Social:Round World version of the Silmarillion

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Short description: Aspect of J.R.R. Tolkien's legendarium


Tolkien circa 1925

The Round World Version is an alternative creation myth to the canonical version of J.R.R. Tolkien's legendarium as it appears in The Silmarillion and The Lord of the Rings. In the canonical version, the Earth was created flat and was changed to round as a cataclysmic event during the Second Age in order to prevent direct access by Men to Valinor, home of the immortals.[1] In the Round World Version, the Earth is created spherical from the beginning.

Tolkien abandoned the Round World Version before completion of The Lord of the Rings but later regretted this decision. He felt that postulating an ancient flat world detracted from the believability of his writings. He planned a new round world version but only got as far as an outline. He continued to amend his published works to make them compatible with a round world version for most of the rest of his life. The editor of The Silmarillion, published after Tolkien's death, considered editing the text to comply with Tolkien's wish to return to the Round World Version, but decided against it.

History

An early stage in the Flat World Version of Tolkien's cosmology

Tolkien gives the fullest account of the creation myth in the Ainulindalë ("Music of the Ainur"). The original version of this was written in the 1930s and referred to by Tolkien as the "Flat World Version", later the "Old Flat World Version" after he created a new flat world version. In 1946 he wrote the "Round World Version" intending this to be the published version. Tolkien sent both the "Old Flat World Version" and the "Round World Version" to Katherine Farrer (wife of theologian Austin Farrer) for review in 1948. Farrer replied to him in October strongly supporting the Flat World Version – "The hope of Heaven is the only thing which makes modern astronomy tolerable..."[2] Farrer seems to have influenced Tolkien to abandon the Round World Version, which he did before completing The Lord of the Rings trilogy, or even starting The Return of the King (first published 1955).[3] A new manuscript was created from a heavily edited Old Flat World Version.[4] Tolkien then produced a final polished version with illuminated capitals.[5]

No version of the Ainulindalë was published during Tolkien's lifetime, but a heavily edited[6] canonical version later formed the first chapter of The Silmarillion (first published 1977) edited by Tolkien's son Christopher Tolkien.[7] The earliest version (but not under the name Ainulindalë) was published in The Book of Lost Tales volume 1 (first published 1983).[8] The Old Flat World Version was included in The Lost Road and Other Writings (first published 1987). Both the Round World Version and the New Flat World Version were included in Morgoth's Ring (first published 1993). The latter is a more faithful reproduction of Tolkien's manuscript than the version in The Silmarillion.[9]

Tolkien also wrote a Round World Version of the Akallabêth ("The Downfall of Númenor"),[10] possibly in 1948 to match the Ainulindalë Round World Version.[11] This is an Atlantis-like story of the destruction of the Númenóreans' island, brought about by their deception by Sauron. This geographic change, in the canonical version, is part of the transition from flat to round world. Like Ainulindalë, Akallabêth was not published during Tolkien's lifetime, but the canonical version was included in The Silmarillion.[12]

As late as 1966 Tolkien was still attempting to make the Round World Version work across his body of work. In The Hobbit he has the Wood-elves lingering in the twilight of the Sun (Round World) instead of lingering in the twilight before the raising of the Sun (Flat World).[13] See § In-universe description for why this change was necessary.

Tolkien's dilemma

In Tolkien's cosmology, the downfall of Númenor was tied to the reshaping of the world from flat to round, making the purely Round World version problematic. Shapes of continents are purely schematic.

The fundamental problem Tolkien had with the Flat World Version was that the Númenóreans, the ancestors of Men, were the means by which the legends of the earliest days were transmitted to later generations. Tolkien believed that the Númenóreans would understand that a flat Earth was impossible. However, the story of the submerging of Númenor relies intrinsically on this cosmology. Many other dramatic moments would be lost or need serious revision to make a Round World Version consistent across all of the works in the Middle-earth legendarium.[14] Amongst the tales that would need revising, but for which Tolkien produced no alternative version, is the story of the Two Trees.[15] The Round World Version represents a major, concrete part of Tolkien's attempt to entirely rewrite the mythology of Middle-earth.[16]

The Round World Version of the Akallabêth was named by Tolkien The Drowning of Anadûnê. He described this as the "Man's version" possibly to distinguish it from the Elvish version in the Akallabêth and reconcile why there are two versions in the legendarium. Much as he would like to entirely abandon or heavily revise the Flat World Version, Tolkien writes that he cannot because it is already too embedded in the universe he has created.[17] Tolkien was attempting, but failing, to reinforce the sense of believability in his mythology by bringing it more into line with scientific knowledge of the history of Earth.[18] But the Round World Version generated as many problems as it solved, such as where now was the location of Valinor to be placed.[19]

Choice for The Silmarillion

During preparation of The Silmarillion for publication, Christopher Tolkien was aware that his father had intended to update it to a new Round World Version. He considered editing the manuscripts to comply with this wish. In other respects, he had edited the stories to make them internally self-consistent and consistent with the already published canon.[20] Versions of The Silmarillion stories more closely following Tolkien's manuscripts were subsequently published by Christopher in The History of Middle-earth series of twelve books.[21]

Christopher decided against such an update because what his father had left was no more than an outline of his intentions. The earlier Round World Version was also no longer viable because by this stage it differed too greatly from already published works. The Silmarillion would either need some major rework of the text or else the change would introduce new inconsistencies.[22]

In-universe description

Christopher Tolkien described the Round World Version as "de-mythologised". As well as removing the flat Earth, the need for the Sun and Moon to be transported by mythical beings is removed. Also gone are the two enormous lamps that light the Earth before the creation of the Sun. The Sun is there from the beginning.[23]

In the Round World Version, the Earth was always round, and Arda was the name for the whole solar system instead of just the Earth. The Sun and the Moon were not the fruit of the Two Trees, but preceded the creation of the Trees. Instead, the Trees preserved the light of the Sun before it was tainted by Melkor.

The Moon is not created by Eru, the supreme being, as in the Flat World Version, but by Melkor, his chief antagonist, who tore it from the Earth. The Moon becomes Melkor's stronghold and because of this, it is moved further away from the Earth by the Valar to diminish Melkor's influence. Christopher Tolkien considers this more de-mythologising: the Moon is created after the Earth, and from a part of it, in accordance with the scientific paradigm.[24]

Manuscript designations

Christopher Tolkien identified the various version of the Ainulindalë with letter designations. Many other sources have followed his system of identifying manuscripts.[25]

Designation Description Date Publication Pub. date
Earliest version 1918–1920[26] The Book of Lost Tales 1983
B Old Flat World Version 1930s The Lost Road and Other Writings 1987
C* Round World Version 1946 Morgoth's Ring 1993
C New Flat World Version c. 1948 Morgoth's Ring 1993
D Final polished version Morgoth's Ring 1993

See also

References

  1. Kane, p. 33
  2. Farrer, quoted by C. Tolkien
    • Kane, p. 34
    • Whittingham, p. 117
  3. C. Tolkien
  4. Kane, p. 34
  5. Kane, p. 34
  6. C. Tolkien
  7. Nagy, p. 608
  8. Kane, p. 33
  9. Kane, p. 33
  10. Kane, p. 243
  11. Silmarillion, pp. 301–399
  12. Garbowski, p. 425
  13. Kane, p. 34
  14. Whittingham, p. 117
  15. Nagy, p. 609
  16. Whittingham, p. 117
    • Curry, p. 139
    • Garbowski, p. 425
  17. Curry, p. 139
  18. Kane, p. 34
  19. Kane, p. 33
  20. Kane, p. 34
  21. Whittingham, p. 117
  22. Whittingham, pp. 117–118
  23. C. Tolkien
  24. C. Tolkien, BOLT

Bibliography

  • Drout, Michael D. C. (ed), J.R.R. Tolkien Encyclopedia: Scholarship and Critical Assessment, Routledge, 2006 ISBN:978-1-135-88034-7.
    • Curry, Patrick, "Earth", pp. 138–139.
    • Garbowski, Christopher, "Middle-earth", pp. 422–428.
    • Nagy, Gergely, "Silmarillion, The", pp. 608–612.
  • Kane, Douglas Charles, Arda Reconstructed: The Creation of the Published Silmarillion, Associated University Presses, 2009 ISBN:978-0-9801496-3-0.
  • Tolkien, C. (ed); Tolkien, J.R.R., "Ainulindalë", Morgoth's Ring, HarperCollins, 2021 ISBN:978-0-00-836369-7.
  • Whittingham, Elizabeth A., The Evolution of Tolkien's Mythology, McFarland, 2008 ISBN:978-0-7864-3281-3.

Primary sources

  • Tolkien, J.R.R.; Carpenter, H. (ed) The Letters of J. R. R. Tolkien, Houghton Mifflin, 1981 ISBN:978-0-395-31555-2.
  • Tolkien, J.R.R.; Tolkien, C. (ed), "Ainulindalë", Morgoth's Ring, HarperCollins, 2021 ISBN:978-0-00-836369-7.
  • Tolkien, J.R.R.; Tolkien, C. (ed), Morgoth's Ring, HarperCollins, 2021 ISBN:978-0-00-836369-7.
  • Tolkien, J.R.R.; Tolkien, C. (ed), The Book of Lost Tales, vol. 1, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2012 ISBN:978-0-547-95208-6.
  • Tolkien, J.R.R.; Tolkien, C. (ed), The Lost Road and Other Writings, Houghton Mifflin, 1987 ISBN:978-0-395-45519-7.
  • Tolkien, J.R.R.; Tolkien, C. (ed), The Silmarillion, Unwin Paperbacks, 1983 ISBN 978-0-04-823230-4.

Further reading