"GL2" - читать интересную книгу автора (vol11) the coastlands of Middle-earth and that country which was
after named Eglador' - to which however is added the puzzling phrase 'Thereof Beleriand was the larger part'. (15) E 4 to D 5. Woods of Nuath: see the later Tale of Tuor in Unfinished Tales, p. 36 and note 14. (16) E 5. The name Tumhalad appears to be written twice, above and below the two short parallel lines shown. See pp. 139-40, commentary on GA $275. (17) E 5-6. Talath Dirnen was first written Dalath Dirnen; see p. 228, $28. (18) E 6 to F 6. South of the Crossings of Taiglin it is difficult to be sure, among various incomplete dotted lines, what was the course of the road to Nargothrond, but my father seems subsequently to have entered it as a straight line of short dashes as shown. (19) E 6-7. From Ephel Brandir various lines, which I cannot certainly interpret and have not marked on the map, run west towards the Crossings of Taiglin. Possibly one line marks the road to the Crossings and another the course of Celebros. - Tavrobel on the map as originally lettered was struck out and replaced by Bar Haleth (also struck out), but no precise site is indicated. For Bar Haleth see p. 157, commentary on GA $324. (20) E 7. Folk of Haleth clearly belongs to the first making of the map and should have been entered on the redrawing (V.408). elsewhere; similarly with Harfalas ('South Falas'), Section 3, H 4. (22) F 4. The original name R.Eglor was struck out and replaced by Eglahir. Later the name Nenning was written in, but Eglahir was not struck out. See p. 117, commentary on GA $85. (23) F 5. For the dotted line on this square see $59 below. (24) F 6. The word 'or' refers to the name Methiriad, Section 3, G 6. (25) F 6. For the change of date from 195 to 495 see V.139, 407. (26) F 6-7. Moors of the Neweglu: among the Narn papers there are many texts concerned with the story of Mim, and in these are found an extraordinary array of names for the Petty-dwarves: Neweg, Neweglin; Niwennog; Naug-neben, Neben-naug; Nebinnog, Nibennog, Nibinnogrim, Nibin-noeg; Nognith. The name on the map, Neweglu, does not occur in the Narn papers. (27) F 7. The name of an isolated hill Carabel stands at the point where Amon Rudh (the abode of Mim) is shown on my map accompanying The Silmarillion. The name of the hill was changed many times: Amon Garabel > Carabel; Amon Carab (translated 'Hill of the Hat'); Amon Nardol and Nardol (cf. the beacon-hill Nardol in Anorien); Amon Rhug 'the Bald Hill'; and Amon Rudh of the same meaning. |
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