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J.R.R. Tolkien - The Man Who Started It All
Tolkien's Foreward to "Lord of the Rings"
Christopher Tolkien's Foreword to "The Silmarillion"

| Chronological
History of Tolkien's Four Ages
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In preparing this Chronology I have encountered a number of difficulties. First Quenta Silmarillion provides no quantitative indication of the passage of time before the creation of the Sun and the return of the Noldorin Exiles; indeed, before the creation of the Two Trees the Valar apparently did not concern themselves with the measurement of Time. Therefore, the seventeen sections of the Chronology marked by Roman numerals are sequential but definitely not isochronous. The three ages of the Chaining of Melkor were obviously vastly longer than the three periods between the poisoning of the Two Trees and the first rising of the Sun, "but of bliss and glad life there is little to be said, before it ends."
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second problem has to do with the beginning of the Years of the Sun.
I have assumed that FA I (or, more accurately, YS 1) began with the
first rising of the Sun in the West. But the reform by which Varda
returned night to Arda soon changed
the direction of movement, and by the end of FA/YS I the Sun was probably
moving from East to West. Since this realignment took some time to accomplish,
FA/YS 1 probably lasted more than 365 days. If, however, the Years of
the Sun should be counted from the first rising of the Sun in the East,
then all these dates may need to be adjusted.
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I have assumed that the year begins in the spring, following the example
of the Eldarin loa in providing dates
for these Eldarin accounts of the First Age. Thus, the birth of
Tuor, which probably occurred in January
(Rian conceived two months before Huor went to the Nirnaeth Arnoediad
at Midsummer), would be dated 473 in the Calendar of Imladris, but 474
in the Kings' Reckoning. Of course, if the birth of Nienor "in
the first beginning of the year"' occurred in January instead of
in March (both are possible), then her birth would remain dated 474,
but Dagor Bragollach should be changed to 456 and the Fell Winter to
497.
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greatest difficulty, though, involves the establishment of firm dates
for most events. The great majority of the references to time
in Quenta Silmarillion date events in terms of time elapsed since other
events. Unfortunately, these datings occur infrequently, and out of
all of them no more than four refer to any single common event: Mereth
Aderthad is held "when twenty years of the Sun had passed";
Dagor Bragollach begins in winter, "it being then four hundred
years and five and fifty since the coming of Fingolfin";
Nargothrond falls in the same
year that the messengers of Cirdan
deliver to Orodreth the warning of Ulmo,
"when four hundred and ninety-five years had passed since the rising
of the Moon, in the spring of the year"; Earendil
is born in the spring, "five hundred years and three since the
coming of the Noldor to Middle-earth."
It is clear that Feanor came to Losgar
some time before Fingolfin crossed the Helcaraxe.
The Moon rose as Fingolfin first
entered Middle-earth, and it had crossed the sky seven times (days?
months?) when Fingolfin entered
Mithrim at the first rising of the Sun. We have dated Mereth Aderthad
as FA/YS 21, since one Year of the Sun had passed at the beginning of
FA/YS 2. Similarly with the messengers of Cirdan
(496, i.e., the next spring) and the birth of Earendil
(504, nearly eight years after Tuor's
arrival in Gondolin). But
I have dated Dagor Bragollach 455, assuming winter to occur at the end
of the year and "the coming of Fingolfin"
to refer to his crossing of the Helcaraxe
a number of months earlier than his arrival in Mithrim. (Incidentally,
an indication of the considerable length of time involved in the return
of the Noldor is that during this
period Melkor returned to Middle-earth,
quarreled with Ungoliant at Lammoth,
rebuilt Angband, and overran Beleriand
as far as Amon Ereb and the Falas.)
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even with this juggling of dates some problems remain. The events between
Dagor Bragollach and the fall of Nargothrond
can be dated fairly closely by examining the careers of Turin (born
in the year when Beren first saw Luthien,
and eight years old in the Year of Lamentation, and twentythree - sixteen
years of youth, three of slavery, and four of outlawry - when he journeyed
to Gondolin during the Fell Winter
that followed the autumn in which Nargothrond was sacked.) This kind
of narrative dating is somewhat unreliable Tuor's
three years of slavery could easily be thirty-one months - or thirty-nine.
It is doubtless because of this imprecision that the dates given for
Dagor Bragollach and the sack of Nargothrond
seem two years too close. To reconcile this, I have removed two years
from Barahir's outlawry in Dorthonion (according to the text, he is
killed "in that time"' in which Galdor dies, seven years after
Dagor Bragollach, i.e., about 462) and one from Tuor's enslavement in
Hithlum.
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short, I must emphasize that the dates in this Chronology for the First
Age depend totally on my interpretations of information that does not
really warrant this kind of scrutiny. But while there may be
errors in the absolute values of the dates, they can nonetheless be
relied on as an accurate indication of the relative sequence of events
and life-spans. If some of my conclusions seem those of some wayward
pupil of Findegil the King's Writer, rather than of a careful scholar
and Elf-friend like Bilbo Baggins,
my only excuse is the poverty of this Age; I have been unable to ask
the Wise to emend my eagerness with their knowledge
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Abbreviations used by me on these History pages: FA - First Age SA - Second Age TA - Third Age FO - Fourth Age
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