Quote:
Originally Posted by cellurdur
As Queen of Elves and Men she dwelt with Aragorn for six score years in great glory and bliss
And the descendants of Elessar through Arwen became also heirs of the western elf-realms of the westlands.
It is through Arwen that Eldarion inherits the elvish lands and it is Arwen alone known as the Queen of Elves.
Arwen seems to be recognised by all the remaining Elves as their queen. This is independent of her marriage to Aragorn.
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I seriously don't want to enter this very furious-looking debate on this thread, but...
...Queen of Elves? Really? I have to admit, I have never been paying especial attention to Arwen (because if you ask me, her portrayal
is boring - whatever can be said about the "beauty image of Lúthien", sure, but she really does not
do much anything in the books, and that much is a fact; it's of course the author's doing, but that's it). But anyway, what I wanted to say: where did the "Queen of Elves" idea come from? I am not aware of anything like that being mentioned in the books. (Which horrifies me, because I thought I should know such things!) She is the queen of the renewed reunited kingdom, for sure, along with Aragorn. But Queen of Elves? No idea.
Most of the Elves had left Middle-Earth anyway, and those who stayed were mostly the wood-elves in Lórien, or also in Mirkwood, who certainly would not have suddenly accepted a random "queen of Elves" from elsewhere. They had been governing themselves for ages, so why now. And Rivendell Elves more or less all departed West.
Cellurdur, can you provide any quote about this, or anything?