Results 1 to 16 of 16

Thread: Hadramaut and Ubar

Hybrid View

Previous Post Previous Post   Next Post Next Post
  1. #1
    Παιδί του ήλιου Member Anastasios Helios's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Posts
    136

    Default Hadramaut and Ubar

    I'm a total geek for Tolkien's mythology. Do any of you think that the names of "Umbar" and the land of Harad were based on these lands and cities in south Arabia. I know very little of these places...can anyone give me any info on the histories of Hadramaut and Ubar?
    Zήτω η Ελλάς! Ζήτω το "Κοινόν Ελλήνων"!


  2. #2
    Lover of Toight Vahjoinas Member Bootsiuv's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Posts
    1,411

    Default Re: Hadramaut and Ubar

    I'm also a fan of Tolkien, although I'm really not sure if these are the places he based these things on.

    I think they're is a site, called Tolkiens dictionary or something like that(it's been at least a year since I've visited there) that would probably be able to tell you if they were based on these southern arabian places.

    It was a very cool site, actually, describing nearly everything in the 100,000some years of Tolkiens fantasy history.
    SSbQ*****************SSbQ******************SSbQ

  3. #3
    Amanuensis Member pezhetairoi's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    South of Sabara
    Posts
    2,719

    Default Re: Hadramaut and Ubar

    I'm not sure myself, but I've always thought these places were Arabic in origin, if not exactly traceable to those exact cities. Tolkien was knowledgeable, but I'm not too sure HOW knowledgeable about the era of Saba. I would have guessed he was inspired by Arabic Morocco, ie the Berbers who were the archetypical 'corsairs', and were probably the ones whom the name was first applied to. Corsairs of Umbar, after all. They were pirate raiders, and probably the most high-profile 'corsairs' in history.


    EB DEVOTEE SINCE 2004

  4. #4

    Default Re: Hadramaut and Ubar

    did you guys know Smaug (the dragon) is named after an Old English verb meaning "to squeeze into a tiny hole" Tolkein admits this in correspondance, he had quite the sense of humor
    HWÆT !
    “Vesall ertu þinnar skjaldborgar!” “Your shieldwall is pathetic!” -Bǫðvar Bjarki [Hrólfs Saga Kraka]
    “Wyrd oft nereð unfǽgne eorl þonne his ellen déah.” “The course of events often saves the un-fey warrior if his valour is good.” -Bēowulf
    “Gørið eigi hárit í blóði.” “Do not get blood on [my] hair.” -Sigurð Búason to his executioner [Óláfs Saga Tryggvasonar: Heimskringla]

    Wes þū hāl ! Be whole (with luck)!

  5. #5
    Lover of Toight Vahjoinas Member Bootsiuv's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Posts
    1,411

    Default Re: Hadramaut and Ubar

    Well, I dug up the site I was referring to....

    This is all that I could really find about Harad, more specifically near Harad (as neither far Harad, nor the peoples inhabiting it, were ever described in any great detail in any of Tolkien's works).

    Quote Originally Posted by Encyclopedia of Arda

    An indefinite region that lay to the south of Gondor and Mordor, beyond the River Harnen. Little is said of it in the histories of Middle-earth, except that the Men of that land conspired with those of Khand, and with the Wainriders, to overthrow Gondor in the time of King Ondoher. The Gondorians anticipated their strike, and Ondoher created a Southern Army to defend his land against them. That Southern Army, under the command of Eärnil, met the invading Men of Near Harad in South Ithilien, and defeated them completely.
    Not really much there as to the exact sites this place could have represented, if any....

    ....and Umbar....

    Quote Originally Posted by Encyclopedia of Arda

    A cape in the far south of Middle-earth, long held by Black Númenóreans, but conquered by Gondor for a time during the Third Age.

    Notes 1 The name appears to contain the word mbar, 'home' or 'dwelling-place', an element seen fairly frequently in place names like 'Brithombar' or 'Dimbar'. The 'u-' prefix is hard to decipher, but it would normally form a negative, so perhaps 'Umbar' simply means 'not home' or 'away from home' (to the Númenóreans or Gondorians, that is). However, there is no definite support for this theory in Tolkien's works.

    Umbar is also known to be the Elvish word for 'fate'. This seems an odd source for a placename, and is probably mere coincidence, but it may possibly refer to the fateful landing of Ar-Pharazôn here in the year II 3261, which ultimately led to the Downfall of Númenor.
    So it seems that, although this place sounds very similiar to Ubar, it may well have had other meanings (Such as meaning "not home" or it being the elvish word for 'fate' coinciding with the place which was the beginning of the end for Numenor (which, if you know anything about Tolkien history, was supposedly a nation unmatched in power and beauty before it was cast into the sea by the gods, which is suprisingly similar to the legend of Atlantis).

    Tolkien was trying to create a british mythology which was as rich as greek mythology, so I think he pulled aspects from all parts of his world....real life, legends and myths, his own imagination, etc.

    The site can be found here if you're interested. It's quite good.
    SSbQ*****************SSbQ******************SSbQ

  6. #6
    EB TRIBVNVS PLEBIS Member MarcusAureliusAntoninus's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    The State of Jefferson, USA
    Posts
    5,722

    Default Re: Hadramaut and Ubar

    You would be surprised on how much of Tolkien's writings were based on historical peoples and events.

    I don't know much of the details on Tolkien, though. If you ask over at the Fourth Age : Total War forum, I'd bet someone could tell you upon what, Tolkein based the Haradrim.


  7. #7
    Voluntary Suspension Voluntary Suspension Philippus Flavius Homovallumus's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    Isca
    Posts
    13,477

    Default Re: Hadramaut and Ubar

    Quote Originally Posted by Bootsiuv
    Well, I dug up the site I was referring to....

    This is all that I could really find about Harad, more specifically near Harad (as neither far Harad, nor the peoples inhabiting it, were ever described in any great detail in any of Tolkien's works).



    Not really much there as to the exact sites this place could have represented, if any....

    ....and Umbar....



    So it seems that, although this place sounds very similiar to Ubar, it may well have had other meanings (Such as meaning "not home" or it being the elvish word for 'fate' coinciding with the place which was the beginning of the end for Numenor (which, if you know anything about Tolkien history, was supposedly a nation unmatched in power and beauty before it was cast into the sea by the gods, which is suprisingly similar to the legend of Atlantis).

    Tolkien was trying to create a british mythology which was as rich as greek mythology, so I think he pulled aspects from all parts of his world....real life, legends and myths, his own imagination, etc.

    The site can be found here if you're interested. It's quite good.
    For starters, if you read the Silmarilion you'll realise that Numenor is Atlantis, it's made obvious at the end of the passage when Tolkien breaks down Numenor's later-day name which meant "The sunken lands" or some such in Elvish.

    most of Tolkien's works come from Germanic and Finnish epic with a liberal smattering of other mythologies.

    Found it: Atlalantë litterally "Downfallen" also Akallabêth or Mar-nu-Falmar.
    "If it wears trousers generally I don't pay attention."

    [IMG]https://img197.imageshack.us/img197/4917/logoromans23pd.jpg[/IMG]

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
Single Sign On provided by vBSSO