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Orc Arsenal.1

26 Wednesday Sep 2018

Posted by Ollamh in Artists and Illustrators, Fairy Tales and Myths, Heroes, J.R.R. Tolkien, Literary History, Military History, Military History of Middle-earth, The Rohirrim

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Alan Lee, And Inquiry Into Ancient Armour, Angus McBride, arming sword, Battle Axe, English Longbowmen, Eowyn, Falchion, Gladius, Gondor, Hildebrandts, Howard Pyle, John Howe, King Arthur, Longbow, Mace, Medieval, Mongols, Morning Star, Orcs, Pelennor, Pitt-Rivers Museum, Robert Louis Stevenson, Rohirrim, Scimitar, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Sir Samuel Meyrick, Ted Nasmith, The Black Arrow, The Lord of the Rings, The White Company, Tolkien, Victorian, Wallace Collection, War Hammer, Weaponry, Witch-King of Angmar

Welcome, dear readers, as always.

“The great shadow descended like a falling cloud.  And behold! It was a winged creature…

Upon it sat a shape, black-mantled, huge and threatening…A great black mace he wielded.”

(The Return of the King, Book Five, Chapter 6, “The Battle of the Pelennor Fields”)

This is clearly a scene which has caught the attention, over the years, of many artists, starting, we’d guess, with the Hildebrandts.

image1hild.jpg

 

Then others, like Angus McBride and Ted Nasmith,

image2am.jpg

image3nasmith.jpg

And Alan Lee and John Howe,

 

image4aleeimage4bhowe

as well as many very good artists whom we don’t know by name—

image4cimage5image6image7

 

Of these, all but Lee and the unknown sixth artist follow JRRT’s description more or less closely.  Number 6—it’s a little unclear– but he might be carrying a war hammer of some sort,

image8warhammer.jpg

rather than a mace.

image9mace.jpg

image10mace.jpg

(These last two are basic patterns of a mace.)

The Lee is, well, we’re not sure what it seems to be.  It sort of looks like a battle axe

image11battleaxe.jpg

but also like what was called a “morning star”,

image12mornin.jpg

which should, we think, belong to the flail family.

 

image13flail

This rather fits in with the P Jackson image, shown in this model (and note that sword—definitely not in the original description—which is in his other hand).

image14mace.jpg

This difference made us curious about the weapons the Rohirrim—and the Gondorians—face and, in particular, those of the orcs.  The Hildebrandts

image15captured

 

provide us with odd-looking spears and what might appear to be scimitars

 

image16scim

but might be the suggestion of a medieval sword called a falchion.

image17falchion

McBride, who spent much of his artistic career illustrating military subjects, gives us weapons (mostly) less fanciful.

image18mcbimage19mcb

Lee

image19lee

and Howe

image20howe

veer between the practical and the fantastic and the films clearly follow them—

image21orcimage22orcimage23orc

How does JRRT describe the orc weaponry?

The first armed orc we see appears in Moria:

“His broad flat face was swart, his eyes were like coals, and his tongue was red; he wielded a great spear…Sam, with a cry, hacked at the spear-shaft, and it broke.  But even as the orc flung down the truncheon and swept out his scimitar…” (The Fellowship of the Ring, Book Two, Chapter 5, “The Bridge of Khazad-dum”)

The orcs who pursue the Fellowship through Moria have similar weapons:

“Beyond the fire he saw swarming black figures:  there seemed to be hundreds of orcs.  They brandished spears and scimitars which shone red as blood in the firelight.”

After the death of Boromir, however, Aragorn, Gimli, and Legolas find a different kind of orc:

“There were four goblin-soldiers of greater stature, swart, slant-eyed, with thick legs and large hands.  They were armed with short broad-bladed swords, not with the curved scimitars usual with Orcs: and they had bows of yew, in length and shape like the bows of Men.” (The Two Towers, Book Three, Chapter 1, “The Departure of Boromir”)

So far, we’ve seen spears

image24spears

and scimitars

image25scim

and now we can add to that “short broad-bladed swords”.  Perhaps Tolkien is thinking of the medieval “arming sword”

image26arming

or even the Roman gladius?

image27gladius.jpg

When we add “bows of yew, in length and shape like the bows of Men”, we immediately see the classic English longbow.

image28longbowman.jpg

This doesn’t quite match with the first orc bowman we see in the films, however, “Lurtz”—

image29lurtz.jpg

image30lurtz.jpg

who appears to have some sort of recurved bow, possibly composite, of the sort the Mongols used

image31mongol

even though, from the white hand on his face, he is supposed to be one of those “goblin-soldiers” from Isengard.

As we were looking through Tolkien’s text, we wondered where he would have gotten his ideas for weapons from.  If the basis, as we imagine it, would have been his background in medieval literature, then he might have gone to the library and found an old standard work, Sir Samuel Meyrick’s (1783-1848)

image32meyrick.jpg

An Inquiry Into Ancient Armour, As It Existed in Europe, Particularly in Great Britain, From the Norman Conquest to the Reign of Charles the Second, first published in 1824.  (Here’s a LINK if you’d like to look at this text for yourself.)

image33mey

Meyrick was the first great English specialist in armor and the later editions of his work (in 3 volumes) have wonderful early hand-colored plates, all based upon surviving armor, tombs, manuscripts, and any other period materials he could gather.

image34meyill.jpg

If JRRT wanted to see such things for himself, he would have found more exotic weapons in the Pitt-Rivers Museum in Oxford,

image35pittriversimage36pitt

or he could have traveled up to London to see the Wallace Collection

image37wallaceimage38wallace

or, best of all, he could have visited the Tower of London, with its massive collection (the organizing of which had earned Meyrick his knighthood in 1832) of medieval arms and armor, which had been available to the public in some form even before Meyrick’s time—here’s a Victorian tour.

image39tower

image40towerimage41tower

It could have been all of the above, of course, but it seems to us that the descriptions we’re reading are actually not really very specific—“mace”, “spear”, “scimitar”—only those short swords and bows suggest anything more detailed.  Perhaps, then, Tolkien was inspired by something else—perhaps he had read, perhaps even possessed, as a boy, books like Howard Pyle’s 1903 The Story of King Arthur and His Knights

image42pyle

and been inspired by its illustrations.

image43pyle

There were plenty of illustrated tales like this—Conan Doyle’s The White Company (first published in serial form in 1891),

image44whitecompany.jpg

or Robert Louis Stevenson’s The Black Arrow (serial 1883, book 1888).

image45blackarrow.jpg

With any and all of that background, we wonder what he might have made of this, however, an orc sword from the films which looks more like something manufactured from a car part than the product of a medieval armorer…

image46sword.jpg

Thanks, as ever, for reading.

MTCIDC

CD

ps

If car part weapons don’t bother you, you might be interested in this LINK—it’s an early article on ideas for weapons and armor for the Jackson films.

Jacobites

17 Wednesday Aug 2016

Posted by Ollamh in Artists and Illustrators, Literary History, Military History, Narrative Methods

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Anne, Aughrim, Boyne, Catriona, Charles II, Culloden, Elizabeth II, Falkirk, George I, George II, Glenshiel, Highlanders, Jacobites, James II, James III, Kidnapped, Killiecrankie, Lowlanders, Mary and William, N.C. Wyeth, Prestonpans, Prince Charles, Requiem, Robert Louis Stevenson, Scotland, Sir Walter Scott, The Black Arrow, The Old Pretender, Treasure Island, Underwoods, War of Austrian Succession, Waverly, Young Folks

Dear Readers, welcome, as always.

We’re taking a break from JRRT in this posting and looking at another favorite, Robert Louis Stevenson’s 1886 novel, Kidnapped,

rlsjss2kidnappedfirstedition

which was first serialized in what must have been a remarkable Victorian children’s magazine, Young Folks (1871-1897, with various titles), as it featured Stevenson’s Treasure Island (1881-1882) and The Black Arrow (1883), as well.

It has been published and republished numerous times since its original appearance (just google the title), but, if you read us regularly, you’ll already know our favorite edition is that published by Charles Scribner’s Sons in 1913 and illustrated by N. C. Wyeth (although we agree with the critics that his Treasure Island, 1911, is even better). Here are a few of the illustrations to give you an idea—these are much moodier than those for Treasure Island, we think.

Wyeth Kidnapped Siege of the Round-HouseWyeth Kidnapped Wreck of the CovenantOn_the_Island_of_Earraid_(N.C._Wyeth).kidnap212_kidnapped_wyeth_murderer

The actual title is based upon 18th-century models, where a great deal of the plot may be teasingly outlined beforehand. We won’t give it all to you, but it begins: Kidnapped Being the Memoirs of David Balfour in the Year 1751 How He Was Kidnapped and Cast Away; His Sufferings in a Desert Isle; His Journey in the Wild Highlands; His Acquaintance with Alan Breck Stewart and Other Notorious Highland Jacobites…

“Jacobites” if you are not acquainted with the term, means “followers of/those loyal to Jacob (that is, James)” and the Jacob/James story marks a turning point in the history of the British Isles.

The story begins when Charles II of England dies in 1685 without leaving a legitimate heir.

charles-ii

The throne then goes to his younger brother, James II.

(c) Government Art Collection; Supplied by The Public Catalogue Foundation

James was a very unpopular king, for some very complicated reasons, and he was driven from the throne in 1688 by a conspiracy which included members of Parliament, some of his army, and his daughter, Mary, as well as his son-in-law, William the Stadthoulder of the Netherlands.

1-william-mary

James didn’t go very easily and there was war in the British Isles from 1689 to 1692, with three major battles, Killiecrankie in Scotland (1689),

killie1

the Boyne, 1690,

boyne1690

and Aughrim, 1691, both in Ireland.

John_Mulvany_-_The_Battle_of_Aughrim.1691

Although James II’s forces lost, that did not end the matter, however. James II died in exile in 1701, but his son, the potential James III (called by his enemies “The Old Pretender”, meaning “claimant to the throne”), continued the struggle, being involved in three major attempts at taking back the monarchy.

In the meantime, Mary and William had both died and Mary’s younger sister, Anne,

6187,Queen Anne,by Michael Dahl

who succeeded them, as well. To keep both religious and family continuity, it had been agreed that, since Anne had no surviving heirs, her second-cousin, George, the Elector of Hanover (a country in what is now western Germany) and his family would inherit the throne, which George did, in 1714, as George I of England.

King_George_I_by_Sir_Godfrey_Kneller,_Bt_(3)

That continuity worked so well, in fact, that he is the direct ancestor of the present queen, Elizabeth II,

coronationpicofer2

article-2335617-1A1939BE000005DC-225_964x730

(We just couldn’t resist including this– even royalty don’t take reigning totally seriously, it seems!)

Not a year later, there was a plan to take the throne by invading Scotland, raising an army of Lowlanders and Highlanders alike, and marching on London. There was one inconclusive battle, at Sherriffmuir, in 1715,

Battle_of_Sheriffmuir

but, even with the arrival of James-the-possible-third,

Prince_James_Francis_Edward_Stuart_by_Anton_Raphael_Mengs

the whole thing fell apart. And something similar happened with the next attempt, in 1719. Modest Spanish support was not enough and the Jacobite army failed at Glenshiel

Glen_shiel

and things subsided into a cold war until 1745. During the intervening years, the struggle between Britain and France, begun in the days of Louis XIV (ruled 1661-1715) had intensified, with France supporting James II and his son as proxies. In 1745, the latest war, the so-called “War of the Austrian Succession”, had been going on since 1740. This was a much more complex pan-European war, but, with Britain and France backing different candidates for the throne, there was a good opportunity for a further attempt on the part of France to destabilize her old opponent. Thus, when it was proposed that the dashing young son of James, Prince Charles (1720-1788),

Young Charles Edward Stuart L_tcm4-563619

backed by a small French army

royalecossais

(with another waiting in the wings for an invasion of southern England), should land in Scotland and raise the country against the government of George II, the Old Pretender agreed.

King_George_II_by_Charles_Jervas

Unfortunately for their cause, this ended as the other attempts had, in failure—and this was the final failure. After one great victory, at Prestonpans in 1745,

prestonpansSurrender

and a smaller one at Falkirk, in early 1746,

falkirk1746

the plan failed at Culloden in April, 1746,

The_Battle_of_Culloden

and this was the last grand attempt. As the inspiration for literature in the romantic period, however, it was extremely successful, beginning with Sir Walter Scott’s

Sir_William_Allan_-_Sir_Walter_Scott,_1771_-_1832._Novelist_and_poet_-_Google_Art_Project

Waverley, published anonymously in 1814.

waverleyfirsted

Regularly regarded as the first great historical novel, it was the beginning of great commercial success for Scott, as well as the beginning of a process which turned Scotland’s past into the basis of an entire cultural industry, of which Kidnapped (1886) and its sequel, Catriona (1893) formed a small, but prominent part and is still with us today in the US (and elsewhere) in Scottish festivals and bumperstickers.

scottishfestivalThank-God-Scottish-Sticker

Thanks, as always, for reading.

MTCIDC

CD

ps

We can’t conclude without including Stevenson’s “Requiem” (from his collection Underwoods, 1887),

RLSrequiem1880

which we’ve always admired and which is on his tomb in Samoa, where he died of a cerebral hemorrhage in 1894.

rlstomb

Bolts and Arrows

06 Wednesday Apr 2016

Posted by Ollamh in Films and Music, Heroes, J.R.R. Tolkien, Military History, Military History of Middle-earth, Narrative Methods, Uncategorized

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Agincourt, anti-aircraft gun, ballista, Bard the Bowman, Battle of Crecy, Battle of Poitiers, Border Reivers, Boromir, crossbow, Crossbow Bunnies, English Longbowmen, harpoon, Hundred Years War, John Singer Sargent, latch, Maximus, N.C. Wyeth, Peter Jackson, Richard the Lionheart, Robert Louis Stevenson, Robin Hood, Roman d'Alexandre, Siege of Chalus, Smaug, Tangled, The Black Arrow, The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings, The Mary Rose, Tolkien, Towton

In our review of the third Hobbit film, we questioned the use by Bard of something a little larger in the way of a missile than Tolkien had intended:

“Then Bard drew his bow-string to his ear. The dragon was circling back, flying low, and as he came the moon rose above the eastern shore and silvered his great wings.

‘Arrow!’ said the bowman. ‘Black Arrow! I have saved you to the last. You have never failed me and always I have recovered you. I had you from my father and he from of old. If ever you come from the forges of the true king under the Mountain, go now and speed well!’ ” (TH 307).

As Bard was firing this himself, we always envisioned him as an English longbowman.

englishlongbowman1330-15151.jpg

And this led us to think a bit about Tolkien’s possible sources, not only for Bard and his bow, but for that arrow–the real one, not the monster dart used in the film.

From any children’s history of England, Tolkien would have learned that longbowmen like the one shown above destroyed three brave French armies in the Hundred Years War, at Crecy (1346), Poitiers (1356), and Agincourt (1415).

hf54d67201.jpg

In the film, however, although Bard was depicted as an archer,

Bard-the-Bowman-bard-the-bowman-37670604-1920-1200.jpg

his weapon of choice looks like this.

bardwithharpoon.jpeg

This reminds us of either a Roman ballista

b0370394e429c42631f520182c155a34.jpg

or an anti-aircraft gun

strandgun01.jpg

or, most especially,  a harpoon gun.

WhaleHarpGun1.jpg

Especially when you look at this Bard’s arrow.

bard.jpg

Although we currently have no evidence for Tolkien’s sources, we can imagine that they might have included, among others, Robin Hood,

5616567327_fc899be2f1_b.jpg

the actions of actual Medieval archers like those at Agincourt or Towton (1461),

towton3.jpg

and a book, perhaps from boyhood, Robert Louis Stevenson’s The Black Arrow (1883/1888).  Stevenson (here in an 1880s portrait by John Singer Sargent)

rlsjss2.jpg

had originally published the story serially in a children’s magazine in 1883

ba1.jpg

before its publication in book form in 1888.

Blackarrowcoverscribners1888.jpg

The classic illustrations are by one of our all-time favorite illustrators, NC Wyeth, from 1917.

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We can’t resist showing you a few:

tumblr_l4istbR1JZ1qamjklo1_1280.jpgillus08.jpg09_blackarrow_alittlebeforedawn_wyeth.jpg

Although the bow is the weapon of choice of those who use the black arrow of the title (it’s employed for revenge), the hero  in fact, has a crossbow.

5616566731_49d251a1fc_b.jpg

The longbow requires years of training and great upper-body strength, leaving its mark on bowmen, as can be seen from this skeleton (and its reconstruction) brought up from the English warship, the Mary Rose,

sinking_3.jpg

which sank with most of its crew in 1545 and was brought up from the mud of the ocean floor in 1982.

130530121104-mary-rose-skeleton-horizontal-gallery.jpg

The crossbow is a mechanical weapon, which uses much less strength to draw

the_old_crossbow_archer_by_renum63-d8aaovo.jpg

and, in the more developed versions, even uses a crank to produce the necessary string tension.

8f106fadbe86ed34e5567bc7a90b89e2.jpg

(And, just as in the case of NC Wyeth illustrations, we can’t resist medieval manuscript illustrations. Look at this pair of crossbow… bunnies from a copy of the Roman d’ Alexandre, circa 1340.)

romandalexandrec1340.jpg

This makes it a less romantic weapon, but equally deadly:  Richard the Lionheart was killed with a bolt/quarrel (what one calls a crossbow arrow) at the siege of Chalus in 1199.

Richard1TombFntrvd.jpg

(This creates another aside–about the hand weapon used as late as the 16th century by the Border Reivers of the land between northern England and southern Scotland–called a “latch”, it was the weapon of choice for those who couldn’t afford early hand guns but wanted to fire easily from the saddle.

Reiver-on-Horse.jpg

The soldiers in Disney’s wonderful movie, Tangled, carry them–notice the off-hand side pouch with a handful of bolts  for one on Maximus’ saddle–)

maxtangled.jpg

But we would  like to conclude with one more use of that black arrow.  A flight of them kills Boromir in The Lord of the Rings.

boromirarrows1.jpg

boromirearrows.png

Just as we began by pointing to the text and the actual bow and arrow which kill Smaug, and not the harpoon of the film, so we would criticize this scene.  In our opinion, it is stretched beyond believability, as well as beyond the text, taking away something of Boromir’s valor in combat with dozens of the enemy, in which he is gradually overcome.

boromir_by_deligaris-d5po92u.jpg

This is just as true for the brief scene of Aragorn at Boromir’s death.  What was simple in the text, thus making it more moving–just Boromir’s confession and Aragorn’s comforting him–becomes a soppy scene in which Boromir swears loyalty and calls Aragorn “my brother”, a liberty Aragorn-the-king-t0-be, would hardly have welcomed.  In the theatrical world, this is called “milking the scene” and here, we think it curdled.

Thanks, as always, for reading.

MTCIDC,

CD

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