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Elf years to Human years ratio
maybe i'm having a brunette's worst moment by having a blonde spell but what exactly is the ratio for Elvish years compared to Humans? Thengise Greenleaf of Mirkwood has suggested that it is 144 Elf years to 1 Human year. Is that correct? Ithaeliel countered with the idea that Elves come of age when they are 50 which would put them under 1 year.....? Help! My curiosity needs to be satisfied!
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Ummmmmm....elves are immortal, so there can be no ratio. Elves live forever, and men die. so I guess the ration would be 1:infinity. Does that answer your question?
Gwindor |
The elves used the term 'yeni' to refer to a period of 144 years. This doesn't mean that a yeni is one Elven year...just a unit of measurement like 1 foot = 12 inches, etc.
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Elves used yéni (the plural for yén) to tell time because when you live for ever the year becomes inconvenient. To give you an idea of exactly how inconvenient I've just created an imaginary unit of time that I'm going to call the "woop." The woop is about two and a half days long, which is just about 1/144th of a year. I am 2644 woops old. It took me at least 5 minutes to figure that out. If I wanted to remember that number I'd have to keep it written on my hand. I'd much rather use the year, thanks. An elf would rather use the yén for the same reason, though after a while even the yén would become inconvenient. Finally, the elves also had two seperate units of time that are about the same length as out year, one astronomical and the other biological. The solar year is called a coranar, which means "sun-round," and the bological year is a loa, which is "growth." I hope this helps you (and everyone else) understand. [ July 22, 2002: Message edited by: burrahobbit ] |
I bow to your wondrous knowledge.
(That was a great explanation!) |
Just to offer in:
OF THE LAWS AND CUSTOMS AMONG THE ELDAR PERTAINING TO MARRIAGE AND OTHER MATTERS RELATED THERETO: TOGETHER WITH THE STATUTE OF FINWE AND MIRIEL AND THE DEBATE OF THE VALAR AT ITS MAKING. AElfwine's Preamble. [The Eldar grew in bodily form slower than Men, but in mind more swiftly. They learned to speak before they were one year old; and in the same time they learned to walk and to dance, for their wills came soon to the mastery of their bodies. Nonetheless there was less difference between the two Kindreds, Elves and Men, in early youth; and a man who watched elf-children at play might well have believed that they were the children of Men, of some fair and happy people. For in their early days elf-children delighted still in the world about them, and the fire of their spirit had not consumed them, and the burden of memory was still light upon them.(1) This same watcher might indeed have wondered at the small limbs and stature of these children, judging their age by their skill in words and grace in motion. For at the end of the third year mortal children began to outstrip the Elves, hastening on to a full stature while the Elves lingered in the first spring of childhood. Children of Men might reach their full height while Eldar of the same age were still in body like to mortals of no more than seven years.(2) Not until the fiftieth year did the Eldar attain the stature and shape in which their lives would after- wards endure, and for some a hundred years would pass before they were full-grown.] |
Also....
I prefer to use the older ratio of 9.58 Years of the Sun to 1 Year of the Trees because the later ratio of 144 Years of the Sun to 1 Year of the Trees is very inconsistent with many texts. The fact that it coincides with the Yen described in the appendices to The Lord of the Rings probably means only that Tolkien wasn't considering the other texts, then unpublished, because he was in the process of revising the entire (unpublished) mythology. -from an article by Michael Martinez entitled "Elves by the numbers" http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/tolkien/54681 I won't go to the trouble of quoting the texts refering to the 144 and 9.58 years. It's all very unresolved. |
Mhoram, what book is that quote (Aelfwine's preamble) from? I'd like to read up on it. It sounds quite interesting.
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History Of Middle-Earth, Volume X
HoME X is one of the best volumes of HoME and anyone interested in the Silmarilion and the First Age should get it. |
Wow! Thank you Mhoram, I shall have to read that!
So elves don't exactly "come of age" at 50, but they grow to their full stature, so in a sense my guess was correct. |
well what i meant about 144=1 is that after 144 normal years they appear to be only 1 year older.
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i thought that by about 100 they would be roughly the equivalent of teenagers. I guess its easy to get mixed up in all this.
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That's exactly what i thought but that's what Tolkien wrote in the appendixes and i can't say anything against it.
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I don't think that an elven yen would affect their ageing like one year to us. The appendix of RotK says that elves just like multiples of 12 (who knows?)
And they aren't entirely immortal. Elves can die by being slain or by dying of sorrow. They just don't age |
Plus, you need to say which kind of man you are referring to. Noble men such as kings and those of the blood of Numenor live much longer than "regular" men (who knows again)
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Uh, Elves=live forever...
Humans=Live for about 80 years in M.E. what ratio can be made of this, Gwindor had the answer... |
Actually though, i think the average life-span of a man is around a 100. I mean, Aragorn (yes, he is Numenorian)lived to be over 200 (according to the Appendixes). Yeah, the blood was being tainted with lesser humans, but I bet people lived to be 100 years old. Denethor got to be 88! And then he killed himself....
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I can't remember if it's Aragorn or Legolas, but someone says in LOTR that the passing of time is different to the Elves than to Men. Both faster and slower at the same time. Also, I don't think the Elves invented the Yen/144 solar year unit so that they could compare their ageing to that of Men. People try to invent "dog years" or "cat years" because they like to think of their animal in terms of their own lifespan, for example your 1 year old labrador is actually 7 - a way of humanising it, comparing it to a 7 year old child. I don't think the Elves would have really cared about comparing themselves to Men, and so there can really be no comparison between "Elf years" and "human years".
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I didn't think the elves used the yén to compare their years to human years either. It seems they invented it to use as a unit like a year. As Burrahobbit said, it was a way of making it easier to keep track of their years. Really, how would it be to have to remember that you were 3876 years old? I would have lost myself on about 112, knowing me [img]smilies/biggrin.gif[/img]. Plus, it makes one feel younger to have longer units of time, because there are fewer. Legolas is 20 yéni old; that's going to make him feel a lot younger than saying he's 2,993 years old.
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How long will the world last? Divide that by about 90 and you will get the number of elf years to a human year. An Elf's life is the life of Arda, when Arda dies the elves die. Then again they age by being consumed by their spirits, so the ageing of Man is different to the ageing of elves.
I have a good question: Elves' bodies age because of corruption and the like caused by Melkor (Morgoth's Ring and all). Do Men's bodies age because of this too? A Man's Fea is destined to leave Arda, but is the ageing of his body caused by this or is it caused by the same corruption as the Ageing of the Elves. I have muddled two ideas together here I know (the lifespan of the elves and the ageing of the elves). But you get the point. |
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[ January 01, 2003: Message edited by: burrahobbit ] |
Since the measuring of years is based on the rotation of the Earth around the Sun, it shouldn't matter what species you are. I know, I know...Captain Obvious strikes again...but no one had mentioned that, and I think it's important to remember in order to avoid confusion.
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I thought that it was too basic to mention. I was so wrong, though.
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[ January 02, 2003: Message edited by: Galorme ] |
This whole discussion raises another question with me. If elves are immortal and reach a particular state of maturity and stop, can they reproduce from adulthood on? How many children, on average, do elves have? If this immortal population continues to procreate won't there be a population problem at some point?
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The elves had very few children in general, and most of the children were born not long after the marriage. When an elf child were born the mother had to give up a part of her fëa (she could even die of it).
There is more to be said about it, but I will leave it to those who know better than I do. |
The Professor's last conception was that Elves become adults at the age of 3000:
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Earendil, that's interesting info, thanks. You can probably answer this then: I know from reading LOTR that Elrond had at least two sons and a daughter. Was he especially prolific then? Did he have more than one wife?
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Mind if I answer that? He wasn't especially, three wouldn't be a huge number for elves anymore than it would be for humans in this day and age. The largest litter, if you will, was Feanor who had 7 children. And only one Elf is specifically noted as having two wives, that's Finwe first High King of the Nolder, who's wife died of grief after child birth. Elrond did not, but it is possible that others did, since the laws stood in place to allow it to happen (under certain circumstances).
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I think that this merely meant that while an Elf could only grow to an adult in 3000 years (as in would become and adult, probably in 50 years, and then remain so for many millennia) Middle Earth would be in a constant state of change, with the earth morphing before their eyes.
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Also, Elrond wasn't exactly an elf.
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Well remember we are trying to make a ratio between Mortal and Emortal, whic is basically trying to make a ratio between Finte and Infinite.
I Dont have any hard evidence on this but, i would like to think there is no certain rate at which they age, perhaps it is all knowledge or Wisedom based, for example when an Elvenchild is first learning to count, it achives an adolessence apearance, when they begin to learn responsabilities they achieve a teen apearance, of course it would begin to slow down a bit becouse the more you know the less there is to learn, but they would eventualy reach an Elderly apearance like our friend Cirdan. [ January 03, 2003: Message edited by: Guildo ] |
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So although Legolas was around thousands of years before I was born, it would be ok socially if I married him? [img]smilies/biggrin.gif[/img]
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no less or more ok than it was for Aragorn to marry Arwen, or for Celeborn to marry Galadriel, because if not im not mistaken She is MUCH older than he is.
[ January 03, 2003: Message edited by: Guildo ] |
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P.S. It isn't funny when you keep saying the same joke for a year. It also isn't funny to repeat the same joke that other people have said a lot. |
Ok, I have a question.
Elves can die from grief/sorrow. So as they are immortal, does the passing of the years not grieve them? Doesn't seeing destruction and the rise of fall and birth and death of so many things, and the burden of so many memories bring grief to their hearts? I know Legolas was known to be compassionate, and most certainly if Elves were a compassionate race, wouldn't the surroundings, and all of the events that occured, bring enough grief for them to, well, die? |
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