Hírilorn: Difference between revisions

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==Etymology==
==Etymology==


''[[hîr]]'' + ''[[-il]]'' + ''[[orn]]''
''[[hîr]]'' + ''[[-il]]'' + ''[[orn]]''<!--Lady-tree?-->


An obsolete name of the tree, used in an early version of the [[legendarium]], was ''Golosbrindi'' (glossed as "Queen of the Forest"), replaced with ''Hirilorn'' (glossed as "Queen of the Trees").<ref>{{LT2|In}}, p. 51</ref>
An obsolete name of the tree, used in an early version of the [[legendarium]], was ''Golosbrindi'' (glossed as "Queen of the Forest"), replaced with ''Hirilorn'' (glossed as "Queen of the Trees").<ref>{{LT2|In}}, p. 51</ref>
{{references}}
{{references}}
[[Category:Trees]]
[[Category:Trees]]

Revision as of 10:09, 20 October 2010

Lúthien Escapes the Treehouse by Ted Nasmith

Hírilorn was an immense beech-tree that grew over the gates of Menegroth, the underground city of King Thingol. The tree was originally named Neldor, meaning "Triple-tree", because of its three massive trunks.

During the time of the Quest for the Silmaril, Thingol feared his daughter Lúthien would risk her life to seek out her love Beren and help him in his quest. He had a house built among the branches of the great beech and imprisoned Lúthien there. Because of this the tree was then called Hírilorn, meaning "Tree of the Lady" in Sindarin, though it did not hold Lúthien for long. Using her magical arts, she escaped from Hírilorn and set out to aid Beren, eventually helping him recover a Silmaril from Morgoth's Iron Crown.

Just as the Quest for the Silmaril began near Hírilorn the quest ended there as well. During the Hunting of the Wolf, Beren received a mortal wound from Carcharoth and died in Lúthien's arms beneath the branches of the Tree of the Lady.[1]

Etymology

hîr + -il + orn

An obsolete name of the tree, used in an early version of the legendarium, was Golosbrindi (glossed as "Queen of the Forest"), replaced with Hirilorn (glossed as "Queen of the Trees").[2]

References