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lithemi
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There are 7 letters in LITHEMI ( E1H4I1L1M3T1 )
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J. R. R. Tolkien invented a number of calendars for his legendarium. "Middle-earth" is the term for inhabited Earth in the setting of a fictional prehistoric era, so a year is the same length as our year. Appendix D of Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings (published 1955) gives details of his invented calendars. * The most elaborate of these is the Shire Calendar used by his fictional Hobbits of the Shire. The calendar is directly based on the historical Anglo-Saxon calendar described by Bede. * The same appendix gives more information on the Shire Calendar's background in the fictional history of Middle-earth, stating that the Shire Reckoning is a conservative continuation of the calendar of Númenor as used in Middle-earth during the Second Age, but revised in the Third Age by Mardil and Hador, the first and seventh ruling Stewards of Gondor. * The Hobbits retained the unreformed King's Reckoning, but introduced a reform that resulted in a fixed number of weeks (in imitation of the historical 10th-century Icelandic calendar). * Appendix D further gives some information on the Reckoning of Rivendell, the calendar used by the Elves in Imladris (Rivendell), which divided the solar year into six "seasons" or "long months". * The only allusion to a calendar of the Dwarves is made in The Hobbit, regarding the "dwarves' New Year" or Durin's Day. * Tolkien repeatedly stresses that his legendarium is set in a remote past of our Earth (as opposed to a completely fictional or mythological world), and he gives intercalation methods used by the Númenoreans that amount to an average length of a year of 365.24 days and an average year in the 'Reckoning of Rivendell' of 52595⁄144≈365.24306 days. * With the caveat "if the year was then of the same length as now" Tolkien goes on to discuss historical intercalation * made by the Númenoreans and their descendants, the Dúnedain, during the Second and Third Ages, assuming a tropical year of 365.2422 days.The seasons referred to in Tolkien's calendars, and in his writings in general, are those of the Northern Hemisphere. |