Otaku-sempai wrote:I don't see how things taken from early drafts, such as references to China and the Gobi Desert, that did not end up in the published text are at all relevant. In any case, I put it to you that "Worm-Easterlings" and "Worm-men" are terrible names--just awful."
It just means "Dragon-men." "Worm" is an ancient English poetic name for "dragon." Would you prefer "Dragon-Easterlings" or "Dragon-men"? Fine.
What I can see is borrowing from the language of Manchurian China for person and place-names for the distant East; and perhaps borrowing from Slavic or Mongolian for other regions of Rhûn.
Old Slavic peoples:
•The Axe-Easterlings of the Wide East (Rus)
•The Viniths of Eastern Mirkwood (the Wends: Polabians, Pomeranians, and Lusatians). Implied by the name Vinitharya (Vinith is Gothic for "Wend, Slav").
•The Viniths from South of Mirkwood (Slovenes)
Also other correlations barely hinted at in the RotK Appendix, when King Elessar/Aragorn receives embassies from Men dwelling east and south of Mirkwood, with provisional names from Alfred the Great's Anglo-Saxon
Geography of Europe:
•The Ulans from East of Mirkwood (Polish)
•The Maroaros of the Bight (Moravians/Czechs-Slovaks)
•The Horithis of Southern Rhovanion (Croats)
•The Surpe of Southern Rhovanion (Serbs)
Mongols don't come into Western history yet in the 900AD era which the Third Age is modeled on. But yes there would be a quasi-Mongolian Mannish people in the East of East. I would provisionally name them:
•The Men of the Last Desert (Mongolians)
Iron Crown did much the same with MERP, although this was before much of HOME was even published.
Nay, ICE simply ignored the technicalities and invented whatever they wished. That was before the Tolkien Estate and Zaentz/Tolkien Enterprises clamped down. Decipher's work was done after the HoME, and tiptoed through all the legalese. C7 could too.
However, I would guess that for the time being, C7 is going to concentrate on the regions and peoples that were directly involved in the Quest of Erebor, the Battle of Five Armies and the War of the Ring.
I would be fine with the core book covering only the areas which on the official Baynes map...the West-lands and the near fringes of Harad and Rhun.
Fine with me if Aman, Forodwaith, Harad, Rhun, the Dark Lands, and the New Lands each received their own hardcover. C7: let me know if you want help writing the other continents.
I have rough notes here...
https://sites.google.com/site/endorenya/harad
https://sites.google.com/site/endorenya/rhun
https://sites.google.com/site/endorenya ... -southland
https://sites.google.com/site/endorenya ... egendarium
I think, for myself, I would keep anything originating from Tolkien's Christmas Letters out of the mix.
Well, if or when C7 ever details Forodwaith, then the Father Christmas Letters would have to be addressed. I would simply depict Father Christmas as he was before the Christian era, as a Maia. I'd use different names, and only "imply" that its the same place as the Father Christmas Letters, without explicitly stepping on the copyrighted materials. I would depict his North Pole sanctum long before those events take place. His realm would conceivably evolve, after thousands of years, into the locations seen in the Fr. Xmas Letters.