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LePetitChoux
12-23-2002, 08:20 AM
Does anyone know what the rest of ME looked like? I mean, what is beyond Harad, Khand, Rhun and the Northern Waste? smilies/confused.gif

LePetitChoux
12-24-2002, 10:39 AM
In answer to my own question, look at what I've just found:
http://lotrmaps.middle-earth.us/maps/r3t_M144.jpg

It was done by a computer though, so it is probably NOT what JRRT imagined it to be...I makes you see how Middle-Earth could be a sort of Pangaea. smilies/confused.gif

Manwe Sulimo
12-24-2002, 02:17 PM
There were no other drawings of Middle-earth beyond Rhûn or Haradwaith. There are vague outlines of "greater" Middle-earth in a few of the HoMe books, though.

Neferchoirwen
12-25-2002, 11:24 AM
I'm confused smilies/eek.gif well, kinda confused.
Isn't that a world map that's up there? Or is what you found a rendition of the world map, as we know it, to the likeness of ME?

Aylwen Dreamsong
12-25-2002, 10:33 PM
No, it is a map of Middle-Earth smilies/biggrin.gif

When I first saw one map like this, of all Arda, I thought "Lookie! Africa, Europe! Asia!"

Nope...It's Middle-Earth...

Aylwen

The Saucepan Man
01-10-2003, 05:41 PM
LePetitChoux, where didyou find that map?

My understanding is that ME is our world only thousands of years ago, so it is a kind of Panagea. Here is a posting I put up on this on another topic yesterday (I have no idea how to do a link):

There's a series of maps in the Tolkien Illustrated Encyclopedia (my reference source for anything pre-The Hobbit until I get round to reading The Silmarillion) which shows the development of Arda (the World) through the various Ages to present time (The Fourth Age of the Sun), some 40,000 years after its creation.
Comparing the Third Age of the Sun (the Age in which LotR is set) to the Fourth Age, Middle Earth represents Europe, Asia and Africa. The area in which LotR is set is Europe (the Shire being the UK) with Harad and Far Harad being the Middle East and Africa respectively. The Americas are the Sunlands and Australia is indeed the Dark Lands.


Which pretty much ties in with your map. But I'd still love to know where it came from (the maps were one of the biggest fascinations for me when I first read LotR).

LePetitChoux
01-11-2003, 04:59 AM
I thought I got that one here (http://www.lotrmaps.com), but that site doesn't appear to work.

While I was searching for the above link, look what I found! (http://balder.prohosting.com/jjck25/lotr/images/DavidDayMap.jpg)

It is different, and doesn't make as much sense to me, but hey. smilies/smile.gif