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In J. R. R. Tolkien's fictional legendarium, Beleriand () was a region in northwestern during the . Events in Beleriand are described chiefly in his work : It tells the story of the early Ages of Middle-earth, in a style similar to that of the epics of Nordic literature—stories pervaded by a tone of impending doom. Beleriand also appears in the works The Book of Lost Tales, The Children of Húrin, and The Lays of Beleriand.

In Tolkien's early writing, he coined many prospective names for the region. Among them were Broceliand, the name of an enchanted forest in medieval romance, and Ingolondë—a play on the name England—when he hoped to root a mythology for England in the region. The scholar Gergely Nagy looked at the prose of the Silmarillion and found what may be evidence of the structure and syntax of Beleriand's poetry.


Fictional history
Events in Beleriand are described chiefly in the second half of the Quenta Silmarillion, which tells the story of the early ages of Middle-earth in a style similar to the epic hero tales of . Beleriand also appears in the works The Book of Lost Tales, The Children of Húrin, and in the epic poems of The Lays of Beleriand.

The land is occupied by Elves of King from the east, who founded the city of in the forest realm of Doriath. Other Elves, the and , cross the sea to . Some of the Noldor return to Beleriand to retrieve the from the evil , but they are resented by the Teleri. Later, Men arrive from the east. Morgoth gathers an army of , and other monsters in his fortress of beneath the mountains in the north of Beleriand, and attacks the Elves repeatedly. Despite the threat, Thingol refuses to fight alongside the Noldor. One by one, the realm of Doriath as well as the Noldor kingdoms Nargothrond and Gondolin fall to assaults, assisted by betrayals and disputes among Elves, Men, and Dwarves. Finally, Earendil crosses the Belegaer Sea to ask the Valar to stop Morgoth. They send an army to overcome Morgoth in the War of Wrath. This ends the of Middle-earth: Angband is destroyed, and Morgoth is banished to the void. Beleriand's inhabitants flee, and much of Beleriand sinks into the sea. Only a small section of the eastern edge of Beleriand survives, including part of the (Blue Mountain) range and the land of Lindon, which became part of the far northwestern shore of Middle-earth.


Fictional geography
Beleriand is a region in the far northwest of , bordering the great sea, . It is bounded to the north by the Ered Engrin, the Iron Mountains, and to the east by the Ered Luin, the Blue Mountains.

+ Places in Beleriand
The southernmost region of Beleriand, bordered on the east by the . It contained the forest of Nimbrethil, mentioned in the poem "Song of Eärendil", which hears in : "Eärendil was a mariner / that tarried in Arvernien; / he built a boat of timber felled / in Nimbrethil to journey in; ..."
Far to the north, the area around Morgoth's fortress of Angband under the peaks of Thangorodrim, and the Ered Engrin, the Iron Mountains.
The realm of the , the Grey Elves of King .
The realm of Círdan the Shipwright and his Sindar Elves in the years of Starlight and the First Age of the Sun. They lived in two havens, at the mouth of the River Nenning, and at the mouth of the River Brithon. The Havens were besieged during the First Battle of Beleriand. When the Havens were destroyed, Círdan's people fled to the Mouths of Sirion and the Isle of Balar.
A hidden city of Elves in the north of Beleriand, founded by Turgon, and hidden from by mountains.
The region north of Beleriand near the icy Helcaraxë. It contains Mithrim, where the High Kings of the had their halls, and Dor-lómin, later a fief of Men of the House of Hador. Hithlum was cold and rainy, but fertile. It is bordered by mountains; to the east and south by the , and to the west by the .
Shoreline west of the Ered Lómin. Named from 's great cry while fighting , the echoes of which ever lingered there.
The northeastern border region of Beleriand. A great fortress was built on the hill of , the chief stronghold of , from which he guarded the area. It was the only fortress to survive the , the Battle of Sudden Flame; the forces of Angband captured it in the Nirnaeth Arnoediad, the Battle of Unnumbered Tears., "The Grey Annals", p. 77 After the Drowning of Beleriand, the peak of Himring remained above the waves as an island.See The Treason of Isengard, p. 124 and note 18, and , note on map in Introduction. The gap in the mountains to the south of this area was known as .
Built by Finrod Felagund, delved into the banks of the river Narog in Beleriand., ch. 13 "Of the Return of the Noldor"
A coastal region in the north of Beleriand; its city is Vinyamar. It was the centre of Turgon's Elven kingdom until people left for Gondolin.
The most easterly region of Beleriand during the , between the Ered Luin and the river . It is a green and forested land. The rivers are the Gelion, and its six tributaries: , , , , and .


Analysis

Naming
Beleriand had many different names in Tolkien's early writings, including Broceliand, the name of an enchanted forest in medieval romance, Golodhinand, Noldórinan ("valley of the Noldor"), Geleriand, Bladorinand, Belaurien, Arsiriand, Lassiriand, and Ossiriand (later used for the easternmost part of Beleriand).

One of Beleriand's early names was Ingolondë, a play on "England", part of Tolkien's long-held but ultimately unsuccessful aim to create what Shippey calls "a mighty patron for his country, a foundation-myth more far-reaching than Hengest and Horsa, one to which he could graft his own stories." Tolkien's aim had been to root his mythology for England in the scraps of names and myths that had survived, and to situate it in a land in the northwest of the continent, by the sea.


A sense of doom
Shippey writes that the Quenta Silmarillion has a tightly-woven plot, each part leading ultimately to tragedy. There are three Hidden Elvish Kingdoms in Beleriand, founded by relatives, and they are each betrayed and destroyed. The Kingdoms are each penetrated by a mortal Man, again all related to each other; and the sense of doom, which Shippey glosses as "future disaster", hangs heavy over all of the characters in the tale.

+ 's analysis of the Hidden Kingdoms of Beleriand
TúrinCity destroyed
Beren
Tuor

Shippey writes that the human race seen in Beleriand in the did not "originate 'on stage' in Beleriand, but drifts into it, already sundered in speech, from the East the. There something terrible has happened to them of which they will not speak: 'A darkness lies behind us... and we have turned our backs upon it'". He comments that the reader is free to assume that the Satanic has carried out the 's temptation of Adam and Eve, and that "the incoming and Easterlings are all descendants of Adam flying from Eden and subject to the curse of Babel."


"Lost" poetry
The Tolkien scholar Gergely Nagy, writing in 2004, notes that The Silmarillion does not contain explicitly embedded samples of Beleriand's poetry in its prose, as Tolkien had done with his many poems in The Lord of the Rings. Instead, the prose of The Silmarillion hints repeatedly at the structure and syntax of its "lost" poetry. Nagy notes 's description of the book as containing prose styles that he classifies as "the Annalistic, the Antique, and the Appendical". The implication of the range of styles is that The Silmarillion is meant to represent, in Christopher Tolkien's words, "a compilation, a compendious narrative, made long afterwards from sources of great diversity (poems, and annals, and oral tales)". Nagy infers from verse-like fragments of text in The Silmarillion that the poetry of Beleriand used , , and rhythm including possibly iambics.

This applies to the Ainulindalë, Tolkien's account of the godlike Ainur:

+ Gergely Nagy's analysis of poem-like prose in the Ainulindalë
and they built lands and Melkor destroyed them; valleys they delved and Melkor raised them up; mountains they carved and Melkor threw them down; seas they hollowed and Melkor spilled them;Prose adapted from poetry, with "rhetorics" and "stricter syntactic patterns"; and balanced clauses "bearing a structural and thematic similarity"

It applies, too, to the narrative of Elves and Men in the Beleriand landscape, in the Quenta Silmarillion:

+ Nagy's analysis of poem-like prose in the Quenta Silmarillion
But there was a deep way under the mountains delved in the darkness of the world by the waters that flowed out to join the streams of Sirion." and rhythm are beautifully seen together"

In a few places, it is possible to relate the adapted verse in the prose to actual verse in Tolkien's legendarium. This can be done, for instance, in parts of the story of Túrin. Here, he realizes he has just killed his friend :

+ Nagy's analysis of adapted verse lines in the Quenta Silmarillion
Then Túrin stood stone still and silent, staring on that dreadful death, knowing what he had done. stone-faced he stood     standing frozen on that dreadful death     his deed knowing"Nearly all the alliterating words, together with the alliteration pattern itself, doubtless derive from the poem; the imagery and to some extent the very phrasing of this very moving central scene ... are virtually unchanged."


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