Friday 6 December 2013

Pic of the Week . . . New Mordor

It appears Mordor, the dark home of Sauron, is not a place of fiction anymore.  Worlds are converging.  Middle Earth is becoming a place of reality.

Just yesterday I was having a conversation with a colleague about places in Middle Earth and who Tolkien may have based them on.  We were thinking the Shire is Britain because we have a lot of shires over here, Hertfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Bedfordshire, etc, and how Isengard could be based on Germany.  Gondor was likened to America, Rivendell was Switzerland, and then there were arguments about where the Dwarves and men of Rohan originated.  Feel free to add your ideas on this.

Then, low and behold, a few news articles popped up on Google.  The first google news article tells of how scientists have likened the Shires to Leicestershire and Lincolnshire (fair enough...ish.  That's basically what we said) but how Mordor is more like Los Angeles and Western Texas.  I don't entirely agree with this.  We put Mordor over in Russia - and with good reason. And this is proven with yet another google news article.

This week's Pic of the Week is from the second article.  It's a picture of Kamchatka volcano in Eastern Russia taken during its most recent eruption.  When compared against a picture of Mordor itself, it proves the convergence of this world and Middle Earth, making Eastern Russia the 'New Mordor'.  Lord of the Ring fanatics must be leaping with joy at the moment :) 


Kamchatka volcano in Eastern Russia

Mordor

So, in this Festive Season To Be Jolly, not only do we have to be good in case Santa is watching, we also have to be aware of the 'Eye of Sauron'.  If you're naughty he'll know, don't you know...

4 comments:

  1. What a great picture! Nothing like an "End of All Things" Christmas :).

    There's so much on Tolkien's world. I even saw once a video on how his map could be how our world map used to be (before it broke apart etc). There's a place in France called Mont St Michel which he supposedly based Minas Tirith on. I visited there and you can really see it with all the levels. Have a google :)

    ReplyDelete
  2. I reckon the Los Angeles and W Texas Mordor is more of a political statement than an artistic one. On the other hand, visually, Kamchatka is spot on. Wonderful picture

    ReplyDelete
  3. Last month when a city in my country was covered with fog at the same time having water shortages we all thought that was Mordor

    ReplyDelete