Lithe: Difference between revisions

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'''Lithe''' refers to two feast days of the [[Shire Calendar]] that lay either side of [[Midyear's Day]] (and, in a leap year, the special feast-day of the [[Overlithe]]).
{{disambig-two|the month in the [[Bree Calendar]]|feast days of the [[Shire Calendar]]|[[Lithedays]]}}
 
{{breemonths}}
Events which occurred on 1 Lithe:
'''Lithe''' was the sixth month of the calendar of [[Bree]], corresponding to [[Forelithe]] of the [[Shire Calendar]], and approximately corresponding to modern [[22 May]] through [[20 June]] in a normal year. It was followed by the [[Summerdays]].<ref>{{App|Calendars}}</ref>
 
==Etymology==
* [[Third Age 2941|T.A. 2941]]:
[[Old English]] ''[[wiktionary:liþa|líða]]'', is the old name for the months June and July.<ref name="Nomen">{{HM|N}}, p. 780-1</ref> It probably referred to the first new moon around the summer solstice.<ref>{{HM|IE}}, Giving of Names, p. 227</ref>
** [[Elrond]] discovers the [[moon-letters]] on [[Thrór's Map]].
{{references}}
* [[Third Age 3019|T.A. 3019]]:
**[[Arwen]] comes to [[Minas Tirith]].
 
[[Category:Hobbit Calendar]]
[[Category:Hobbit Calendar]]
[[category:dates]]
[[de:Lithe]]
[[fi:Lithe (kuukausi)]]

Latest revision as of 06:21, 25 May 2018

This article is about the month in the Bree Calendar. For the feast days of the Shire Calendar, see Lithedays.
Months in the Bree Calendar
  1. Frery* (January)
  2. Solmath (February)
  3. Rethe (March)
  4. Chithing* (April)
  5. Thrimidge (May)
  6. Lithe* (June)
  7. Mede* (July)
  8. Wedmath (August)
  9. Harvestmath* (September)
  10. Wintring* (October)
  11. Blooting* (November)
  12. Yulemath* (December)
*Differ from Shire names.

Lithe was the sixth month of the calendar of Bree, corresponding to Forelithe of the Shire Calendar, and approximately corresponding to modern 22 May through 20 June in a normal year. It was followed by the Summerdays.[1]

Etymology[edit | edit source]

Old English líða, is the old name for the months June and July.[2] It probably referred to the first new moon around the summer solstice.[3]

References