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In Germanic mythology, Myrkviðr (Old Norse "mirky wood, dark wood"[1] or "black forest"[2]) or, as anglicised by William Morris and later adopted by JRR Tolkien, Mirkwood, is the name of several forests.
The direct derivatives of the name occurs as a place name both in Sweden and Norway, and related forms of the name occur elsewhere in Europe, most famously the Black Forest (Schwarzwald), and may thus be a general term for dark and dense forests of ancient Europe.[3][4]
The word myrkviðr is a compound of two words. The first element is myrk "dark", which is cognate to, among others, the English adjectives mirky and murky.[5][6] The second element is viðr "wood, forest".[7]
The name is attested as a mythical local name of a forest in the Poetic Edda poem Lokasenna, and the heroic poems Atlakviða, Helgakviða Hundingsbana I and Hlöðskviða, and in prose in Fornmanna sögur, Flateyjarbók, Hervarar Saga.[1][5]
The localization of Myrkviðr varies by source:
comments on Myrkviðr in a letter to his eldest grandson:
Regarding the forests, Francis Gentry comments that "in the Norse tradition 'crossing the Black Forest' came to signify penetrating the barriers between one world and another, especially the world of the gods and the world of fire, where Surt lives [...]."[2]
It was first anglicized as Mirkwood by William Morris in A Tale of the House of the Wolfings from 1888, and later by J. R. R. Tolkien in his fiction.[13]
Swedish language, European Union, Finland, Denmark, Lithuania
Socialism, Romanticism, Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, Walthamstow, Textile arts
Attila, Caucasus, Central Asia, Black Sea, Xiongnu
Huns, Tyrfing, Goths, Myrkviðr, Hervor
Tyrfing, Samsø, Goths, Norse mythology, Angantyr
Middle-earth, The Hobbit, Tolkien's legendarium, Moria (Middle-earth), Third Age
Ore Mountains, Elbe, Saale, Myrkviðr, Lokasenna
Angles, Franks, Latin, Old Norse, Germany