Locations named after Tolkien's works

From Tolkien Gateway
"...It is a long tale..." — Aragorn
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Several locations have been given names after fictional locations and characters of Tolkien's Middle-earth and wider Legendarium.

Cities[edit | edit source]

Geldrop[edit | edit source]

Geldrop is a Dutch town with a neighbourhood whose streets are all related to Tolkien and his Legendarium.[1]

Jacksonville[edit | edit source]

Jacksonville is a city in Florida that has a neighbourhood with street names based on The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit.[2]

Geographical features[edit | edit source]

Mountains[edit | edit source]

Seamounts[edit | edit source]

Astronomy[edit | edit source]

Titan[edit | edit source]

Titan is one of Saturn's moons. Its mountains (Montes) are named after mountains in Arda and hills (colles) after characters.[13]

The named montes of Titan are: Angmar Montes, Dolmed Montes, Doom Mons, Echoriat Montes, Erebor Mons, Gram Montes, Irensaga Montes, Merlock Montes, Mindolluin Montes, Misty Montes, Mithrim Montes, Rerir Montes, Taniquetil Montes.

Asteroids[edit | edit source]

Other[edit | edit source]

  • Kuiper Belt object 385446 Manwë and its moon Thorondor.[17]
  • Trans-Neptunian object 174567 Varda and its moon Ilmarë.[18]
  • A series of regions of Pluto called Balrog Macula.[19]
  • The Eye of Sauron is a nickname given to many objects due to a similar appearance including, the nebulae M 1-42,[20] Helix Nebula,[21] star system HR 4796A,[22] and Seyfert galaxy NGC 4151.[23]
  • Earendel, a star in the constellation of Cetus. Even though it is an Anglo-Saxon name that predates Tolkien, the researches involved in its discovery were fans of his works and chose the name for that reason. [24]

See also[edit | edit source]

References

  1. Frank Jacobs, "Suburb Designs Its Neighborhood around J.R.R. Tolkien’s Middle-Earth" dated 13 February 2016, BigThing.com (accessed 4 February 2024)
  2. Ennis Davis, "10 Jax neighborhoods with thematic street names" dated 5 December 2016, TheJaxsonMag.com (accessed 4 February 2024)
  3. "Mount Shadowfax", www2.gov.bc.ca/ (accessed 4 February 2024)
  4. "Mount Gandalf", www2.gov.bc.ca/ (accessed 4 February 2024)
  5. "Mount Aragorn", www2.gov.bc.ca/ (accessed 4 February 2024)
  6. "Eriador Seamount", MarineRegions.org (accessed 4 February 2024)
  7. "Rohan Seamount", MarineRegions.org (accessed 4 February 2024)
  8. "Gondor Seamount", MarineRegions.org (accessed 4 February 2024)
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 Harry Baker, "Eye of Sauron' volcano and other deep-sea structures discovered in underwater 'Mordor" dated 23 July 2023, livescience.com (accessed 4 February 2024)
  10. "Fangorn Bank", MarineRegions.org (accessed 4 February 2024)
  11. "Edoras Bank", MarineRegions.org (accessed 4 February 2024)
  12. "Isengard Ridge", MarineRegions.org (accessed 4 February 2024)
  13. Gabrielle Barone, "The Unexpected Journey from Tolkien to Titan", (accessed 4 February 2024)
  14. IAU Minor Planet Center, "(2991) Bilbo = 1975 JC = 1979 SY3 = 1982 HV = 1982 KB2" dated 3 August 2018, MinorPlanetCenter.net (accessed 4 February 2024)
  15. Schmadel, Lutz D. (2007). "(2675) Tolkien". Dictionary of Minor Planet Names – (2675) Tolkien. Springer Berlin Heidelberg. p. 219. ISBN 978-3-540-00238-3.
  16. IAU Minor Planet Center, "(378214) Sauron = 2007 AP11", MinorPlanetCenter.net (accessed 4 February 2024)
  17. "385446 Manwe", (accessed 4 February 2024)
  18. IAU Minor Planet Center, "(174567) Varda = 2003 MW12", MinorPlanetCenter.net (accessed 4 February 2024)
  19. Adam Rogers, "The New, Nerdy Mythology of Pluto's Place Names", Wired.com (accessed 4 February 2024)
  20. "The Eye Of Sauron Is Nebula ESO 456-67", tgdaily.com (accessed 4 February 2024)
  21. Paulo Lobao, "The Eye of Sauron (AKA NGC7293)", SkyandTelescope.org (accessed 4 February 2024)
  22. Flora Graham, "Eye of Sauron star spotted by planet-hunting camera", NewScientist.com (accessed 4 February 2024)
  23. "NGC 4151: An Active Black Hole in the "Eye of Sauron"", chandra.Harvard.edu (accessed 4 February 2024)
  24. Meet Earendel: Hubble telescope's most distant star discovery gets a Tolkien-inspired name, space.com (accessed 6 February 2024)