according the completely made up argument you made.
@Hydra-dr8hd11 ай бұрын
All Catholics hate the Roman Empire so it's not surprising that Tolkien hated the Roman Empire The Roman Empire used to persecute Catholics (= Christians) and throw them in arenas with wild animals
@overlord506811 ай бұрын
He was a Catholic and all Catholics of all times were and always will be against the polytheist Roman empire
@apollomars167811 ай бұрын
nope minas thirid is not based on Konstantinopel, but more likely Adrianopel, while Osgiliath is often compared with Konstantinopel in the narrative, that wants to make the evil races and orcs to Muslims. This is bullshit. It is more about northern western european society, explicit the UK. Numenor didnt slowly widdled and died out, it sink into the ocean, like atlantis. It is more an analogy about good vs bad colonialism and ergo the british empire. Anarion and Isildur were not brothers, at best you could compare arnor and gondor to the western and eastern roman empire. the civilwar didnt happend over the minority of the king, but by the pro-elven or pro-men views in numenor with the faithfull being surrounded by a princess, while the true king tried to attack the land to the west and failed. It is more an analogy to the fight in Islam after the death of Mohamed between Abū Bakr and Fātima, the later mother of Ali. the dunedain are racial superiour to their colonial subjects, because of their age (200-600) to men (60), but this blood is slowly lost in gondor by the gondorians, who are by "good" colonialisation cultural adapted to numenorian culture without being numenorian, because they die to early to record the knowledge of the numenorians. This desiree and the thinning of the numenorian blood over time is one of the main reasons of the slow downfall of gondor, even portrayed in the movies. Haradrim using elephants is not an analogy to carthago..... It is more probably about india than carthago and maybe they are even about sometime else, like british people handling the mystical elephants from stories only known even for the rohirim on the battlefield. the battle on the hornburg is not a fancy comparison to a fight by some Horatius, who defended Rome from the etruscians, ffs. Tolkien didnt compared the HORN-BURG with the latin genus horatius, who broke down a BRIDGE to defend early rome. It is mor elikely, that Tolkien hated Rome, because they invaded britannia and made it to a colony and brought a believe into britannia with a sole power, that corrupted everyone, who touched it and twisted his natural british views to a practical, exploiting and hateful view to every naturalistic god, called christianity....
@bas-tn3um11 ай бұрын
nope let me ass pull while giving no sources. heeeee hawwww appolo homosexual. @@apollomars1678
@leonemaledetto1500 Жыл бұрын
I imagined as much. He loved Celtic myth, and the Romans were a large reason for their downfall. Also the imperialism of Rome must have seemed to ol'JRR like a force for homogeneity in the world, where he so loved the differences of peoples that inhabit it.
@couchpotatoe91 Жыл бұрын
Exactly. Middle-Earth is in many parts united, but not homogenized. The Roman Empire on the other hand, while adopting some Greek customs earlier in its republic, mostly sought to destroy anything that was different and foreign and establish Roman superiority. Examples include the absolute annihilation of Carthage and anything related to their culture (afaik we don't know of a single Carthaginian book or author) and the assimilation of Celts into "civilized" people. Ironically though, Tolkien seems to have been unaware or ignored the fact that early Christians did the same thing, often times even worse in that they tolerated no other religion while Romans did accept foreign worship as long as you accepted the emperor as your half-deity. Given his devout catholic belief, it might be that it just never occured to him that the spread of Christianity had such a sharp cultural impact. Afair it was the Christians who basically hunted down Celtic and Nordic druids that transferred oral stories of their gods, not the Romans who relied heavily on Celtic auxilia and Gaul as a buffer province and had no problem with polytheism as long as they were included.
@petrospetromixos6962 Жыл бұрын
@@couchpotatoe91 werent Carthagenians just barbarians, how could they have authors or books?
@goofygrandlouis6296 Жыл бұрын
Sooo... Do you think he would be on team Galadriel rebooted ? 😅😅
@couchpotatoe91 Жыл бұрын
@@petrospetromixos6962 Carthaginians were seafarers and traders that explored along the West African coast long before Romans did (look up the explorer Hanno from the 5th century BC). Romans actually seized a stranded Punic vessel in the 1st Punic War in the 3rd century BC and replicated it because it was just a superior ship design to theirs. Carthaginians were originally a trading colony from Phoenicia which is in nowaday Israel, but Phoenicia got eventually conquered by the Persians leaving the colony of Carthage an independent new nation. They were by no means "barbarians", the city of Carthage at one point in history was one of if not the biggest city in the mediterranean. The Phoenicians also perfected the art of translucent glass blowing. They were one of the biggest players in the Mediterranean before the Roman rise alongside the Greeks. But they were traders and no conquerors, so while they controlled land that was profitable, they didn't have a concept of Imperialism as the Romans did. They also had an oligarchy and a senate much like Romans did btw, but without dictators (ancient term) in times of crisis.
@couchpotatoe91 Жыл бұрын
@@goofygrandlouis6296 Tolkien likely already would've problems with the action and war focus of the LotR films. I know his son Christopher did. If he wasn't already dead, I'm sure he'd wish to be after seeing the Rings of Power.
@LLPTV Жыл бұрын
Even Tolkien thought about Roman empire at least every week.
@attemptedunkindness3632 Жыл бұрын
It's a perennial problem that all alpha males are required to at least think about the Roman Empire at least once every 160 hours. Ideally you are looking for numbers like 12-24 hours but Tolkien is forgiven for he is an aged G who left a good chunk of his testosterone simply surviving outrageous WW1 battles.
@paulmayson3129 Жыл бұрын
What if you think about it 24/24, 7/7???@@attemptedunkindness3632
@maximusd26 Жыл бұрын
if it's not every day, how would you face your ancestors ?
@isaackellogg3493 Жыл бұрын
@@maximusd26with the right (dexter) side of my visage. They’d expect nothing less.
@VVabsa Жыл бұрын
@@attemptedunkindness3632 Question, does one think about the entire history of the Romans from 753BC - 480 AD (1453 AD if you count the Eastern Roman/Byzantine empire) or the Empire part specifically?
@Tom-sd9jb Жыл бұрын
"I do not love the bright sword for its sharpness, nor the arrow for its swiftness, nor the warrior for his glory. I love only that which they defend." I remember reading somewhere the Faramir was Tolkien's cheeky self insert.
@tau-5794 Жыл бұрын
Faramir and Frodo were both (sort of) self inserts. Faramir for being based on himself in general, and Frodo for his experiences in WW1, as an officer and Sam standing in for the common soldier he was expected to lead.
@edgargross2789 Жыл бұрын
Thats Beren.
@Elyseon Жыл бұрын
Considering that Beren is even mentioned on his gravestone, definitely.
@calonarang737811 ай бұрын
The best words I've heard so far!
@tau-579411 ай бұрын
@@edgargross2789 Beren was the self insert, but Faramir and Frodo were both more directly inspired by his own personality.
@derfelcadarn8230 Жыл бұрын
Tolkien was a traditional Catholic, a Royalist & a counter-revolutionary ; as such, his main inspiration, like all true counter-revolutionaries, was the Christian Middle Ages. An aristocratic social order with a secretly democratic mentality; a strong, patriarchal monarchy with extensive local liberties: a warrior-nobility that still submited to the spiritual authority of the priestly order; a politically fragmented Europe that thought of itself as a spiritually united continent, headed by the Holy Church, and whose warring polities could put aside their differences when necessary (the Crusades, for example) etc. Medieval Christendom was full of these wonderful paradoxes which Tolkien thought to be the basis of true authority and true freedom. So, of course, it's not surprising that Tolkien hated the Roman Empire, and more generally, the very idea of Empire. Imperialism, true imperialism that is, was completely foreign to the medieval mind. When Tolkien described himself as both an anarchist & a conservative, that is what he meant.
@Digganob590 Жыл бұрын
I wholeheartedly agree with the rest of your comment, but I am intrigued by one phrase: "An aristocratic social order with a secretly democratic mentality;" What precisely do you mean by this? I wouldn't think you meant democratic in the same way we mean it today, that being the power is directed by the people, as it is in modern democracies. Do you mean the spirit and will of the people being taken into consideration by government?
@binbows2258 Жыл бұрын
@@Digganob590 I think the idea is that the nobility are "chosen" by and serve as the "representatives" of the common people. They hold unquestionable authority, but it is a righteous authority that the people "agreed" to let them have. Essentially, the noble dynasties themselves were "chosen" by the people to lead them.
@Digganob590 Жыл бұрын
@@binbows2258 Hey now, let's let the OP speak for himself. By the way, fun fact, every political system is a democracy once you piss the people off enough.
@robmartin5448 Жыл бұрын
he wasn't a fan of the nahsis he was not a fan of fascists. In some ways Rome was a very fascist society. That's why Skyrim gives you a mission to join the Empire or the Stormcloacks in Tolkien fashion. Would Tolkien have sided with Empire?
@drlca6601 Жыл бұрын
barons and magna carta@@Digganob590
@Procopius464 Жыл бұрын
Tolkien also said that Aragorn becoming king of the united realms was similar to what might have happened if an emperor had inherited the Byzantine Empire and recovered the ruined territories of the western Roman Empire. Edit: Since this comment is getting a lot of views I want to make a correction. Actually what Tolkien said was that the reunited realm was more like the Holy Roman Empire. He did not say it was like the Western Roman and Byzantine Roman empires coming together again, although he did compare Godor to the Byzantine Empire.
@Phavahg Жыл бұрын
So, Justinian then? But then, Justinian was certainly not Roman (Numenorean) by birth, although he apparently grew up speaking Latin (Westron).
@Procopius464 Жыл бұрын
@@Phavahg It's not that he's supposed to be Justinian or any actual historical figure. Rather it's a somewhat analogous situation. It's an example of history rhyming, but not directly repeating (although this is fake history). Tolkien didn't use symbolism or allegory (which he hated), but he did take inspiration from real history, and of course IRL history does rhyme and to some extent repeat. There is no cryptic hidden meaning behind any of the characters. In one of his letters he mentioned how Gondor was similar to the Byzantine Empire, and that the unified kingdom was similar to the Roman empire reuniting. In another letter he said the Numenorians would have resembled Egyptians, although this had more to do with their architecture and burial customs than their physical appearance. The Middle Earth is supposed to be an ancient mythological age, like the Greek heroic period which all their epics are set in. The Romans, Celts, etc., are all successor populations that come after or during the 4th age. It also fits somewhat with existing systems of mythology like Germanic, Greek, and Celtic. A lot was borrowed from Celtic, in fact.
@callnight1441 Жыл бұрын
@Phavahg you need to be careful how you phrase certain things. Justinian, despite being born illyrian or thracian, would have considered himself just as roman as any itallic at the time
@khorneflakes2175 Жыл бұрын
@@callnight1441 I was about to comment this, I can't recall Justinian not being considered Roman, by himself or another.
@carlosaugustodinizgarcia3526 Жыл бұрын
Justinian was roman and spoke latin.He was just not from Italy. And neither were Constantine,Septimus Severus,Philp the Arab,Heliogabalus ,Caracalla and Diocletian.
@roosterman8601 Жыл бұрын
6:00 no one commenting on the fact that one of the greatest authors of all time known for his posh language just said "grr" in a letter to his son unironically
@InkandFantasy Жыл бұрын
It took me a solid 10 minutes to decide if I wanted to say that as well while reading it hahaha
@grandmasteryoda6717 acting like virginity is shameful is cringe.
@JackovdaBoro Жыл бұрын
"As I have said, I am a nationalist; England is good enough for me. I would defend England against the whole European continent. With even greater joy would I defend England against the whole British Empire." G.K. Chesterton
@derfelcadarn8230 Жыл бұрын
Yes, absolutely, there are some fascinating parallels to be made between Tolkien & Chesterton. Well, I don't know if you've heard of him, good sir, but if you feel particularly close to Tolkien's & Chesterton's worldview, you can always check out the works of Georges Bernanos, some of which have been translated by Cluny Media. In my humble opinion: the greatest French Catholic writer of the 20th century, and one of the greatest French writers, period. A superb novelist & a magnificent polemicist & essayist. A staunch Royalist & Anarchist -- a "White Anarchist", you could say. Royalism à la française, with a special Latin zeal. A bit different from the Anglo-American conservative tradition. But, with Charles Péguy, he is to France what Tolkien & Chesterton are to England: some of the most orthodox & distinguished defenders of their nation's unique vocation before God. Cheers & greetings from France,
@sandwichninja Жыл бұрын
Petty nationalism is cringy and unrealistic. The only nationalism that will save the Western world is racial (as in White). Anglophiles are some of the slowest to accept this due to the emotional attachment they have for their lionized role in the absurd WWII narrative. Imagine thinking that Churchill - who ordered the carpet bombing of 160+ German villages, towns, and cities - was a hero _"fighting tyranny"._
@ThereIsAlwaysaWay2 Жыл бұрын
Amen ♥♥♥
@JoaoVitor-wp9zg Жыл бұрын
@@derfelcadarn8230 Man, you look like a very cool person, judging by these authors you are suggesting, cheers!
@joepetto9488 Жыл бұрын
If only he meant it.
@plenarchist Жыл бұрын
“My political opinions lean more and more to Anarchy (philosophically understood, meaning abolition of control not whiskered men with bombs) … Government is an abstract noun meaning the art and process of governing and it should be an offence to write it with a capital G or so to refer to people. … the most improper job of any man, even saints (who at any rate were at least unwilling to take it on), is bossing other men. Not one in a million is fit for it, and least of all those who seek the opportunity.” - J.R.R. Tolkien, 1943 letter to his son from The Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien (1981)
@dirtbird7415 Жыл бұрын
If he wrote that , it is very telling as to why he hated the Roman empire. The Romans , Like the Greeks before them viewed a Political career and service to the state as the highest good an individual could achieve.
@pyotrbagration2438 Жыл бұрын
@@dirtbird7415 Hoes mad
@davidd854 Жыл бұрын
This fits with the general idea of the ring of power as well I think.
@zealgaming816111 ай бұрын
@@dirtbird7415 The Romans wanted to get closer to the gods. And in their eyes, the gods where both terrifyingly wrathful and beautifully strong. We know about the pain of chasing power. But as our once great civilization collapse into nihilism, we also now know the pain of weakness.
@petrapetrakoliou897911 ай бұрын
Government is the product of the evolutionary process of war, it isn't a nicety.
@yseson_ Жыл бұрын
No hater of nations but a hater of empire, i share these sentiments deeply.
@thadtuiol1717 Жыл бұрын
Hope you're not American, the irony would be too great for you to bear
@audreyharris7643 Жыл бұрын
@@thadtuiol1717what's the irony
@RussianOccupier1908 ай бұрын
Nah empires are great without empires we would still be living in the Stone Age
@danzoom8 ай бұрын
@@RussianOccupier190 isn't true, since the first states could barely be called empires. Indus valley civilization and sumers were independent city-states.
@RussianOccupier1908 ай бұрын
@@danzoom an empire is a nation that seeks to expand its territory mostly through violent means empire does not necessarily mean a huge landmass since empires can come in all sorts of sizes throughout history there have been very small empires like the Egyptian or the Hittite which are very small in comparison to other bigger better known empires like the Roman,Mongol, and British empires.
@TheMoguera Жыл бұрын
So it's not that he hates the roman empire, he just doesn't like empires?
@sindrimyr5351 Жыл бұрын
Indeed. He hates the idea of empires imposing their culture and language upon other civilizations and thus trying to eradicate the previous peoples customs. He preferes diversity and richness of culture and languages as opposed to one universalized and centrified culture.
@jaykilbourne1110 Жыл бұрын
TL,DR; He favors chaos, anarchy, and destructive conflict.@@sindrimyr5351
@underarmbowlingincidentof1981 Жыл бұрын
@Hlord-be4xx same thing basically. although cooperation between those culturally diverse people is something he does value. I mean I'd say isolationism is something he warns about in his books.
@muhammadedwards8425 Жыл бұрын
@Hlord-be4xxI don't think so. A massive confederation or other grouping of semi-independent states that have their own culture would probably be something he'd be down with. Like an idealized Russia, or if the EU was a state and also a utopia
@hebanker3372 Жыл бұрын
Which is kind of an oxymoron, for if the Romans hadn't embraced Christianity, he wouldn't have been a Christian himself. The concept of imperium is a double edged sword.
@gurugurumawaru7869 Жыл бұрын
Tolkien hated imperialism would be a more accurate title
@haroldcruz855011 ай бұрын
Yes but that does not invite many viewers as much as the title that was used in this video
@Parasmunt11 ай бұрын
He definitely would not be a fan of modernity! He would be aghast at everything. Imperialism continues today in various forms more so than at any point on history. Mainly due to shared economic systems heavily interconnected but with master and servant countries, related media systems, related legal systems, related norms to do with religion.
@yourhighness645710 ай бұрын
@@Parasmunthe hated atheism too
@Erimgard1310 ай бұрын
He hates imperialism in general, but we very specifically have him talking about he hates Rome. So the title makes perfect sense for the content.
@matthewgabbard64159 ай бұрын
And for that reason I say people suck@@haroldcruz8550
@andreasmuller417211 ай бұрын
To love your country without being blind to its faults is an attitude I wish more people had.
@Commodore22345Ай бұрын
People don't acknowledge the faults of their nation, not because they don't see them, but because any time you do, the enemies of your nation will politicize it and use such admissions to subvert, weaken and eventually destroy your nation. That is why, for example, the Japanese steadfastly refuse to admit to any wrongdoing in WW2 to this very day. They know they did wrong, but they also know if they admit it, their enemies will use that to help break down their national identity.
@ddfelix4829 Жыл бұрын
A couple of thoughts.... Tolkien used the story of Horatius Cocles as the basis for Boromir and Faramir's stand at Osgiliath in the Appendices of TRotK. Horatius was one of the heroes of the Republic, not the Empire. Also, the stories of the rustic and independent people of Haleth in Beleriand reflect the old Roman Republican values of industriousness, family, and ethics in defense of their community. The Dunedain of Arnor lost their kingdom and their reputation, yet never gave up on protecting the Shire. I think Tolkien saw this as the true calling of power and leadership of the powerful and blessed Numenoreans.... and should have been the calling of the Romans as well. The Romans raped and pillaged many lands as the King's faction of the Numenoreans and the Black Numenoreans abused the peoples of Middle-earth. I believe Tolkien's philosophy as setting an example by being true to the truth. This is shown by the Hobbits', Gandalf's, Aragorn's, Faramir's, and Theoden's courteous behavior towards their social inferiors and guests. People will emulate superior traits through exemplary behavior, not through domination. Examples include the Ithilien Rangers' reverence and remembrance of the Valar before their meal and the highly informal behavior yet extremely polite conversations between Theoden and Merry.
@joepetto9488 Жыл бұрын
The way the Beorians and Turin along with Androg’s men lived as “ethical outlaws” also harkens back to Romulus and Remus, their grandfather the Outlawed-King Numitor, and the king’s band of loyal retainers turned bandits.
@bas-tn3um Жыл бұрын
ink and history lied for views why are you acting like this is a mystery.
@juwebles435211 ай бұрын
Ahh yes I'm sure no one revered Horatius cocles the second the government changed
@bas-tn3um11 ай бұрын
yea he was just a hero of rome for 6 centuries. youre a clown go read a history book.@@juwebles4352
@AverageAlien11 ай бұрын
Republic is objectively inferior to Empire/Monarchy in every single way. This is true in the modern day as well. Democracy always fails, by default. Monarchy needs a comeback
@MerkhVision Жыл бұрын
This is an excellent and thoughtful video full of nuance, which is much appreciated and desperately needed in these increasingly polarized world!
@62cky4powerthirst Жыл бұрын
People often forget the curse of empire: you either conquer too much territory and empire dies stretched too thin to protect itself biting off more than it can chew or your empire runs out of room to expand into and collapses from within due to class contradictions.
@briishperson4555 Жыл бұрын
"Class contradictions", not to rain on your parade, but that's a load of bollocks
@sanguiniue Жыл бұрын
When a nation becomes trapped by one class of people it dies. The leaders of a nation turns its attention to helping and protecting that class of people. It cant respond correctly to threats as that would damage the ruling class interests. For Rome it was the land owners , India the priests, japan the warriors , china the bureaucrats and currentley for the USA its big company's and wall street @@briishperson4555
@DarkArtistKaiser Жыл бұрын
@@briishperson4555 Happens more times than you think. Either be taken by the rot without or the rot within, or even both. That is always the fate of all empires.
@62cky4powerthirst Жыл бұрын
@@briishperson4555 Oh sorry, silly me: I forgot poor people and slaves just merrily worked and whistled and sang like Keebler Elves and were not at all angry about being poor or slaves. Yup, everyone just got along just fine. Poor people never got angry the rich in their political system usually bought it and rigged the rules against them while using endless wars to distract them. That's why there was never any slave rebellions or worker uprisings. The Romans and the French just are the two biggest examples of people who just loved their monarchs and never went through any civil wars because they all just loved each other so much. Silly me, I must've read the depressing history books instead of the happy ones!
@briishperson4555 Жыл бұрын
@@62cky4powerthirst I don't dispute that revolts and rebellions by the working masses happened, i just don't think that they were a main cause in the collapse of the roman empire (or most empires for that matter, sans russia and france), but rather infighting amongst the ruling elite
@harbl99 Жыл бұрын
Here's a thing: Karen Fonstad (of _The Atlas of Middle-Earth_ fame) worked out that the distance from Hobbiton to Minas Tirith is about the same as that from Oxford to Constantinople. Make of that what you will.
@Procopius464 Жыл бұрын
Sounds about right.
@tj-co9go Жыл бұрын
Known today as Istanbul. Although I always think of this city still as Constantinople, as a historian
@ArawnOfAnnwn Жыл бұрын
@@tj-co9go No, it's Byzantium!
@magniwalterbutnotwaltermag1479 Жыл бұрын
No, it's Miklagard! @@ArawnOfAnnwn
@benjaminthefox Жыл бұрын
@@tj-co9go Why'd they change it?
@evilsponge6911 Жыл бұрын
"Rome makes a desert, and calls it peace" -Tacitus
@derfelcadarn8230 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely... Rome definitely did a lot of good; it also did a lot of evil, absolutely evil stuff, even. Well, I don't know where you stand politically, good stranger, but from a right-wing perspective (mine), it boggles the mind that so many people on the Right these days so readily worship the Roman Empire... At the peak of its power & influence, Rome was nothing more than a plutocracy which spent its time destroying indigenous European cultures & persecuting Christian souls... Such a great example for the political & spiritual regeneration of the decadent West...
@fabrizio.guidi64 Жыл бұрын
"U.S.A. makes a desert, and calls it peace"
@jeffersoncruz2898 Жыл бұрын
ROMA CRIOU UMA CIVILIZAÇÃO!
@falsesatsuma11 ай бұрын
@@fabrizio.guidi64 The Eagle still flys over Parthia, it has yet to be brought to heel.
@Aegius10 ай бұрын
Japan, Germany and South Korea didn’t become deserts
@zarquondam Жыл бұрын
No one who's read Augustine's CITY OF GOD would find it "paradoxical" that a Roman Catholic would dislike the Roman Empire. The irony, however, is that the Roman Catholic church modeled itself in many ways on the structure of the Roman Empire. A hierarchical structure terminating in a supreme ruler-pontiff; the wearing of robes when most European men had switched to the "barbarian" trousers; the appropriation of terms like "diocese" and "basilica," etc.
@ProgressIsTheOnlyEvolution11 ай бұрын
Exactly!
@reactiondavant-garde339110 ай бұрын
@JuliaHalecky Yeah the hierarchy of the church was already formed (more or less) before the Empire even legalised christianity under Constantin the Great.
@andreamarino60103 ай бұрын
The Catholic Church has a Pope since God appointed St.Peter as the head and His vicar on earth. The clothes are just traditional for liturgy, they do not live with them attacched. Nowdays priests use trousers
@Ravi9A3 ай бұрын
Its natural for augustine readers to suffer from cognitive incoherence.
@oliversmith9200 Жыл бұрын
Back in the seventies, I saw a LOTR inspired poster in a Head Shop, in which the orc's armor looked distinctly Roman. Wish I had that old image half a century later to share.
@dziosdzynes76633 ай бұрын
Not really
@bryanthomas49072 ай бұрын
Romans bc they were so rigid. Everyone assumed they were all having gay orgies at any given time but their view of it was very hierarchal. Terribly misogynistic, rampant slavery, never really liked the architecture so yeah fuck em
@mellamanborrego8299Ай бұрын
@@dziosdzynes7663 speak for yourself, ya jrk
@hypokratesthehypocrite3513Күн бұрын
That’s sick as fuck,
@silverchairsg Жыл бұрын
Tolkien: I don't like the Roman Empire Time Traveller: Professor, I brought you this game called Rome Total War. Have a go at it. Why not let your buddy Jack play it too? 3 hours later Tolkien: And as Frodo slashed the back of the last of the retreating orcs with Sting, he beckoned to the Men-at-arms of Gondor behind him and bellowed: "The enemy army flees! Pursue them! Drive them from the battlefield!" CS Lewis: The Witch's Minotaur general clove Mr Tumnus's head from his shoulders with one mighty blow. All around him, Peter Pevensie and the rest of the Narnian army were fleeing. He raised his head and let out a roar that echoed above the din of the battlefield: "The enemy warlord is running like a frightened goat. Chase him! Goats make good eating!"
@beanzor Жыл бұрын
As a roman catholic myself, I grew up reading JRR Tolkien, I have about the same view of the world.
@tomtaylor562311 ай бұрын
that's what happens when you follow a religion invented by the tunnelers to destroy us. you go against your own.
@bilas85 Жыл бұрын
This is something that i have noticed in several british works from the half of the 19th century on - parallelisms between the british empire and the romans would surprisingly pop up in the most unexpected places, and be always negative thoward the second. What i find curious is the distance in time between the two, which normally would prevent any comparison. It is though something that any empire would do, building their own narrative using a previous great example as a meter of measure to reaffirm their actual superior greatness, for example the early franks empires are all about that: we are greater, we are better, our claims are more justifiable, and so on. Tolkien was a top-level educated man of his time, when clearly such opinions would be a part of the zeitgeist.
@GeorgeMasterclass Жыл бұрын
The Romans were so cool and the legacy so great that every european power had tried to mimic or play as the new Rome. Napoleon, the Germans, the Brits, the Americans, Russians, Turks.
@mnk9073 Жыл бұрын
The British "hated" the Roman Empire because a) the French were quicker to claim it, I mean Napoleon literally handed out Aquilas and crowned himself Caesar b) Britain was essentially a backwater far from civilisations bright light and yet the British took the better part of two millenia to reach the level of sophistication again that was Roman Britain and c) even at the height of it's power _the Empire_ was a sorry network of trade posts and forts compared to the cultural, social and economic hegemony that was the Roman Empire.
@GeorgeMasterclass Жыл бұрын
@@mnk9073 I dont agree, the Brits were quite progressive, and were the heart of the industrial revolution. Moreover they were quite versatile during the middle ages despite being a nation with a small population.
@GaryJones69420 Жыл бұрын
@@mnk9073sounds like you either a) hate the British or b) dont know much about the British Empire.
@mnk9073 Жыл бұрын
@@GeorgeMasterclassNobody is saying they were not industrious or inventive but they always lacked the cultural splendour and the sophistication. Victorian London is described even by patriotic Brits as a sprawling soot covered Moloch, a destitute modern Babylon, utter Bedlam far from the beauty of Rome. Hell, Tolkien himself saw it as that and agreed with Blake on the "dark satanic mills". During the middle ages England played an important role in it's sphere, Scotland, Ireland and France but most of Europe was, in contrast to the geopolitical giants like France, Spain and the HRE, largely indifferent to and unbothered by it.
@NorthernHistory11 ай бұрын
The whole LOTR is a critique of centralized, military power bent on imperial conquest. Mordor's legions marching to the beat of one drum. He proposes that free, independent people will overthrow such a regime, and indeed they did, in history too.
@pedrolmlkzk9 ай бұрын
That is one of the themes yes but not the central one
@Ravi9A3 ай бұрын
Usa hasnt fallen yet.
@LincolnDWard2 ай бұрын
@@pedrolmlkzk the central theme is the allure of power, which that critique of empire neatly falls under
@konstantinosmandalos75963 күн бұрын
@@Ravi9A Neither has Russia or the PRC or all those large burdens to mankind.
@Ravi9A3 күн бұрын
@@konstantinosmandalos7596 USA is orders of magnitude worse.
@gergelybakos2159 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this balanced presentation of the surprisingly fresh and healthy way of Tokien's thinking. May more people think like this!
@fionn2220 Жыл бұрын
"I assert, then, the divine right of the people, ‘God's grant to Adam and his poor children for ever’, to have and to hold this good green earth. And I assert the sovereignty and the sanctity of the nations, which are the people embodied and organised. The nation is a natural division, as natural as the family, and as inevitable. That is one reason why a nation is holy and why an empire is not holy. A nation is knit together by natural ties, ties mystic and spiritual, and ties human and kindly; an empire is at best held together by ties of mutual interest, and at worst by brute force. The nation is the family in large; an empire is a commercial corporation in large. The nation is of God; the empire is of man-if it be not of the devil." -Pádraig Pearse, the first President of Ireland I think this expresses Tolkiens point on empire quite well.
@Somethingelse34510 ай бұрын
Tolkien would hate the globalism of today
@theoriginalkyttyn77249 ай бұрын
Yes, he would have.
@Wartoz8 ай бұрын
And Trump
@V.B.Squire7 ай бұрын
@@WartozTrump is the opposite to globalism and Tolkien would see through CNN propaganda,
@V.B.Squire7 ай бұрын
@@WartozTrump is the opposite to globalism and Tolkien would see through CNN propaganda,
@hyacinthlynch8437 ай бұрын
@@Wartoz Why? Trump is a nationalist just like Tolkien.
@Brubarov Жыл бұрын
I understand him a lot better thanks to you, but also because I totally share his perspective. Especially in our crazy world.
@dustinlattimore7336 Жыл бұрын
Boy, I sure can identify with being a traditionalist and patriot who absolutely abhors the current state and government of his country
@wojtek_32 Жыл бұрын
i hope you're not blaming that current state on the immutable traits of certain groups.
@splatterkat3838 Жыл бұрын
@@wojtek_32 I am.
@kaiserquasar3178 Жыл бұрын
@@wojtek_32 That your name is Polish makes this even better (Poles are way more right-wing on average than westerners afaik), so good one. Truly defying the stereotype.
@wojtek_32 Жыл бұрын
@@kaiserquasar3178 i am not polish and i have no clue what you are on about
@wojtek_32 Жыл бұрын
@@splatterkat3838 don't forget that tolkien had a "burning private grudge" against your leader
@riverrun7061 Жыл бұрын
Good Lord, what kind of cultural state have we reached where I need a nearly 10 minute video to explain to me that a person can hold two contrasting but not necessarily contradictory ideas at the same time?
@hebanker3372 Жыл бұрын
The culture of views, my friend.
@leonake4194 Жыл бұрын
The state were the people that watched the video mostly wanted to actually know more about Tolkien, instead of the five second answer you seem to be looking for
@riverrun7061 Жыл бұрын
@@leonake4194 That was a 5-second answer strung out into nearly 10 minutes. If you didn't realize that listening to it, then that's what I'm talking about.
@riverrun7061 Жыл бұрын
@@leonake4194 No, I'm saying that the video itself was a very small amount of content bloviated out in a nearly 10 minutes. I'm saying that the actual content of the video was maybe I don't know 5 to 30 seconds worth of actual content and then just waffling around on expansions and illustrations of the same idea.
@Mamothrept Жыл бұрын
@riverrun7061 The expansions were useful and interesting to me though 🌲 Hum, why be so hasty. Some things are only worth talking about if they take a long time to say, afterall. 😉
@victormolinatorres9 ай бұрын
Wonderfully written video!! You got precisely to the point and made clear what Toklien had in his head (with wich I could not agree more) Really interesting topic!!
@MisterPeckingOrder11 ай бұрын
Tolkien had the most based takes on Rome ever. Not surprised.
@paulgabel8261 Жыл бұрын
Author,can you give us a link to all of the featured paintings in this video? Please, theyre all so fantastic.
@InkandFantasy Жыл бұрын
Of course! These are almost all the classical paintings. I’m a little under the weather but I’ll try adding the rest at some point. Thanks for watching!! 0:35 The Death of Caesar by Jean-Léon Gérôme 1:02 The Romans in their Decadence by Thomas Couture 1:22 Aeneas fleeing from Troy by Pompeo Batoni 1:55 The Sack of Rome by the Barbarians by Joseph-Noël Sylvestre 2:25 The Consummation of Empire by Thomas Cole 2:34 Destruction by Thomas Cole 2:43 The Death of Julius Caesar by Vincenzo Camuccini 3:38 A Roman Emperor: 41 AD by Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema 3:45 Ave Caesar Morituri te Salutant by Jean-Léon Gérôme 3:56 Vercingetorix throws down his arms at the feet of Julius Caesar by Lionel-Noël Royer 5:07 A Roman Triumph by Peter Paul Rubens 5:18 The wind from Hastings by Luis Royo 6:36 God speed by Edmund Blair Leighton
@nulltheworm Жыл бұрын
@@InkandFantasy Do you know the one at 5:18?
@InkandFantasy Жыл бұрын
I added it to the original reply I made. Thank you for watching!! @@nulltheworm
@xanderunderwoods336317 күн бұрын
Your channel is criminally underrated. As an author myself, I absolutely love this video.
@InkandFantasy17 күн бұрын
Thank you very much!!!!
@NQWG Жыл бұрын
Just when i though Tolkien couldn't get more based.
@amer6706 Жыл бұрын
Same
@yadig. Жыл бұрын
Same
@miracleyang3048 Жыл бұрын
Same
@hammer3721 Жыл бұрын
Tolkien is a Dacian supremacist.
@starroving6464 Жыл бұрын
Same
@boxylemons7961 Жыл бұрын
the more I read about JRR Tolkien the more I admire him as a person.
@MichaelStanton2610 ай бұрын
He was more brilliant than most know
@Smokey34825 күн бұрын
what was he before then?
@CedarloreForge18 күн бұрын
Brother you are without a doubt the best Tolkien scholar on KZbin consistently creating honest and academic videos that I think the Professor himself would appreciate. Thanks for the hard work! 🙏
@InkandFantasy18 күн бұрын
Thank you so much, it means the world! Have a wonderful day!!!
@catcocomics1601 Жыл бұрын
My favorite author just got a little more respectable in my eyes, seeing this.
@raphaelledesma9393 Жыл бұрын
The Fall of the Western Roman Empire is why Europe is a kaleidoscope of different cultures and kingdoms and not simply a Roman outpost. Rome had its day but something beautiful sprung from its ashes.
@Diogolindir Жыл бұрын
But argueably Rome was an already a multicultural empire which practiced syncretism and that itself created new cultures in each province. The Romans were not a rigid uniform culture. Sure they had structures but usually according to their basic laws but Egypt for instance had a beautiful greco-roman-egyptian culture, temples for Epona in Gaul had a Greco-Roman personality to it, new gods and goddesses were adopted, fashion changed according to the mixture of roman culture and their locals. So I partially disagree for I do believe post Roman cultures were very beautiful as well.
@GAMER123GAMING Жыл бұрын
@@Diogolindir "tempes for Epona in Gaul had a Greco-Roman personality to it" How... diverse.
@Diogolindir Жыл бұрын
@@GAMER123GAMING I fail to see your point.
@heraadrian7764 Жыл бұрын
As beautifull as sanguine roses blooming on blood soaked earth.
@chalupabatman1803 Жыл бұрын
I think it would be better to explain it as “The fall of the western empire is why Europe is the current kaleidoscope of different peoples and cultures. Romans did not simply move into areas and replace the people who were there(though they obviously did that also). They ruled a very very very cosmopolitan empire with many different people and cultures. It just explains how it became this certain kaleidoscope, but it was going to be a thing no matter what
@dameanvil10 ай бұрын
01:57 🏰 Rome's influence is evident in Tolkien's work, but he despised empire-building and its consequences. 03:39 🇬🇧 Tolkien was a staunch traditionalist and patriot, advocating for localism over imperial expansion. 05:37 🌍 He valued the preservation of local languages and cultures, including Latin, which he deeply loved. 07:28 💡 Tolkien's experiences and beliefs profoundly influenced his writings, including "The Lord of the Rings."
@buddyltd Жыл бұрын
I'm so glad this video has blown up. What a fascinating topic, and I'm very excited to see the other videos on your channel!
@casslane3932 Жыл бұрын
i grew up with both english and irish culture i even met my greatgrandmother who was a staunch imperialist and in many ways still believed in the inferiority of the irish yet she had a half irish grandson and didnt say a word but she looked at all the "other" cultures and peoples who were once beneath her as a threat. history is both simple and complicated and i found both english culture and irish culture had its own merits and i love both yet never could ignore the fact they have always been so interconnected but also how not so long ago me being half irish would have looked very different than now. personaly especialy in the isles we all have way more in common than not and there is somthing in every culture you can find to love and respect so i wish we could all see it and learn perhaps from eachother and love rather than hate. very idealistic but i see tolkiens opion and agree
@Intelwinsbigly Жыл бұрын
Ggrandma was fucking based
@pattonramming1988 Жыл бұрын
She's right look what happened in recent years
@Yahya-sb1yo Жыл бұрын
@@pattonramming1988"Imperialism" is what brought the things youre talking about
@pattonramming1988 Жыл бұрын
@@Yahya-sb1yo imperialism brought the weakness of Britain?
@Yahya-sb1yo Жыл бұрын
@@pattonramming1988 Directly or indirectly, yes
@alkrimiy Жыл бұрын
Tolkien's vision is seems like my ideal political stance
@jonirischx8925 Жыл бұрын
You are a medieval catholic who believes some people have special blood, making them deserving of absolute power over others?
@rosaeruber225 Жыл бұрын
yay
@Mamothrept Жыл бұрын
@@Besthinktwice If his views about good government are based on the medieval model, than it certainly did work in real life. For many hundreds of years. I'm not sure I'd like to go back to something like that, but our current system sure is facing challenges right now. I believe we have a lot to humbly learn and incorporate from the past systems
@talesofgore9424 Жыл бұрын
don't worry we are well on our way to cyberfeudalism. @@Besthinktwice
@G96Saber Жыл бұрын
@@Besthinktwice I don't you understand anything about life in the medieval era, if your immediate response is > muh chivalric romances
@shadetree4679 Жыл бұрын
Really enjoyed this video its a very interesting and detailed take on Tolkien's life and beliefs.
@william_santiago Жыл бұрын
I'm totally perplexed why Tolkien hating Rome has ANYTHING to do with the Roman Catholic church. Sharing a name doesn't share a culture. New Zealanders are sometimes called "Kiwis", though they don't share any culture with the bird. Rome persecuted the Catholics for 300 years.
@InkandFantasy Жыл бұрын
It was mentioned because the Empire and the Church have a very intertwined history with the Pope crowing an Emperor of the Romans and claiming jurisdiction over the west through the “edict” of Constantine. It was not mentioned as a serious consideration but rather as something people may connect because of the aforementioned reasons.
@Adventeuan3 ай бұрын
And then the empire became nicenean. Which broke into latin and greek creeds which evolved to the catholic and orthodox church.
@aizac91Ай бұрын
As an Asian (southeast) Tolkien is what I perceived to be a true Pro-European man. Loved what’s good for his kind, culture, and continent but also love for others for what is good for their kind and lands. As a global south opinion this is The most vital trait and thinking that is needed among European natives today.
@WE-R-EVERYWHEREАй бұрын
Yup. All of you people need to be expelled.
@5p1tАй бұрын
i think we had that better for a while, where countries were eager to work together in good faith but since a few years its every country for itself
@santiagorojaspiaggio Жыл бұрын
Good video! In short words: he didn't like imperialism and tyranny.
@isidroramos1073 Жыл бұрын
Uhmmmm... somehow I don't think Theoden, Denethor and Galadriel were elected in fair, democratic elections (or that the Lady of the Lake, her arm clad in the purest shimmering samite held aloft Excalibur from the bosom of the water, signifying by divine providence that they were righful rulers...)
@LB-py9ig Жыл бұрын
@isidroramos1073 You might be surprised to learn government had far less say in your life under a Medieval king than it does now in even the most progressive western nation. No, really. It's not even close by a mile.
@MrRawrCEO Жыл бұрын
@@LB-py9ig That's a bit of a twist of logic. Government (if we're just counting developed democratic republics) these days is definitely far more present in our lives due to how interconnected society has become but arguing that it has more say than kings leaves out a LOT of context. Sure there's more rules and such we have to deal with in our daily lives but we also have more protections and conveniences as well. Go back to feudal times and while you could certainly live out your entire life never even noticing that you had a king, your local feudal lord could still ABSOLUTELY make their influence known. Not to mention if your king just happened to be making the rounds in your village and took interest in you for whatever reason you had far less ability to contest than you would in modern times.
@TheJosep70 Жыл бұрын
@@LB-py9ig Maybe they didn't have the means to do it?
@AJX-2 Жыл бұрын
@@LB-py9igThat's why Tolkien described his political beliefs as "anarcho-monarchy"
@fariesz6786 Жыл бұрын
i personally believe that Tolkien is someone whose true views are much more complicated and nuanced than what he shouted out into the world. it's often said he hated Shakespeare but i think he mostly just hated what Angliscists had made out of Shakespeare. i suppose whenever he saw entrenched opinions and exaggerated, unreflected reverence of anything he could easily become a contrarian - and as humans do maybe he eventually truly believed his contrarian standpoint, or maybe the truth even there is complicated and different for every topic in question.
@Chewbacca2000 Жыл бұрын
That was really internesting, thanks man!! Tolkien also related Númenor to Plato's Atlantis, in the Silmarillion after Númenor is destroyed the different names of it are mentioned, one of them is "Atalanta" or something like that, then it describes that the refugees of Númenor/"Atalanta" go on to start civilization elsewhere and "build pyramids" or something it says, which would be a reference to Egypt. I think I'm right with all that haha, you should check it out though, very interesting. He said he had an "Atlantis complex" too; "In a 1955 letter to his friend W. H. Auden, J.R.R. Tolkien confessed, "I have what some might call an Atlantis complex. ... I mean the terrible recurrent dream (beginning with memory) of the Great Wave, towering up, and coming in ineluctably over the trees and green fields" (Letters 163). He was to insist on the significance of this dream again in various correspondences in 1956, 1964, and 1965; over the course of those letters, he refers to his "Atlantis complex" as a dream, vision, myth, legend, and-fascinatingly-dim memory (213, 232, 347, 361). In several of these he also mentions that, though he does not know if either of his parents was subject to the Atlantis haunting, his son Michael "inherited" the dream, and that he (J.R.R.T.) "bequeathed it to Faramir" by some undefined process of ideational inheritance.1 The Great Wave appeared in multiple other places as it developed into an Atlantean myth concerning the island of Númenor. Gradually, the narrative became entwined with other concerns: a pseudo-fall, the Noachian escape of Elendil and his sons to Middle-earth, an attempt at psychological science-fiction, and of course even deeper issues of trauma, reincarnation, time travel, and communication with other living beings." muse.jhu.edu/article/738148/summary
@PulsatingShadow Жыл бұрын
His haplogroup (it's documented, you can look it up) indicates that his ancestors may have survived the sinking of Doggerland, which may have been the location of Atlantis. Perhaps the dreams of drowning are genetic memories.
@nicechock11 ай бұрын
You guys dont know the story is based on the Bible? Not on any roman empire. This video author is completely clueless.
@narrare.di.storia11 ай бұрын
Great video, thanks! Looks like Tolkien shared same views with Tacitus, who didn't like the empire and even give a voice to opponents and natives, but still was deeply loyal to Rome.
@jacobzanardi1930 Жыл бұрын
Understanding that he was a devout Catholic makes this not paradoxical at all. The morality of the Roman Empire was entirely opposite of Christian morality.
@RussianOccupier1908 ай бұрын
How so? Because it seemed to expand and become more powerful is that how Roman morality was entirely opposite to Christianity?
@Geshiko-GuP10 ай бұрын
And this is why I go to Tolkien for stories Not politics I love uniting nations into a singular Union And I love the Roman Empire
@JohnDoe-sl6di10 ай бұрын
So did AH
@waderoberts3701 Жыл бұрын
Tolkien would be opposed to globalism today.
@c.d.dailey8013 Жыл бұрын
Interesting. That is iffy. The approach to foreign countries can be boiled down into opposing ideas of nationalism and globalism. The video depicts Tolkien as a moderate nationalist. He has a deep love for his nation of England. However he opposes England building a big British Empire. He also showed appreciation for other European nations such as Rome and Finland. An extreme nationalist would be all into the glory of the home nation and building an empire. The main example of extreme nationalism is Fascism. The biggest example of fascism in turn is the Nazis. Tolkien would definitely not approve of what the Nazis were doing. Maybe Tolkien would have mixed feelings about globalism. He would hate for national cultures to get diluted and lost. That is a risk of cultures interacting. Yet maybe Tolkien would like globalism because it keeps national empire building at bay. I actually have the same mixed view for my country, the United States as Tolkien does for his. I am definitely on the globalist side. I like the use of diplomacy and even global government, like the UN. That is a way for countries to resolve conflict without going into war. World peace is definitely a good goal to aim for. I am also fascinated by foreign cultures.
@arielquelme Жыл бұрын
Who knows, Tolkien on the very description are most likely not fan of Soros esque globalization He most likely would be right wing like Boris Johnson and has monarchist boomer mentality
@nobelissimos8719 Жыл бұрын
@@c.d.dailey8013 Local man has no idea what he is talking about and thinks being ruled by globalist elites = peace.
@jessiemeisenheimer8675 Жыл бұрын
@@c.d.dailey8013National Socialism and Fascism are two different ideologies. Sources: Aly, G. “Hitler’s Beneficiaries: How the Nazis Bought the German People.” Verso, 2016. (Original German 2005) Barkai, A. “Nazi Economics: Ideology, Theory, and Policy.” Yale University Press, 1990. Bel, G. "Against the mainstream: Nazi privatization in 1930s Germany." Universitat de Barcelona, PDF. Berkoff, K. "Harvest of Despair: Life and Death in Ukraine under Nazi Rule." Harvard University Press, 2004. Birchall, I. “The Spectre of Babeuf.” Haymarket Books, 2016. Bormann, M. “Hitler’s Table Talk.” Ostara Publications, 2016. Bosworth, R. “Mussolini’s Italy: Life under the Dictatorship 1915-1945.” Penguin Books, Kindle 2006. Brown, A. "How 'socialist' was National Socialism?" Kindle, 2015. Colingham, L. "The Taste of War: World War Two and the Battle for Food." Penguin UK, 2011. Dilorenzo, T. “The Problem with Socialism.” Regnery Publishing, Kindle 2016. Engels, F “Socialism: Utopian and Scientific.” Written, 1880. Progress Publishers, 1970. Engelstein, L. "Russia in Flames: War, Revolution, Civil War, 1914-1921." Oxford University Press, Kindle 2018. Evans, R. “The Coming of the Third Reich.” Penguin Books, Kindle 2004. Farrell, N. "Mussolini: A New Life." Endeavour Press Ltd, Kinde 2015. Feder, G. "The Programme of the NSDAP: The National Socialist German Worker's Party and its General Conceptions." RJG Enterprises Inc, 2003. Feder, G. "The German State on a National and Socialist Foundation." Black House Publishing LTD, 2015. Friedman, M. “Capitalism and Freedom: Fortieth Anniversary Edition.” university of Chicago, Kindle 2002. (originally published in 1962) Fustel de Coulanges, “The Ancient City: A Study of the Religion, Laws, and Institutions of Greece and Rome.” Pantianos Classics, Kindle 2017, first published in 1877.
@sylph8005 Жыл бұрын
Define globalism
@Neo2266. Жыл бұрын
I'm glad that even Tolkien thought about the Roman empire at least once per day
@Damian-ho1yb Жыл бұрын
Dude, I enjoy your content. It stands out.
@rubenhernandez805911 ай бұрын
I love it when great authors are done justice. Tolkien especially since we share a faith. I applaud you on this and you have earned a subscriber today.
@emoxvx11 ай бұрын
Tolkien hated the Roman Empire because he hated imperialism, as any sane person would.
@surgiosurge2 ай бұрын
Depends, if youre part of the empire i don't think it's sane to hate it
@Tinnesa Жыл бұрын
Great video yet again, thanks.
@spaulding304 Жыл бұрын
It's crazy to think how impactful the Roman Empire was to our very existence and identity today. The West is a remarkable, thriving remnant of it.
@didonegiuliano354710 ай бұрын
as Italian, I know very well
@gklimt85055 ай бұрын
This is a great piece. Thank you for helping me understand Tolkien better. I admire him even more now, if that is possible.
@Adventures_with_nick2 ай бұрын
It’s called the Celtic genocide. The death toll among Celtic peoples (which really were native Europeans as they made up the population of nearly all of Europe) by the Romans was horrific. Just look at the Romance languages today and you can hear the Celtic or Pre-Roman influence, as they are diverged from Latin especially French and Portuguese
@padensmith435410 ай бұрын
Your essays are fantastic
@InkandFantasy10 ай бұрын
Thank you so much!!
@efaristi9737 Жыл бұрын
You can love some aspects of a culture while loathing others parts of it. I see no paradox in it, cultures are complex and with multiples facets just like peoples. 4:18 On that, Tolkien and i share similar values, i too think nations should cooperate and learn to live together without imposing themselves onto others and preserving what made their cultures and civilisation so unique. The wealth of humanity, of life, is its diversity, not everything being the same.
@hebanker3372 Жыл бұрын
''The wealth of humanity, of life, is its diversity, not everything being the same.'' Someone really needs to get grip on life.
@efaristi9737 Жыл бұрын
@@hebanker3372 You disagree ?
@hebanker3372 Жыл бұрын
@@efaristi9737 That's not how the human world works. We are creatures of competition, killing each other for resources. This will never change.
@efaristi9737 Жыл бұрын
@@hebanker3372 Says you. I for one won't pretend to know the future or what can and cannot possibly change. Also, that doesn't change the truth of what i said. Because despite that "competition", diversity of life endure.
@samueldimmock694 Жыл бұрын
@@hebanker3372 Zero sum fallacy exists for a reason, after all. But then again, cooperation is more profitable when it works, and that also will never change.
@KAZVorpal11 ай бұрын
Hating the evildoing of one's own political class is part of loving one's nation. That's how so many Americans think of the evils imposed overseas in our name.
@thepatriarchy84437 ай бұрын
Not truly in our name, that's just what our government tells us. It's in reality for corporations and NGOs.
@KAZVorpal7 ай бұрын
@@thepatriarchy8443 I agree completely, except I said in our name in the sense that they go out into the world and commit evil under the pretense that WE are doing it. They are the OFFICIAL face of Americans. Oh, and one other caveat: They aren't doing it in the name of those corporations, they OWN those corporations. The political class created corporate law specifically so they could monopolize capital and legally plunder society.
@user-tm8jt2py3d15 күн бұрын
This is very beautiful, even more so in the context of his books. Very relatable sentiment.
@bb1111116 Жыл бұрын
The video makes a premise *”Why Tolkien Hated the Roman Empire”* with only a sentence in one letter as direct evidence. * The video misses that Tolkien’s politics changed as he grew older. So which Tolkien are we talking about? The one who served in the British army in World War 1? Or the more pacifist Tolkien of World War 2? Tolkien was a complex man who was an idealist and a realist. He could have conflicting ideas. * The video falsely distorts Tolkien’s mythology to support this premise. - Aragorn became the king of Gondor, which had an Empire. Tolkien’s myth is very supportive of the Numenorians who were loyal to the Valar which had monarchies in Middle-earth. * In real life, Tolkien was a monarchist who wanted the king/queen of England to have direct power over parliament. - Next whatever Tolkien’s criticisms were of the British Empire, he accepted the Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (CBE) honor. Overall he supported the British Empire. - Tolkien preferred England over Britain because he wanted emphasis on the Anglo-Saxon roots of England’s culture. Not because he was against an empire.
@MWhaleK Жыл бұрын
As someone who is DEEPLY interested in the Ancient Celts and identifies somewhat with them? I sympathize with anyone who is Anti-Imperial Rome.
@birgbirg111 Жыл бұрын
imagine simping for an empire
@adambrande Жыл бұрын
lol the very same celts who started living like Romans and began fighting for them? You can't identify to a celt unless you go out of the street naked swinging your "sword"
@jayargee492 Жыл бұрын
What the fuck do you mean you "somewhat identify" with the *Ancient Celts?*
@hebanker3372 Жыл бұрын
@@birgbirg111 Imagine simping for a long lost tribe.
@MWhaleK2 ай бұрын
@@adambrande The same Celts who crushed Rome long before Rome was an empire, Crushed Greece and raided it's most holy shrine, Spread from Ireland to Turkey and from Northern Spain to Iceland, were one of the Europe's first masters of Iron and whose priestly/intellectual cast (the druids) are still a by word for Wisdom. A people group whose languages gave us words like Car and Trousers as well as others. Who legends gave us King Arthur, Merlin, Morganna and Mab as well as great influenced the writings of Tolkein.
@Александър_Ангелов10 ай бұрын
I really like and respect Tolkien! Also your Channel is really enjoyable to watch, thank you!
@InkandFantasy10 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for the kind words!!
@derrickpatten7252 Жыл бұрын
5:50 Did Tolkien really write "(grr!)" in letter 53?!
@InkandFantasy Жыл бұрын
yes!!
@piperjj448611 ай бұрын
Localist seemed to be the best way to describe him. It's more nuanced than he just hated Imperialism.
@mattlikembeАй бұрын
Very interesting, thanks! For your information, the 2nd Vatican council defines Latin as the only official liturgical language, the local languages being just authorized. This is not properly applied in the Catholic Church like many aspects of this council, which makes the confusion very understandable!
@SirSparrowHawk Жыл бұрын
Based Tolkien strikes again.
@oleksijm Жыл бұрын
It's really debatable whether the Romans actually 'eradicated' the cultures of the people they conquered. Judging by numerous examples of Gallo-Roman, Germano-Roman and Punic-Roman culturally synthetic artefacts, inscriptions and attestations, it would seem far fetched of a claim.
@birgbirg111 Жыл бұрын
I'm sure you'd like to be a roman slave, enjoying all that glory and whatnot
@hebanker3372 Жыл бұрын
The idea of imperial Rome being a homogenous country or culture is the result of 19th century and onwards ethno-states trying to grasp older times through their own nationalistic worldviews.
@jessiemeisenheimer8675 Жыл бұрын
So changing them to be Roman? Doesn't really change the point.
@oleksijm Жыл бұрын
@@jessiemeisenheimer8675 gradual assimilation and cultural synthesis is not eradication.
@italianspaghett4359 Жыл бұрын
@@oleksijm it is, just slower and less painfull
@glishev3 ай бұрын
The strange thing about Tolkien hating 'empire' as an idea is that he was born and lived most of his life in the British one. He never hated being an Englishman (of course he didn't). He was rather sad about the Anglican Communion, being a Catholic. He had nothing against royalties coming from copies of "The Lord of the Rings" sold in the original English language in far countries like Canada, New Zealand, Australia, etc. He even had nothing against his own invented realm of Gondor which is described like a former empire in Appendix A of LotR. And yet, he hated the notion of 'empire'. One of the man's many internal tensions, I guess.
@tehgankerer11 ай бұрын
Honestly its quite easy to draw any comparisons between the roman empire and any fictional nation's history/mythos. The Roman empire spanned 7 centuries (including the republic). In such a massive timespan there's plenty of examples to draw for comparison.
@heronwireo1085 Жыл бұрын
In fairness to the Romans, "Multiple nations living in peace" was a foreign concept to the ancient world. It became a concept precisely because of the Roman Empire. Rome after all had been sacked by the Gauls in 390 BC, and doubtless would have been again had it not been conquered in its turn. People at the time took it for granted that force was the only way to preserve peace. I grant everything Tolkien believed about Empire (corrupt, exploitative, destructive to culture) but I also must own that independent nations living in peace generally happens only when rough parity in multiple vectors (population, wealth, military) is in place. Alas, nature abhors an equilibrium, and Pareto distribution is real. I pray for peace, but I don't expect it.
@brettjohnson536Ай бұрын
Literary version of the Florida man challenge. Type in "why Tolkien hated" then the first letter of your name, see what comes up
@saladinbob Жыл бұрын
There's an irony to disliking the concept of Britishness, seeing it as something artificial because what became England was once a series of petty Kingdoms such as Mercia, Dummonia, Northumberland,. Before that it was a collection of localised tribe. You can't have it both ways, if he preferred localisation and disliked the idea of Empire, then where does it end? The Nation? The country? The Tribe? Or the Family? Everything is made up of a collection of constituent parts, and where I to have been alive at the time I would have pointed this contradiction out to him.
@masdav94 Жыл бұрын
It ends with the nation - the ways and traditions of a people. It is what Western nations are willfully doing to themselves under the name of progress.
@nicolas-hg9fn7 ай бұрын
Maybe he only hated the fast process of globalization but liked the things he simply grew up with
@Ted_Land3 ай бұрын
There is nothing rational about nostalgic, traditionalist lamentation of that which no longer is. Do not look for logical consistency behind it. Rationality and logic is, after all, not all there is to mankind; Far from it. One is either sympathetic or unsympathetic towards this traditionalist lamentation; reason is not relevant. It is the human, animalistic element in you that colours your view on it.
@FalkFlak11 ай бұрын
Very informative. I wonder how Tolkien accomodated the very dynamic and fluent nature of culture which is in an ever evolving changing and interchanging state towards "outside" influences.
@tamaveirene10 ай бұрын
IMO Great content shared with zeal between myself and my grandson...Tolkien and his contemporaries are our favourites. These men were literary Titans...almost incomprehensible to today's youth!
@davidmurray9193 Жыл бұрын
He would be disgusted on how Great Britain has had it's heart a soul ripped apart now and it's morals and order destroyed
@unarealtaragionevole Жыл бұрын
You hint at something much deeper about an unspoken influence on Tolkien shared by many European writers of northern Europe since the Middle Ages. You were correct to call him a "medievalist," as he and many similar writers had preferences to use the influences and imagery of the Middle Ages which tended to come from more northern European sources than southern European...especially Ireland, UK, France, and Germany. With the decline of the Western Empire and rise of the Kingdoms across the Middle Ages, there were many active attempts to separate the local cultures with their Roman origins assuming they had any to begin with. And while Tolkien embraced the Middle Ages in his work, he was also under the greater influence of northern Europe to replace the classical world with the more recent medieval world which looked more like them.
@hebanker3372 Жыл бұрын
I think Tokien's dispositions on the matter comes more from the 19th centrury, romantic views of the Middle Age than actual medieval writers. In fact, the more the germanic kingdoms progressed, the more they embraced southern concepts, like roman law, architecture and theology. It was the romanticism in the 19th century that enabled the people of Europe to reject the infatuation with latin culture and go back to their ''roots'', which in some ways developed greatly the ideas of nationalism.
@unarealtaragionevole Жыл бұрын
@@hebanker3372 True, but the romanticism that you are talking about is just a more extreme example of what I am trying to describe as a "greater influence." I agree with what you are saying, Tolkien and other writers of the day were romanticizing the medieval world, but this was just more writers from primarily northern Europe trying to promote the 'grandness' of something that was shaped primarily by northern European cultures. This romanticism wasn't something created in the 19th century, but just a continuation of a literary culture that began as early as the 11th century and I like to debate is continuing today.
@hebanker3372 Жыл бұрын
@@unarealtaragionevole If by northern writers you mean the writers and compilers of epics, then you are missing half the picture. Most of these writers wrote to propagandize on behalf of their patrons. The Nibelungenlied was an epic fabrication to promote the ''locality'' of the Burgundian nobles, particularily the dukes. The song of Roland was meant to encourage warriors to fight the Musims in Spain. The Life of king Louis was written to promote the pious dynasty of the Capetians and strengthen the relationship with the pope. Even the sagas of the Northmen had political motivations. My point is that the romantics of the 19th century tried to view those works of literature, which served their own agendas, as genuine works of art, bereft of ulterior motives.
@unarealtaragionevole Жыл бұрын
@@hebanker3372 By northern writers I mean the literary cultures that developed from predominately northern European regions and peoples from about the year 1000 and later, who actively chose to abandon classical (predominantly Roman and Greek) themes, archetypes, and retellings and instead chose to start writing about themselves instead. Regardless their reasons, from about 1000 and later we start to see the bulk of the literary culture for western Europe begin to centralize on medieval themes, events, peoples.....which tended to focus not on classical themes of the south, but of the northern regions in control of the day. By doing this, a literary bias began to form that bled through the centuries and led to the type of propaganda style writings(at least in the more extreme cases) you were talking about. This bias, was still present even in the 1800 and1900s when Tolkien was forming his opinions about things. So him saying something like I don't like Rome, or if his writing is focusing on medieval themes instead, then he is subject to question if he was not being influenced by these biases that started long before him and he didn't even know it.
@unifieddynasty11 ай бұрын
''For myself, I would see White Tree in flower again in the courts of the Kings, and the Silver Crown return, and Minas Tirith in peace: Minas Anor again as of old, full of light, high and fair, beautiful as a queen among queens..."
@gregk2369 Жыл бұрын
This made me realize how much smarter he was than all of us
@aimeeinkling9 ай бұрын
Yeah, it was a pretty unusual position for him to have taken at the time and if he hadn't possessed such a formidable intellect capable of arguing his position successfully, he probably would have suffered consequences for it.
@Meowmento Жыл бұрын
This made me respect Tolkien even more!
@Sinewmire Жыл бұрын
Utterly fascinating. Thanks for sharing!
@pirategirl94best Жыл бұрын
Protect this mans legacy at all costs.
@Donerci_Pikacu_Usta11 ай бұрын
Yes! I guessed it correctly! He hates it because Rome destroyed many cultures
@johnmitchelljr10 ай бұрын
Love your thoughtful and insightful channel. Well done. Tolkien and Orwell great writers. Thank you.
@InkandFantasy10 ай бұрын
It means a lot, thank you! And thanks for watching!!
@maksimsharamko6545 Жыл бұрын
Empires emerge and dissolve for a reason... Everything has reasons.
@pogo8050 Жыл бұрын
That’s what they talk about in the video
@darylwilliams7883 Жыл бұрын
Tolkien recognized I think that the Roman Empire was based on incredible privilege of a few based on incredible suffering for the rest. And it was the suffering he hated.
@brunoactis1104 Жыл бұрын
The medieval era was not much better in that regard. In fact, i'd image it was worse.
@ordinaryrat Жыл бұрын
Roman Empire was actually very well rounded socially compared to the middle ages.
@ordinaryrat Жыл бұрын
@@Brunel1859 The local conquered populations were often better off under Roman rule so its more just customs and traditions
@Kidneyjoe42 Жыл бұрын
That was everywhere, though. The life of a Gaulish peasant was not appreciably different under Roman rule. In fact, being conquered by Rome almost certainly improved the quality of life of the average Briton. If anything, Roman rule was more egalitarian than the feudal monarchies that followed. Many men of modest birth managed to rise through the Roman military to positions of power, with some like Justinian even becoming emperor. The Roman Empire wasn't all butterflies and rainbows, but demonizing it while idealizing medieval Europe like Tolkien did makes no sense at all.
@le-chevalier-renaud18 күн бұрын
Fun fact: Many Romans hated the Roman Empire, believing that the Empire represented the corruption and decadence of their culture. And that the best and most glorious time of Rome had been the Republic. In fact this is the prevailing view we get from our historical sources.
@CMVBrielman Жыл бұрын
Counterpoint: empire is inevitable. When any society has the opportunity to form an empire, it does. Therefore, at any time, we have a duty to recognize who has the opportunity and who thinks they do, and act accordingly. If one is part of a society with the inclination and ability to establish an empire, they must be cognizant of that fact and treat it not only as an opportunity but a responsibility. I don’t mean a responsibility to form an empire, but a responsibility to act with care if they should do so. The fact that, of all the empires of Western Eurasia, Rome endured for almost a millennia as a contiguous empire, suggests that they did not do terribly, as empires go. One can believe that while also accepting that they were brutal, even by the standards of their time. But brutality alone cannot account for their longevity - or else vast swaths of Eurasia would be speaking dialects of Mongolian.
@DidYaServe Жыл бұрын
The most intelligent men in history knew that tyranny and empire were the worst outcome for mankind. Tolkien was one of them.
@RussianOccupier1908 ай бұрын
Tyranny and empire are not necessarily the same without Rome and the many empires that preceded it we would still be living in the Stone Age this idea that different nations can peacefully coexist without going to war over land and resources has to one the most retarded I have ever heard.
@vernonchow20329 ай бұрын
One note about Vatican II. In Guatemala some parishes offered mass in the local Mayan languages rather than Spanish, deepening parishoners ties with their ancestors buried nearby. This is a contrast with immigrant countries like the US where Irish, Italians, and Poles hearing a Mass in Latin united them and brought them closer to their ancestors in graves across the Atlantic, while a Mass in English did the opposite. I don't know how it worked in England, but I imagine that is a case where the "meaning" of Vatican II could vary by Parish.
@jimicusjolcen946010 ай бұрын
0:50 Minas Tirith may have been inspired by Ravenna, Italia, a capitol of the Roman Empire.
@TheMeefmaster19 күн бұрын
Well my balls may smell like flowers
@AlejandroM9623 Жыл бұрын
The beacons are way more ancient than the Rome empire, you can find the system in classic greek literature about the Trojan war.
@domovoi_02 ай бұрын
Incredible video. Tolkien was a once in a century visionary and an absolute chad. Love and blessings!
@fr.andygutierrez5356 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic… thank you!
@Taffer100020 күн бұрын
Dude hates everything. Hated softcover books, cars and the Roman Empire.