Old Words and Names in the Shire: Difference between revisions
From Tolkien Gateway
m (Corrected typo) |
No edit summary |
||
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''''Old Words and Names in the Shire''''' was a short treatise written by [[Meriadoc Brandybuck|Merry Brandybuck]] sometime after the [[War of the Ring]]. In this work Merry discussed the kinship with the language of the [[Rohirrim]] of such "shire-words" as ''[[mathom]]'' and old elements in place names. | '''''Old Words and Names in the Shire''''' was a short treatise written by [[Meriadoc Brandybuck|Merry Brandybuck]] sometime after the [[War of the Ring]]. In this work Merry discussed the kinship with the [[Rohan language|language]] of the [[Rohirrim]] of such "shire-words" as ''[[mathom]]'' and old elements in place names. | ||
This treatise was kept in the library of [[Bucklebury]], perhaps one of those important works that weren't copied into the [[Red Book]].<ref>{{FR|Records}}</ref> | |||
{{References}} | {{References}} | ||
[[Category:Books and documents within the legendarium]] | [[Category:Books and documents within the legendarium]] | ||
[[de:Alte Wörter und Namen im Auenland]] | |||
[[fi:Konnun vanhat nimet ja sanat]] |
Revision as of 07:12, 8 October 2020
Old Words and Names in the Shire was a short treatise written by Merry Brandybuck sometime after the War of the Ring. In this work Merry discussed the kinship with the language of the Rohirrim of such "shire-words" as mathom and old elements in place names.
This treatise was kept in the library of Bucklebury, perhaps one of those important works that weren't copied into the Red Book.[1]