Lórinand: Difference between revisions

From Tolkien Gateway
m (Re-linked)
m (ref tweak)
(2 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Lórinand''' was one of the many old names for the land usually called [[Lothlórien]]; its meaning is apparently '[[Valley of Gold]]'.
{{main|Lothlórien}}
'''Lórinand''' was one of the many old names for the land usually called [[Lothlórien]].
==Etymology==
In a manuscript composed by [[J.R.R. Tolkien|Tolkien]] sometime after ''[[The Lord of the Rings]]'', ''Lórinand'' is said to be a [[Nandorin]] name, meaning "valley of gold" (containing the "Elvish word meaning 'golden light'").<ref name=UTG>{{UT|Galadriel}}, note 5</ref>


[[Category:Locations]]
However, [[Christopher Tolkien]] notes that in a later manuscript the name ''Lórinand'' was reconceptualized as "a transformation, after the introduction of the [[Mallorn|mallorns]], of a yet older name ''[[Lothlórien#Names|Lindórinand]]''".<ref name=UTG/>
 
{{references}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Lorinand}}
[[Category:Nandorin words]]
[[Category:Elvish words]]

Revision as of 00:34, 7 July 2011

Main article: Lothlórien

Lórinand was one of the many old names for the land usually called Lothlórien.

Etymology

In a manuscript composed by Tolkien sometime after The Lord of the Rings, Lórinand is said to be a Nandorin name, meaning "valley of gold" (containing the "Elvish word meaning 'golden light'").[1]

However, Christopher Tolkien notes that in a later manuscript the name Lórinand was reconceptualized as "a transformation, after the introduction of the mallorns, of a yet older name Lindórinand".[1]

References