Thingol

Elu Thingol (died Y.S. 502) is a fictional character in J.R.R. Tolkien's Middle-earth legendarium. He appears in The Silmarillion, The Lays of Beleriand and Children of Húrin as well as in numerous stories in the many volumes of The History of Middle-earth. He is notably a major character in many of the stories about the First Age of Tolkien's Middle-earth[1] and he is an essential part of the ancestral backgrounding of the romance between Aragorn and Arwen in The Lord of the Rings.

Thingol
Tolkien character
The Fight between Thingol and Boldog
illustration by Tom Loback
In-universe information
AliasesElwë Singollo,
Elu Thingol,
King of Doriath,
King of the Sindar,
King of the Teleri,
High-king and Lord of Beleriand,
RaceElves
GenderMale
Book(s)The Silmarillion,
The Children of Húrin,
The Lays of Beleriand,
Beren & Lúthien

Thingol is introduced as the King of Doriath, King of the Sindar, High-king[2] and Lord of Beleriand. He is said to be "the tallest of all the Children of Ilúvatar" and the "mightiest of the Eldar save Fëanor only".[3]

Fictional role

In The Silmarillion he is one of the three chieftains of the Elves who depart from Cuiviénen with Oromë as ambassadors of Valinor and later become Kings. Upon his return, he persuades many of his kindred, the Nelyar, to follow him back to Valinor. This host becomes known as the Teleri. He later encounters Melian the Maia and fell in love with her. He had a daughter, Luthien, who married Beren. He fought numerous wars with Morgoth and Feanor, before being killed in a war with the Dwarves. Thingol was the one who set numerous quests deemed impossible for Beren in order to prevent him from marrying Luthien.

Etymology

  • Thingol is, in Tolkien's fictional language of Sindarin, a form of an epithet of Elu. Elu is from Elwë, Star-man (man in the sense male, not human). Thingol comes from sindacollogrey cloak, possibly derived from his family trait of long silver hair. The Quenya form of the same name is Elwë Singollo, Singollo meaning Greycloak.
  • AranrúthKing's Ire, Thingol's sword. In History of Middle-earth, Vol. XII, p. 376 a stem, RUTH, is given with the sense "scar, score, furrow" It is worth noting that this was also the sword of the Kings of Númenor and very likely Ar-Pharazôn had it with him when he assaulted Valinor, where it was presumably buried with him.
  • List Melian – Doriathrin Sindarin for Girdle of Melian.

The House of Thingol, Elmo, and Olwë

MelianTHINGOL
d. First Age 502
Elmo
unknown
Olwë
b. YT
Círdan
b. YT
Eöl
d. FA 400
Aredhel
d. FA 400
unknown
mother
Aranwë
unknown
GaladhonEärwenFinarfinMaeglinVoronwë
Lúthien
YT 1200 – FA 503
GalathilCelebornGaladriel
b. YT 1362
Angrod
d. FA 455
EldalótëFinrod
YT 1300 – FA 465
Aegnor
d. FA 455
Dior
d. FA 506
Nimloth
d. FA 506
Orodreth
d. FA 495
Eluréd
FA 500 – FA 506
Elurín
FA 500 – FA 506
Elwing
b. FA 503
Gil-galad
d. SA 3441
Finduilas
d. FA 495
Elros
FA 532 – SA 442
Elrond
b. FA 532
Celebrían
Tar-Elendil
SA 350 – SA 751
Silmariën
b. SA 521
Tar-Meneldur
SA 543 – SA 942
Elendil
SA 3119 – SA 3441
Ar-Pharazôn
SA 3118 – SA 3319
Isildur
SA 3209 – TA 2
Anárion
SA 3219 – SA 3440
Arvedui
TA 1864 – TA 1975
Fíriel
b. TA 1896
Aranarth
TA 1941 – TA 2106
Aragorn
TA 2931 – FA 120
Arwen
TA 241 – FA 121
Elladan
b. TA 130
Elrohir
b. TA 130
Eldarion

See also

  • Quenta Silmarillion

References

  1. Michael D.C. Drout (6 November 2006). J.R.R. Tolkien Encyclopedia: Scholarship and Critical Assessment. Routledge. p. 646. ISBN 978-1-135-88033-0.
  2. J.R.R. Tolkien, Christopher Tolkien editor, History of Middle-earth, Vol.XI, (1994), p.21, "Fingolfin...acknowledged the high-kingship of Thingol"; p.380, Thingol is also acknowledged high-king by Círdan and his following: p.410, the Grey-elves of Mithrim acknowledged Thingol as high-king.
  3. J.R.R. Tolkien, Christopher Tolkien editor, History of Middle-earth, Vol.XI, (1994), p.21, p.25.
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