish translator.Allan, James D., [https://tolkienbooks.net/php/details2.php?id=637 Tolkien Language Notes], Mythopoeic Linguistic Fellowship, Toronto, 1974{{cite web |url=https://asiatimes.com/2003/01/the-ring-and-the-remnants-of-the-west/ |work=Asia Times |title=The 'Ring' and the remnants of the West |author=Spengler |date=11 January 2003 |access-date=23 October 2011}} Others believe that Tolkien was reacting against the links between Wagner's work and Nazism.{{cite journal |last=Birzer |first=Bradley J. |author-link=Bradley J. Birzer |title='Both rings were round, and there the resemblance ceases': Tolkien, Wagner, Nationalism, and Modernity |publisher=Intercollegiate Studies Institute |url=https://scholar.google.co.uk/scholar?hl=en&as_sdt=0%2C5&q=%22both+rings+were+round%2C+and+there+the+resemblance+ceases%22&btnG= |journal=ISI Conference on "Modernists and Mist Dwellers" |location=Seattle |date=3 August 2001}}{{cite book |last=Chism |first=Christine |chapter=Middle-Earth, the Middle Ages, and the Aryan Nation: Myth and History during World War II | title=Tolkien the Medievalist |editor-first=Jane |editor-last=Chance |editor-link=Jane Chance |publisher=Routledge |year=2002 |isbn=0-415-28944-0 |series=Routledge Studies in Medieval Religion and Culture |volume=3}}{{efn|The DVD of Peter Jackson's film of The Return of the King ends with a quotation of the Siegfried theme from the Ring of the Nibelungen; the scholar of film and film music Kevin J. Donnelly writes that the reference is ambiguous, being possibly a musical joke, perhaps a comment on the similarity of the two stories, or maybe an oblique allusion to "the troubling racial imaginary of Tolkien's world and Peter Jackson's trilogy of films".{{cite book |last=Donnelly |first=Kevin J. |editor-last=Mathijs |editor-first=Ernest |chapter=Musical Middle Earth |title=The Lord of the Rings: Popular Culture in Global Context |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=I8mxughWAOEC&pg=PA315 |year=2006 |publisher=Wallflower Press |isbn=978-1-904764-82-3 |page=315}} See also Music of The Lord of the Rings film series. }}

= Finnish =

File:Sammon puolustus.jpg for some Middle-earth characters. Painting: The Defense of the Sampo, an adaptation of a scene from Kalevala, by Akseli Gallen-Kallela, 1896]]

{{further|Finnish influences on Tolkien}}

Tolkien was "greatly affected"{{harvnb|Carpenter|2023|loc=#131 to Milton Waldman, late 1951}} by the Finnish national epic Kalevala, especially the tale of Kullervo, as an influence on Middle-earth. He credited Kullervo's story with being the "germ of [his] attempt to write legends".{{harvnb|Carpenter|2023|loc=#257 to Christopher Bretherton, 16 July 1964}} He tried to rework the story of Kullervo into a story of his own, and though he never finished,{{harvnb|Carpenter|2023|loc=#1 to Edith Bratt, October 1914, footnote 6}} similarities to the story can still be seen in the tale of Túrin Turambar. Both are tragic heroes who accidentally commit incest with their sister who on finding out kills herself by leaping into water. Both heroes later kill themselves after asking their sword if it will slay them, which it confirms.{{harvnb|Chance|2004|pp=288–292}}

Like The Lord of the Rings, the Kalevala centres around a magical item of great power, the Sampo, which bestows great fortune on its owner, but whose exact nature is never made clear;{{sfn|Hooker|2014|pp=159–166}} it has been considered a World pillar (Axis mundi) among other possibilities.{{cite news |last1=Heikura |first1=Pasi |title=Aristoteleen kantapää ja Sammon selitykset |url=https://yle.fi/aihe/artikkeli/2014/09/23/aristoteleen-kantapaa-ja-sammon-selitykset |access-date=6 July 2020 |work=Yle |date=23 September 2014}} Scholars including Randel Helms have suggested that the Sampo contributed to Tolkien's Silmarils that form a central element of his legendarium.{{cite book |last=West |first=Richard |author-link=Richard C. West |chapter=Setting the Rocket Off in Story: The Kalevala as the Germ of Tolkien's Legendarium |editor-last=Chance |editor-first=Jane |editor-link=Jane Chance |title=Tolkien and the invention of myth: a reader |title-link=Tolkien and the Invention of Myth |publisher=University Press of Kentucky |year=2004 |isbn=978-0-8131-2301-1 |pages=285–294}} Jonathan Himes has suggested further that Tolkien found the Sampo complex, and chose to split the Sampo's parts into desirable objects. The pillar became the Two Trees of Valinor with their Tree of life aspect, illuminating the world. The decorated lid became the brilliant Silmarils, which embodied all that was left of the light of the Two Trees, thus tying the symbols together.{{cite journal |last=Himes |first=Jonathan B. |year=2000 |title=What J.R.R. Tolkien Really Did with the Sampo? |journal=Mythlore |volume=22 |issue=4 |at=Article 7 |url=https://dc.swosu.edu/mythlore/vol22/iss4/7}}

Like the One Ring, the Sampo is fought over by forces of good and evil, and is ultimately lost to the world as it is destroyed towards the end of the story. The work's central character, Väinämöinen, shares with Gandalf immortal origins and wise nature, and both works end with the character's departure on a ship to lands beyond the mortal world. Tolkien also based elements of his Elvish language Quenya on Finnish.{{sfn|Hooker|2014|pp=159–166}}{{cite web |title=Cultural and Linguistic Conservation |website=National Geographic Society |url=http://www.nationalgeographic.com/ngbeyond/rings/language.html |access-date=16 April 2006 |url-status=dead |archive-date=27 March 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140327132156/http://www.nationalgeographic.com/ngbeyond/rings/language.html}} Other critics have identified similarities between Väinämöinen and Tom Bombadil.{{cite book |last=Gay |first=David Elton |chapter=J.R.R. Tolkien and the Kalevala: Some Thoughts on the Finnish Origins of Tom Bombadil and Treebeard |editor-last=Chance |editor-first=Jane |editor-link=Jane Chance |title=Tolkien and the invention of myth: a reader |publisher=University Press of Kentucky |year=2004 |isbn=978-0-8131-2301-1 |pages=295–304}}

= Classical =

{{further|Tolkien and the classical world}}

File:Kratzenstein orpheus.jpg nearly rescues Eurydice from Hades, only for her to die a second death. In Tolkien's version, Lúthien plays Orpheus rather than Eurydice, three times rescuing Beren, and they enjoy a second life together.{{cite book |last=Stevens |first=Ben Eldon |title=Middle-earth as Underworld: From Katabasis to Eucatastrophe |pages=113–114}} in {{harvnb|Williams|2021}}]]

Influence from Greek mythology is apparent in the disappearance of the island of Númenor, recalling Atlantis.{{harvnb|Carpenter|2023|loc=#154 to Naomi Mitchison, September 1954, and #227 to Mrs Drijver, January 1961}} Tolkien's Elvish name "Atalantë" for Númenor resembles Plato's Atlantis,{{sfn|Tolkien|1977|p=281}} furthering the illusion that his mythology simply extends the history and mythology of the real world.{{harvnb|Tolkien|1954a|loc="Note on the Shire Records"}} In his Letters, however, Tolkien described this merely as a "curious chance."{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=I33v5ny3NX0C&pg=PA77 |title=A Question of Time: J.R.R. Tolkien's Road to Faërie |first=Verlyn |last=Flieger |author-link=Verlyn Flieger |pages=76–77 |publisher=Kent State University Press |year=2001 |isbn=978-0873386999}}

Classical mythology colours the Valar, who borrow many attributes from the Olympian gods.{{Cite book |last=Purtill |first=Richard L. |author-link=Richard Purtill |title=J. R. R. Tolkien: Myth, Morality, and Religion |publisher=Harper & Row |year=2003 |pages=52, 131 |isbn=0-89870-948-2}} The Valar, like the Olympians, live in the world, but on a high mountain, separated from mortals;{{Cite book |last=Stanton |first=Michael |title=Hobbits, Elves, and Wizards: Exploring the Wonders and Worlds of J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan |year=2001 |page=18 |isbn=1-4039-6025-9}} Ulmo, Lord of the Waters, owes much to Poseidon, while Manwë, the Lord of the Air and King of the Valar, to Zeus.

Tolkien compared Beren and Lúthien with Orpheus and Eurydice, but with the gender roles reversed.{{harvnb|Carpenter|2023|loc=#154 to Naomi Mitchison, September 1954}} Oedipus is mentioned in connection with Túrin in the Children of Húrin, among other mythological figures:

{{quote|There is the Children of Húrin, the tragic tale of Túrin Turambar and his sister Níniel – of which Túrin is the hero: a figure that might be said (by people who like that sort of thing, though it is not very useful) to be derived from elements in Sigurd the Volsung, Oedipus, and the Finnish Kullervo.}}

Fëanor has been compared with Prometheus by researchers such as Verlyn Flieger. They share a symbolical and literal association with fire, are both rebels against the gods' decrees and inventors of artefacts that were sources of light, or vessels to divine flame.{{harvnb|Flieger|2002|pp=[https://books.google.com/books?id=L6Byko7dGpgC&pg=PA102 102–103]}}

= Celtic =

== Welsh and Irish ==

{{main|Celtic influences on Tolkien}}

File:Middle-earth's Geographic Influences.svg, medieval, and recent influences on the geography and peoples of Middle-earth. All locations are approximate. Main source is {{cite book |last=Garth |first=John |author-link=John Garth (author) |title=The Worlds of J.R.R. Tolkien: The Places that Inspired Middle-earth |title-link=The Worlds of J. R. R. Tolkien |date=2020 |publisher=Frances Lincoln Publishers & Princeton University Press |isbn=978-0-7112-4127-5 |pages=12–13, 39, 41, 151, 32, 30, 37, 55, 88, 159–168, 175, 182 and throughout}}; minor sources are listed on the image's Commons page.]]

The extent of Celtic influence has been debated. Tolkien wrote that he gave the Elvish language Sindarin "a linguistic character very like (though not identical with) Welsh ... because it seems to fit the rather 'Celtic' type of legends and stories told of its speakers".{{harvnb|Carpenter|2023|loc=#144 to Naomi Mitchison, April 1954}} Some names of characters and places in The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings have Welsh origin; for instance, Crickhollow in the Shire recalls the Welsh placename Crickhowell,{{cite web |last1=Gregg |first1=Emma |title=JRR Tolkien's Wales |url=https://www.visitwales.com/things-do/culture/cultural-attractions/explore-tolkiens-wales |publisher=Welsh Government |access-date=20 November 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210301132956/https://www.visitwales.com/things-do/culture/cultural-attractions/explore-tolkiens-wales |archive-date=1 March 2021 |date=2021 |url-status=live}} while the hobbit name Meriadoc has been suggested as an allusion to a legendary king of Brittany,{{cite book |last=Koch |first=John T. |title=Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia |publisher=ABC-CLIO |year=2006 |isbn=1-85109-440-7 |page=474}} though Tolkien denied any connection.{{harvnb|Carpenter|2023|loc=#297 to Mr. Rang, draft, August 1967}} In addition, the depiction of Elves has been described as deriving from Celtic mythology.{{cite book |last=Fimi |first=Dimitra |author-link=Dimitra Fimi |chapter=Filming Folklore: Adapting Fantasy for the Big Screen through Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings |editor1-last=Bogstad |editor1-first=Janice M. |editor2-last=Kaveny |editor2-first=Philip E. |title=Picturing Tolkien |year=2011 |publisher=McFarland |isbn=978-0-78648-473-7 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jNjKrXRP0G8C&pg=PA84 |pages=84–101}}

Tolkien wrote of "a certain distaste" for Celtic legends, "largely for their fundamental unreason",{{harvnb|Carpenter|2023|loc=#19 to Allen & Unwin, December 1937}} but The Silmarillion is thought by scholars to have some Celtic influence. The exile of the Noldorin Elves, for example, has parallels with the story of the Tuatha Dé Danann in Irish mythology.{{cite news |last=Fimi |first=Dimitra |author-link=Dimitra Fimi |title='Mad' Elves and 'Elusive Beauty': Some Celtic Strands of Tolkien's Mythology |date=August 2006 |url=http://dimitrafimi.com/articlesandessays/mad-elves-and-elusive-beauty-some-celtic-strands-of-tolkiens-mythology/}} The Tuatha Dé Danann, semi-divine beings, invaded Ireland from across the sea, burning their ships when they arrived and fighting a fierce battle with the current inhabitants. The Noldor arrived in Middle-earth from Valinor and burned their ships, then turned to fight Melkor. Another parallel can be seen between the loss of a hand by Maedhros, son of Fëanor, and the similar mutilation suffered by Nuada Airgetlám / Llud llaw Ereint ("Silver Hand/Arm") during the battle with the Firbolg.{{cite journal |last=Fimi |first=Dimitra |author-link=Dimitra Fimi |title='Mad' Elves and 'Elusive Beauty': Some Celtic Strands of Tolkien's Mythology |journal=Folklore |volume=117 |issue=2 |year=2006 |doi=10.1080/00155870600707847 |pages=156–170|s2cid=162292626 }}{{cite journal |last=Kinniburgh |first=Annie |year=2009 |title=The Noldor and the Tuatha Dé Danaan: J.R.R. Tolkien's Irish Influences |journal=Mythlore |volume=28 |issue=1 |at=Article 3 |url=https://dc.swosu.edu/mythlore/vol28/iss1/3}} Nuada received a hand made of silver to replace the lost one, and his later appellation has the same meaning as the Elvish name Celebrimbor: "silver fist" or "Hand of silver" in Sindarin (Telperinquar in Quenya).{{sfn|Tolkien|1977|p=357}}

Tolkien's 1955 O'Donnell lecture at Oxford, "English and Welsh," addresses Tolkien's love of the musicality of the Welsh language, which he states was an influence on the sounds of the Elvish language of Sindarin. He voiced his affinity for Welsh by stating, "Welsh is of this soil, this island, the senior language of the men of Britain; and Welsh is beautiful."{{cite book |last=Tolkien |first=J. R. R. |last2=Jackson |first2=Kenneth Hurlstone |last3=Chadwick |first3=Nora K. |last4=Charles |first4=B. G. |last5=Rees |first5=William |last6=Parry-Williams |first6=T. H. |title=Angles and Britons: O'Donnell lectures |publisher=University of Wales Press |publication-place=Cardiff |year=1963 |oclc=502459920 |page= }}

==Arthurian legends==

The Arthurian legends are part of the Celtic cultural heritage. Tolkien denied their influence, but critics have found several parallels.{{cite journal |last=Jardillier |first=Claire |title=Tolkien under the influence: Arthurian Legends in The Lord of the Rings |journal=Bulletin des Anglicistes Médiévistes, Bulletin de l'Association des Médiévistes Anglicistes de l'Enseignement Supérieur |issue=63 |year=2003 |pages=57–78 |url=https://amaes.jimdofree.com/publications-de-l-amaes/notre-journal-ema/ |access-date=6 December 2008}}{{cite journal |url=http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Gandalf+and+Merlin%3a+J.R.R.+Tolkien's+Adoption+and+Transformation+of+a...-a0188065411 |title=Gandalf and Merlin: J.R.R. Tolkien's Adoption and Transformation of a Literary Tradition |first=Frank P. |last=Riga |journal=Mythlore |date=22 September 2008}}{{cite journal |url=http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Galadriel+and+Morgan+le+Fey%3a+Tolkien's+redemption+of+the+lady+of+the...-a0163972505 |journal=Mythlore |title=Galadriel and Morgan le Fey: Tolkien's redemption of the lady of the lacuna |first=Susan |last=Carter |date=22 March 2007}}{{harvnb|Flieger|2005|pp=33–44}} Authors such as Donald O'Brien, Patrick Wynne, Carl Hostetter, and Tom Shippey have pointed out similarities between the tale of Beren and Lúthien in The Silmarillion and Culhwch and Olwen, a tale in the Welsh Mabinogion. In both, the male heroes make rash promises after having been stricken by the beauty of non-mortal maidens; both enlist the aid of great kings, Arthur and Finrod; both show rings that prove their identities; and both are set impossible tasks that include, directly or indirectly, the hunting and killing of ferocious beasts (the wild boars, Twrch Trwyth and Ysgithrywyn, and the wolf Carcharoth) with the help of a supernatural hound (Cafall and Huan). Both maidens possess such beauty that flowers grow beneath their feet when they come to meet the heroes for the first time, as if they were living embodiments of spring.{{harvnb|Shippey|2005|pp=193–194}}: "The hunting of the great wolf recalls the chase of the boar Twrch Trwyth in the Welsh Mabinogion, while the motif of 'the hand in the wolf's mouth' is one of the most famous parts of the Prose Edda, told of Fenris Wolf and the god Týr; Huan recalls several faithful hounds of legend, Garm, Gelert, Cafall." The Mabinogion was part of the Red Book of Hergest, a source of Welsh Celtic lore, which the Red Book of Westmarch, a supposed source of Hobbit-lore, probably imitates.{{harvnb|Hooker|2006|pp=176–177}}, "The Feigned-manuscript Topos": "The 1849 translation of The Red Book of Hergest by Lady Charlotte Guest (1812–1895), ... The Mabinogion, ... is now housed in the library at Jesus College, Oxford. Tolkien's well-known love of Welsh suggests that he would have likewise been well-acquainted with the source of Lady Guest's translation. ... Tolkien wanted to write (translate) a mythology for England, and Lady Charlotte Guest's work can easily be said to be a 'mythology for Wales.'

Gandalf has been compared with Merlin,{{cite web |url=http://www.orthodoxengland.org.uk/tolkien.htm |title=Orthodoxy in the Shire – A Tribute to J R R Tolkien |first=Eadmund |last=Dunstall |work=Orthodox England |publisher=St John's Orthodox Church, Colchester |access-date=23 October 2011}} Frodo and Aragorn with Arthur,{{cite web |last=Pascual Mondéjar |first=Ignacio |title=Aragorn and the Arthurian Myth |work= |url=http://mural.uv.es/igpasmon/TolkmythB.htm |publisher=Universitat de València Press |date=2006}} and Galadriel with the Lady of the Lake. Flieger has investigated the correlations and Tolkien's creative methods.{{harvnb|Flieger|2005|loc=[https://books.google.com/books?id=Q6zgmCf_kY4C&pg=PA32 The Literary Model: Tolkien and Arthur]}} She points out visible correspondences such as Avalon and Avallónë, and Brocéliande and Broceliand, the original name of Beleriand.{{harvnb|Flieger|2005|pp=[https://books.google.com/books?id=Q6zgmCf_kY4C&pg=PA41 41–42]}} Tolkien himself said that Frodo's and Bilbo's departure to Tol Eressëa (also called "Avallon" in the Legendarium) was an "Arthurian ending".{{harvnb|Flieger|2005|p=42}} "To Bilbo and Frodo the special grace is granted to go with the Elves they loved – an Arthurian ending, in which it is, of course, not made explicit whether this is an 'allegory' of death, or a mode of healing and restoration leading to a return." Such correlations are discussed in the posthumously published The Fall of Arthur; a section, "The Connection to the Quenta", explores Tolkien's use of Arthurian material in The Silmarillion.{{cite book |last=Tolkien |first=J. R. R. |chapter=The Connection to the Quenta |year=2013 |title=The Fall of Arthur |title-link=The Fall of Arthur |publisher=HarperCollins}} Another parallel is between the Arthurian tale of Sir Balin and that of Tolkien's Túrin Turambar. Though Balin knows he wields an accursed sword, he continues his quest to regain King Arthur's favour. Fate catches up with him when he unwittingly kills his own brother, who mortally wounds him. Turin accidentally kills his friend Beleg with his sword.{{cite news |url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2007/apr/28/jrrtolkien.fiction |title=Hobbit forming |first=Nicholas |last=Lezard |author-link=Nicholas Lezard |work=The Guardian |date=28 April 2007}} Review of The Children of Húrin.

= Slavic =

There are a few echoes of Slavic mythology in Tolkien's novels, such as the names of the wizard Radagast and his home at Rhosgobel in Rhovanion; all three appear to be connected with the Slavic god Rodegast, a god of the sun, war, hospitality, fertility, and harvest.{{cite journal |last=Orr |first=Robert |title=Some Slavic Echos in J.R.R. Tolkien's Middle-earth |journal=Germano-Slavica |issue=8 |year=1994 |pages=23–34 }} The Anduin, the Sindarin name for The Great River of Rhovanion, may be related to the Danube River, which flows mainly among the Slavic people and played an important role in their folklore.

History

The Battle of the Pelennor Fields towards the end of The Lord of the Rings may have been inspired by a conflict of real-world antiquity. Elizabeth Solopova notes that Tolkien repeatedly referred to a historic account of the Battle of the Catalaunian Fields by Jordanes, and analyses the two battles' similarities. Both battles take place between civilisations of the "East" and "West", and like Jordanes, Tolkien describes his battle as one of legendary fame that lasted for several generations. Another apparent similarity is the death of king Theodoric I on the Catalaunian Fields and that of Théoden on the Pelennor. Jordanes reports that Theodoric was thrown off by his horse and trampled to death by his own men who charged forward. Théoden rallies his men shortly before he falls and is crushed by his horse. And like Theodoric, Théoden is carried from the battlefield with his knights weeping and singing for him while the battle still goes on.{{sfn|Solopova|2009|pp=70–73}}{{sfn|Libran-Moreno|2011|pp=100–101}}

Literature

= Shakespeare =

{{main|Shakespeare's influence on Tolkien}}

File:Birnam Wood comes to Dunsinane. Illustration for Macbeth, 1912.jpg comes to Dunsinane, as branches carried by soldiers, in Shakespeare's version. Tolkien found this deeply disappointing.{{sfn|Shippey|2005|pp=205–208}}]]

Shakespeare's influence on Tolkien was substantial, despite Tolkien's professed dislike of the playwright.{{sfn|Shippey|2001|pp=192–196}} Tolkien disapproved in particular of Shakespeare's devaluation of elves, and was deeply disappointed by the prosaic explanation of how Birnam Wood came to Dunsinane Hill in Macbeth.{{harvnb|Carpenter|1978|p=35}}{{harvnb|Carpenter|2023|loc=#163 to W. H. Auden, 7 June 1955 }} Tolkien was influenced especially by Macbeth and A Midsummer Night's Dream, and he used King Lear for "issues of kingship, madness, and succession".{{cite journal |last=Drout |first=Michael D. C. |author-link=Michael Drout |title=Tolkien's Prose Style and its Literary and Rhetorical Effects |journal=Tolkien Studies |date=2004 |volume=1 |issue=1 |pages=137–163 |doi=10.1353/tks.2004.0006 |s2cid=170271511 |url=https://muse.jhu.edu/article/176065|doi-access=free |url-access=subscription }} He arguably drew on several other plays, including The Merchant of Venice, Henry IV, Part 1, and Love's Labour's Lost, as well as Shakespeare's poetry, for numerous effects in his Middle-earth writings.{{cite book |last=Kollmann |first=Judith J. |chapter=How 'All That Glisters Is Not Gold' Became 'All That Is Gold Does Not Glitter': Aragorn's Debt to Shakespeare |editor-last=Croft |editor-first=Janet Brennan |editor-link=Janet Brennan Croft |title=Tolkien and Shakespeare: Essays on Shared Themes and Languages |publisher=McFarland & Company |year=2007 |pages=110–127 |isbn=978-0786428274 |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Tolkien_and_Shakespeare/-WGaDtnHUOYC&pg=PA110}} The Tolkien scholar Tom Shippey suggests that Tolkien may even have felt a kind of fellow-feeling with Shakespeare, as both men were rooted in the county of Warwickshire.{{sfn|Shippey|2001|pp=192–196}}{{sfn|Shippey|2005|pp=208–209}}

= Antiquarianism =

{{further|Tolkien and antiquarianism}}

Scholars including Nick Groom place Tolkien in the tradition of English antiquarianism, where 18th century authors like Thomas Chatterton, Thomas Percy, and William Stukeley created a wide variety of antique-seeming materials much as Tolkien did, including calligraphy, invented language, forged medieval manuscripts, genealogies, maps, heraldry, and a mass of invented paratexts such as notes and glossaries.{{cite book |last=Groom |first=Nick |chapter=The English Literary Tradition: Shakespeare to the Gothic |pages=286-302 |chapter-url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/9781118517468.ch20 |editor-last=Lee |editor-first=Stuart D. |editor-link=Stuart D. Lee |title=A Companion to J. R. R. Tolkien |date=2020 |orig-year=2014 |publisher=Wiley Blackwell |isbn=978-1119656029 |oclc=1183854105}} Will Sherwood comments that these non-narrative elements "will all sound familiar as they are the techniques that [Tolkien] used to immerse readers into Arda."{{cite journal |last=Sherwood |first=Will |year=2020 |title=Tolkien and the Age of Forgery: Improving Antiquarian Practices in Arda |journal=Journal of Tolkien Research |volume=11 |issue=1 |at=Article 4 |url=https://scholar.valpo.edu/journaloftolkienresearch/vol11/iss1/4 }} Sherwood argues that Tolkien intentionally set about improving on antiquarian forgery, eventually creating "the codes and conventions of modern fantasy literature".

= Modern =

{{main|Tolkien's modern sources}}

Thomas Kullmann and Dirk Siepmann write that The Lord of the Rings imitates "epic poetry from ancient Greece, Ireland and England; early modern romances, folklore and fairy tales; rhetorical traditions and popular poetry", adding that the tradition Tolkien uses most is none of those, but the often overlooked influence of "nineteenth- and early twentieth-century novel-writing."{{sfn|Kullmann|Siepmann|2021|pp=297-307}}

Claire Buck, writing in the J.R.R. Tolkien Encyclopedia, explores his literary context,{{cite encyclopedia |last=Buck |first=Claire |editor-last=Drout |editor-first=Michael D. C. |editor-link=Michael D. C. Drout |title=Literary Context, Twentieth Century |encyclopedia=J.R.R. Tolkien Encyclopedia: Scholarship and Critical Assessment |year=2013 |orig-year=2007 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0-415-86511-1 |pages=363–366}} while Dale Nelson in the same work surveys 24 authors whose works are paralleled by elements in Tolkien's writings.{{cite encyclopedia |last=Nelson |first=Dale |editor-last=Drout |editor-first=Michael D. C. |editor-link=Michael D. C. Drout |title=Literary Influences, Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries |encyclopedia=J.R.R. Tolkien Encyclopedia: Scholarship and Critical Assessment |year=2013 |orig-year=2007 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0-415-86511-1 |pages=366–377}} Postwar literary figures such as Anthony Burgess, Edwin Muir, Philip Toynbee and the critic Colin Manlove variously sneered at The Lord of the Rings, but others like Naomi Mitchison and Iris Murdoch respected the work, and W. H. Auden championed it. Those early critics dismissed Tolkien as non-modernist. Later critics have placed Tolkien closer to the modernist tradition with his emphasis on language and temporality, while his pastoral emphasis is shared with First World War poets and the Georgian movement. Buck suggests that if Tolkien was intending to create a mythology for England, that would fit the tradition of English post-colonial literature and the many novelists and poets who reflected on the state of modern English society and the nature of Englishness.

Tolkien acknowledged a few authors of Edwardian adventure stories, such as John Buchan and H. Rider Haggard, as writing excellent stories. Tolkien stated that he "preferred the lighter contemporary novels", such as Buchan's.{{sfn|Carpenter|1978|p=168}} Critics have detailed resonances between the two authors.{{sfn|Hooker|2011|pp=162–192}} Auden compared The Fellowship of the Ring to Buchan's thriller The Thirty-Nine Steps.{{cite news |url=https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/books/01/02/11/specials/tolkien-fellowship.html?smid=tw-nytbooks&smtyp=cur |title=The Hero Is a Hobbit |last=Auden |first=W. H. |author-link=W. H. Auden |date=31 October 1954 |work=The New York Times}} Nelson states that Tolkien responded rather directly to the "mythopoeic and straightforward adventure romance" in Haggard. Tolkien wrote that stories about "Red Indians" were his favourites as a boy; Shippey likens the Fellowship's trip downriver, from Lothlórien to Tol Brandir "with its canoes and portages", to James Fenimore Cooper's 1826 historical romance The Last of the Mohicans.{{sfn|Shippey|2005|p=393}} Shippey writes that Éomer's riders of Rohan in the scene in the Eastemnet wheel and circle "round the strangers, weapons poised" in a way "more like the old movies' image of the Comanche or the Cheyenne than anything from English history".{{sfn|Shippey|2001|pp=100–101}}

When interviewed, the only book Tolkien named as a favourite was Rider Haggard's adventure novel She: "I suppose as a boy She interested me as much as anything—like the Greek shard of Amyntas [Amenartas], which was the kind of machine by which everything got moving."{{cite journal|last=Resnick |first=Henry |year=1967 |title=An Interview with Tolkien |journal=Niekas |pages=37–47}} A supposed facsimile of this potsherd appeared in Haggard's first edition, and the ancient inscription it bore, once translated, led the English characters to She{{'}}s ancient kingdom, perhaps influencing the Testament of Isildur in The Lord of the Rings{{cite journal |last=Nelson |first=Dale J. |year=2006 |title=Haggard's She: Burke's Sublime in a popular romance |journal=Mythlore |issue=Winter–Spring |url=https://www.thefreelibrary.com/Haggard%27s+She%3A+Burke%27s+Sublime+in+a+popular+romance.-a0146063132}} and Tolkien's efforts to produce a realistic-looking page from the Book of Mazarbul.{{harvnb|Flieger|2005 |p=150 }} Critics starting with Edwin Muir{{cite book |last=Muir |first=Edwin |author-link=Edwin Muir |title=The Truth of Imagination: Some Uncollected Reviews and Essays |publisher=Aberdeen University Press |page=[https://archive.org/details/truthofimaginati0000muir/page/121 121] |isbn=0-08-036392-X |year=1988 |url=https://archive.org/details/truthofimaginati0000muir/page/121 }} have found resemblances between Haggard's romances and Tolkien's.{{harvnb|Lobdell |2004|pp=5–6 }}Rogers, William N., II; Underwood, Michael R. "Gagool and Gollum: Exemplars of Degeneration in King Solomon's Mines and The Hobbit". In {{harvnb|Clark|Timmons|2000|pp=121–132}}{{cite web |last=Stoddard |first=William H. |date=July 2003 |title=Galadriel and Ayesha: Tolkienian Inspiration? |publisher=Franson Publications |url=http://www.troynovant.com/Stoddard/Tolkien/Galadriel-and-Ayesha.html |access-date=2 December 2007 |archive-date=22 December 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071222191403/http://www.troynovant.com/Stoddard/Tolkien/Galadriel-and-Ayesha.html |url-status=dead }}{{harvnb|Hooker|2006|pp=123–152}} "Frodo Quatermain," "Tolkien and Haggard: Immortality," "Tolkien and Haggard: The Dead Marshes" Saruman's death has been compared to the sudden shrivelling of Ayesha when she steps into the flame of immortality.

File:Jules verne cryptogramme.png

Parallels between The Hobbit and Jules Verne's Journey to the Center of the Earth include a hidden runic message and a celestial alignment that direct the adventurers to the goals of their quests.{{sfn|Hooker|2014|pp=1–12}}

Tolkien wrote of being impressed as a boy by Samuel Rutherford Crockett's historical fantasy novel The Black Douglas and of using it for the battle with the wargs in The Fellowship of the Ring;{{harvnb|Carpenter|2023|p=391}} critics have suggested other incidents and characters that it may have inspired,Anderson, Douglas A., The Annotated Hobbit (1988), 150{{harvnb|Lobdell |2004|pp=6–7}} but others have cautioned that the evidence is limited. Tolkien stated that he had read many of Edgar Rice Burroughs' books, but denied that the Barsoom novels influenced his giant spiders such as Shelob and Ungoliant: "I developed a dislike for his Tarzan even greater than my distaste for spiders. Spiders I had met long before Burroughs began to write, and I do not think he is in any way responsible for Shelob. At any rate I retain no memory of the Siths or the Apts."[https://books.google.com/books?id=rUczCgAAQBAJ&pg=PT135 Edgar Rice Burroughs: Master of Adventure]

Charles Dickens' The Pickwick Papers has been shown to have reflections in Tolkien;{{harvnb|Hooker|2006|pp=117–122}} "The Leaf Mold of Tolkien's Mind" for instance, Bilbo's birthday party speech recalls Pickwick's first speech to his group.{{cite web |last=Martinez |first=Michael |title=Tolkien's Dickensian Dreams |url=https://www.tolkiensociety.org/blog/2015/07/tolkiens-dickensian-dreams/ |publisher=The Tolkien Society |access-date=31 March 2023 |date=10 July 2015}} A longer version of the article is [https://atolkienistperspective.wordpress.com/2015/07/01/tolkiens-dickensian-dreams/ Dickens' short story that inspired a Tolkien chapter]. William Morris was a major influence. Tolkien wished to imitate the style and content of Morris's prose and poetry romances,{{harvnb|Carpenter|2023|loc=#1 to Edith Bratt, October 1914}} and made use of elements such as the Dead Marshes{{harvnb|Carpenter|2023|loc=#226 to L. W. Forster, December 1960}} and Mirkwood.{{ME-ref|Hobbit|p. 183, note 10}} Another was the fantasy author George MacDonald, who wrote The Princess and the Goblin. Books by the Inkling author Owen Barfield contributed to his world-view, particularly The Silver Trumpet (1925), History in English Words (1926) and Poetic Diction (1928). Edward Wyke-Smith's Marvellous Land of Snergs, with its "table-high" title characters, influenced the incidents, themes, and depiction of Hobbits,{{ME-ref|Hobbit|pp. 6–7}} as did the character George Babbitt from Babbitt.{{cite book |last1=Gilliver |first1=Peter |author1-link=Peter Gilliver |last2=Marshall |first2=Jeremy |last3=Weiner |first3=Edmund |title=The Ring of Words: Tolkien and the Oxford English Dictionary |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bszM-uwEQOkC&pg=PA54 |date=23 July 2009 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-956836-9 |page=54}} H. G. Wells's description of the subterranean Morlocks in his 1895 novel The Time Machine is suggestive of some of Tolkien's monsters.

Personal experience

= Childhood =

{{further|The Scouring of the Shire#Origins}}

Some locations and characters were inspired by Tolkien's childhood in rural Warwickshire, where from 1896 he first lived near Sarehole Mill, and later in Birmingham near Edgbaston Reservoir.{{harvnb|Carpenter|2023|loc=#178 to Allen & Unwin, December 1955}} There are also hints of the nearby industrial Black Country; he stated that he had based the description of Saruman's industrialization of Isengard and The Shire on that of England.The Lord of the Rings, Foreword: "The country in which I lived in childhood was being shabbily destroyed before I was ten"{{efn|The various tall towers in the Birmingham area, including Edgbaston Waterworks, Perrott's Folly and the University of Birmingham's clock tower, have repeatedly been suggested, without evidence, as possible inspirations for the towers in The Lord of the Rings.{{cite news |last=Jahangir |first=Rumeana |title=The Hobbit: How England inspired Tolkien's Middle Earth |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-29787528 |publisher=BBC |date=7 December 2014}}{{cite web |last=Kennedy |first=Maev |author-link=Maev Kennedy |title=Bought for £1, the mysterious tower that inspired JRR Tolkien |url=https://www.theguardian.com/society/2013/jan/29/tower-inspired-tolkien-bought |website=The Guardian |date=29 January 2013}}{{cite web |url=http://www.birmingham.gov.uk/preview/GenerateContent?CONTENT_ITEM_ID=712&CONTENT_ITEM_TYPE=0&MENU_ID=15 |title=J. R. R. Tolkien |access-date=9 April 2020 |date=31 May 2007 |publisher=Birmingham City Council |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070607202651/http://www.birmingham.gov.uk/preview/GenerateContent?CONTENT_ITEM_ID=712&CONTENT_ITEM_TYPE=0&MENU_ID=15 |archive-date=7 June 2007}}}}

The name of Bilbo's Hobbit-hole, "Bag End", was the real name of the Worcestershire home of Tolkien's aunt Jane Neave in Dormston.{{cite web |title=Lord of the Rings inspiration in the archives |url=https://www.explorethepast.co.uk/2013/05/lord-of-the-rings-inspiration-in-the-archives/ |website=Explore the Past (Worcestershire Historic Environment Record) |date=29 May 2013 |quote=Andrew Morton, used this catalogue as one of his sources and reproduced it in full. He discovered that the farm was owned by Tolkien's aunt in the 1920s and was visited by the author on at least a couple of occasions. The name is probably all that was used, as the farm bears little resemblance otherwise to the Hobbit dwelling of the books.}}{{cite web |last=Morton |first=Andrew |author-link=Andrew Morton (writer) |title=Bag End – A Very English Place |url=http://www.tolkienlibrary.com/press/1065-Bag-End-A-Very-English-Place.php |date=30 December 2012 |access-date=20 November 2021}}

= War =

{{main|The Great War and Middle-earth}}

File:Lancashire Fusiliers trench Beaumont Hamel 1916.jpg experience with his regiment, the Lancashire Fusiliers (pictured), on the Western Front in the First World War influenced his account of the landscape around Mordor.]]

On publication of The Lord of the Rings there was speculation that the One Ring was an allegory for the atomic bomb; Alan Nicholls wrote that "The closeness of its analogy to the human situation gives it a dreadful reality and relevance. It is a prose-poet's rendering of the mental twilight of the modern world, darkened as it is by the black power ... of the atom bomb". The poet and novelist Edwin Muir disagreed, writing that it could not directly equated with the hydrogen bomb, as it "seems to stand for evil itself".{{cite journal |last=Thompson |first=George H. |title=Early Review of Books by J.R.R. Tolkien - Part II |journal=Mythlore |year=1985 |volume=11 |issue=3 |at=article 11 |url=https://dc.swosu.edu/mythlore/vol11/iss3/11 }} Tolkien insisted that the book was not allegorical,{{cite book |last=Tolkien |first=J. R. R. |author-link=J. R. R. Tolkien |chapter=Foreword to the Second Edition |title=The Lord of the Rings |isbn=0-261-10238-9 |year=1991 |publisher=HarperCollins}} and pointed out that he had completed most of the book, including the ending, before the first use of atomic bombs.{{cite book |last1=Manni |first1=Franco |last2=Bonechi |first2=Simone |year=2008 |chapter=The Complexity of Tolkien's Attitude Towards the Second World War |title=The Ring Goes Ever On: Proceedings of the Tolkien 2005 Conference |publisher=The Tolkien Society }} However, in a 1960 letter, he wrote that "The Dead Marshes [just north of Mordor] and the approaches to the Morannon [an entrance to Mordor] owe something to northern France after the Battle of the Somme",{{harvnb|Carpenter|2023|loc=#226 to Professor L. W. Forster, 31 December 1960}} and, in the foreword to The Lord of the Rings, that the First World War was "no less hideous an experience" for its young participants than the Second.{{cite news |last=Ciabattari |first=Jane |title=Hobbits and hippies: Tolkien and the counterculture |url=http://www.bbc.com/culture/story/20141120-the-hobbits-and-the-hippies |publisher=BBC |date=20 November 2014}} In September and October 1916, Tolkien took part in the Battle of the Somme as a signals officer, before being sent home with trench fever.{{sfn|Carpenter|1978|pp=88–94}}{{sfn|Garth|2003|loc=Chapters 7–10}}{{sfn|Shippey|2005|p=254}} Tolkien scholars agree that Tolkien responded to the war by creating his Middle-earth legendarium.{{sfn|Shippey|2005|pp=371, 374–375}}{{sfn|Kosalka|2011|pp=8–9, 194–221}}{{sfn|Garth|2003|p=287}}{{sfn|Croft|2004|p=18}} Commentators have suggested multiple correspondences between Tolkien's wartime experiences and aspects of his Middle-earth writings. For example, the metallic dragons that attack the Elves in the final battle of The Fall of Gondolin are reminiscent of the newly-invented tanks that Tolkien saw.{{harvnb|Garth|2003|p=221}} Tolkien's fellow-Inkling C. S. Lewis, who fought in the 1917 Battle of Arras, wrote that The Lord of the Rings realistically portrayed "the very quality of the war my generation knew", including "the flying civilians, the lively, vivid friendships, the background of something like despair and the merry foreground, and such heavensent windfalls as a cache of tobacco 'salvaged' from a ruin".{{cite news |last=Lewis |first=C. S. |author-link=C. S. Lewis |title=The Dethronement of Power |work=Time and Tide |date=22 October 1955 |page=36}}

= Inklings =

{{further|Inklings}}

Tolkien was a core member of the Inklings, an informal literary discussion group associated with the University of Oxford between the early 1930s and late 1949.{{cite book |editor1-last=Kilby |editor1-first=Clyde S. |editor2-last=Mead |editor2-first=Marjorie Lamp |title=Brothers and Friends: The Diaries of Major Warren Hamilton Lewis |publisher=Harper & Row |year=1982 |isbn=0-06-064575-X |page=230}} The group shared in Colin Duriez's words "a guiding vision of the relationship of imagination and myth to reality and of a Christian worldview in which a pagan spirituality is seen as prefiguring the advent of Christ and the Christian story."{{cite encyclopedia |last=Duriez |first=Colin |author-link=Colin Duriez |title=Inklings |editor-last=Drout |editor-first=Michael D. C. |editor-link=Michael D. C. Drout |encyclopedia=J. R. R. Tolkien Encyclopedia |year=2013 |orig-year=2007 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0-415-86511-1 |pages=295–297}} Shippey adds that the group was "preoccupied" with "virtuous pagans", and that The Lord of the Rings is plainly a tale of such people in the dark past before Christian revelation.{{sfn|Shippey|2005|pp=224–226}} He further writes that what Tolkien called the Northern theory of courage, namely that even total defeat does not make what is right wrong, was "a vital belief" shared by Tolkien and other Inklings.{{sfn|Shippey|2005|p=136, note}} The group considered philosophical issues, too, which found their way into Tolkien's writings, among them the ancient debate within Christianity on the nature of evil. Shippey notes Elrond's Boethian statement that "nothing is evil in the beginning. Even [the Dark Lord] Sauron was not so",{{harvnb|Tolkien|1954a|loc=Book 2, ch. 2 "The Council of Elrond"}} in other words all things were created good; but that the Inklings, as evidenced by C. S. Lewis's Mere Christianity, book 2, section 2, to some extent tolerated the Manichean view that Good and Evil are equally powerful, and battle it out in the world.{{sfn|Shippey|2005|pp=160–161}} Shippey writes that Tolkien's Ringwraiths embody an Inkling and Boethian idea found in Lewis and Charles Williams, that of things being bent out of shape, the word wraith suggesting "writhe" and "wrath", glossed as "a twisted emotion"; even the world became bent, so men could no longer sail the old straight road westwards to the Undying Lands. All the same, Shippey writes, Tolkien's personal war experience was Manichean: evil seemed at least as powerful as good, and could easily have been victorious, a strand which can also be seen in Middle-earth.{{sfn|Shippey|2005|pp=169–170}} At a personal level, Lewis's friendship greatly encouraged Tolkien to keep going with The Lord of the Rings; he wrote that without Lewis "I should never have brought The L. of the R. to a conclusion."{{cite web |title=How C.S. Lewis Helped Encourage Tolkien's 'Lord of the Rings' |work=Newsweek |url=https://www.newsweek.com/men-letters-jrr-tolkien-and-cs-lewiss-bond-563509 |date=4 March 2017}}

Notes

{{notelist}}

References

{{reflist|28em}}

Sources

{{Refbegin}}

  • {{cite book |last=Burns |first=Marjorie |author-link=Marjorie Burns |title=Perilous Realms: Celtic and Norse in Tolkien's Middle-earth |title-link=Perilous Realms |publisher=University of Toronto Press |year=2005 |isbn=0-8020-3806-9}}
  • {{cite book |first=Jesse L. |last=Byock |author-link=Jesse Byock |title=The Saga of the Volsungs: The Norse Epic of Sigurd the Dragon Slayer |publisher=University of California Press |year=1990 |isbn=0-520-06904-8 }}
  • {{ME-ref|Letters}}
  • {{cite book |last=Carpenter |first=Humphrey |author-link=Humphrey Carpenter |title=J. R. R. Tolkien: A Biography |year=1978 |orig-year=1977 |publisher=Unwin Paperbacks |isbn=978-0-04928-039-7}}
  • {{cite book |first=Humphrey |last=Carpenter |author-link=Humphrey Carpenter |title=J.R.R. Tolkien: A Biography |location=New York |publisher=Houghton Mifflin |isbn=978-0618057023 |year=2000}}
  • {{cite book |last=Chance |first=Jane |author-link=Jane Chance |title=Tolkien's Art: A 'Mythology for England' |publisher=University Press of Kentucky |year=2001 |isbn=0-8131-9020-7}}
  • {{cite book |last=Chance |first=Jane |author-link=Jane Chance |title=Tolkien and the Invention of Myth: A Reader |publisher=University Press of Kentucky |year=2004 |isbn=0-8131-2301-1}}
  • {{cite book |editor-last=Clark |editor-first=George |editor2-first=Daniel |editor2-last=Timmons |title=J. R. R. Tolkien and His Literary Resonances: Views of Middle-Earth |isbn=0-313-30845-4 |publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |year=2000 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/jrrtolkienhislit0000unse }}
  • {{cite book |last=Croft |first=Janet Brennan |author-link=Janet Brennan Croft |title=War and the Works of J.R.R. Tolkien |publisher=Praeger |year=2004 |isbn=978-0-313-32592-2 |oclc=52948909 }}
  • {{cite book |last=Flieger |first=Verlyn |author-link=Verlyn Flieger |title=Splintered Light: Logos and Language in Tolkien's World |title-link=Splintered Light |publisher=Kent State University Press |year=2002 |isbn=0-87338-744-9}}
  • {{cite book |last=Flieger |first=Verlyn |author-link=Verlyn Flieger |year=2005 |title=Interrupted Music: The Making Of Tolkien's Mythology |publisher=Kent State University Press |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Q6zgmCf_kY4C&q=Tolkien+%22Red+Book%22+Haggard&pg=PA150 |isbn=9780873388245}}
  • {{cite book |last=Garth |first=John |author-link=John Garth (author) |title=Tolkien and the Great War: The Threshold of Middle-earth |publisher=Houghton Mifflin Harcourt |year=2003 |isbn=978-0-618-57481-0}}
  • {{cite book |last=Hooker |first=Mark T. |year=2006 |title=Tolkienian Mathomium: A Collection of Articles on J. R. R. Tolkien and his Legendarium |publisher=Llyfrawr |isbn=978-1-4382-4631-4}}
  • {{cite book |last=Hooker |first=Mark T. |year=2011 |editor-last=Fisher |editor-first=Jason |editor-link=Jason Fisher |chapter=Reading John Buchan in Search of Tolkien |title=Tolkien and the Study of his Sources: Critical Essays |publisher=McFarland |isbn=978-0-7864-6482-1 |oclc=731009810}}
  • {{Cite book |last=Hooker |first=Mark T. |year=2014 |title=The Tolkienaeum: Essays on J.R.R. Tolkien and his Legendarium |publisher=Llyfrawr |isbn=978-1-49975-910-5}}
  • {{cite book |last=Kosalka |first=David |title=Ghosts of Mythic Pasts: Mythic History in the Works of Friedrich Gundolf, Robert Graves, and JRR Tolkien in Light of the First World War |publisher=University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee (PhD thesis) |year=2011 |url=https://www.proquest.com/openview/b592a8753df2813cb84e80dbf83b0867}}
  • {{cite book |last=Kullmann |first=Thomas |last2=Siepmann |first2=Dirk |title=Tolkien as a Literary Artist |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan |publication-place=Cham |year=2021 |isbn=978-3-030-69298-8}}
  • {{cite book |last1=Lee |first1=Stuart D. |author1-link=Stuart D. Lee |last2=Solopova |first2=Elizabeth |author2-link=Elizabeth Solopova |title=The Keys of Middle-earth: Discovering Medieval Literature Through the Fiction of J. R. R. Tolkien |date=2005 |publisher=Palgrave |isbn=978-1403946713 |url=https://archive.org/details/keysmiddleearthd00lees_471 |url-access=limited}}
  • {{cite book |last=Libran-Moreno |first=Miryam |chapter='Byzantium, New Rome!' Goths, Langobards, and Byzantium in 'The Lord of the Rings' |editor-last=Fisher |editor-first=Jason |editor-link=Jason Fisher |title=Tolkien and the Study of His Sources: Critical Essays |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=98VQ3gHsVsMC&pg=PA100 |year=2011 |publisher=McFarland |isbn=978-0-7864-8728-8 |pages=85–115}}
  • {{cite book |last=Lobdell |first=Jared C. |author-link=Jared Lobdell |year=2004 |title=The World of the Rings: Language, Religion, and Adventure in Tolkien |publisher=Open Court |isbn=978-0-8126-9569-4 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/worldofringslang0000lobd }}
  • {{cite book |last=Shippey |first=Tom |author-link=Tom Shippey |title=J. R. R. Tolkien: Author of the Century |year=2001 |orig-year=2000 |publisher=HarperCollins |isbn=978-0261-10401-3}}
  • {{cite journal |first=Tom |last=Shippey |author-link=Tom Shippey |title=Light-elves, Dark-elves, and Others: Tolkien's Elvish Problem |journal=Tolkien Studies |volume=1 |issue=1 |pages=1–15 |year=2004 |doi=10.1353/tks.2004.0015 |doi-access=free}}
  • {{cite book |last=Shippey |first=Tom |author-link=Tom Shippey |title=The Road to Middle-Earth |year=2005 |edition=Third |orig-year=1982 |publisher=Grafton (HarperCollins) |isbn=978-0261102750}}
  • {{cite book |last=Shippey |first=Tom |author-link=Tom Shippey |title=Roots and Branches: Selected Papers on Tolkien |publisher=Walking Tree Publishers |series=Cormarë Series |volume=11 |year=2007 |isbn=978-3-905703-05-4}}
  • {{cite book |last=Simek |first=Rudolf |author-link=Rudolf Simek |title=Mittelerde: Tolkien und die germanische Mythologie |trans-title=Middle-earth: Tolkien and the Germanic Mythology |language=de |publisher=C. H. Beck |year=2005 |isbn=978-3406528378}}
  • {{ME-ref|Solopova}}
  • {{ME-ref|FOTR}}
  • {{ME-ref|Silm}}
  • {{ME-ref|BOLT2}}
  • {{ME-ref|MR}}
  • {{cite book |editor-last=Williams |editor-first=Hamish |editor-link=Hamish Williams |title=Tolkien and the Classical World |title-link=Tolkien and the Classical World (book) |publication-place=Zurich |date=2021 |isbn=978-3-905703-45-0 |oclc=1237352408 }}

{{Refend}}

{{J. R. R. Tolkien}}

{{Lord of the Rings}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Influences}}

Category:Völsung cycle

Category:Tyrfing cycle

Category:Beowulf

Category:Kalevala