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John Ronald Reuel Tolkien, Englishman, scholar, and storyteller, was born
of English
parents
at Bloemfontein, South Africa on Jan. 3, 1892 and died in England on Sept.
2, 1973.
His entire childhood was spent in England, to which the family returned
permanently in 1896 upon the death of his father. He received his education
at King Edward's School, St. Philip's Grammar School, and Oxford University.
After graduating in 1915 he joined the British army and saw action in the
Battle of the Somme. He was eventually discharged after spending most of
1917 in the hospital suffering from "trench fever". (It was during this
time that he began "Beren and Luthien", which later appeared in The Silmarillion)
Tolkien
was a scholar by profession. His academic positions were: staff member
of the New
English
Dictionary (1918-20); Reader, later Professor of English Language at Leeds,
1920-25; Rawlinson and Bosworth Professor of Anglo-Saxon at Oxford (1925-45);
and Merton Professor of English Language and Literature (1945-59). His
principal professional focus was the study of Anglo-Saxon (Old English)
and its relation to linguistically similar languages (Old Norse, Old German,
and Gothic), with special emphasis on the dialects of Mercia, that part
of England in which he grew up and lived, but he was also interested in
Middle English, especially the dialect used in the Ancrene Wisse (a twelfth
century
manuscript
probably composed in western England). Moreover, Tolkien was an expert
in the surviving literature written in these languages. Indeed, his unusual
ability to simultaneously read the texts as linguistic sources and as literature
gave him perspective
into
both aspects; this was once described as "his unique insight at once into
the language of poetry and the poetry of language".
From an early age he had been fascinated by language, particularly the languages of Northern Europe, both ancient and modern. From this affinity for language came not only his profession but also his private hobby, the invention of languages. He was more generally drawn to the entire "Northern tradition", which inspired him to wide reading of its myths and epics and of those modern authors who were equally drawn to it, such as William Morris and George MacDonald. His broad knowledge inevitably led to the development of various opinions about Myth, its relation to language, and the importance of Stories, interests which were shared by his friend C.S. Lewis. All these various perspectives: language, the heroic tradition, and Myth and Story (and a very real and deeply-held belief in and devotion to Catholic Christianity) came together with stunning effect in his stories: first the legends of the Elder Days which served as background to his invented languages, and later his most famous works, The Hobbit and The Lord Of the Rings.