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{{short description|Humanoid race from J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth}}
{{Cleanup|date=January 2008}}
{{Middle-earth elves}}
{{good article}}
{{Use British English|date=May 2021}}
In [[J. R. R. Tolkien]]'s [[legendarium]], an '''Elf''' is an individual member of one of the races that inhabit the lands of [[Arda]]. They appear in ''[[The Hobbit]]'' and in ''[[The Lord of the Rings]]'', but their complex history is described in full only in ''[[The Silmarillion]]'', edited and published after Tolkien's death. More details about them are given in the author's other writings edited and published since then, such as ''[[Unfinished Tales]]'' and ''[[The History of Middle-earth]]''. ''The History of Middle-earth'' also reveals their textual and conceptual history, as Tolkien had been writing about Elves long before ''The Hobbit'' was published.
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2021}}
In [[J. R. R. Tolkien]]'s writings, '''Elves''' are the first fictional race to appear in [[Middle-earth]]. Unlike [[Man (Middle-earth)|Men]] and [[Dwarf (Middle-earth)|Dwarves]], Elves [[Death and immortality in Middle-earth|do not die]] of disease or old age. Should they die in battle or of grief, their souls go to the [[Halls of Mandos]] in [[Aman (J. R. R. Tolkien)|Aman]]. After a long life in Middle-earth, Elves yearn for the [[Earthly Paradise]] of [[Valinor]], and can sail there from the Grey Havens. They feature in ''[[The Hobbit]]'' and ''[[The Lord of the Rings]]''. Their history is described in detail in ''[[The Silmarillion]]''.


Tolkien derived Elves from mentions in the ancient poetry and languages of Northern Europe, especially [[Old English]]. These suggested to him that Elves were large, dangerous, beautiful, lived in wild natural places, and practised archery. He invented languages for the Elves, including [[Sindarin]] and [[Quenya]].
==Development==
Traditional [[Fairy painting | Victorian dancing fairies]] and elves<ref> Fimi, Dimitra , Working With English: Medieval and Modern Language, Literature and Drama, ''Come sing ye light fairy things tripping so gay: Victorian Fairies and the Early Work of J. R. R. Tolkien'', [www.nottingham.ac.uk/english/working_with_english/Fimi_31_05_06.pdf] retrieved 11/01/08
</ref> appear in much of Tolkien's early poetry in part due to of the influence of a production of J.M. Barrie's ''[[Peter Pan]]'' in [[Birmingham]] in 1910,<ref name="Carpenter">{{ME-ref|Biography}}</ref> and his familiarity with the work of [[Catholic]] mystic poet, [[Francis Thompson]].<ref name="Carpenter" />


Tolkien-style Elves have become a [[Elves_in_fiction|staple of fantasy literature]]. They have appeared, too, in film and role-playing game adaptations of Tolkien's works.
As a philologist, Tolkiens interest in languages led him to invent several of his own as a pastime. In considering the nature of who might speak these languages, and what stories they might tell, Tolkien again turned to the concept of elves.<ref name="Carpenter"/>


== Origins ==
In the earliest forms of the stories which provide context for the Elvish languages,''[[The Book of Lost Tales]]'' Tolkien develops a theme that the dimunitive fairy-like race of elves had actually once been a great and mighty people, and as Men took over the world, these Elves had "diminished".<ref>{{ME-ref|bolt}}</ref><ref>{{ME-ref|bolt2}}</ref><ref name="Fimi">[http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2386/is_2_117/ai_n16676591 http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2386/is_2_117/ai_n16676591]Fimi,Dimitra, "Mad" Elves and "elusive beauty": some Celtic strands of Tolkien's mythology, Folklore, Volume 117, Issue [[2 August]] [[2006]] , pages 156 - 170 </ref>. This theme resurfaces in the much later ''[[The Lord of the Rings]]'' in the dialogue of [[Galadriel]].<ref>T.A. Shippey: ''Tolkien, Author of the Century'' HarperCollins, 2000, p.211</ref>


{{further|Elf}}
These greater Elves are based on [[Elf|those in Northern European mythologies]],<ref>{{cite book |last = Shippey |first = T.A. |authorlink = Tom Shippey |title = The Road to Middle-earth |publisher = HarperCollins Publishers |date=2005 [1982] |edition = 3rd ed. |isbn = 0-261-10275-3}}</ref> especially the god-like and human-sized ''[[Light elf|Ljósálfar]]'' of the Norse and some of the stories are directly inspired by [[Celtic mythology]],<ref name="Fimi"/>, the "Flight of The Noldoli (later [[Noldor]])" is directly based on the [[Tuatha Dé Danann]] and [[Lebor Gabála Érenn]]. The [[Elvish language]] [[Sindarin]] has "a linguistic character very like (though not identical with) [[Welsh language|British-Welsh]] ... because it seems to fit the rather 'Celtic' type of legends and stories told of its speakers".<ref>{{ME-ref|letters|#144}}</ref> Tolkien's later comments regarding his distaste for Celtic legends<ref>{{ME-ref|letters|#19}}</ref> are more a product of his Anglophilia than a commentary on the texts themselves or their influence on his writing.<ref name="Fimi"/>


=== Icelandic folklore ===
Tolkien's Elves are also considered to be inspired by [[Catholic]] theology - as representing the state of Men in Eden who have not yet "[[Fall of Man|fallen]]" - similar to humans but taller, fairer and wiser, with greater spiritual powers, keener senses, and a closer empathy with nature. Jonathan Lindsell is often said to represent the archetypal form of the elf. Tolkien wrote of them - "They are made by man in his own image and likeness; but freed from those limitations which he feels most to press upon him. They are immortal, and their will is directly effective for the achievement of imagination and desire."<ref name="Carpenter"/>


The framework for [[J. R. R. Tolkien]]'s conception of his Elves, and many points of detail in his portrayal of them, is thought by Haukur Þorgeirsson to have come from the survey of folklore and early modern scholarship about elves (''álfar'') in Icelandic tradition in the introduction to ''[https://is.m.wikisource.org/wiki/%C3%8Dslenzkar_%C3%BEj%C3%B3%C3%B0s%C3%B6gur_og_%C3%A6fint%C3%BDri Íslenzkar þjóðsögur og æfintýri]'' ('Icelandic legends and fairy tales'). It covered stories from the 17th century onwards, noting that elves are the firstborn race;{{efn|In its case, the other two races are the sea elves (mermen) and the Jüflings (of rocks and hills).<ref name="Þorgeirsson 2023"/>}} that they could marry humans; and that they lack an immortal soul.<ref name="Þorgeirsson 2023">{{cite journal |last=Þorgeirsson |first=Haukur |title=J. R. R. Tolkien and the Ethnography of the Elves |journal=Notes and Queries |volume =70 |issue =1 |date=March 2023 |pages=6–7 |doi=10.1093/notesj/gjad007 }}</ref>
==History==
===Awakening===
{{main|Awakening of the Elves}}
The Elves awoke during the [[Years of the Trees]] in the [[First Age]] on the shores of Lake [[Cuiviénen]] under the starlit sky, as [[Middle-earth]] lay in darkness by then. There they were discovered by the [[Vala (Middle-earth)|Vala]] [[Oromë]], who brought the tidings of their awakening to [[Valinor]].


=== Germanic word ===
''The Silmarillion'' states that [[Melkor]], the Dark Lord, had already captured some wandering Elves, and twisted and mutilated them until they became the [[Orc (Middle-earth)|Orcs]]. However, Tolkien ultimately became uncomfortable with this Elvish origin, and devised different theories about the [[Orc (Middle-earth)#The origin of Orcs|origin of Orcs]].<ref name = "morgoth's ring1">{{me-ref|mr|"Myths Transformed"}}</ref>


The modern English word ''[[Elf]]'' derives from the [[Old English]] word ''[[Elf#Old English|ælf]]'' (with cognates in all other [[Germanic languages]]).<ref name="Shippey 2005 etymology">{{harvnb|Shippey|2005|pp=66–74}}</ref> Numerous types of elves appear in [[Germanic mythology]]; the West Germanic concept appears to have come to differ from the Scandinavian notion in the early Middle Ages, and the [[Anglo-Saxon]] concept diverged even further, possibly under [[Celtic mythology|Celtic]] influence.<ref name="Simek 1972">{{cite book |last1=Simek |first1=Rudolf |author-link=Rudolf Simek |year=2007 |last2=Hall |first2=Angela (trans.) |title=Dictionary of Northern Mythology |pages=7–8, 73–74 |publisher=[[Boydell & Brewer|D.S. Brewer]] |isbn=978-0-85991-513-7}}</ref> [[J. R. R. Tolkien]] made it clear in a letter that his Elves differed from those "of the better known lore"<ref group=T>{{harvnb|Carpenter|2023|loc=#25, to the editor of ''[[The Observer]]'', printed 20 February 1938 }}</ref> of [[Scandinavian mythology]].<ref>{{ME-ref|Solopova|p. 26}}</ref>
===Sundering===
{{main|Sundering of the Elves}}
[[Image:Sundering of the Elves.png||thumb|400px|The Sundering of the Elves as perceived after the Exile of the Noldor]]
The Valar decided to summon the Elves to Valinor rather than leaving them dwelling in place where they were first awakened, near the Cuiviénen lake in the eastern extremity of Middle-earth. They sent Oromë, who took [[Ingwë]], [[Finwë]] and [[Elwë]] as ambassadors to Valinor.


=== Halfway beings ===
Returning to Middle-earth, Ingwë, Finwë and Elwë convinced a great host to take the journey to Valinor. Not all Elves accepted the summons though, and those who did not became known as the '''[[Avari]]''', ''The Unwilling''.


The Tolkien scholar [[Tom Shippey]] notes that one [[Middle English]] source which he presumes Tolkien must have read, the ''[[South English Legendary]]'' from c. 1250, describes elves much as Tolkien does:<ref name="Shippey 2005 Legendary"/>
The others were called '''Eldar''', ''the People of the Stars'' by Oromë, and they took Ingwë, Finwë and Elwë as their leaders, and became respectively the [[Vanyar]], [[Noldor]] and [[Teleri]]. On their journey, some of the Teleri feared the [[Misty Mountains]] and dared not cross them. They turned back and stayed in the vales of the [[Anduin]], and became the [[Nandor (Middle-earth)|Nandor]]; these were led by Lenwë.


{| class="wikitable" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; border: none;"
Oromë led the others over the Misty Mountains and [[Ered Lindon]] into [[Beleriand]]. There Elwë became lost, and the Teleri stayed behind looking for him. The Vanyar and the Noldor moved onto a floating island that was moved by [[Ulmo]] to Valinor.
|-
! ''[[South English Legendary]]''<br/>"St Michael" 253-258 !! Modern English
|-
| ''And ofte in fourme of wommane : In many derne weye<br/>grete compaygnie mon i-seoth of heom : boþe hoppie and pleiƺe,<br/>Þat Eluene beoth i-cleopede : and ofte heo comiez to toune,<br/>And bi daye muche in wodes heo beoth : and bi niƺte ope heiƺe dounes.<br/>Þat beoth þe wrechche gostes : Þat out of heuene weren i-nome,<br/>And manie of heom a-domesday : Ʒeot schullen to reste come.''<ref name="Horstmann 1887">{{cite book |editor1-last=Horstmann |editor1-first=C. |chapter=St Michael |title=The Early South English Legendary |date=1887 |publisher=Trubner/Early English Text Society |page=307 |location=lines 253-258 |isbn=9780527000844 |url=https://archive.org/details/earlysouthengli00librgoog/page/n360/mode/2up}}</ref>
| And often shaped like women: On many secret paths<br/>men see great numbers of them: dancing and sporting.<br/>These are called Elves: and often they come to town<br/>and by day they are much in the woods: by night up on the high [[Downland|downs]].<br/>Those are the wretched spirits: that were taken out of [[Heaven]],<br/>And at [[Judgement Day|Doomsday]] many of them shall come to rest.
|}


Some of Tolkien's Elves are in the "undying lands" of [[Valinor]], home of the godlike [[Valar]], while others are in Middle-earth. The Elf-queen [[Galadriel]] indeed has been expelled from Valinor, much like the fallen [[Melkor]], though she is clearly good, and much like an angel. Similarly, some of the ''Legendary''{{'}}s ''Eluene'' are on Earth, others in the "[[Earthly Paradise]]". So, did they have souls, Shippey asks? Since they could not leave the world, the answer was no; but given that they didn't disappear completely on death, the answer had to have been yes. In Shippey's view, the ''Silmarillion'' resolved the Middle English puzzle, letting Elves go not to Heaven but to the halfway house of the [[Halls of Mandos]] on Valinor.<ref name="Shippey 2005 Legendary"/>
After years, Ulmo returned to Beleriand to seek out the remaining Teleri. As Elwë had not yet been found, a great part of the Teleri took his brother [[Olwë]] as their leader and were ferried to Valinor. Some Teleri stayed behind though, still looking for Elwë, and others stayed on the shores, being called by [[Ossë]]. They took [[Círdan]] as their leader and became the '''[[Falathrim]]'''. All Teleri who stayed in Beleriand later became known as the '''[[Sindar]]'''.


===Exile===
=== Elf or fairy ===
{{main|Exiles (Middle-earth)}}
In Valinor, Fëanor, son of Finwë, and the greatest of the Noldor, created the [[Silmaril]]s in which he stored a part of the light of the [[Two Trees]] that were lighting Valinor. After three ages in the Halls of Mandos, Melkor was released. He spread his evil, and eventually killed Finwë and stole the Silmarils. Fëanor then named him ''Morgoth'' ([[Quenya|Q]]. ''The Black Enemy''). Fëanor and his seven [[sons of Fëanor|sons]] then [[Oath of Fëanor|swore]] to take the Silmarils back, and led a large army of the Noldor to Beleriand.


[[File:Edwin Landseer - Scene from A Midsummer Night's Dream. Titania and Bottom - Google Art Project.jpg|thumb|[[Victorian era]] [[Fairy painting]]: [[Edwin Landseer]], ''[[Scene from A Midsummer Night's Dream|Scene from A Midsummer Night's Dream. Titania and Bottom]]'', 1851]]
===Wars of Beleriand===
{{main|War of Beleriand}}
In Beleriand, Elwë was eventually found, and married [[Melian]] the [[Maia (Middle-earth)|Maia]]. He became the overlord of Beleriand, naming himself Thingol ([[Sindarin|S]]. ''Grey-cloak''). After the [[First Battle of Beleriand]], during the first rising of the Moon, the Noldor arrived in Beleriand. They laid a [[Siege of Angband|siege]] around [[Angband (Middle-earth)|Angband]] (Morgoth's fortress), but were eventually defeated.


By the late 19th century, the term 'fairy' had been taken up as a [[utopian]] theme, and was used to critique social and religious values, a tradition which Tolkien and [[T. H. White]] continued.<ref>{{cite book |last=Zipes |first=Jack |title=Victorian fairy tales : the revolt of the fairies and elves |year=1989 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0-415-90140-6 |page=xxiv |edition=Paperback}}</ref> One of the last of the [[Fairy painting#Victorian fairy painting|Victorian Fairy-painting]]s, ''The Piper of Dreams'' by [[Estella Canziani]], sold 250,000 copies and was well known within the trenches of World War I where Tolkien saw active service. Illustrated posters of [[Robert Louis Stevenson]]'s poem ''Land of Nod'' had been sent out by a philanthropist to brighten servicemen's quarters, and Faery was used in other contexts as an image of "[[Merry England|Old England]]" to inspire patriotism.<ref>{{ME-ref|Garth|p. 78}}</ref> By 1915, when Tolkien was writing his first elven poems, the words'' elf'', ''fairy'' and ''gnome'' had many divergent and contradictory associations. Tolkien had been gently warned against the term 'fairy', which [[John Garth (author)|John Garth]] supposes may have been due to its growing association with [[homosexuality]], but Tolkien continued to use it.<ref>{{ME-ref|Garth|p. 76}}</ref> According to [[Marjorie Burns]], Tolkien eventually but hesitantly chose the term ''elf'' over ''fairy''. In his 1939 essay ''[[On Fairy-Stories]]'', Tolkien wrote that "English words such as ''elf'' have long been influenced by French (from which ''fay'' and ''faërie'', ''fairy'' are derived); but in later times, through their use in translation, ''fairy'' and ''elf'' have acquired much of the atmosphere of German, Scandinavian, and Celtic tales, and many characteristics of the ''[[Huldufólk|huldu-fólk]]'', the ''[[Aos Sí|daoine-sithe]]'', and the ''[[Tylwyth Teg|tylwyth-teg]]''."<ref>{{cite book |last=Burns |first=Marjorie |author-link=Marjorie Burns |title=Perilous realms: Celtic and Norse in Tolkien's Middle-earth |title-link=Perilous Realms |publisher=[[University of Toronto Press]] |year=2005 |isbn=0-8020-3806-9 |pages=22–23}}</ref>
Then [[Eärendil the Mariner]], a [[half-elven|half-elf]] from the [[House of Finwë]], sailed to Valinor to ask the Valar for help. Then the Ban of the Noldor was lifted, and the Valar started the [[War of Wrath]], in which Morgoth was finally overcome.


{{anchor|Names}}
===Second and Third Age===
After the War of Wrath, the Valar tried to summon the Elves back to Valinor. Many complied, but some stayed. During the [[Second Age]] they founded the Realms of [[Lindon]], [[Eregion]] and [[Mirkwood]]. [[Sauron]], Morgoth’s former servant, made war upon them, but with the aid of the [[Númenóreans]] they defeated him.


=== Reconciling multiple traditions ===
During the Second and [[Third Age]] they held some protected realms with the aid of the [[Rings of Power]], but after the [[War of the Ring]] they waned further, and most Elves left Middle-earth for Valinor. Tolkien's published writings give somewhat contradictory hints as to what happened to the Elves of Middle-earth after the [[One Ring]] was destroyed at the end of the [[Third Age]].


{{further|Philology and Middle-earth|Elf#Proper names}}
After the destruction of the [[One Ring]], the power of the [[Three Rings]] of the Elves would also end and the Age of Men would begin. Elves that remained in Middle-earth were doomed to a slow decline until, in the words of [[Galadriel]], they faded and became a "rustic folk of dell and cave," and were greatly diminished from their ancient power and nobility. While the power of the remaining [[Noldor]] would be immediately lessened, the "fading" of all Elvenkind was a phenomenon that would play out over hundreds and even thousands of years; until, in fact, our own times, when occasional glimpses of rustic Elves would fuel our folktales and fantasies.


[[File:Beowulf eotenas ylfe orcneas.jpg|thumb|upright=2|''[[Beowulf]]''{{'}}s ''eotenas [ond] ylfe [ond] orcneas'', "ogres [and] elves [and] devil-corpses", inspiring Tolkien to create [[orc]]s, elves, and other races]]
There are many references in ''The Lord of the Rings'' to the continued existence of Elves in Middle-earth during the early years of the [[Fourth Age]]. [[Elladan]] and [[Elrohir]], the sons of Elrond, do not accompany their father when the White Ship bearing the [[Ring-bearer]] and the chief Noldorin leaders sails from the [[Grey Havens]] to [[Valinor]]; they are said to have remained in [[Lindon]] for a time. Celeborn is said (in Appendix A) to have added most of southern [[Mirkwood]] to the realm of [[Lórien]] at the end of the Third Age, but elsewhere Tolkien wrote that Celeborn dwelt for a while in Lindon before at last leaving Middle-earth for Valinor.


Tolkien, a [[philologist]], knew of the many seemingly contradictory traditions about elves. The Old English ''[[Beowulf]]''-poet spoke of the strange ''[[Jötunn|eotenas]] ond ylfe ond [[orc]]néas'', "[[Ent|ettens]] [giants] and elves and demon-corpses",<ref name="Shippey 2005 etymology"/> a grouping which Shippey calls "a very stern view of all non-human and un-Christian species".<ref name="Shippey 2005 Legendary">{{harvnb|Shippey|2005|pp=270–273}}</ref> The Middle English ''[[Sir Gawain]]'' meets a green axe-wielding giant, an ''aluisch mon'' ("elvish man", translated by Shippey as "uncanny creature").<ref name="Shippey 2005 etymology"/> Christian sources from Iceland knew and disapproved of the tradition of offering [[sacrifice]]s to the elves, [[álfablót|''álfa-blót'']].<ref name="Shippey 2005 etymology"/>
Tolkien also wrote that Elves moved to Ithilien during King [[Elessar]]'s reign, and assisted in the rebuilding of Gondor. They primarily resided in southern Ithilien, along the shores of the Anduin. It is also implied that Elves continued to dwell at the Grey Havens, at least for a certain period. Tolkien states that [[Círdan]] did not sail with [[Elrond]], Galadriel, and the others at the end of ''The Lord of the Rings'', and [[Sam Gamgee]] sailed from the Havens decades afterwards, so it would seem that at least some Elves remained in [[Mithlond]] at that time. Círdan would supposedly leave on the last ship ever to leave the havens. [[Legolas]] also sailed to Valinor after Elessar's death, and although the reference to this in ''The Lord of the Rings'' states that it was Legolas himself that built the ship, it seems unlikely that any Wood-Elf from Mirkwood could have done so without the assistance of Círdan's folk, whom Tolkien elsewhere said were the only Elves remaining at the end of the Third Age with the skill to build the great ships that sailed from Middle-earth to the Blessed Realm.

[[File:Elf-Arrows.JPG|thumb|upright|left|[[Elf-shot]], associated with "[[elf arrow]]s", [[neolithic]] flint arrowheads sometimes used as [[amulet]]s,<ref>Electric Scotland. "Scottish Charms and Amulets" [http://www.electricscotland.com/history/articles/charms6.htm Elf-Arrows]</ref> was one of the hints Tolkien used to create his Elves.<ref name="Shippey 2005 etymology"/>]]

Elves were directly dangerous, too: the medical condition "[[elf-shot]]", described in the spell ''Gif hors ofscoten sie'', "if a horse is elf-shot", meaning some kind of internal injury,<ref name="Hall 2005">{{cite journal |last=Hall |first=Alaric |author-link=Alaric Hall |year=2005 |title=Calling the shots: the Old English remedy ''gif hors ofscoten sie'' and Anglo-Saxon 'elf-shot' |journal=Neuphilologische Mitteilungen: Bulletin of the Modern Language Society |volume=106 |issue=2 |pages=195–209 |jstor=43344130}}</ref> was associated both with [[neolithic]] flint arrowheads and the temptations of the devil. Tolkien takes "elf-shot" as a hint to make his elves skilful in archery.<ref name="Shippey 2005 etymology"/> Another danger was ''wæterælfádl'', "[[For Water-Elf Disease|water-elf disease]]", perhaps meaning [[dropsy]],<ref name="Shippey 2005 etymology"/> while a third condition was ''ælfsogoða'', "elf-pain",<ref name="Hall 2005"/> glossed by Shippey as "lunacy".<ref name="Shippey 2005 etymology"/> All the same, an Icelandic woman could be ''frið sem álfkona'', "fair as an elf-woman", while the Anglo-Saxons might call a very fair woman ''ælfscýne'', "elf-beautiful".<ref name="Shippey 2005 etymology"/> Some aspects can readily be reconciled, Shippey writes, since "Beauty is itself dangerous".<ref name="Shippey 2005 etymology"/> But there is more: Tolkien brought in the Old English usage of descriptions like ''wuduælfen'' "wood-elf, [[dryad]]", ''wæterælfen'' "water-elf", and ''sǣælfen'' "sea-elf, [[naiad]]", giving his elves strong links with wild nature.<ref name="Shippey 2005 etymology"/><ref name="Clark Hall 2002">{{cite book |last=Clark Hall |first=J. R. |author-link=John Richard Clark Hall |title=A Concise Anglo-Saxon Dictionary |date=2002 |orig-year=1894 |publisher=University of Toronto Press |edition=4th |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ufdQAQAAMAAJ |pages=286, 395, 423}}</ref> Yet another strand of legend holds that [[Elfland]], as in ''[[Elvehøj]]'' ("Elf Hill") and other traditional stories, is dangerous to mortals because [[Time in J. R. R. Tolkien's fiction|time there is distorted]], as in Tolkien's [[Lothlórien]]. Shippey comments that it is a strength of Tolkien's "re-creations", his imagined worlds, that they incorporate all the available evidence to create a [[Impression of depth in The Lord of the Rings|many-layered impression of depth]], making use of "both good and bad sides of popular story; the sense of inquiry, prejudice, hearsay and conflicting opinion".<ref name="Shippey 2005 etymology"/>

Shippey suggests that the "fusion or kindling-point" of Tolkien's thinking about elves came from the Middle English [[Breton lai|lay]] ''[[Sir Orfeo]]'', [[Tolkien and the classical world|which transposes the classical myth]] of [[Orpheus and Eurydice]] into a wild and wooded Elfland, and makes the quest successful. In Tolkien's translation the elves appear and disappear: "the king of Faerie with his rout / came hunting in the woods about / with blowing far and crying dim, and barking hounds that were with him; yet never a beast they took nor slew, and where they went he never knew". Shippey comments that Tolkien took many suggestions from this passage, including the horns and the hunt of the Elves in [[Mirkwood]]; the proud but honourable Elf-king; and the placing of his elves in wild nature. Tolkien might only have had broken fragments to work on, but, Shippey writes, the more one explores how Tolkien used the ancient texts, the more one sees "how easy it was for him to feel that a consistency and a sense lay beneath the chaotic ruin of the old poetry of the North".<ref name="Shippey 2005 etymology"/>

Tolkien's [[Sundering of the Elves]] allowed him to explain the existence of [[Norse mythology]]'s Light Elves, who live in ''Alfheim'' ("Elfhome") and correspond to his Calaquendi, and Dark Elves, who live underground in ''Svartalfheim'' ("Black Elfhome") and whom he "rehabilitates" as his Moriquendi, the Elves who never went to see the light of the [[Two Trees of Valinor]].<ref name="Shippey 2005 Light and Dark">{{harvnb|Shippey|2005|pp=282–284}}</ref>

{| class="wikitable" style="margin: 1em auto;"
|+ Tolkien's multiple medieval sources for Elves<ref name="Shippey 2005 etymology"/>
|-
! Medieval source !! Term !! Idea
|-
| ''[[Beowulf]]'' || ''[[Jötunn|eotenas]] ond ylfe ond [[orc]]néas'': "ettens, elves, and devil-corpses" || Elves are strong and dangerous.
|-
| ''[[Sir Gawain and the Green Knight]]'' || The Green Knight is an ''aluisch mon'': "elvish man, uncanny creature" || Elves have strange powers.
|-
| [[Incantation|Magical spell]] || ''ofscoten'': "[[Elfshot|elf-shot]]" || Elves are [[Archery|archer]]s.
|-
| Icelandic and<br/>[[Old English]] usage || ''frið sem álfkona'': "fair as an elf-woman"<br/>''ælfscýne'': "elf-beautiful" || Elves are beautiful.
|-
| Old English usage || ''wuduælfen'', ''wæterælfen'', ''sǣælfen'': "[[dryad]]s, water-elves, [[naiad]]s" || Elves are strongly connected to nature.
|-
| Scandinavian ballad ''[[Elvehøj]]'' || Mortal visitors to Elfland are in danger, as time seems different there. || [[Time in J. R. R. Tolkien's fiction|Time is distorted in Elfland]].
|-
| [[Norse mythology]] || [[Dökkálfar and Ljósálfar|''Dökkálfar'', ''Ljósálfar'']]: "dark elves, light elves" || [[Sundering of the Elves|The Elvish peoples are sundered]] into multiple groups.<ref name="Shippey 2005 Light and Dark"/>
|}

== Development ==

Tolkien developed his conception of elves over the years, from his earliest writings through to ''The Hobbit'', ''The Silmarillion'', and ''The Lord of the Rings''.<ref name="Eden 2013">{{cite encyclopedia |last=Eden |first=Bradford Lee |author-link=Bradford Lee Eden |editor-last=Drout |editor-first=Michael D. C. |editor-link=Michael D. C. Drout |title=Elves |encyclopedia=[[The J. R. R. Tolkien Encyclopedia]] |year=2013 |orig-year=2007 |publisher=[[Routledge]] |isbn=978-0-415-86511-1 |pages=150–152}}</ref>

=== Early writings ===

Traditional [[Fairy painting|Victorian dancing fairies and elves]] appear in much of Tolkien's early poetry,<ref name="bolt1" group=T>{{harvnb|Tolkien|1984}}</ref> and have influence upon his later works,<ref>[[Dimitra Fimi|Fimi, Dimitra]]. [http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/english/working_with_english/Fimi_31_05_06.pdf "Come sing ye light fairy things tripping so gay: Victorian Fairies and the Early Work of J. R. R. Tolkien"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090731102254/http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/english/working_with_english/Fimi_31_05_06.pdf |date=31 July 2009}}. ''Working With English: Medieval and Modern Language, Literature and Drama''. Retrieved 11/01/08</ref> in part due to the influence of a production of [[J. M. Barrie]]'s ''[[Peter Pan]]'' in [[Birmingham]] in 1910,<ref name="Carpenter">{{ME-ref|Biography}}</ref> and his familiarity with the work of [[Catholic]] mystic poet, [[Francis Thompson]]<ref name="Carpenter"/> which Tolkien had acquired in 1914.<ref name="bolt1" group=T/>

{{quote|
O! I hear the tiny horns <br/>
Of enchanted [[leprechaun]]s <br/>
And the padded feet of many [[gnome]]s a-coming!
|J. R. R. Tolkien, ''[[Goblin Feet]]'', 1915
}}

=== ''The Book of Lost Tales'' (c. 1917–1927) ===

In his ''[[The Book of Lost Tales]]'', Tolkien develops a theme that the diminutive fairy-like race of Elves had once been a great and mighty people, and that as Men took over the world, these Elves had "diminished"<ref name="bolt1" group=T/><ref group=T>{{ME-ref|bolt2}}</ref><ref name="Fimi">{{cite journal |last=Fimi |first=Dimitra |author-link=Dimitra Fimi |s2cid=162292626 |title="Mad" Elves and "elusive beauty": some Celtic strands of Tolkien's mythology |journal=Folklore |volume=117 | issue=2 |date=August 2006 |pages= 156–170 |doi=10.1080/00155870600707847}}</ref> themselves. This theme is shared especially by the god-like and human-sized ''[[Dökkálfar and Ljósálfar|Ljósálfar]]'' of [[Norse mythology]], and medieval works such as ''Sir Orfeo'', the Welsh ''[[Mabinogion]]'', Arthurian romances and the legends of the ''[[Tuatha Dé Danann]]''.<ref name="Anderson1" group=T>{{harvnb|Tolkien|1937|p=120}}</ref>

The name ''Inwe'' or ''Ingwë'' (in the first draft ''[[Yngvi|Ing]]''), given by Tolkien to the eldest of the elves and his clan,<ref name="Lost Road" group=T>{{harvnb|Tolkien|1987|p=171, ''[[The Lhammas]]''}}</ref> is similar to the name of the god [[Freyr|Ingwi-Freyr]] in Norse mythology, a god who is gifted the elf-world [[Álfheimr]]. Terry Gunnell finds the relationship between beautiful ships and the Elves reminiscent of the god [[Njörðr]] and the god Freyr's ship [[Skíðblaðnir]].<ref name="Articles">{{cite web |last=Gunnell |first=Terry |title=Tivar in a Timeless Land: Tolkien's Elves |year=2011 |url=http://de-vagaesemhybrazil.blogspot.com/2011/02/tivar-in-timeless-land-tolkiens-elves.html |publisher=University of Iceland}}</ref> He also retains the usage of the French derived term "fairy" for the same creatures.<ref>{{cite book |last=Burns |first=Marjorie |author-link=Marjorie Burns |title=Perilous Realms: Celtic and Norse in Tolkien's Middle-earth |year=2005 |publisher=[[University of Toronto Press]] |isbn=978-0-8020-3806-7 |page=23}}</ref>

The larger Elves are inspired by [[Christianity in Middle-earth|Tolkien's personal Catholic theology]], representing the state of Men in [[Garden of Eden|Eden]] who have not yet [[Fall of Man|fallen]], like humans but fairer and wiser, with greater spiritual powers, keener senses, and a closer empathy with nature. Tolkien wrote of them: "They are made by man in his own image and likeness; but freed from those limitations which he feels most to press upon him. They are immortal, and their will is directly effective for the achievement of imagination and desire."<ref name="Carpenter"/>

In ''The Book of Lost Tales'', Tolkien includes both more serious "medieval" elves such as [[Fëanor]] and Turgon alongside frivolous, [[Jacobean era|Jacobean]] elves such as the [[Solosimpi]] and [[Lúthien|Tinúviel]].<ref name="Anderson1" group=T/>
Alongside the idea of the greater Elves, Tolkien toyed with the idea of children visiting Valinor, the island-homeland of the Elves in their sleep. Elves would also visit children at night and comfort them if they had been chided or were upset. This was abandoned in Tolkien's later writing.<ref name="BoLT" group=T>{{harvnb|Tolkien|1984<!--BoLT1-->|p=31, ''The Cottage of Lost Play''}}</ref>

=== ''The Hobbit'' (c. 1930–1937) ===

[[Douglas A. Anderson|Douglas Anderson]] shows that in ''[[The Hobbit]]'', Tolkien again includes both the more serious 'medieval' type of elves, such as [[Elrond]] and the wood-elf king, [[Thranduil]], and frivolous elves, such as the elvish guards at [[Rivendell]].<ref name="Anderson1" group=T/>

=== ''The Quenta Silmarillion'' (c. 1937) ===

{{further|Tolkien and the Celtic}}

In 1937, having had his manuscript for ''The Silmarillion'' rejected by a publisher who disparaged all the "eye-splitting [[Celtic languages|Celtic]] names" that Tolkien had given his Elves, Tolkien denied the names had a Celtic origin:<ref name="Letter 26" group=T/>

{{quote|Needless to say they are not Celtic! Neither are the tales. I do know Celtic things (many in their original languages Irish and Welsh), and feel for them a certain distaste: largely for their fundamental unreason. They have bright colour, but are like a broken stained glass window reassembled without design. They are in fact "mad" as your reader says – but I don't believe I am.<ref name="Letter 26" group=T>{{harvnb|Carpenter|2023|loc=#26 to [[Stanley Unwin (publisher)|Stanley Unwin]], 4 March 1938 }}</ref>}}

[[Dimitra Fimi]] proposes that these comments are a product of his Anglophilia rather than a commentary on the texts themselves or their actual influence on his writing, and cites evidence to this effect in her essay "'Mad' Elves and 'elusive beauty': some Celtic strands of Tolkien's mythology".<ref name="Fimi"/> Fimi proposes that some of the stories Tolkien wrote as elven history are directly influenced by [[Celts|Celtic]] mythology.<ref name="Fimi"/> For example, "Flight of The [[Noldor|Noldoli]]" she argues, is based on the ''Tuatha Dé Danann'' and ''[[Lebor Gabála Érenn]]'', and their migratory nature comes from early Irish/Celtic history.<ref name="Fimi"/> [[John Garth (author)|John Garth]] states that with the underground enslavement of the Noldoli to Melkor, Tolkien was essentially rewriting Irish myth regarding the Tuatha Dé Danann into a [[Christian eschatology]].<ref>{{ME-ref|Garth|p. 222}}</ref>

=== ''The Lord of the Rings'' (c. 1937–1949) ===

{{Further|Guide to the Names in The Lord of the Rings}}

In ''The Lord of the Rings'' Tolkien [[Pseudotranslation in The Lord of the Rings|pretends to be merely the translator]] of [[Bilbo Baggins|Bilbo]] and [[Frodo]]'s memoirs, collectively known as the ''[[Red Book of Westmarch]]''. He says that those names and terms that appear in English are meant to be his purported translations from the [[Common Speech]].<ref group=T>{{harvnb|Tolkien|1955|loc=Appendix F}}</ref>

According to Shippey, the theme of diminishment from semi-divine Elf to diminutive Fairy resurfaces in ''[[The Lord of the Rings]]'' in the dialogue of Galadriel.<ref>{{cite book |first=T. A. |last=Shippey |author-link=Tom Shippey |title=[[J. R. R. Tolkien: Author of the Century]] | publisher=HarperCollins |year=2000| page=211}}</ref> "Yet if you succeed, then our power is diminished, and Lothlórien will fade, and the tides of Time will sweep it away. We must depart into the West, or dwindle to a rustic folk of dell and cave, slowly to forget and to be forgotten."<ref group=T>{{harvnb|Tolkien|1954a}} book 2, ch. 7 "The Mirror of Galadriel"</ref>

Writing in 1954, part way through proofreading ''The Lord of the Rings'', Tolkien claimed that the [[Elvish languages (Middle-earth)|Elvish language]] [[Sindarin]] had a character very like [[Welsh language|British-Welsh]] "because it seems to fit the rather 'Celtic' type of legends and stories told of its speakers".<ref name="letter_144" group=T>{{harvnb|Carpenter|2023|loc=#144 to [[Naomi Mitchison]], 25 April 1954 }}</ref> In the same letter, Tolkien goes on to say that the elves had very little in common with elves or fairies of Europe, and that they really represent men with greater artistic ability, beauty and a longer life span. In his writings, an Elven bloodline was the only real claim to 'nobility' that the Men of Middle-earth could have.<ref name="letter_144" group=T/> Tolkien wrote that the elves are primarily to blame for many of the ills of Middle-earth in ''The Lord of the Rings'', having independently created the [[Three Rings]] to stop their domains in mortal-lands from '[[Decline and fall in Middle-earth|fading]]' and attempting to prevent inevitable change and new growth.<ref name="Brin 2008">{{cite book |last=Brin |first=David |title=Through Stranger Eyes: Reviews, Introductions, Tributes & Iconoclastic Essays |year=2008 |publisher=Nimble Books |isbn=978-1-934840-39-9 |page=37}}</ref>

{{anchor|History}}

== Fictional history ==

{{main|The Silmarillion}}

===Awakening===
[[File:Elvish_Migrations_and_Kindreds.svg|thumb|upright=2|[[Arda (Middle-earth)|Arda]] in the [[First Age]], with the [[sundering of the Elves]]. The Elves awoke at Cuiviénen, on the Sea of Helcar (right) in Middle-earth, and many of them migrated westwards to [[Valinor]] in Aman, though some stopped in [[Beleriand]] (top), and others returned to Beleriand later.]]

The first Elves were awakened by [[Eru Ilúvatar]] near the bay of Cuiviénen during the [[Years of the Trees]]. This event marked the beginning of the [[First Age]]. They awoke under the starlit sky, as the Sun and Moon had yet to be created. The first Elves to awaken were three pairs: Imin ("First") and his wife Iminyë, Tata ("Second") and Tatië, and Enel ("Third") and Enelyë. They walked through the forests, finding other pairs of Elves, who became their folk. They lived by the rivers, and invented poetry and music in [[Middle-earth]]. Journeying further, they came across tall and dark-haired elves, the fathers of most of the Noldor. They invented many new words. Continuing their journey, they found elves singing without language, the ancestors of most of the Teleri.<ref name="WOTJ Quendi and Eldar" group=T>{{harvnb|Tolkien|1994|loc="Quendi and Eldar"}}</ref> The elves were discovered by the [[Vala (Middle-earth)|Vala]] [[Oromë]], who brought the news of their awakening to Valinor.<ref group=T>{{harvnb|Tolkien|1977}}, ch. 3 "Of the Coming of the Elves and the Captivity of Melkor"</ref>

{{anchor|Olwë}}

=== Sundering ===

{{main|Sundering of the Elves}}


The [[Valar]] decided to summon the Elves to Valinor rather than leaving them where they were first awakened, near the Cuiviénen lake in the eastern extremity of Middle-earth. They sent Oromë, who took Ingwë, [[Finwë]] and [[Elwë]] as ambassadors to Valinor. Returning to Middle-earth, Ingwë, Finwë and Elwë convinced many of the Elves to take the Great Journey (also called the Great March) to Valinor. Those who did not accept the summons became known as the Avari, ''The Unwilling''. The others were called Eldar, ''the People of the Stars'' by Oromë, and they took Ingwë, Finwë and Elwë as their leaders, and became respectively the Vanyar, [[Noldor]] and Teleri (who spoke Vanyarin Quenya, Noldorin Quenya, and Telerin, respectively). On their journey, some of the Teleri feared the [[Misty Mountains]] and dared not cross them. They turned back and stayed in the vales of the [[Anduin]], and, led by Lenwë, became the Nandor, who spoke Nandorin. Oromë led the others over the Misty Mountains and Ered Lindon into [[Beleriand]]. There Elwë became lost, and the Teleri stayed behind looking for him. The Vanyar and the Noldor moved onto a floating island, Tol Eressëa, that was moved by [[Ulmo]] to Valinor. After years, Ulmo returned to Beleriand to seek out the remaining Teleri. Without Elwë, many of the Teleri took his brother Olwë as their leader and were ferried to Valinor. Some Teleri stayed behind though, still looking for Elwë, and others stayed on the shores, being called by Ossë. They took '''Círdan''' as their leader and became the [[Falathrim]]. The Teleri who stayed in Beleriand later became known as the Sindar.<ref name="Dickerson 2013">{{cite encyclopedia |last=Dickerson |first=Matthew |author-link=Matthew Dickerson |editor-last=Drout |editor-first=Michael D. C. |editor-link=Michael D. C. Drout |title=Elves: Kindreds and Migrations |encyclopedia=[[The J. R. R. Tolkien Encyclopedia]] |year=2013 |orig-year=2007 |publisher=[[Routledge]] |isbn=978-0-415-86511-1 |pages=152–154}}</ref>
In "The Tale of Aragorn and Arwen" that is found in Appendix A, Tolkien depicts a Middle-earth where most Elves have already left. The majority of those who remained lived in Mirkwood, while a much smaller population was in [[Lindon]]. Aragorn speaks of the empty garden of Elrond in Rivendell. Most strikingly, after Elessar's voluntary death, [[Arwen]] flees to a Lórien that is depicted as wholly abandoned, and gives up her own spirit in its sad and silent confines.


[[Matthew Dickerson]] notes the "very complicated changes, with shifting meanings assigned to the same names" as Tolkien worked on his conception of the elves and their divisions and migrations. He states that the sundering of the elves allowed Tolkien, a professional [[philologist]], to develop two languages, distinct but related, Quenya for the Eldar and Sindarin for the Sindar, citing Tolkien's own statement that the stories were made to create a world for the languages, not the reverse. Dickerson cites the Tolkien scholar [[Tom Shippey]]'s suggestion that the "real root" of ''The Silmarillion'' lay in the linguistic relationship, complete with sound-changes and differences of semantics, between these two languages of the divided elves. Shippey writes, too, that the elves are separated not by colour, despite names like light and dark, but by history, including their migrations.<ref name="Dickerson 2013"/><ref>{{cite book |last=Shippey |first=Tom |author-link=Tom Shippey |title=[[J. R. R. Tolkien: Author of the Century]] |date=2001 |publisher=HarperCollins |isbn=978-0261-10401-3 |pages=228–231}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |first=Verlyn |last=Flieger |author-link=Verlyn Flieger |title=Splintered Light: Logos and Language in Tolkien's World |title-link=Splintered Light |edition=revised |year=2002 |publisher=[[Kent State University Press]] |isbn=978-0873387446 |page=71}}</ref>
==Life cycle==
{{Cleanup-section|date=June 2006}}
As told in ''[[The History of Middle-earth]]'' and in Tolkien's ''[[The Letters of J. R. R. Tolkien|Letters]]'', Elves had a different life cycle than Men. Most of the following information strictly refers only to the Eldar, as found in his essay '''''Laws and Customs among the Eldar''''', found in ''[[Morgoth's Ring]]''.


===Early life===
=== Exile ===
Elves are born about one year from their [[conception]]. The day of their conception is celebrated, not the actual [[birthday]] itself. Their minds develop quicker than their bodies; by their first year, they can speak, walk and even dance, and their quicker onset of mental maturity makes young Elves seem, to Men, older than they really are. Physical [[puberty]] comes in around their fiftieth to one hundredth year (by age fifty they reach their adult height), and by their first hundred years of life outside the womb all Elves are fully grown.<ref name = "laws">{{me-ref|mr|"Laws and Customs among the Eldar"}}</ref> Elven bodies slow down and stop aging physically, while human bodies do not.{{Fact|date=September 2007}}


In Valinor, Fëanor, son of Finwë, and the greatest of the Elves, created the [[Silmaril]]s in which he stored a part of the light of the [[Two Trees]] that were lighting Valinor.<ref group=T>{{harvnb|Tolkien|1977}}, ch. 7, "Of the Silmarils and the Unrest of the Noldor"</ref> After three ages in the Halls of Mandos, Melkor was released, feigning reform. He however spread his evil and started to poison the minds of the Elves against the Valar. Eventually he killed Finwë and stole the Silmarils. Fëanor then named him ''Morgoth'' (Sindarin: ''The Black Enemy''). Fëanor and his seven [[sons of Fëanor|sons]] then [[Oath of Fëanor|swore]] to take the Silmarils back, and led a large army of the Noldor to Beleriand.<ref name="Flight of the Noldor" group=T>{{harvnb|Tolkien|1977}}, ch. 9, "Of the Flight of the Noldor"</ref>
===Sexuality, marriage, and parenthood===


=== Wars of Beleriand ===
Elves marry freely and for love early in life. [[Monogamy]] is practised and [[adultery]] is unthinkable; they only marry once (Finwë, first High King of the Noldor, was an exception, as he remarried after his first wife died).<ref name="laws"/>


In Beleriand, Elwë was eventually found, and married Melian the [[Maia (Middle-earth)|Maia]]. He became the overlord of Beleriand, naming himself [[Thingol]] (Sindarin: ''Grey-cloak''). After the [[First Battle of Beleriand]], during the first rising of the Moon, the Noldor arrived in Beleriand.<ref name="Flight of the Noldor" group=T/> They laid a [[Siege of Angband|siege]] around Morgoth's fortress of [[Angband (Middle-earth)|Angband]], but were eventually defeated.<ref group=T>{{harvnb|Tolkien|1977}}, ch. 13, "Of the Return of the Noldor"</ref> The Elves never regained the upper hand, finally losing the hidden kingdoms [[Nargothrond]], [[Doriath (Middle-earth)|Doriath]], and [[Gondolin]] near the culmination of the war.<ref group=T>{{harvnb|Tolkien|1977}}, ch. 22, "Of the Ruin of Doriath"</ref><ref group=T>{{harvnb|Tolkien|1977}}, ch. 23, "Of Tuor and the Fall of Gondolin"</ref> When the Elves had been forced to the furthest southern reaches of Beleriand, [[Eärendil the Mariner]], a [[half-elven|half-elf]] from the [[House of Finwë]], sailed to Valinor to ask the Valar for help. The Valar started the [[War of Wrath]], finally defeating Morgoth.<ref group=T>'{{harvnb|Tolkien|1977}}, ch. 24, "Of the Voyage of Earendil and the War of Wrath"</ref>
Spouses can choose each other even long before they are married, thus becoming betrothed. The betrothal is subject to parental approval unless the parties are of age and intend to marry soon, at which point the betrothal is announced at a meeting of the two houses. They exchange rings and the betrothal lasts at least a year, and is revocable by the return of the rings; however, it is rarely broken. After their formal betrothal, the couple appoint a date, at least a year later, for the wedding.<ref name = "laws" />


{{anchor|Gil-galad}}
Marriage is celebrated at a feast of the two houses. They give back their betrothal rings and receive others worn on their index fingers. The bride’s mother gives the groom a jewel to be worn. Only the words exchanged by the bride and groom (including the speaking of the name of [[Eru Ilúvatar]]) and the consummation are required for marriage.<ref name = "laws" />


=== Second and Third Ages ===
The Elves view the sexual act as extremely special and intimate, for it leads to the conception and birth of children. [[extra-marital sex|Extra-marital]] and [[premarital sex]] are unthinkable, [[adultery]] is also unheard of and fidelity between spouses is absolute. Yet a sundering during pregnancy or during the early years of parenthood (caused by war, for example) is so grievous to the couple that they prefer to have children in peaceful times. Elves can not be raped or forced to have sex; before that they will lose the will to live and go to Mandos.<ref name="laws"/>


After the War of Wrath, the Valar tried to summon the Elves back to Valinor. Many complied, but some stayed. During the [[Second Age]] they founded the Realms of [[Lindon (Middle-earth)|Lindon]] (all that was left of Beleriand after the cataclysm), [[Eregion]], and [[Rhovanion]] (Mirkwood). [[Sauron]], Morgoth's former servant, made war upon them, but with the aid of the [[Númenóreans]] they defeated him, though both the king of the Noldorin Elves, Gil-galad, and Elendil, king of the Númenóreans, were killed. During the Second and [[Third Age]]s, they held some protected realms with the aid of the [[Three Rings|Three Rings of Power]]: Lothlorien, ruled by [[Galadriel]] and Celeborn; [[Rivendell]], ruled by [[Elrond]] and home to the Elf-lord Glorfindel; and the Grey Havens, ruled by Círdan the shipwright. Círdan and his Elves built the ships on which Elves departed for Valinor.<ref group=T>{{harvnb|Tolkien|1977}}, "Of the Rings of Power and the Third Age"</ref>
Elves have few children, as a rule (Fëanor and [[Nerdanel]] were an exception, conceiving seven sons), and there are relatively sizable intervals between each child (but see below for notes on Elvish birth rates in Middle-earth versus in Aman). They are soon preoccupied with other pleasures; their [[libido]] wanes and they focus their interests elsewhere, like the arts. Nonetheless, they take great delight in the union of love, and they cherish the days of bearing and raising children as the happiest days of their lives.<ref name = "laws" />


===Fourth Age===
There seems to only be one known example of extreme marital strife in Tolkien's mythology, that of [[Eöl]] and [[Aredhel]], in which the latter actually left the former without his knowledge, resulting in Eöl ultimately killing her. However, this marriage was far from typical of the Elves.


After the [[War of the Ring|destruction of the One Ring]], the power of the Three Rings of the Elves ended and the [[Fourth Age]], the Age of Men, began. Most Elves left for Valinor; those that remained in Middle-earth were doomed to a slow decline until, in the words of [[Galadriel]], they faded and became a "rustic folk of dell and cave". The fading played out over thousands of years, until in the modern world, occasional glimpses of rustic Elves would fuel folktales and fantasies. Elladan and Elrohir, the sons of Elrond, did not accompany their father when the White Ship bearing the [[Ring-bearer]] and the chief Noldorin leaders sailed from the Grey Havens to Valinor; they remained in Lindon. [[Celeborn]] and other elves of the Grey Havens remained for a while before leaving for Valinor. [[Legolas]] founded an elf colony in [[Ithilien]] during King [[Aragorn|Elessar]]'s reign; the elves there helped to rebuild [[Gondor]], living mainly in southern Ithilien, along the shores of the Anduin. After Elessar's death, Legolas built a ship and sailed to Valinor and, eventually, all the elves in Ithilien followed him.<ref group=T>{{harvnb|Tolkien|1955|loc=Appendix B: "Later Events Concerning the Members of the Fellowship of the Ring"}}</ref>
===Daily life===
The Elves, particularly the Noldor, preoccupy themselves with various things, such as smithwork, sculpture, music and other arts, and of course, what to eat{{Fact|date=September 2007}}. Males and females can do almost everything equally; however, the females often specialise in the arts of healing while the men go to war. This is because they believe that taking life interferes with the ability to preserve life. However, Elves are not stuck in rigid roles; females can defend themselves at need as well as males, and many males are skilled healers as well, such as [[Elrond]].<ref name = "laws" />


In "[[The Tale of Aragorn and Arwen]]" in Appendix A, most Elves have already left, barring some in Mirkwood and a few in Lindon; the garden of Elrond in Rivendell is empty. [[Arwen]] flees to an abandoned Lothlórien, where she dies.<ref group=T>{{harvnb|Tolkien|1955}}, Appendix A, 1. v. "[[The Tale of Aragorn and Arwen]]"</ref>
===Later life===
Eventually, if they do not die in battle or from some other cause, the Elves of Middle-earth grow weary of it and desire to go to Valinor, where the Valar originally sheltered their kind. Those who wish to leave for the Undying Lands go by boats provided at the [[Grey Havens]], where [[Círdan]] the Shipwright dwells with his folk.


== Characteristics ==
==="The third cycle of life," aging, and facial hair===
Despite Tolkien's statements in ''The Hobbit'' that Elves (and Hobbits) have no beards, Círdan in fact has a beard, which appears to be an anomaly and a simple oversight. However, Tolkien later devised at least three "cycles of life" for Elves around 1960; Círdan had a beard because he was in his third cycle of life. ([[Mahtan]], Nerdanel's father, had a beard in his second cycle of life, a rare phenomenon.) It is unclear what these cycles exactly are, since Tolkien left no notes further explaining this. Apparently, beards were the only sign of further natural physical aging beyond maturity.


=== Appearance ===
Nevertheless, Tolkien may have ultimately changed his mind about whether Elves had facial hair. As Christopher Tolkien states in ''[[Unfinished Tales]]'', his father wrote in December 1972 or later that the Elvish strain in Men, such as [[Aragorn]], was "''observable in the beardlessness of those who were so descended''", since "''it was a characteristic of all Elves to be beardless''".<ref>{{Me-ref|ut}}</ref> This would seemingly contradict the information above.


Tolkien describes elves as "tall, fair of skin and grey-eyed, though their locks were dark, save in the golden house of Finarfin."<ref name="Appendix F" group=T>{{harvnb|Tolkien|1955|at=Appendix F}}</ref> The Vanyar were called "The Fair" for their golden hair.<ref group=T>{{harvnb|Tolkien|1977|at=Index, "Vanyar"}}</ref><ref name="Dickerson 2013"/> Maeglin is said to have been "tall and black-haired" and "his skin was white."<ref name = "Of Maeglin" group=T>{{harvnb|Tolkien|1977|at=ch. 16 "Of Maeglin"}}</ref> Túrin, a Man, was called Elf-man due to his appearance and speech, and described as "dark-haired and pale-skinned, with grey eyes."<ref name="Túrin Turambar" group=T>{{harvnb|Tolkien|1977|at=ch. 21 "Of Túrin Turambar"}}</ref><!--or blue eyes, in the Narn-->
Elves sometimes appear to age under great stress. Círdan appeared to be aged himself, since he is described as looking old, save for the stars in his eyes; this may be due to all the sorrows he had seen and lived through since the First Age. Also, the people of [[Gwindor]] of [[Nargothrond]] had trouble recognizing him after his time as a prisoner of Morgoth.


===Death===
=== Marriage ===
Elves are naturally immortal. In addition to their immortality, and (at least due to their extended knowledge of herbs and medicines) they can recover from wounds which would normally kill a mortal Man. However, Elves can be slain, or die of grief and weariness. In this way they are not truly immortal, at least not in a literal sense, but have indefinite lifespans (they will not die of age, but can be killed in battle). Even so, this idea is collectively called ''immortality''.


{{further|Elfland|Women in The Lord of the Rings}}
Elves who die or are killed go to the Halls of Mandos in Valinor. After a certain period of time and rest that serves as "cleansing", their spirits (''[[Fëa and hröa|fëa]]'') are clothed in bodies (''[[Fëa and hröa|hröa]]'') identical to their old ones.<ref name = "converse">{{ME-ref|MR|''The Converse of Manwë and Eru'', p. 361-4}}</ref> They almost never go back to Middle-earth, however. The only Elf known to have done so was [[Glorfindel]]. A rare and more unusual example of an Elf coming back from the Halls of Mandos can be read in the tale of Beren and Lúthien, as [[Lúthien]] was the other Elf to be sent back to Middle-earth - as a mortal, however.


Elves, at least the Eldar, have a pregnancy that lasts about a year. By the age of 1, Elves can speak, walk and dance. [[Puberty]] and full height are attained at around their fiftieth to one hundredth year, when they stop aging physically.<ref name="laws" group=T><!--Morgoth's Ring-->{{harvnb|Tolkien|1993|loc="Laws and Customs among the Eldar"}}</ref> Elves marry freely, monogamously, only once, and for love early in life; [[adultery]] is unthinkable.<ref name="laws" group=T/> Betrothal, with the exchange of rings, lasts at least a year, and is revocable by the return of the rings, but is rarely broken.<ref name="laws" group=T/> Marriage is by words exchanged by the bride and groom (including the speaking of the name of Eru Ilúvatar) and consummation; it is celebrated with a feast. Wedding rings are worn on the index fingers. The bride's mother gives the groom a jewel to wear.<ref name="laws" group=T/> Elves view the sexual act as special and intimate, for it leads to the birth of children. Elves who are married cannot be forced by other Elves to have sex; before that they will lose the will to endure and go to [[Mandos]].<ref name="laws" group=T/> Elves have few children,{{efn|An exception was Fëanor, who had seven sons.<ref name="seven" group=T>{{harvnb|Tolkien|1977|loc=ch. 5 "Of Eldamar and the Princes of the Eldalië"}}</ref>}} and there are long intervals between each child. They are soon preoccupied with other pleasures; their [[libido]] wanes and they focus their interests elsewhere, like the arts.<ref name="laws" group=T/>
Eventually, their immortal spirits (''fëa'') will overwhelm and consume their bodies (''hröa''), rendering them "bodiless", whether they opt to go to Valinor or remain in Middle-earth. At the end of the world, all Elves will have become invisible to mortal eyes, except to those to whom they wish to manifest themselves.<ref name = "laws" /> Tolkien called the Elves of Middle-earth who had undergone this process "Lingerers"<ref name = "laws" />, and the process may be thought of as a fourth and final cycle of Elven life.


=== Skill ===
The lives of Elves only endure as the world endures.<ref name = "laws" /> It is said in the Second Prophecy of [[Mandos]] that at the end of time the Elves will join the other [[Children of Ilúvatar]] in singing the Second Music of the [[Ainur]].<ref>{{ME-ref|sil}}</ref>However it is disputable whether the Prophecy is canon, and the published [[Silmarillion]] states that only Men shall participate in the Second Music, and that the ultimate fate of the Elves is unknown.


{{further|Noldor}}
==Names and naming conventions==
In ''The Lord of the Rings'' Tolkien pretends to be merely the translator of Bilbo and Frodo's memoirs, collectively known as the "[[Red Book of Westmarch]]". He says many of the names and terms appearing in the work, as well in the earlier ''The Hobbit'', are meant to be his representations of actual Middle-earth terms. Thus, Elves were not actually called "Elves" by anyone throughout Tolkien's writings.<ref>{{ME-ref|rotk}}</ref>


Elves, particularly the Noldor, spend their time on smithwork, sculpture, music and other arts, and on preparing food. Males and females are equal, but females often specialize in the arts of healing while the males go to war. This is because they believe that taking life interferes with the ability to preserve life. However, females can defend themselves at need as well as males, and many males such as Elrond are skilled healers.<ref name="laws" group=T/> Elves are skilful horse-riders, riding without saddle or bridle, though Tolkien was inconsistent on this point.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Drout |first1=Michael D. C. |author1-link=Michael D. C. Drout |last2=Hitotsubashi |first2=Namiko |last3=Scavera |first3=Rachel |s2cid=170851865 |title=Tolkien's Creation of the Impression of Depth |journal=Tolkien Studies |volume=11 |issue=1 |year=2014 |pages=167–211 |issn=1547-3163 |doi=10.1353/tks.2014.0008}}</ref>
Instead, they are called the "Firstborn" ([[Quenya|Q]]. ''Minnónar'') or the "Elder Kindred" (as opposed to [[Man (Middle-earth)|Men]], the Secondborn) as they were "awakened" before Men by [[Eru Ilúvatar]] ([[God]]). The Elves named themselves ''Quendi'' ("the Speakers"), in honour of the fact that, when they were created, they were the only living beings able to speak. The [[Dúnedain]] called them ''Nimîr'' ("the Beautiful"), while their usual name in [[Sindarin]] was ''Eledhrim''.<ref name = "QuendiandEldar1">{{ME-ref|WotJ|''Quendi and Eldar''}}</ref>


=== Elvish languages ===
In other writings, part of ''The History of Middle-earth'', Tolkien details Elvish naming conventions. The Quenya word for "name" was ''essë''. An Elf of Valinor was typically given one name (''ataressë'') at birth by the father. It usually reflected either the name of the father or mother, indicating the person's descent, to which later some distinguishing prefix could be added. As the Elf grew older, they received a second name (''amilessë''), given by the mother. This name was extremely important and reflected personality, skills, or fate, sometimes being 'prophetic'.


{{Main|Elvish languages (Middle-earth)}}
The ''epessë'' or the "after-name" is the third type. It was given later in life, not necessarily by kin, as a title of admiration and honour. In some circumstances, yet another name was chosen by the Elf themselves, called ''kilmessë'' meaning "self-name".


Tolkien created many [[Elvish languages (Middle-earth)|languages for his Elves]]. His interest was primarily [[philology|philological]], and he said his stories grew out of his languages. Indeed, the languages were the first thing Tolkien ever created for his mythos, starting with what he originally called "Elfin" or "Qenya" [sic]. This was later spelled [[Quenya]] (High-elven); it and Sindarin (Grey-elven) are the most complete of Tolkien's constructed languages. Elves are also credited with creating the [[Tengwar]] (by Fëanor) and [[Cirth]] (Daeron) scripts.<ref name="Hostetter 2013">{{cite encyclopedia |last=Hostetter |first=Carl F. |author-link=Carl F. Hostetter |editor-last=Drout |editor-first=Michael D. C. |editor-link=Michael D. C. Drout |title=Languages Invented by Tolkien |encyclopedia=[[The J. R. R. Tolkien Encyclopedia: Scholarship and Critical Assessment]] |year=2013 |orig-year=2007 |publisher=[[Routledge]] |isbn=978-0-415-86511-1 |pages=332–343}}</ref>
The "true names" remained the first two, though an Elf could be referred to by any of these. Mother-names were usually not used by those who did not know the Elf well. In later history and song any of the four could become the one generally used and recognised.


=== Death and immortality ===
After their Exile to Middle-earth and adoption of [[Sindarin]] as the daily speech, most of the Noldor also chose for themselves a name that fitted the style of that language, translating or altering one of their [[Quenya]] names.
{{main|Death and immortality in Middle-earth}}


Elves are immortal, and [[Time in The Lord of the Rings|remain unwearied with age]]. They can recover from wounds which would be fatal to a Man, but can be killed in battle. Spirits of dead Elves go to the Halls of Mandos in Valinor. After a certain period of time and rest that serves as "cleansing", their spirits are clothed in bodies identical to their old ones.<ref name="converse" group=T><!--Morgoth's ring-->{{harvnb|Tolkien|1993|loc=''The Converse of [[Manwë (Middle-earth)|Manwë]] and Eru'', pp. 361–364}}</ref> If they do not die in battle or accident,{{efn|[[Míriel]] however is so exhausted by the birth of her fiery and creative son Fëanor, that she wilfully gives up her spirit.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |last=Dickerson |first=Matthew |author-link=Matthew T. Dickerson |title=Finwë and Míriel |editor-first=Michael D. C. |editor-last=Drout |editor-link=Michael D. C. Drout |year=2013 |orig-year=2007 |encyclopedia=[[The J. R. R. Tolkien Encyclopedia]] |chapter=Popular Music |pages=212–213 |publisher=[[Routledge]] |isbn=978-0-415-96942-0 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=B0loOBA3ejIC&pg=PA212}}</ref> }} Elves eventually grow weary of Middle-earth and desire to go to Valinor;<ref group=T>{{harvnb|Tolkien|1977}}, ch. 1 "Of the Beginning of Days"</ref> they often sail from the Grey Havens, where Círdan the Shipwright dwells with his folk.<ref group=T>{{harvnb|Tolkien|1977|loc=ch. 20 "Of the Fifth Battle: Nirnaeth Arnoediad"}} "At the bidding of Turgon Círdan built seven swift ships, and they sailed out into the West"</ref><ref group=T>{{harvnb|Tolkien|1977|loc="Of the Rings of Power and the Third Age"}} "at the Grey Havens of Lindon there abode also a remnant of the people of Gil-galad the Elvenking. ... building and tending the elven-ships wherein those of the Firstborn who grew weary of the world set sail into the uttermost West. Círdan the Shipwright was lord of the Havens"</ref> Eventually, any Elves that remain in Middle-earth undergo a process of "fading", in which their immortal spirits overwhelm and "consume" their bodies. This renders their bodily forms invisible to mortal eyes, except to those to whom they wish to manifest themselves.<ref name="laws" group=T/><ref group=T>{{harvnb|Tolkien|1993|loc="Myths Transformed", XI}}</ref>
A [[patronymic]] surname is also used — the father's name with the suffix "-ion" added. Thus, [[Gildor Inglorion]] is "''Gildor, son of Inglor''".


[[File:Fates of Elves and Men.svg|thumb|center|upright=3|Fates of Elves and Men in [[Tolkien's legendarium]]. Elves are immortal but can be killed in battle, in which case they go to the [[Halls of Mandos]] in Aman. They may be restored by the Will of the [[Valar in Middle-earth|Valar]], and then go to live with the Valar in Valinor, like an [[Earthly Paradise]], though just being in the place does not confer immortality, as Men supposed. Men are mortal, and when they die they go beyond the circles of the world, even the Elves not knowing where that might be.{{sfn|Shippey|2005|pp=269-272}}]]
Several examples include:


== Adaptations ==
*'''[[Galadriel]]''' is the Sindarin translation of Alatáriel, the Telerin Quenya ''epessë'' originally given to her by [[Celeborn]], which means "Maiden Crowned by a Radiant Garland". Her father-name is Artanis (noble woman) and her mother-name is Nerwen (man-maiden).


[[File:Rankin-bass-hobbit-elves.jpg|thumb|left|upright|Wood elves as portrayed in the 1977 Rankin-Bass version of ''[[The Hobbit (1977 film)|The Hobbit]]'' look nothing like those in any other adaptation.<ref name="Gilkeson 2018"/> ]]
*'''[[Maedhros]]''', the oldest son of [[Fëanor]], was called ''Russandol'' (copper-top) by his brothers: He had earned this ''epessë'' because of his ruddy hair. His father-name had been ''Nelyafinwë'' (Finwë the third: Fëanor's own father-name had been (Curu) Finwë), and his mother-name ''Maitimo'' (well-shaped one). ''Maedhros'' is a rendering into Sindarin of parts of his mother-name and ''epessë''.


The 1977 [[Rankin/Bass Animated Entertainment|Rankin-Bass]] version of ''[[The Hobbit (1977 film)|The Hobbit]]'' depicts the wood-elves in what Austin Gilkeson calls a weird way, quite unlike the elves in any other adaptation, not even resembling the film's depiction of Elrond. Gilkeson describes them as "like [[Troll doll]]s that have been left out in the rain too long, and a little like [[Yzma]] from ''[[The Emperor's New Groove]]''. They have gray skin, pug faces, and blond hair. It’s frankly bizarre".<ref name="Gilkeson 2018">{{cite web |last=Gilkeson |first=Austin |title=Rankin/Bass's The Hobbit Showed Us the Future of Pop Culture |url=https://www.tor.com/2018/12/21/rankin-basss-the-hobbit-showed-us-the-future-of-pop-culture/ |website=[[Tor.com]] |access-date=26 October 2023 |date=21 December 2018}}</ref>
*'''[[Finrod Felagund|Finrod]]''' is usually referred to as ''Felagund'' (hewer of caves), a name the [[Dwarf (Middle-earth)|Dwarves]] had given to him (originally ''Felakgundu'') because of his dwellings at [[Nargothrond]]. Finrod adopted the name, and made it a title of honour.


[[File:Elf warriors.png|thumb|Elf soldiers in [[Peter Jackson]]'s ''[[The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring]]'' are depicted as physically superior to Men.<ref name="Bogstad Kaveny 2011"/>]]
*'''[[Círdan]]''' (Shipwright) is the ''epessë'' of a [[Teleri]]n Elf who remained in [[Beleriand]], and later [[Lindon]], until the end of the [[Third Age]]. His original name was only rarely remembered in traditions as ''Nōwē'', and he was referred to always as Círdan, a title which had been given to him as Lord of the [[Falas]].


In [[Peter Jackson]]'s [[The Lord of the Rings (film series)|''Lord of the Rings'' film series]] (2001–2003), Elves are shown as physically superior to Men in eyesight, balance, and aim, but their superiority in other ways is "never really made clear".<ref name="Bogstad Kaveny 2011">{{cite book |last1=Ford |first1=Judy Ann |last2=Reid |first2=Robin Anne |author2-link=Robin Anne Reid |chapter=Into the West: Far Green Country or Shadow on the Waters? |editor1-last=Bogstad |editor1-first=Janice M. |editor2-last=Kaveny |editor2-first=Philip E. |title=[[Picturing Tolkien]] |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jNjKrXRP0G8C&pg=PA172 |year=2011 |publisher=[[McFarland & Company|McFarland]] |isbn=978-0-7864-8473-7 |page=172}}</ref>
==Elvish languages==
{{main|Elvish languages}}


[[File:Riders of th Sidhe (big).jpg|thumb|Jackson's Elves resemble those of the 19th-20th century [[Celtic Revival]], as in [[John Duncan (painter)|John Duncan]]'s 1911 painting ''The Riders of the Sidhe'', rather than Tolkien's reconstruction of [[medieval]] Elves, according to [[Dimitra Fimi]].<ref name="Fimi 2011"/> ]]
Tolkien created many languages for Elves. His interest was primarily [[philology|philological]], and he said his stories grew out of his languages. Indeed, the languages were the first thing Tolkien ever created for his mythos, starting with what he originally called "Qenya", the first primitive form of Elvish. This was later called [[Quenya]] (High-elven) and, along with [[Sindarin]] (Grey-elven), is one of the two most complete of Tolkien's languages. In addition to these two he also created several other (partially derived) languages.


Fimi compared Jackson's handling of Elves with Tolkien's. Tolkien's Elves are rooted as firmly as possible in [[Anglo-Saxon]], [[Middle English]], and Norse tradition, but influenced also by Celtic [[Fairy|fairies]] in the ''[[Tuatha Dé Danann]]''. Jackson's Elves are however "Celtic" in the romanticised sense of the [[Celtic Revival]].<ref name="Fimi 2011"/><ref name="Rosebury 2003">{{cite book |last=Rosebury |first=Brian |author-link=Brian Rosebury |title=Tolkien: A Cultural Phenomenon |title-link=Tolkien: A Cultural Phenomenon |date=2003 |orig-year=1992 |publisher=[[Palgrave Macmillan|Palgrave]] |isbn=978-1403-91263-3 |pages=204–220}}</ref> She compares Jackson's representation of Gildor Inglorion's party of Elves riding through the Shire "moving slowly and gracefully towards the West, accompanied by ethereal music" with [[John Duncan (painter)|John Duncan]]'s 1911 painting ''The Riders of the Sidhe''. She notes that Jackson's conceptual designer, the illustrator [[Alan Lee (illustrator)|Alan Lee]], had made use of the painting in the 1978 book [[Faeries (book)|''Faeries'']].<ref name="Fimi 2011">{{cite book |last=Fimi |first=Dimitra |author-link=Dimitra Fimi |chapter=Filming Folklore: Adapting Fantasy for the Big Screen through Peter Jackson's ''The Lord of the Rings'' |editor1-last=Bogstad |editor1-first=Janice M. |editor2-last=Kaveny |editor2-first=Philip E. |title=[[Picturing Tolkien]] |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jNjKrXRP0G8C&pg=PA84 |year=2011 |publisher=[[McFarland & Company|McFarland]] |isbn=978-0-7864-8473-7 |pages=84–101}}</ref>
Elves are also credited with creating the [[Tengwar]] (by [[Fëanor]]) and [[Cirth]] ([[Daeron]]) runic scripts.


== In popular culture ==
==Notable Elves==
*[[Awakening of the Elves|Imin]] - The first Elf to awake near the bay of Cuiviénen, first of the [[Vanyar]]
*[[Awakening of the Elves|Tata]] - The second Elf to awake, first of the [[Noldor]]
*[[Awakening of the Elves|Enel]] - The third Elf to awake, first of the [[Teleri]]
*[[Ingwë]] - King of the Vanyar and High King of all the Elves
*[[Thingol|Elwë]] - Called ''Elu Thingol'', King of [[Doriath]] and of the [[Sindar]]
*[[Lúthien]] - Daughter of Thingol and [[Melian (Middle-earth)|Melian]] the [[Maia (Middle-earth)|Maia]], wife of the [[Man (Middle-earth)|Man]] [[Beren]], the fairest and the greatest of all the [[Children of Ilúvatar]]
*[[Círdan]] - Called 'the Shipbuilder', Lord of the [[Falas]] in Beleriand and later of the [[Grey Havens]]
*[[Olwë]] - Brother of Thingol, King of [[Alqualondë]] and King of the Teleri in [[Valinor]] ([[Falmari]])
*[[Finwë]] - First High King of the Noldor, had two wives, [[Míriel]] and [[Indis]] (remarries after Míriel dies)
*[[Fëanor]] - Son of Finwë by Míriel, craftsman of the [[Silmaril]]s, greatest of all the Elves of Valinor, and leader of the [[Exiles (Middle-earth)|Exile]] of the Noldor to [[Middle-earth]]
*The seven [[Sons of Fëanor]] - Elven princes who followed their father on his quest to reclaim the Silmarils from [[Morgoth]]
*[[Fingolfin]] - First son of Finwë and Indis, father of Fingon, Turgon, [[Argon (Middle-earth)|Argon]] and [[Aredhel]], first High King of the Noldor in Beleriand
*[[Fingon]] - Second High King of the Noldor in Beleriand, Lord of [[Hithlum]], slain by [[Gothmog]] the [[Balrog]]
*[[Turgon]] - Third High King of the Noldor in Beleriand, the Hidden King of [[Gondolin]], father of Idril
*[[Idril]] - Daughter of Turgon, princess of Gondolin, wife of [[Tuor]], and mother of [[Eärendil]]
*[[Maeglin]] - Son of Aredhel and [[Eöl]], cousin to Idril, whom he loved illicitly; betrayed Gondolin to Morgoth
*[[Glorfindel]] - Only Elf who returns to Middle-earth after re-embodiment in Valinor; slayer of [[Balrog]]
*[[Finarfin]] - Son of Finwë and Indis, father of Finrod, Galadriel, [[Angrod]] and [[Aegnor]], and the Third High King of All the Noldor
*[[Finrod Felagund]] - King of [[Nargothrond]], overlord of Finarfin's folk in Beleriand, gave up his life to save Beren
*[[Orodreth]] - Son of [[Angrod]] and thus nephew of [[Finrod Felagund]], second King of [[Nargothrond]]
*[[Galadriel]] - Lady of [[Lórien|Lothlórien]], greatest Lady of the Noldor, mother of [[Celebrían]]
*[[Celeborn]] - Lord of [[Lórien|Lothlórien]], Galadriel's husband, kinsman to Thingol
*[[Celebrimbor]] - Forger of the [[Rings of Power]], grandson of Fëanor
*[[Gil-galad]] - Fourth and Last High King of the Noldor in Middle-earth, who ruled during the [[Last Alliance of Elves and Men]]
*[[Amroth]] - Lord of [[Lórinand]] before Celeborn and Galadriel, lover of [[Nimrodel]], lost in the Sea
*[[Thranduil]] - King of the Woodland Realm of Mirkwood and father of Legolas
*[[Legolas]] - Called ''Greenleaf'', one of [[Fellowship of the Ring (characters)|the Company of the Ring]]


Tolkien-style Elves have influenced the depiction of elves in the fantasy genre from the 1960s and afterwards. Elves speaking an elvish language similar to those in Tolkien's novels became staple non-human characters in [[high fantasy]] works and in fantasy [[role-playing game]]s like ''[[Elf (Dungeons & Dragons)|Dungeons & Dragons]]''. They are often portrayed as being mentally sharp and lovers of nature, art, and song, as well as wiser and more beautiful than humans. They usually fit the stereotype of being skilled archers and gifted in [[magic in fiction|magic]].<ref>{{cite thesis |last=Bergman |first=Jenni |title=The Significant Other: A Literary History of Elves |type=PhD |publisher=[[Cardiff University]] |year=2011 |url=http://orca.cf.ac.uk/55478/}}</ref>
[[Half-elven]]:
*[[Dior (Middle-earth)|Dior]] Eluchíl - Son of Beren and Lúthien, Thingol's heir, and father of [[Eluréd]], [[Elurín]] and Elwing
*[[Elwing]] - Wife of Eärendil, and mother of Elrond and Elros
*[[Eärendil]] - Son of [[Tuor]] and Idril, the greatest mariner, set with the [[Silmaril]] to journey the skies as a star
*[[Elros]] - First High King of [[Númenor]]
*[[Elrond]] - Master of [[Rivendell]], father of Arwen, [[Elladan and Elrohir]], and Bearer of [[Three Rings|Vilya]]
*[[Arwen]] - Called ''Undómiel'' 'the Evenstar', fairest of the Elves after Lúthien, Queen of King [[Aragorn|Elessar]]
*[[Eldarion]] - Son of Arwen and Elessar, ruler of the [[Reunited Kingdom]] after his father, descendant of all the Houses of Men and Elves of the [[Elder Days]]


==Adaptations==
== Notes ==


{{notelist}}{{-}}
<gallery caption="Examples of Adaptations of Tolkiens Elves" style="float:right" >
Image:Rankin-bass-hobbit-elves.jpg| Elves as portrayed in the 1977 Rankin-Bass version of ''[[The Hobbit (film)| The Hobbit]]''
Image:GWElfBowman.jpg |An Elf miniature for [[Lord of the Rings Strategy Battle Game]] Designed by [[Brian Nelson]] for [[Citadel Miniatures]].
</gallery>


== References ==
The 1979 [[Rankin Bass]] animated version of ''The Hobbit'', with character designs by Lester Abrams, features Elves as green-skinned warriors with slightly [[Austrians|Austrian]]-[[German language|German]] accents.


=== Primary ===
In ''[[MERP|Middle-earth Role Playing]]'' ([[Iron Crown Enterprises]], 1986), three tribes of elves are presented as [[player character]] race options, the Silvan, Sinda and Noldo - each receiving statistic bonuses (ranging from 5 to 15) to all attributes apart from Strength, with the Noldo receiving the highest accumulative bonuses of any racial type in the game. All three tribes are statistically immune to disease (+100% chance of resistance), and must be given 'Presence' as the highest randomly generated statistic. Elven characters also receive significant skill bonuses with missile weapons (such as a bow and arrow) and stealth skills (such as hiding).


{{reflist|group=T|28em}}
All 3 elven tribes (Silvan, Noldor, Sindar) depicted in [[Lord of the Rings Roleplaying Game]] ([[Decipher, Inc.]], 2001) have varying (one or two points) statistic bonuses to Bearing, Perception and Nimbleness, with the Noldor also receiving a bonus to Wits and the Sindar to Vitality, giving both of these the highest accumulative bonuses available to Player Characters. The system of skills, feats and flaws further outlines racial and cultural characteristics, bonuses being given to the Noldor in Lore and "Resisting the Shadow", to the Silvan elves for various wood-craft skills, and the Sindar to musical performance. All elves have the ability to enchant objects, and receive bonuses in any test regarding magic.


=== Secondary ===
In the ''[[The Lord of the Rings Strategy Battle Game]]'' ([[Games Workshop]], 2001), Elves have similar statistics to similarly armed Men, except for much higher scores for their Fighting and Courage attributes.<ref>{{cite web | title = Profiles of Middle-earth | work = Rules Summary | publisher = Games Workshop | date = | url = http://uk.games-workshop.com/legionsofmiddleearth/reference/1/ | accessdate = 2007-07-03 }}</ref> On average, Elven wargear (armour and weapons) give twice the advantage of weapons made by Men.


{{reflist|28em}}
==See also==
{{Middle-earth portal}}
*[[Calendar of Imladris]]
*[[Awakening of the Elves]]
*[[Elvish languages]]


==References==
=== Sources ===
<div class="references-small">
<references />
</div>


* {{ME-ref|Letters}}
==External links==
* {{ME-ref|ROAD}}
* [http://www.ansereg.com/warm_beds_are_good.htm "Warm Beds Are Good: Sex and Libido in Tolkien's Writing"] by Tyellas, ''Mallorn'' #42, 2005. (Archived at Ansereg (website).)
* {{ME-ref|TH}}
*[http://tareldaelda.tk Tareldaelda] Website devoted to the Calaquendi
* {{ME-ref|FOTR}}
* {{ME-ref|ROTK}}
* {{ME-ref|Silm}}
* {{ME-ref|BoLT}}
* {{ME-ref|LROW}}
* {{ME-ref|MR}}
* {{ME-ref|WJ}}


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Latest revision as of 03:27, 24 November 2024

In J. R. R. Tolkien's writings, Elves are the first fictional race to appear in Middle-earth. Unlike Men and Dwarves, Elves do not die of disease or old age. Should they die in battle or of grief, their souls go to the Halls of Mandos in Aman. After a long life in Middle-earth, Elves yearn for the Earthly Paradise of Valinor, and can sail there from the Grey Havens. They feature in The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings. Their history is described in detail in The Silmarillion.

Tolkien derived Elves from mentions in the ancient poetry and languages of Northern Europe, especially Old English. These suggested to him that Elves were large, dangerous, beautiful, lived in wild natural places, and practised archery. He invented languages for the Elves, including Sindarin and Quenya.

Tolkien-style Elves have become a staple of fantasy literature. They have appeared, too, in film and role-playing game adaptations of Tolkien's works.

Origins

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Icelandic folklore

[edit]

The framework for J. R. R. Tolkien's conception of his Elves, and many points of detail in his portrayal of them, is thought by Haukur Þorgeirsson to have come from the survey of folklore and early modern scholarship about elves (álfar) in Icelandic tradition in the introduction to Íslenzkar þjóðsögur og æfintýri ('Icelandic legends and fairy tales'). It covered stories from the 17th century onwards, noting that elves are the firstborn race;[a] that they could marry humans; and that they lack an immortal soul.[1]

Germanic word

[edit]

The modern English word Elf derives from the Old English word ælf (with cognates in all other Germanic languages).[2] Numerous types of elves appear in Germanic mythology; the West Germanic concept appears to have come to differ from the Scandinavian notion in the early Middle Ages, and the Anglo-Saxon concept diverged even further, possibly under Celtic influence.[3] J. R. R. Tolkien made it clear in a letter that his Elves differed from those "of the better known lore"[T 1] of Scandinavian mythology.[4]

Halfway beings

[edit]

The Tolkien scholar Tom Shippey notes that one Middle English source which he presumes Tolkien must have read, the South English Legendary from c. 1250, describes elves much as Tolkien does:[5]

South English Legendary
"St Michael" 253-258
Modern English
And ofte in fourme of wommane : In many derne weye
grete compaygnie mon i-seoth of heom : boþe hoppie and pleiƺe,
Þat Eluene beoth i-cleopede : and ofte heo comiez to toune,
And bi daye muche in wodes heo beoth : and bi niƺte ope heiƺe dounes.
Þat beoth þe wrechche gostes : Þat out of heuene weren i-nome,
And manie of heom a-domesday : Ʒeot schullen to reste come.
[6]
And often shaped like women: On many secret paths
men see great numbers of them: dancing and sporting.
These are called Elves: and often they come to town
and by day they are much in the woods: by night up on the high downs.
Those are the wretched spirits: that were taken out of Heaven,
And at Doomsday many of them shall come to rest.

Some of Tolkien's Elves are in the "undying lands" of Valinor, home of the godlike Valar, while others are in Middle-earth. The Elf-queen Galadriel indeed has been expelled from Valinor, much like the fallen Melkor, though she is clearly good, and much like an angel. Similarly, some of the Legendary's Eluene are on Earth, others in the "Earthly Paradise". So, did they have souls, Shippey asks? Since they could not leave the world, the answer was no; but given that they didn't disappear completely on death, the answer had to have been yes. In Shippey's view, the Silmarillion resolved the Middle English puzzle, letting Elves go not to Heaven but to the halfway house of the Halls of Mandos on Valinor.[5]

Elf or fairy

[edit]
Victorian era Fairy painting: Edwin Landseer, Scene from A Midsummer Night's Dream. Titania and Bottom, 1851

By the late 19th century, the term 'fairy' had been taken up as a utopian theme, and was used to critique social and religious values, a tradition which Tolkien and T. H. White continued.[7] One of the last of the Victorian Fairy-paintings, The Piper of Dreams by Estella Canziani, sold 250,000 copies and was well known within the trenches of World War I where Tolkien saw active service. Illustrated posters of Robert Louis Stevenson's poem Land of Nod had been sent out by a philanthropist to brighten servicemen's quarters, and Faery was used in other contexts as an image of "Old England" to inspire patriotism.[8] By 1915, when Tolkien was writing his first elven poems, the words elf, fairy and gnome had many divergent and contradictory associations. Tolkien had been gently warned against the term 'fairy', which John Garth supposes may have been due to its growing association with homosexuality, but Tolkien continued to use it.[9] According to Marjorie Burns, Tolkien eventually but hesitantly chose the term elf over fairy. In his 1939 essay On Fairy-Stories, Tolkien wrote that "English words such as elf have long been influenced by French (from which fay and faërie, fairy are derived); but in later times, through their use in translation, fairy and elf have acquired much of the atmosphere of German, Scandinavian, and Celtic tales, and many characteristics of the huldu-fólk, the daoine-sithe, and the tylwyth-teg."[10]

Reconciling multiple traditions

[edit]
Beowulf's eotenas [ond] ylfe [ond] orcneas, "ogres [and] elves [and] devil-corpses", inspiring Tolkien to create orcs, elves, and other races

Tolkien, a philologist, knew of the many seemingly contradictory traditions about elves. The Old English Beowulf-poet spoke of the strange eotenas ond ylfe ond orcnéas, "ettens [giants] and elves and demon-corpses",[2] a grouping which Shippey calls "a very stern view of all non-human and un-Christian species".[5] The Middle English Sir Gawain meets a green axe-wielding giant, an aluisch mon ("elvish man", translated by Shippey as "uncanny creature").[2] Christian sources from Iceland knew and disapproved of the tradition of offering sacrifices to the elves, álfa-blót.[2]

Elf-shot, associated with "elf arrows", neolithic flint arrowheads sometimes used as amulets,[11] was one of the hints Tolkien used to create his Elves.[2]

Elves were directly dangerous, too: the medical condition "elf-shot", described in the spell Gif hors ofscoten sie, "if a horse is elf-shot", meaning some kind of internal injury,[12] was associated both with neolithic flint arrowheads and the temptations of the devil. Tolkien takes "elf-shot" as a hint to make his elves skilful in archery.[2] Another danger was wæterælfádl, "water-elf disease", perhaps meaning dropsy,[2] while a third condition was ælfsogoða, "elf-pain",[12] glossed by Shippey as "lunacy".[2] All the same, an Icelandic woman could be frið sem álfkona, "fair as an elf-woman", while the Anglo-Saxons might call a very fair woman ælfscýne, "elf-beautiful".[2] Some aspects can readily be reconciled, Shippey writes, since "Beauty is itself dangerous".[2] But there is more: Tolkien brought in the Old English usage of descriptions like wuduælfen "wood-elf, dryad", wæterælfen "water-elf", and sǣælfen "sea-elf, naiad", giving his elves strong links with wild nature.[2][13] Yet another strand of legend holds that Elfland, as in Elvehøj ("Elf Hill") and other traditional stories, is dangerous to mortals because time there is distorted, as in Tolkien's Lothlórien. Shippey comments that it is a strength of Tolkien's "re-creations", his imagined worlds, that they incorporate all the available evidence to create a many-layered impression of depth, making use of "both good and bad sides of popular story; the sense of inquiry, prejudice, hearsay and conflicting opinion".[2]

Shippey suggests that the "fusion or kindling-point" of Tolkien's thinking about elves came from the Middle English lay Sir Orfeo, which transposes the classical myth of Orpheus and Eurydice into a wild and wooded Elfland, and makes the quest successful. In Tolkien's translation the elves appear and disappear: "the king of Faerie with his rout / came hunting in the woods about / with blowing far and crying dim, and barking hounds that were with him; yet never a beast they took nor slew, and where they went he never knew". Shippey comments that Tolkien took many suggestions from this passage, including the horns and the hunt of the Elves in Mirkwood; the proud but honourable Elf-king; and the placing of his elves in wild nature. Tolkien might only have had broken fragments to work on, but, Shippey writes, the more one explores how Tolkien used the ancient texts, the more one sees "how easy it was for him to feel that a consistency and a sense lay beneath the chaotic ruin of the old poetry of the North".[2]

Tolkien's Sundering of the Elves allowed him to explain the existence of Norse mythology's Light Elves, who live in Alfheim ("Elfhome") and correspond to his Calaquendi, and Dark Elves, who live underground in Svartalfheim ("Black Elfhome") and whom he "rehabilitates" as his Moriquendi, the Elves who never went to see the light of the Two Trees of Valinor.[14]

Tolkien's multiple medieval sources for Elves[2]
Medieval source Term Idea
Beowulf eotenas ond ylfe ond orcnéas: "ettens, elves, and devil-corpses" Elves are strong and dangerous.
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight The Green Knight is an aluisch mon: "elvish man, uncanny creature" Elves have strange powers.
Magical spell ofscoten: "elf-shot" Elves are archers.
Icelandic and
Old English usage
frið sem álfkona: "fair as an elf-woman"
ælfscýne: "elf-beautiful"
Elves are beautiful.
Old English usage wuduælfen, wæterælfen, sǣælfen: "dryads, water-elves, naiads" Elves are strongly connected to nature.
Scandinavian ballad Elvehøj Mortal visitors to Elfland are in danger, as time seems different there. Time is distorted in Elfland.
Norse mythology Dökkálfar, Ljósálfar: "dark elves, light elves" The Elvish peoples are sundered into multiple groups.[14]

Development

[edit]

Tolkien developed his conception of elves over the years, from his earliest writings through to The Hobbit, The Silmarillion, and The Lord of the Rings.[15]

Early writings

[edit]

Traditional Victorian dancing fairies and elves appear in much of Tolkien's early poetry,[T 2] and have influence upon his later works,[16] in part due to the influence of a production of J. M. Barrie's Peter Pan in Birmingham in 1910,[17] and his familiarity with the work of Catholic mystic poet, Francis Thompson[17] which Tolkien had acquired in 1914.[T 2]

O! I hear the tiny horns
Of enchanted leprechauns
And the padded feet of many gnomes a-coming!

— J. R. R. Tolkien, Goblin Feet, 1915

The Book of Lost Tales (c. 1917–1927)

[edit]

In his The Book of Lost Tales, Tolkien develops a theme that the diminutive fairy-like race of Elves had once been a great and mighty people, and that as Men took over the world, these Elves had "diminished"[T 2][T 3][18] themselves. This theme is shared especially by the god-like and human-sized Ljósálfar of Norse mythology, and medieval works such as Sir Orfeo, the Welsh Mabinogion, Arthurian romances and the legends of the Tuatha Dé Danann.[T 4]

The name Inwe or Ingwë (in the first draft Ing), given by Tolkien to the eldest of the elves and his clan,[T 5] is similar to the name of the god Ingwi-Freyr in Norse mythology, a god who is gifted the elf-world Álfheimr. Terry Gunnell finds the relationship between beautiful ships and the Elves reminiscent of the god Njörðr and the god Freyr's ship Skíðblaðnir.[19] He also retains the usage of the French derived term "fairy" for the same creatures.[20]

The larger Elves are inspired by Tolkien's personal Catholic theology, representing the state of Men in Eden who have not yet fallen, like humans but fairer and wiser, with greater spiritual powers, keener senses, and a closer empathy with nature. Tolkien wrote of them: "They are made by man in his own image and likeness; but freed from those limitations which he feels most to press upon him. They are immortal, and their will is directly effective for the achievement of imagination and desire."[17]

In The Book of Lost Tales, Tolkien includes both more serious "medieval" elves such as Fëanor and Turgon alongside frivolous, Jacobean elves such as the Solosimpi and Tinúviel.[T 4] Alongside the idea of the greater Elves, Tolkien toyed with the idea of children visiting Valinor, the island-homeland of the Elves in their sleep. Elves would also visit children at night and comfort them if they had been chided or were upset. This was abandoned in Tolkien's later writing.[T 6]

The Hobbit (c. 1930–1937)

[edit]

Douglas Anderson shows that in The Hobbit, Tolkien again includes both the more serious 'medieval' type of elves, such as Elrond and the wood-elf king, Thranduil, and frivolous elves, such as the elvish guards at Rivendell.[T 4]

The Quenta Silmarillion (c. 1937)

[edit]

In 1937, having had his manuscript for The Silmarillion rejected by a publisher who disparaged all the "eye-splitting Celtic names" that Tolkien had given his Elves, Tolkien denied the names had a Celtic origin:[T 7]

Needless to say they are not Celtic! Neither are the tales. I do know Celtic things (many in their original languages Irish and Welsh), and feel for them a certain distaste: largely for their fundamental unreason. They have bright colour, but are like a broken stained glass window reassembled without design. They are in fact "mad" as your reader says – but I don't believe I am.[T 7]

Dimitra Fimi proposes that these comments are a product of his Anglophilia rather than a commentary on the texts themselves or their actual influence on his writing, and cites evidence to this effect in her essay "'Mad' Elves and 'elusive beauty': some Celtic strands of Tolkien's mythology".[18] Fimi proposes that some of the stories Tolkien wrote as elven history are directly influenced by Celtic mythology.[18] For example, "Flight of The Noldoli" she argues, is based on the Tuatha Dé Danann and Lebor Gabála Érenn, and their migratory nature comes from early Irish/Celtic history.[18] John Garth states that with the underground enslavement of the Noldoli to Melkor, Tolkien was essentially rewriting Irish myth regarding the Tuatha Dé Danann into a Christian eschatology.[21]

The Lord of the Rings (c. 1937–1949)

[edit]

In The Lord of the Rings Tolkien pretends to be merely the translator of Bilbo and Frodo's memoirs, collectively known as the Red Book of Westmarch. He says that those names and terms that appear in English are meant to be his purported translations from the Common Speech.[T 8]

According to Shippey, the theme of diminishment from semi-divine Elf to diminutive Fairy resurfaces in The Lord of the Rings in the dialogue of Galadriel.[22] "Yet if you succeed, then our power is diminished, and Lothlórien will fade, and the tides of Time will sweep it away. We must depart into the West, or dwindle to a rustic folk of dell and cave, slowly to forget and to be forgotten."[T 9]

Writing in 1954, part way through proofreading The Lord of the Rings, Tolkien claimed that the Elvish language Sindarin had a character very like British-Welsh "because it seems to fit the rather 'Celtic' type of legends and stories told of its speakers".[T 10] In the same letter, Tolkien goes on to say that the elves had very little in common with elves or fairies of Europe, and that they really represent men with greater artistic ability, beauty and a longer life span. In his writings, an Elven bloodline was the only real claim to 'nobility' that the Men of Middle-earth could have.[T 10] Tolkien wrote that the elves are primarily to blame for many of the ills of Middle-earth in The Lord of the Rings, having independently created the Three Rings to stop their domains in mortal-lands from 'fading' and attempting to prevent inevitable change and new growth.[23]

Fictional history

[edit]

Awakening

[edit]
Arda in the First Age, with the sundering of the Elves. The Elves awoke at Cuiviénen, on the Sea of Helcar (right) in Middle-earth, and many of them migrated westwards to Valinor in Aman, though some stopped in Beleriand (top), and others returned to Beleriand later.

The first Elves were awakened by Eru Ilúvatar near the bay of Cuiviénen during the Years of the Trees. This event marked the beginning of the First Age. They awoke under the starlit sky, as the Sun and Moon had yet to be created. The first Elves to awaken were three pairs: Imin ("First") and his wife Iminyë, Tata ("Second") and Tatië, and Enel ("Third") and Enelyë. They walked through the forests, finding other pairs of Elves, who became their folk. They lived by the rivers, and invented poetry and music in Middle-earth. Journeying further, they came across tall and dark-haired elves, the fathers of most of the Noldor. They invented many new words. Continuing their journey, they found elves singing without language, the ancestors of most of the Teleri.[T 11] The elves were discovered by the Vala Oromë, who brought the news of their awakening to Valinor.[T 12]

Sundering

[edit]

The Valar decided to summon the Elves to Valinor rather than leaving them where they were first awakened, near the Cuiviénen lake in the eastern extremity of Middle-earth. They sent Oromë, who took Ingwë, Finwë and Elwë as ambassadors to Valinor. Returning to Middle-earth, Ingwë, Finwë and Elwë convinced many of the Elves to take the Great Journey (also called the Great March) to Valinor. Those who did not accept the summons became known as the Avari, The Unwilling. The others were called Eldar, the People of the Stars by Oromë, and they took Ingwë, Finwë and Elwë as their leaders, and became respectively the Vanyar, Noldor and Teleri (who spoke Vanyarin Quenya, Noldorin Quenya, and Telerin, respectively). On their journey, some of the Teleri feared the Misty Mountains and dared not cross them. They turned back and stayed in the vales of the Anduin, and, led by Lenwë, became the Nandor, who spoke Nandorin. Oromë led the others over the Misty Mountains and Ered Lindon into Beleriand. There Elwë became lost, and the Teleri stayed behind looking for him. The Vanyar and the Noldor moved onto a floating island, Tol Eressëa, that was moved by Ulmo to Valinor. After years, Ulmo returned to Beleriand to seek out the remaining Teleri. Without Elwë, many of the Teleri took his brother Olwë as their leader and were ferried to Valinor. Some Teleri stayed behind though, still looking for Elwë, and others stayed on the shores, being called by Ossë. They took Círdan as their leader and became the Falathrim. The Teleri who stayed in Beleriand later became known as the Sindar.[24]

Matthew Dickerson notes the "very complicated changes, with shifting meanings assigned to the same names" as Tolkien worked on his conception of the elves and their divisions and migrations. He states that the sundering of the elves allowed Tolkien, a professional philologist, to develop two languages, distinct but related, Quenya for the Eldar and Sindarin for the Sindar, citing Tolkien's own statement that the stories were made to create a world for the languages, not the reverse. Dickerson cites the Tolkien scholar Tom Shippey's suggestion that the "real root" of The Silmarillion lay in the linguistic relationship, complete with sound-changes and differences of semantics, between these two languages of the divided elves. Shippey writes, too, that the elves are separated not by colour, despite names like light and dark, but by history, including their migrations.[24][25][26]

Exile

[edit]

In Valinor, Fëanor, son of Finwë, and the greatest of the Elves, created the Silmarils in which he stored a part of the light of the Two Trees that were lighting Valinor.[T 13] After three ages in the Halls of Mandos, Melkor was released, feigning reform. He however spread his evil and started to poison the minds of the Elves against the Valar. Eventually he killed Finwë and stole the Silmarils. Fëanor then named him Morgoth (Sindarin: The Black Enemy). Fëanor and his seven sons then swore to take the Silmarils back, and led a large army of the Noldor to Beleriand.[T 14]

Wars of Beleriand

[edit]

In Beleriand, Elwë was eventually found, and married Melian the Maia. He became the overlord of Beleriand, naming himself Thingol (Sindarin: Grey-cloak). After the First Battle of Beleriand, during the first rising of the Moon, the Noldor arrived in Beleriand.[T 14] They laid a siege around Morgoth's fortress of Angband, but were eventually defeated.[T 15] The Elves never regained the upper hand, finally losing the hidden kingdoms Nargothrond, Doriath, and Gondolin near the culmination of the war.[T 16][T 17] When the Elves had been forced to the furthest southern reaches of Beleriand, Eärendil the Mariner, a half-elf from the House of Finwë, sailed to Valinor to ask the Valar for help. The Valar started the War of Wrath, finally defeating Morgoth.[T 18]

Second and Third Ages

[edit]

After the War of Wrath, the Valar tried to summon the Elves back to Valinor. Many complied, but some stayed. During the Second Age they founded the Realms of Lindon (all that was left of Beleriand after the cataclysm), Eregion, and Rhovanion (Mirkwood). Sauron, Morgoth's former servant, made war upon them, but with the aid of the Númenóreans they defeated him, though both the king of the Noldorin Elves, Gil-galad, and Elendil, king of the Númenóreans, were killed. During the Second and Third Ages, they held some protected realms with the aid of the Three Rings of Power: Lothlorien, ruled by Galadriel and Celeborn; Rivendell, ruled by Elrond and home to the Elf-lord Glorfindel; and the Grey Havens, ruled by Círdan the shipwright. Círdan and his Elves built the ships on which Elves departed for Valinor.[T 19]

Fourth Age

[edit]

After the destruction of the One Ring, the power of the Three Rings of the Elves ended and the Fourth Age, the Age of Men, began. Most Elves left for Valinor; those that remained in Middle-earth were doomed to a slow decline until, in the words of Galadriel, they faded and became a "rustic folk of dell and cave". The fading played out over thousands of years, until in the modern world, occasional glimpses of rustic Elves would fuel folktales and fantasies. Elladan and Elrohir, the sons of Elrond, did not accompany their father when the White Ship bearing the Ring-bearer and the chief Noldorin leaders sailed from the Grey Havens to Valinor; they remained in Lindon. Celeborn and other elves of the Grey Havens remained for a while before leaving for Valinor. Legolas founded an elf colony in Ithilien during King Elessar's reign; the elves there helped to rebuild Gondor, living mainly in southern Ithilien, along the shores of the Anduin. After Elessar's death, Legolas built a ship and sailed to Valinor and, eventually, all the elves in Ithilien followed him.[T 20]

In "The Tale of Aragorn and Arwen" in Appendix A, most Elves have already left, barring some in Mirkwood and a few in Lindon; the garden of Elrond in Rivendell is empty. Arwen flees to an abandoned Lothlórien, where she dies.[T 21]

Characteristics

[edit]

Appearance

[edit]

Tolkien describes elves as "tall, fair of skin and grey-eyed, though their locks were dark, save in the golden house of Finarfin."[T 22] The Vanyar were called "The Fair" for their golden hair.[T 23][24] Maeglin is said to have been "tall and black-haired" and "his skin was white."[T 24] Túrin, a Man, was called Elf-man due to his appearance and speech, and described as "dark-haired and pale-skinned, with grey eyes."[T 25]

Marriage

[edit]

Elves, at least the Eldar, have a pregnancy that lasts about a year. By the age of 1, Elves can speak, walk and dance. Puberty and full height are attained at around their fiftieth to one hundredth year, when they stop aging physically.[T 26] Elves marry freely, monogamously, only once, and for love early in life; adultery is unthinkable.[T 26] Betrothal, with the exchange of rings, lasts at least a year, and is revocable by the return of the rings, but is rarely broken.[T 26] Marriage is by words exchanged by the bride and groom (including the speaking of the name of Eru Ilúvatar) and consummation; it is celebrated with a feast. Wedding rings are worn on the index fingers. The bride's mother gives the groom a jewel to wear.[T 26] Elves view the sexual act as special and intimate, for it leads to the birth of children. Elves who are married cannot be forced by other Elves to have sex; before that they will lose the will to endure and go to Mandos.[T 26] Elves have few children,[b] and there are long intervals between each child. They are soon preoccupied with other pleasures; their libido wanes and they focus their interests elsewhere, like the arts.[T 26]

Skill

[edit]

Elves, particularly the Noldor, spend their time on smithwork, sculpture, music and other arts, and on preparing food. Males and females are equal, but females often specialize in the arts of healing while the males go to war. This is because they believe that taking life interferes with the ability to preserve life. However, females can defend themselves at need as well as males, and many males such as Elrond are skilled healers.[T 26] Elves are skilful horse-riders, riding without saddle or bridle, though Tolkien was inconsistent on this point.[27]

Elvish languages

[edit]

Tolkien created many languages for his Elves. His interest was primarily philological, and he said his stories grew out of his languages. Indeed, the languages were the first thing Tolkien ever created for his mythos, starting with what he originally called "Elfin" or "Qenya" [sic]. This was later spelled Quenya (High-elven); it and Sindarin (Grey-elven) are the most complete of Tolkien's constructed languages. Elves are also credited with creating the Tengwar (by Fëanor) and Cirth (Daeron) scripts.[28]

Death and immortality

[edit]

Elves are immortal, and remain unwearied with age. They can recover from wounds which would be fatal to a Man, but can be killed in battle. Spirits of dead Elves go to the Halls of Mandos in Valinor. After a certain period of time and rest that serves as "cleansing", their spirits are clothed in bodies identical to their old ones.[T 28] If they do not die in battle or accident,[c] Elves eventually grow weary of Middle-earth and desire to go to Valinor;[T 29] they often sail from the Grey Havens, where Círdan the Shipwright dwells with his folk.[T 30][T 31] Eventually, any Elves that remain in Middle-earth undergo a process of "fading", in which their immortal spirits overwhelm and "consume" their bodies. This renders their bodily forms invisible to mortal eyes, except to those to whom they wish to manifest themselves.[T 26][T 32]

Fates of Elves and Men in Tolkien's legendarium. Elves are immortal but can be killed in battle, in which case they go to the Halls of Mandos in Aman. They may be restored by the Will of the Valar, and then go to live with the Valar in Valinor, like an Earthly Paradise, though just being in the place does not confer immortality, as Men supposed. Men are mortal, and when they die they go beyond the circles of the world, even the Elves not knowing where that might be.[30]

Adaptations

[edit]
Wood elves as portrayed in the 1977 Rankin-Bass version of The Hobbit look nothing like those in any other adaptation.[31]

The 1977 Rankin-Bass version of The Hobbit depicts the wood-elves in what Austin Gilkeson calls a weird way, quite unlike the elves in any other adaptation, not even resembling the film's depiction of Elrond. Gilkeson describes them as "like Troll dolls that have been left out in the rain too long, and a little like Yzma from The Emperor's New Groove. They have gray skin, pug faces, and blond hair. It’s frankly bizarre".[31]

Elf soldiers in Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring are depicted as physically superior to Men.[32]

In Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings film series (2001–2003), Elves are shown as physically superior to Men in eyesight, balance, and aim, but their superiority in other ways is "never really made clear".[32]

Jackson's Elves resemble those of the 19th-20th century Celtic Revival, as in John Duncan's 1911 painting The Riders of the Sidhe, rather than Tolkien's reconstruction of medieval Elves, according to Dimitra Fimi.[33]

Fimi compared Jackson's handling of Elves with Tolkien's. Tolkien's Elves are rooted as firmly as possible in Anglo-Saxon, Middle English, and Norse tradition, but influenced also by Celtic fairies in the Tuatha Dé Danann. Jackson's Elves are however "Celtic" in the romanticised sense of the Celtic Revival.[33][34] She compares Jackson's representation of Gildor Inglorion's party of Elves riding through the Shire "moving slowly and gracefully towards the West, accompanied by ethereal music" with John Duncan's 1911 painting The Riders of the Sidhe. She notes that Jackson's conceptual designer, the illustrator Alan Lee, had made use of the painting in the 1978 book Faeries.[33]

[edit]

Tolkien-style Elves have influenced the depiction of elves in the fantasy genre from the 1960s and afterwards. Elves speaking an elvish language similar to those in Tolkien's novels became staple non-human characters in high fantasy works and in fantasy role-playing games like Dungeons & Dragons. They are often portrayed as being mentally sharp and lovers of nature, art, and song, as well as wiser and more beautiful than humans. They usually fit the stereotype of being skilled archers and gifted in magic.[35]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ In its case, the other two races are the sea elves (mermen) and the Jüflings (of rocks and hills).[1]
  2. ^ An exception was Fëanor, who had seven sons.[T 27]
  3. ^ Míriel however is so exhausted by the birth of her fiery and creative son Fëanor, that she wilfully gives up her spirit.[29]

References

[edit]

Primary

[edit]
  1. ^ Carpenter 2023, #25, to the editor of The Observer, printed 20 February 1938
  2. ^ a b c Tolkien 1984
  3. ^ Tolkien, J. R. R. (1984b). Christopher Tolkien (ed.). The Book of Lost Tales. Vol. 2. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 0-395-36614-3.
  4. ^ a b c Tolkien 1937, p. 120
  5. ^ Tolkien 1987, p. 171, The Lhammas
  6. ^ Tolkien 1984, p. 31, The Cottage of Lost Play
  7. ^ a b Carpenter 2023, #26 to Stanley Unwin, 4 March 1938
  8. ^ Tolkien 1955, Appendix F
  9. ^ Tolkien 1954a book 2, ch. 7 "The Mirror of Galadriel"
  10. ^ a b Carpenter 2023, #144 to Naomi Mitchison, 25 April 1954
  11. ^ Tolkien 1994, "Quendi and Eldar"
  12. ^ Tolkien 1977, ch. 3 "Of the Coming of the Elves and the Captivity of Melkor"
  13. ^ Tolkien 1977, ch. 7, "Of the Silmarils and the Unrest of the Noldor"
  14. ^ a b Tolkien 1977, ch. 9, "Of the Flight of the Noldor"
  15. ^ Tolkien 1977, ch. 13, "Of the Return of the Noldor"
  16. ^ Tolkien 1977, ch. 22, "Of the Ruin of Doriath"
  17. ^ Tolkien 1977, ch. 23, "Of Tuor and the Fall of Gondolin"
  18. ^ 'Tolkien 1977, ch. 24, "Of the Voyage of Earendil and the War of Wrath"
  19. ^ Tolkien 1977, "Of the Rings of Power and the Third Age"
  20. ^ Tolkien 1955, Appendix B: "Later Events Concerning the Members of the Fellowship of the Ring"
  21. ^ Tolkien 1955, Appendix A, 1. v. "The Tale of Aragorn and Arwen"
  22. ^ Tolkien 1955, Appendix F
  23. ^ Tolkien 1977, Index, "Vanyar"
  24. ^ Tolkien 1977, ch. 16 "Of Maeglin"
  25. ^ Tolkien 1977, ch. 21 "Of Túrin Turambar"
  26. ^ a b c d e f g h Tolkien 1993, "Laws and Customs among the Eldar"
  27. ^ Tolkien 1977, ch. 5 "Of Eldamar and the Princes of the Eldalië"
  28. ^ Tolkien 1993, The Converse of Manwë and Eru, pp. 361–364
  29. ^ Tolkien 1977, ch. 1 "Of the Beginning of Days"
  30. ^ Tolkien 1977, ch. 20 "Of the Fifth Battle: Nirnaeth Arnoediad" "At the bidding of Turgon Círdan built seven swift ships, and they sailed out into the West"
  31. ^ Tolkien 1977, "Of the Rings of Power and the Third Age" "at the Grey Havens of Lindon there abode also a remnant of the people of Gil-galad the Elvenking. ... building and tending the elven-ships wherein those of the Firstborn who grew weary of the world set sail into the uttermost West. Círdan the Shipwright was lord of the Havens"
  32. ^ Tolkien 1993, "Myths Transformed", XI

Secondary

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  1. ^ a b Þorgeirsson, Haukur (March 2023). "J. R. R. Tolkien and the Ethnography of the Elves". Notes and Queries. 70 (1): 6–7. doi:10.1093/notesj/gjad007.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Shippey 2005, pp. 66–74
  3. ^ Simek, Rudolf; Hall, Angela (trans.) (2007). Dictionary of Northern Mythology. D.S. Brewer. pp. 7–8, 73–74. ISBN 978-0-85991-513-7.
  4. ^ Solopova, Elizabeth (2009). Languages, Myths and History: An Introduction to the Linguistic and Literary Background of J. R. R. Tolkien's Fiction. New York City: North Landing Books. p. 26. ISBN 978-0-9816607-1-4.
  5. ^ a b c Shippey 2005, pp. 270–273
  6. ^ Horstmann, C., ed. (1887). "St Michael". The Early South English Legendary. lines 253-258: Trubner/Early English Text Society. p. 307. ISBN 9780527000844.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  7. ^ Zipes, Jack (1989). Victorian fairy tales : the revolt of the fairies and elves (Paperback ed.). Routledge. p. xxiv. ISBN 978-0-415-90140-6.
  8. ^ Garth, John (2003). Tolkien and the Great War. London: HarperCollins (published 2004). p. 78. ISBN 978-0-00-711953-0.
  9. ^ Garth, John (2003). Tolkien and the Great War. London: HarperCollins (published 2004). p. 76. ISBN 978-0-00-711953-0.
  10. ^ Burns, Marjorie (2005). Perilous realms: Celtic and Norse in Tolkien's Middle-earth. University of Toronto Press. pp. 22–23. ISBN 0-8020-3806-9.
  11. ^ Electric Scotland. "Scottish Charms and Amulets" Elf-Arrows
  12. ^ a b Hall, Alaric (2005). "Calling the shots: the Old English remedy gif hors ofscoten sie and Anglo-Saxon 'elf-shot'". Neuphilologische Mitteilungen: Bulletin of the Modern Language Society. 106 (2): 195–209. JSTOR 43344130.
  13. ^ Clark Hall, J. R. (2002) [1894]. A Concise Anglo-Saxon Dictionary (4th ed.). University of Toronto Press. pp. 286, 395, 423.
  14. ^ a b Shippey 2005, pp. 282–284
  15. ^ Eden, Bradford Lee (2013) [2007]. "Elves". In Drout, Michael D. C. (ed.). The J. R. R. Tolkien Encyclopedia. Routledge. pp. 150–152. ISBN 978-0-415-86511-1.
  16. ^ Fimi, Dimitra. "Come sing ye light fairy things tripping so gay: Victorian Fairies and the Early Work of J. R. R. Tolkien" Archived 31 July 2009 at the Wayback Machine. Working With English: Medieval and Modern Language, Literature and Drama. Retrieved 11/01/08
  17. ^ a b c Carpenter, Humphrey (1977). J. R. R. Tolkien: A Biography. New York: Ballantine Books. ISBN 978-0-04-928037-3.
  18. ^ a b c d Fimi, Dimitra (August 2006). ""Mad" Elves and "elusive beauty": some Celtic strands of Tolkien's mythology". Folklore. 117 (2): 156–170. doi:10.1080/00155870600707847. S2CID 162292626.
  19. ^ Gunnell, Terry (2011). "Tivar in a Timeless Land: Tolkien's Elves". University of Iceland.
  20. ^ Burns, Marjorie (2005). Perilous Realms: Celtic and Norse in Tolkien's Middle-earth. University of Toronto Press. p. 23. ISBN 978-0-8020-3806-7.
  21. ^ Garth, John (2003). Tolkien and the Great War. London: HarperCollins (published 2004). p. 222. ISBN 978-0-00-711953-0.
  22. ^ Shippey, T. A. (2000). J. R. R. Tolkien: Author of the Century. HarperCollins. p. 211.
  23. ^ Brin, David (2008). Through Stranger Eyes: Reviews, Introductions, Tributes & Iconoclastic Essays. Nimble Books. p. 37. ISBN 978-1-934840-39-9.
  24. ^ a b c Dickerson, Matthew (2013) [2007]. "Elves: Kindreds and Migrations". In Drout, Michael D. C. (ed.). The J. R. R. Tolkien Encyclopedia. Routledge. pp. 152–154. ISBN 978-0-415-86511-1.
  25. ^ Shippey, Tom (2001). J. R. R. Tolkien: Author of the Century. HarperCollins. pp. 228–231. ISBN 978-0261-10401-3.
  26. ^ Flieger, Verlyn (2002). Splintered Light: Logos and Language in Tolkien's World (revised ed.). Kent State University Press. p. 71. ISBN 978-0873387446.
  27. ^ Drout, Michael D. C.; Hitotsubashi, Namiko; Scavera, Rachel (2014). "Tolkien's Creation of the Impression of Depth". Tolkien Studies. 11 (1): 167–211. doi:10.1353/tks.2014.0008. ISSN 1547-3163. S2CID 170851865.
  28. ^ Hostetter, Carl F. (2013) [2007]. "Languages Invented by Tolkien". In Drout, Michael D. C. (ed.). The J. R. R. Tolkien Encyclopedia: Scholarship and Critical Assessment. Routledge. pp. 332–343. ISBN 978-0-415-86511-1.
  29. ^ Dickerson, Matthew (2013) [2007]. "Popular Music". In Drout, Michael D. C. (ed.). Finwë and Míriel. The J. R. R. Tolkien Encyclopedia. Routledge. pp. 212–213. ISBN 978-0-415-96942-0.
  30. ^ Shippey 2005, pp. 269–272.
  31. ^ a b Gilkeson, Austin (21 December 2018). "Rankin/Bass's The Hobbit Showed Us the Future of Pop Culture". Tor.com. Retrieved 26 October 2023.
  32. ^ a b Ford, Judy Ann; Reid, Robin Anne (2011). "Into the West: Far Green Country or Shadow on the Waters?". In Bogstad, Janice M.; Kaveny, Philip E. (eds.). Picturing Tolkien. McFarland. p. 172. ISBN 978-0-7864-8473-7.
  33. ^ a b c Fimi, Dimitra (2011). "Filming Folklore: Adapting Fantasy for the Big Screen through Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings". In Bogstad, Janice M.; Kaveny, Philip E. (eds.). Picturing Tolkien. McFarland. pp. 84–101. ISBN 978-0-7864-8473-7.
  34. ^ Rosebury, Brian (2003) [1992]. Tolkien: A Cultural Phenomenon. Palgrave. pp. 204–220. ISBN 978-1403-91263-3.
  35. ^ Bergman, Jenni (2011). The Significant Other: A Literary History of Elves (PhD). Cardiff University.

Sources

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