Camellia Sackville
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Little biographical information is known about Camellia, however possibly came from [[Michel Delving]]<ref>In the earlier drafts of the [[Baggins Family|Baggins]] genealogy. Whether this was meant to stand is unclear. </ref> | Little biographical information is known about Camellia, however possibly came from [[Michel Delving]]<ref>In the earlier drafts of the [[Baggins Family|Baggins]] genealogy. Whether this was meant to stand is unclear. </ref> | ||
| + | ==Etymology== | ||
| + | The name refers to an Asian plant. It is named after George Joseph Kamel, who brought the plant from Japan. | ||
| + | |||
| + | It possibly suggests that this exotic plant still existed in [[Middle-earth]] in the [[Third Age]], like [[potatoes]] and [[Pipe-weed|tobacco]]. | ||
{{references}} | {{references}} | ||
[[Category:Hobbits]] | [[Category:Hobbits]] | ||
Revision as of 09:25, 1 December 2010
| Camellia Sackville | |
|---|---|
| Hobbit | |
| Biographical Information | |
| Location | Michel Delving |
| Physical Description | |
| Gender | Female |
Camellia and Longo founded the Sackville-Baggins family with their marriage, and they had one child together, Otho, Bilbo's cousin, who was born in S.R. 1310. Through her son Otho Baggins, she became the mother-in-law of Lobelia Sackville-Baggins.
Little biographical information is known about Camellia, however possibly came from Michel Delving[1]
Etymology
The name refers to an Asian plant. It is named after George Joseph Kamel, who brought the plant from Japan.
It possibly suggests that this exotic plant still existed in Middle-earth in the Third Age, like potatoes and tobacco.
