Tighfield: Difference between revisions

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'''Tighfield''' was a village or town located somewhere in the [[Shire]], though its exact location is not known. It is important to history as the home of many of [[Samwise Gamgee|Samwise Gamgee]]'s ancestors. His great-great-grandfather [[Wiseman Gamwich]] came to [[Tighfield]] about two hundred years before the [[War of the Ring]], and Wiseman's son [[Hob Gammidge]] is recorded as a roper, one of a long line of Tighfield rope-makers.  
'''Tighfield''' was a village or town located somewhere in the [[Shire]], though its exact location is not known. It is important to history as the home of many of [[Samwise Gamgee]]'s ancestors. His great-great-grandfather [[Wiseman Gamwich]] came to [[Tighfield]] about two hundred years before the [[War of the Ring]], and Wiseman's son [[Hob Gammidge]] is recorded as a roper, one of a long line of Tighfield rope-makers.  


Hob's son [[Hobson Gamgee|Hobson]], and in turn his son [[Andwise Roper|Andwise]], were said to have practised their skills in a rope-walk (that is, a rope-maker's yard) for many years.
Hob's son [[Hobson Gamgee|Hobson]], and in turn his son [[Andwise Roper|Andwise]], were said to have practised their skills in a rope-walk (that is, a rope-maker's yard) for many years.

Revision as of 21:16, 16 October 2010

Tighfield was a village or town located somewhere in the Shire, though its exact location is not known. It is important to history as the home of many of Samwise Gamgee's ancestors. His great-great-grandfather Wiseman Gamwich came to Tighfield about two hundred years before the War of the Ring, and Wiseman's son Hob Gammidge is recorded as a roper, one of a long line of Tighfield rope-makers.

Hob's son Hobson, and in turn his son Andwise, were said to have practised their skills in a rope-walk (that is, a rope-maker's yard) for many years.

Hob's grandson was Hamfast Gamgee, Sam's father, who left Tighfield for Hobbiton, to start a new life as a gardener.

Etymology

Tighfield's name is associated with the tradition of rope-making there and contains an old word for "rope" (see English "tie", whose spelling was assimilated to verb "tie"). It was the site of a rope-maker's yard, also called "rope-walk" because the ropes were stretched out in long lines over trestles at intervals.[1]

Tolkien notes the modern place-name elements tigh, teigh, tye, tey which are unrelated; they mean "an enclosed piece of land" and do not occur as the first element in a compound.[1]

Tolkien also noted that the term "rope-walk" in the text has confused several of his translators, to the point of imagining rope bridges.[1]

References