Gothic: Difference between revisions
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==External links== | ==External links== | ||
*{{WP|Gothic language}} | *{{WP|Gothic language}} | ||
*[http:// | *[http://glaemscrafu.jrrvf.com/english/gothic.html Texts and sound samples] at [[Glǽmscrafu]], including some texts by Tolkien | ||
{{references}} | {{references}} | ||
[[Category:Languages (real-world)]] | [[Category:Languages (real-world)]] | ||
[[de:Gotische Sprache]] | [[de:Gotische Sprache]] | ||
[[fi:Gootin kieli]] | [[fi:Gootin kieli]] |
Revision as of 13:09, 2 January 2020
Gothic was the language of the Goths; the oldest known Germanic language, it is now extinct and left no descendants. As a Germanic language, Gothic was related to Old English and Old Norse.
Gothic was the first language that J.R.R. Tolkien studied for his own pleasure, and it may have given an impulsion in the first development of Qenya. Tolkien even attempted to reconstruct some parts of the language and such elements survived in Taliska, the language he created for the Edain of the First Age. He also composed a full poem, Bagme Bloma "The Flower of the Trees" in Gothic.
According to Lisa Star, Tolkien also devised a tengwar mode for Gothic which is known to exist, but remain unpublished to date.[1]
Gothic names in Tolkien's legendarium
Since in The Lord of the Rings Old English represents Rohirric, Tolkien used Gothic to represent the earlier language of the Northmen of Rhovanion in accordance to the similarity between these languages.
However, in reality Old English was not directly related to Gothic as the way Rohirric was to Northern; therefore Tolkien's simulation does not reflect exactly the relationship between these languages but rather their similarity.
External links
- Gothic language at Wikipedia
- Texts and sound samples at Glǽmscrafu, including some texts by Tolkien
References
- ↑ Lisa Star, "A List of Tolkien's Unpublished and Slightly Published Manuscripts" dated 1 August 2002, Tyalie Tyelellieva website (archived) (accessed 2 January 2012)