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The Stars That Varda Made  by Kitt Otter

The Stars That Varda Made

The Elves are the people of the stars; the very same stars they woke under can be seen by anyone who glimpses upward at night. The stars are central in the Professor’s mythology. Some knowledge of the night sky is essential to understanding the mythology and Elves in particular, be you a fanfiction writer or plain Tolkien fanatic. Even though Elvish names for stars and constellations abound in his work, the Professor was often vague about their identities. I’ve been an amateur astronomer for some years and my curiosity finally led me to do the research (and guesswork) to match the Elvish names to their likely stars. Basically this essay is a list of possibilities.

All the Elvish is in bold and I give the sources with their page numbers so you can more easily look them up. In addition, there are references, definitions of astronomical terms, and several links to star maps at the end. I suggest you keep a map handy.

We’ll begin with the passage in The Fellowship of the Ring:

“Away high in the East swung Remmirath, the Netted Stars, and slowly above the mists red Borgil rose, glowing like a jewel of fire. Then by some shift of airs all the mist was drawn away like a veil, and there leaned up, as he climbed over the rim of the world, the Swordsman of the Sky, Menelvagor with his shining belt. The Elves all burst into song” [p. 111].

There is no doubt that Menelvagor of the shining belt is Orion, and Remmirath, the netted stars, is the dazzling star-cluster above Orion, the Pleiades. But which star is Borgil? There are, in fact, two possible bright red stars: Betelgeuse, the shoulder of Orion, and Aldebaran, the eye of Taurus. By the passage, it seems most likely to be Aldebaran, who is above Orion and under the Pleiades. Yet not all think so; this is actually a hot topic of debate.

Betelguese is on Orion’s shoulder, though right as the swordsman rises, the crimson star is on his lower half; that is, the belt files over the horizon at about the same time Betelguese does. Betelgeuse may have been too low to be the red Borgil the Professor describes as “above the mists”. Still, the shoulder may have been high enough to escape the haze the rest of Menelvagor was under. I can’t settle the question for good. Aldebaran is my own preference for Borgil, but be free to choose yours.

Moving on to The Silmarillion, narrowing down specific stars grows much harder:

“Then Varda went forth from the council, and she looked out from the height of Taniquetil, and beheld the darkness of Middle-earth beneath the innumerable stars, faint and far.[…] She took the silver dews from the vats of Telperion, and therewith she made new stars and brighter against the coming of the Firstborn;[…]. Carnil and Luinil, Nénar and Lumbar, Alcarinquë and Elemmírë she wrought in that time…” [p. 48].

Before I continue, I should point out that in a late version of the story from Morgoth’s Ring [pgs. 38-39 & 375-76], Varda made only the Great Stars, not THE stars. By both accounts, however, it seems the bright stars created from the silver dews are the planets.

OK, then which planets? Further in Morgoth’s Ring [pgs.434-436], the Professor set Alcarinquë as Jupiter, Elemmírë as Mercury, Carnil as Mars, Nénar as Neptune, leaving Luinil as Uranus. But, as Christopher Tolkien and others have pointed out, Neptune and Uranus are too dim to be considered “great stars”, neverminding the sharp eyes of the Elves. Perhaps the Professor was being fanciful or liked the poetic ring of it. Still, for a fanfiction writer serious on realism such vagueness is a sin. Are there other stars we can assign them to?

Carnil and Luinil, defined as “red star” and “blue star”, instantly had me think of the most striking pair of blue and red stars, Betelgeuse and Rigel. Both are among the brightest stars in the sky and both are in the constellation Orion. Yet they needn’t be two proximate stars; there are other possibilities. Besides the red planet Mars, Carnil may be other scarlet stars such as Arcturus, Aldebaran, and Antares. Luinil could be a host of other blue-white stars, among them Vega and Procyon.

Nénar, possibly having the root nen (water), like Luinil, could be any watery-blue star like Rigel, Vega, or Procyon. Alcarinquë means “the glorious” and Elemmírë “star jewel”. They may be any of the brighter stars, though their being Jupiter and Saturn fits well because “glorious” and “jewel” are close to what pops into my head when I see them. Lumbar, maybe having the root lumbë (shadow), could be Mercury, who is often behind the sun from earth’s vantage point, in the sun’s shadow, if you like to think – though the possibilities run through just about any major star. Actually, in The War of the Jewels, the Forward presents the idea that Lumbar may be Saturn, also giving an explanation for its strange name [p. xi].

In short, that Silm passage is a coil of confusion. If you deny altogether Carnil and Co are any of the bright planets, then a safe bet would be among the ten brightest stars of the northern hemisphere: Sirius, Arcturus, Vega, Capella, Rigel, Procyon, Betelgeuse, Altair, Aldebaran, and Antares. Please look them up to your heart’s content.

A few paragraphs below the previous passage in The Silmarillion says:

“It is told that even as Varda ended her labors, and they were long, when first Menelmacar strode up the sky and the blue fire of Helluin flickered in the mists above the borders of the world, in that hour the Children of the Earth awoke…” [p. 48].

Christopher Tolkien in Book of Lost Tales 1identifies Helluin (which seems obvious from the description) as Sirius, known to us as the Dog Star, who follows Orion [p. 224]. Too bad all aren’t so easy to place.

“Now fair and marvelous was that vessel made, and it was filled with a wavering flame, pure and bright; and Eärendil the Mariner sat at the helm, glistening with dust of elven-gems, and the Silmaril was bound upon his brow. Far he journeyed in that ship, even into the starless voids; but most often was he seen at morning or at evening, glimmering in sunrise or sunset, as he came back to Valinor from voyages beyond the confines of the world” [p. 250].

Eärendil is the morning and evening star, known to us as the brightest planet, Venus, which is brightest object in our sky only next to the sun and moon.

A last mention of a star, though I am not sure whether it’s “outdated”, is in Book of Lost Tales 1:

“…and that Morwinyon who blazes above the world's edge in the west was dropped by her as she fared in great haste back to Valinor. Now this is indeed the true beginning of Morwinyon and his beauty […]” [p. 122].

Morwinyon is said later by Christopher Tolkien to be Arcturus [p. 145]. Also in BoLT 1 [p. 203], Morwinyon is mentioned along with Nielluin the bee, a rejected name for Sirius, that is, Helluin. This combination would make sense, for Sirius and Arcturus are the brightest stars in the northern hemisphere.

Now to examine the constellations mentioned in The Silmarillion:

“…and many other of the ancient stars she gathered together and set as signs in the heavens of Arda:Wilwarin, Telumendil, Soronúmë, and Anarríma; and Menelmacar with his shining belt, that forebodes the Last Battle that shall be at the end of days. And high in the north as a challenge to Melkor she set the crown of seven mighty stars to swing, Valacirca, the Sickle of the Valar and sign of doom” [p. 48].

Wilwarin the butterfly is almost universally accepted as the queen, Cassiopeia. Being ‘W’ shaped, it does look more like a hum-dumming butterfly than a dignified queen. (But perhaps not to all).

Soronúmë, maybe rooted with soron (eagle), could be our Aquila, who is an eagle as well. Or maybe it could be Lyra who was in centuries past a ‘swooping eagle’ instead of a lyre; I think even Cygnus the swan could be a candidate. By coincidence, all three constellations have near likeness to birds and are prominent and close together in the summer sky. No clear winner here!

Menelmacar is another name of Menelvagor the swordsman – our Orion again.

I have never found certain identifications for Anarríma and Telumendil. Part of the problem lies in the ambiguity of their names. For Anarríma, I have found meanings as various as ‘sun-edge’ (Astronomy of Middle-earth) and ‘red-flamed wreath’ (forodrim). Being no expert in Quenya, I cannot add my own definition, but if in keeping with ‘flaming circlet’ as both seem to imply, I would say Anarríma is a constellation with close-grouped stars (and possibly red ones), like Taurus or Scorpios. Taking from ‘sun-edge’, it could also be one of the 13 constellations (12 which are known to us as the zodiac) the sun treks through.

Telumendil I have found frequently translated as ‘lover of the heavens’. But my, that does not help! Forodrim.org says Telumendil is possibly Taurus, though I do not know where they get that. I have also seen the translation ‘point of the dome’ and if that is true, I would say Telumendil is one of the northern constellations, whose stars take turns being the North Star, that is, the dome’s point. To digress a little, the earth wobbles on its axis, so the axis spins a circle, like a top, in a 25,800-year period, pointing to different parts of the northern sky. Polaris, our current north star, shall be several degrees off the axis point in a few centuries. Which constellation Telumendil could be might depend on which constellation had honor of being on the point of the dome when the Elves named it. (That’s probably going way deeper than the Professor intended, though).

The seven stars of Valacirca the sickle is easily identified as the asterism the Big Dipper, as it is commonly called, though its names are numerous, such as the plow or water ladle. Also in the Professor’s writings, we find it described as the Burning Briar in Shaping of Middle-earth [pg. 100], and in BoLT 1, as the Seven Stars from Aulë’s forge [pg. 122], the Seven Butterflies [pg. 145], and the Wain [pgs. 33 & 37]. Doubtless the list is incomplete. The variety resembles the richness found in real-life myth.

There is no end to the detail we can delve into with the Professor’s Middle-earth, greatly because we live in it. Its sky is our sky. The stars that Varda kindled and the Elves praised are shining for you to see – and that’s a good reason to shout Elbereth Gilthoniel! To identify the few that the Professor wrote of in Elvish is often difficult but not impossible. Some identities are pretty certain and some are vast yet can be narrowed. Nonetheless, we should not get so caught up in names that we forget to be awed by the handiwork of Varda.

I know I am not 100% correct here. Please let me know about your disagreements and speculations.

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Terms:

Asterism: Simple shapes the stars make – not to be confused with constellations, which are more extended. Examples are the Little Dipper in Ursa Major and the Great Square in Pegasus.

Axis: The imaginary line that runs through the earth connecting both poles.

Constellation: A group of stars that seems to create a picture, which can differ from culture to culture.

Northern Hemisphere: The earth is divided into two hemispheres at the equator. The further ‘up’ you go into one of the hemispheres limits the amount of stars you can see because the earth literally blocks your view. Since Europe, within the Northern Hemisphere, is the basis of Middle-earth, all the stars in the Professor’s writings are assumed to be those seen from the Northern Hemisphere.

Planet: Greek for ‘wanderer’, the wandering stars that we know today; they do not really shine by their own light but by reflecting the sun’s. Their swift movement (relative to other stars) has always given them prominent roles in mythology.

Star-cluster: Quite as it sounds, a very tight group of stars. Often with the naked eye a cluster looks like a hazy star or patch (if the naked eye can see it at all). The Pleiades is an exception, mainly from being exceptionally near earth.

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Sources:

Book of Lost Tales, The, “The Cottage of Lost Play” pgs 33 & 37, “The Coming of the Elves” pgs 122 & 145, and “The Tale of the Sun and Moon” pgs 203 & 224. Ballantine Books, 1992.

Fellowship of the Ring, The, “Three is Company” pg 111. Ballantine Books.

Morgoth’s Ring, “Ainulinalë” pgs 38-39, “Myths Transformed” pgs 375-76, and “Index: Star Names” pgs 434-36. Houghton Mifflin, 1993.

Shaping of Middle-earth, The, “The Quenta” pg 100. Ballantine Books, 1995.

Silmarillion, The, “Of the Coming of the Elves and the Captivity of Melkor” pg 48 and “Of the Voyage of Eärendil and the War of Wrath” pg 250. Houghton Mifflin, 2004.

War of the Jewels, “Forward” pg xi. Houghton Mifflin, 1994

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Further Reference:

“The Astronomy of Middle-earth”: http://www.physics.ccsu.edu/larsen/astronomy_of_middle.htm

http://www.forodrim.org/daeron/md_astro.html

For other topics such as earth’s wobble (precession) or the 13 constellations in the sun’s path (zodiac), Wikipedi.org is a good quick reference.

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Star Maps:

I recommend you use one of the first two below to follow the essay.

This has the names of all the northern hemisphere constellations but none of the star names. http://www.nightskyinfo.com/maps_images/html/sky_map_north.htm

This is not the greatest map but it at least has the names of constellations and the brighter stars. http://www.aurorahunter.com/starchart.php

Not that I’m from Hawaii, but this site http://www.hawastsoc.org/deepsky/index.html has very detailed maps of each constellation and seasonal maps of the sky for certain latitudes, and even gives the mythology of the constellations. Honestly, it has the best customizable chart I’ve seen outside of purchasable software.

(To my frustration-beyond-words, I could not find a tidy star chart with all I wanted… If you know of a tidy one with the whole northern hemisphere, the constellation names AND the brighter stars names, I’ll be forever grateful.)





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