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John
Ronald Reuel Tolkien (* 03-01-1892 / 02-09-1973)
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18th
Century
Migration of the
Tollkühn family from Saxony (Germany) to England,
changing the name to Tolkien.
1891
Mabel Suffield
marries Arthur Reuel Tolkien, a bank manager for the Bank of
Africa, who moved to South Africa when he left his job at Lloyds
Bank in Birmingham, England.
1892
On January 3rd,
John Ronald Reuel Tolkien ("Ronald") was born in Bloemfontein,
South Africa.
1894
John Ronald's
only brother, Hilary, was born.
1896
On February 15th,
Arthur Tolkien dies after having contracted rheumatic fever.
Mabel Tolkien, John Ronald and Hilary return to the West Midlands
in England. They grow up in the rural village Sarehole with
its mill, and in the city of Birmingham.
1900
Mabel Tolkien
becomes a roman catholic. The priest, who visits the family
often is Father Francis Xavier Morgan, half-Spanish, half-Welsh.
1904
Mabel Tolkien
is diagnosed with diabetes, which, at that time, is incurable.
She dies on the 15th of October. The boys are taken into care
by aunt Beatrice Suffield and by Father Morgan. Later they live
at Mrs Faulkner's.
In that time John
Ronald visits King Edward VI Grammar School in Birmingham. During
that time, his interests in linguistics become more pronounced.
Together with some King Edward's friends, he forms the "T. C.
B. S." (Tea Club, Barrovian Society, named after their meeting
place at the Barrow Stores) .
1908
Being lodged at
Mrs Faulkner's, John Ronald meets Edith Bratt, a 19-year old
woman. Father Francis Morgan forbides a relationship until he
is 21 and able to take care of himself.
1911
J.R.R. Tolkien
went up to Exeter College, Oxford. He studied the Classics,
Old English, the Germanic languages (especially Gothic), Welsh
and Finnish.
1913
When he was 21,
Tolkien contacted Edith, but they had grown apart and she had
become engaged to someone else. Tolkien persuaded her to break
her engagement and become engaged to him.
He then obtained
a disappointing second class degree in Honour Moderations, the
"midway" stage of a 4-year Oxford "Greats" (i.e. Classics) course,
although with an "alpha plus" in philology. As a result of this
he changed his school from Classics to the more congenial English
Language and Literature.
In this summer,
he was fascinated by the poem "Crist of Cynewulf",
especially the lines "Eálá Earendel engla beorhtast Ofer
middangeard monnum sended", which means "Hail Earendel
brightest of angels, over Middle Earth sent to men ".
1915
J.R.R. Tolkien
obtained a first class degree at Oxford in English. In this
year he joined the Lancashire Fusileers, mobilised after the
outbreak of WW1 in 1914.
1916
John Ronald Tolkien
marries Edith Bratt. After his marriage, he was posted to France.
Tolkien fought at the Somme and was invalided home with trench
fever. Two of his three closest school friends, members of the
T.C.B.S., died in WW1.
1917
In early 1917
he began work on what was to become The Silmarillion - his great
work of language and mythology. It was when he was stationed
at Hull that he and Edith went walking in the woods at nearby
Roos, and there in a grove thick with hemlock Edith danced for
him. This was the inspiration for the tale of Beren and Lúthien,
a recurrent theme in his "Legendarium". The Tale of Beren and
Luthien Tinuviel always remained his favourite. Edith, he said,
was his Luthien.
Their first son,
John Francis Reuel (later Father John Tolkien) had been born
on 16 November 1917.
1918-1920
In 1918, J.R.R.
Tolkien obtained academic employment, and by the time he was
demobilised he had been appointed Assistant Lexicographer on
the New English Dictionary (the "Oxford English Dictionary")
in Oxford. In 1920, he applied to become Reader (Associate Professor)
in English Language at the University of Leeds, and to his surprise
was appointed.
During these years,
he read on of his stories, The Fall of Gondolin, to the Exeter
College Essay Club, where it was well received by an audience
which included Neville Coghill and Hugo Dyson, two future "Inklings".
1920-1925
At Leeds as well
as teaching he collaborated with E. V. Gordon on the famous
edition of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (1924). In addition,
he and Gordon founded a "Viking Club" for undergraduates devoted
mainly to reading Old Norse sagas and drinking beer. During
thise times, he continued writing and refining The Book of Lost
Tales and his invented "Elvish" languages
Leeds also saw
the birth of two more sons: Michael Hilary Reuel in October
1920, and Christopher Reuel in 1924.
Then in 1925 the
Rawlinson and Bosworth Professorship of Anglo-Saxon at Oxford
fell vacant; Tolkien successfully applied for the post.
1925-1935
Tolkien did not
publish very much academic research. However, his rare scholarly
publications were often extremely influential, most notably
his lecture "Beowulf, the Monsters and the Critics". He
did, however, have a heavy teaching load.
At Oxford, the
Inklings was formed. This was a group of Christian, conservative,
Oxford writers who met informally and convivially. Besides Tolkien,
its members included Messrs Coghill and Dyson, as well as Owen
Barfield, Charles Williams, and above all C. S. Lewis, who became
one of Tolkien's closest friends. The Inklings regularly met
for conversation, drink, and frequent reading from their work-in-progress.
Edith bore their
last child and only daughter, Priscilla, in 1929. Tolkien got
into the habit of writing the children annual illustrated letters
as if from Santa Claus, and a selection of these was published
in 1976 as The Father Christmas Letters. In adulthood John entered
the priesthood, Michael and Christopher both saw war service
in the Royal Air Force. Afterwards Michael became a schoolmaster
and Christopher a university lecturer, and Priscilla became
a social worker.
Meanwhile Tolkien
continued developing his mythology and languages. As mentioned
above, he told his children stories, some of which he developed
into those published posthumously as Mr. Bliss, Roverandom,
Farmer Giles of Ham etc.
1935-1937
One day when he
was marking examination papers, he discovered that one candidate
had left one page of an answer-book blank. On this page, he
wrote in an impulse "In a hole in the ground there lived a Hobbit".
He then decided he needed to find out what a Hobbit was, what
sort of a hole it lived in, why it lived in a hole, etc.
From this investigation
grew a tale that he told to his younger children, and even passed
round. In 1936 an incomplete typescript of it came into the
hands of Susan Dagnall, an employee of the publishing firm of
George Allen and Unwin. She asked Tolkien to finish it, and
presented the complete story to Stanley Unwin, the then Chairman
of the firm. He tried it out on his 10-year old son Rayner,
who wrote an approving report, and it was published as The Hobbit
in 1937.
1937-1955
In 1945 he changed
his chair to the Merton Professorship of English Language and
Literature, which he retained until his retirement in 1959.
Tolkien and Edith Bratt lived quietly in the North Oxford suburb
of Headington.
The Hobbit was
so successful that Stanley Unwin asked if he had any more similar
material available for publication. By this time Tolkien had
begun to make his Legendarium into what he was now calling the
full account Quenta Silmarillion, or Silmarillion for short.
The publisher's reaction was that these were not commercially
publishable, but asked him again if he was willing to write
a sequel to The Hobbit.
This sequel soon
developed into something much more than a children's story:
The Lord of the Rings. Rayner Unwin, Stanley Unwin's son, again
played a an important role in accepting the story for publishing.
His father's firm decided to incur the probable loss of £1,000
for the succès d'estime, and publish it under the title of The
Lord of the Rings in three parts during 1954 and 1955, with
USA rights going to Houghton Mifflin. It soon became apparent
that both author and publishers had greatly underestimated the
work's public appeal.
1955-1968
The Lord of the
Rings had mixed reviews, ranging from the ecstatic (W. H. Auden,
C. S. Lewis) to the damning (E. Wilson, E. Muir, P. Toynbee).
The really amazing moment was when The Lord of the Rings went
into an American pirated paperback version in 1965. The publicity
generated by the copyright dispute alerted millions of American
readers to the existence of something outside their previous
experience. By 1968 The Lord of the Rings had almost become
the Bible of the "Alternative Society".
Being stalked
by American fans, Tolkien had to change addresses and his telephone
number went ex-directory.
1969-1973
After his retirement
in 1969 Edith and Ronald moved to Bournemouth.
On 22 November
1971 Edith died, and Ronald soon returned to Oxford, to rooms
provided by Merton College. Ronald died on 2 September 1973.
He and Edith are buried together in a single grave in the Catholic
section of Wolvercote cemetery in the northern suburbs of Oxford.
In the headstone,
the following text is inscripted:
Edith
Mary Tolkien, Lúthien,
1889-1971
John
Ronald Reuel Tolkien, Beren, 1892-1973
1973-
Poshumously, Tolkiens
"Legendarium", the stories concerning the first and
second Era, were published by Allen & Unwin. J.R.R.Tolkien's
son, Christopher Tolkien, took up the task of editing, completing
and publishing his father's life work. This resulted in the
publication of "The Silmarillion" (1977), "Unfinished
Tales" (1980) and the "History of Middle Earth series"
(1984-1997).
Furthermore, other
stories, such as Mr. Bliss, Roverandom and Father Christmas
Letters, were published.
<<
back to -=[RedBookofWestmarch]=-
home
- Humphrey
Carpenter: J.R.R. Tolkien, A Biography. London: George Allen
& Unwin, 1977. ISBN 0-04-928037-6
- David
Doughan: Who was Tolkien?
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BIOGRAPHY
PICTURES

Father
Francis Morgan

J.R.R.
Tolkien in the 1960's

Tolkien
and Bratt

Tolkien
just before his death in 1973

The
grave of "Beren and Luthien", Wolvercote Cemetary, Oxford.
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