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  2. Orc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orc

    The orc was a sort of "hell-devil" in Old English literature, and the orc-né (pl. orc-néas, "demon-corpses") was a race of corrupted beings and descendants of Cain, alongside the elf, according to the poem Beowulf. Tolkien adopted the term orc from these old attestations, which he professed was a choice made purely for "phonetic suitability ...

  3. Tolkien and race - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tolkien_and_race

    He notes that the link between darkness and evil is made many times in the Bible, with phrases such as "the shadow of death" or "you are all children of light". The irredeemable Orcs, he notes, are traceable to Old English vocabularies where Latin Orcus (Pluto, ruler of the underworld, or death) is glossed as "orc, giant, or the devil of Hell ...

  4. Tolkien's moral dilemma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tolkien's_moral_dilemma

    The Elf Ecthelion slays the Orc champion Orcobal in Gondolin. 2007 illustration by Tom Loback. J. R. R. Tolkien, a devout Roman Catholic, [T 1] created what he came to feel was a moral dilemma for himself with his supposedly evil Middle-earth peoples like Orcs, when he made them able to speak.

  5. Christianity in Middle-earth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christianity_in_Middle-earth

    Commentators including some Christians have taken a wide range of positions on the role of Christianity in Tolkien's fiction, especially in The Lord of the Rings.They note that it contains representations of Christ and angels in characters such as the wizards, the resurrection, the motifs of light, hope, and redemptive suffering, the apparent invisibility of Christianity in the novel, and not ...

  6. Cosmology of Tolkien's legendarium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmology_of_Tolkien's...

    [T 2] Melkor creates Orcs in mockery of Elves, or by corrupting Elves he had captured in his northern Middle-earth fortress of Udûn. [T 16] Shippey writes that Tolkien's Middle-earth writings embody the ancient Christian debate on the nature of evil. Shippey notes Elrond's Boethian statement that "nothing is evil in the beginning.

  7. 'It's magic': Here's the history behind the Elf on the Shelf ...

    www.aol.com/news/magic-heres-history-behind-elf...

    Once upon a time, there was a young mother who had made it through her son's first five years without an Elf on the Shelf. ... If you were wondering, Bell has elves in her home. "Our elves still ...

  8. Tolkien's monsters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tolkien's_monsters

    Orcs are depicted as wholly evil, meaning that they could be slaughtered without regret. All the same, Orcs are human-like in being able to speak, and in having a similar concept of good and evil, a moral sense of fairness, even if they are not able to apply their morals to themselves. This presented Tolkien, a devout Roman Catholic, with a ...

  9. Elves in Middle-earth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elves_in_Middle-earth

    Elves, at least the Eldar, have a pregnancy that lasts about a year. By the age of 1, Elves can speak, walk and dance. Puberty and full height are attained at around their fiftieth to one hundredth year, when they stop aging physically. [T 26] Elves marry freely, monogamously, only once, and for love early in life; adultery is unthinkable.