• Abdicating Queen Margrethe II Of Denmark Has A Surprising Tolkien Conne

    From MummyChunk@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jan 12 20:12:04 2024
    From G

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    Queen Margrethe II might be one of the only IRL monarchs with a
    legitimate connection to Tolkien

    Queen Margrethe II, ruler of Denmark, will abdicate her throne this
    week. She is, by all accounts, well-loved in the country, so if you’re
    into monarchy that’s great, I guess. However, she’s an interesting
    character away from the throne, and is well learned in archeology,
    decoupage (posh collaging), and screenwriting. She has attended
    archeological digs, written two films, designed the sets for three
    more, and even made a cameo in one.

    However, few people know about her connection to Lord of the Rings
    author J. R. R. Tolkien. In the early ‘70s, shortly before she
    ascended to the throne, she drew some illustrations for Tolkien’s
    iconic fantasy book. I guess preparing to rule a country isn’t that
    taxing.

    According to Tolkien’s publisher Rayner Unwin in his book George Allen
    & Unwin: A Remembrancer, then-Princess Margrethe sent her
    illustrations directly to Tolkien, who greatly enjoyed them. “Tolkien,
    an instinctive royalist, was delighted by the letter, and a little correspondence ensued,” Unwin explained. Many people have spotted
    similarities between the Queen’s illustrations and Tolkien’s own, but
    I would wager Margrethe’s are more abstract, which led to one of them
    being printed upside down in The Folio Society edition of The Lord of
    the Rings. But more on that later.

    Using the pseudonym Ingahild Grathmer, a partial anagram of her name,
    Margrethe first published her unique take on Lord of the Rings
    illustrations with the Danish translation of the books.

    In 1977, The Folio Society got in touch to use her illustrations for
    its forthcoming publication, in which experienced engraver Eric Fraser
    edited the illustrations to make them easier to reproduce
    successfully. This edition of The Lord of the Rings was reissued in
    2002, presumably to cash in on the success of Peter Jackson’s film
    adaptations, and is still available today.

    Queen Margrethe also appeared in a documentary about Tolkien, called
    J. R. R. T.: A Film Portrait of J. R. R. Tolkien and narrated by the
    inimitable Judi Dench, in which she read her letter to the author and
    showed some of her drawings that she sent him, including an
    unpublished sketch of the Council of Elrond, and a drawing of the
    Scouring of the Shire which Tolkien described as “dismally and meanly
    hideous”. If you know the chapter, you’ll understand that’s a
    compliment. He also said the image was “dreadfully like what happened
    to the village in which I lived as a child, almost as soon as I left
    it.”

    Queen Margrethe’s passion for fantasy and Tolkien is unmistakable, and
    the fact she quotes from the text so easily and readily shows how many
    times she’s read Tolkien’s work. It’s also interesting to hear her
    compare Tolkien’s descriptions of Saruman’s despicable buildings to
    those that the Nazis built in her native Denmark during World War 2,
    during which she was a child. Much like the Hobbits coming back to the
    Shire after destroying the Ring, a child Margrethe would have been
    shocked by the stark architecture of Denmark’s occupiers.

    The documentary also shows that Margrethe’s Tolkien illustrations
    didn’t stop after ascending to the throne. She shares a watercolour
    based on the events of The Silmarillion (particularly the tragedy of
    Turin Turambar), which she dates to the late ‘70s.

    Queen Margrethe’s illustrations are some of my personal favourites,
    and I’d put her just below the greats of Alan Lee and John Howe, on
    the same level as the Brothers Hildebrandt and John Blanche when it
    comes to iconic imagery from Middle-earth. With more time on her hands
    in the near future, perhaps her retirement will result in a deluge of
    more Tolkien illustrations to be published in translations or special
    editions in the forthcoming years. We can only hope.

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