Login | Register
There Are 268 People Online!

Thread: Hair Colour

Bottom of Page    Message Board > The Silmarillion > Hair Colour   
It seems to me that Tolkien really liked to play with his character's hair colours. Hair colour actually signified something I think.

Take Galadriel for an example. Her golden hair is surely something that signifies light and hope, and indeed she is the only one of Finwe's house who actually survived into the Thrid Age on Middle-Earth.

The Noldor have rich dark hair and the Vanyar bright golden. And the Teleri have silver hair of course. Even the tribes of Men have such differences in hair colour. The Rohirrim and the Gondorians had different hair colour, as did the house of Hador and the House of Beor.

I find that the hair colour is really something that helps me understand Tolkien's characters more. I mean, somehow I just cannot imagine Feanor with bright golden hair, or Galadriel with dark hair. It justs seems wrong, and it would sort of change their personality images in my mind as well.

Does anyone else feel the same? Middle-Earth would never be the same without the rich descriptions of hair!

Just wanted to comment on whaty a great hair job Tolkien did. Dunce Smilie
Quote:
Take Galadriel for an example. Her golden hair is surely something that signifies light and hope, and indeed she is the only one of Finwe's house who actually survived into the Thrid Age on Middle-Earth.

It isn't difficult to survive the Third Age if you're the only one of Finwë's house left in the Third Age. And she only survived the First Age because according to UT she apparently already left Beleriand before the sack of Menegroth.

Anyway, i can't see why hair colour should signify anything. The hair colour is only dependent on genetics, that's all.

Celegorm was fair-haired for instance, and he was one of the most 'evil' of Fëanor's sons, not much 'hope and light' there.

Quote:
The Noldor have rich dark hair and the Vanyar bright golden. And the Teleri have silver hair of course.

Not all Teleri have silver hair. That is mentioned nowhere. As the Teleri were the largest group of Elves, i think the hair colours were uniformly distributed amongst them.

Silver hair is imo very exceptional, and perhaps only the descendants of Elwë Singollo could have it, as Elwë is described as getting his silver hair after staring in Melian's hair for an awful lot of time (and wives are indeed usually the most contributing factor for their husbands grey hair).

Celeborn is related to Elwë, and also had silver hair; whilst his daughter Celebrían also had silver hair.
i like the idea of the hair signifying somthing about the character, but i just think that tolkien was trying to gereralise the race types by their hair colour...

For example... in our own culture..

Native Americans and Oriental types have black hair.
The celts generally had red hair..
Scandanavians are sterio typed as all being blond....

of course there is always exceptions to the rules, as would be in the books.


Everything has exceptions. But hair colour has played a big part in the books. I really couldn't imagine the LOTR or the Sil. without hair colour differences. It would be very different.
This is what happens when I go away. However, this seems as good a place as any for my customary rant about all the blonde Eldar in the movie version of Lorien. Either Jackson's nuts or Galadriel's been VERY busy. It irked me, becuase whenever I see a blonde Nolda/i in the Silmarillion I know they're special. Not necessarily of the House of Finarfin (though this is usually the case) but part Vanyar at the least. Making everyone from Legolas to the entire population of Lorien blonde cheapened that for me, a lot. When we look back at blonde Noldor we see Glorfindel, Idril, Galadriel, Finarfin himself; a select group of people you prefer as allies rather than foes. Probably where the idea of hair color as representative of character was born.

Though I do know someone who holds with your theory of blonde Teleri, Miruvor. We got into a discussion of that over at wotmania! believe it or not. I'm still not convinced, but since both of ya'll have read more HoME than me I'm not prepared to enter the lists on behalf of my position.
Well I'm not sure if I would call Galadriel's hair blond. It was a radiant golden with still a silver hint. Quite unique (and indeed, three strands of that hair were a greater treasure than any Ring could every be).

And if Galadriel really did get around much, then that would certainly fuel my wild theories about the relationship between Galadriel & Celeborn...

Quote:
It irked me, becuase whenever I see a blonde Nolda/i in the Silmarillion I know they're special.

It's not that special to me; it's just because Finwë took a Vanya as his second wife.
Which makes the blonde Noldor descendants of both the first High King of the Noldor AND the ONLY High King of ALL Eldar. Seems iike a big deal to me, particularly in light of how successive generations of the Eldar diminished. 'Course, I kinda like blondes anyway....
Was Indis related to Ingwë ? I do not think that is mentioned anywhere.

Quote:
'Course, I kinda like blondes anyway....

No comment about that...
My bad: I don't actually KNOW she was his daughter, and the language used to describe the relationship implies the opposite:

"She was a Vanya, close kin of Ingwe the High King, golden haired and tall...."

Of course, that doesn't rule it out, but you'd think if Indis was daughter to Ingwe Tolkien would've just said so. But perhaps he hadn't decided yet. On the upside, it's from the Silm, so it's canon at least, if vague canon.
Well if Ingwë equals the "Imin" (the very First Elf to awaken at Cuiviénen and who later picked the group of Elves that would be named as "Vanyar") from HoME, then "close kin" would mean that she is his daughter, as it would be impossible for him to have siblings.

If we just look at the Sil though, we do not really have an idea. It would be logical though for the High King of all Quendi to be the very first Elf to have awakened at Cuiviénen, imo. I don't think they decided it by picking a straw.

Anyway, if the House of Finarfin is related to the High King of all Quendi himself, then so much for Caranthir lashing out at them, eh? Fëanorians can be so amusing, if they're not making a complete mess.
Indis was said to be the daughter of Ingwe's sister in The Shibboleth of Feanor. Earlier in The History of Middle-Earth, from text in Morgoth's Ring, she had been Ingwe's sister.

I wish I could keep all the characters straight! My brain just can't hold all the details and I won't use age as an excuse. That being said, I too really like to know what a character's hair and eye color are; if I can get a good mental picture of them it makes the story much richer :-)
Some time ago I took a look at some general statements regarding the Elves, and also a more specific look at the interesting sons of Feanor. It's not meant to be exhaustive, but perhaps it might help.

General

Quote:
'In general the Sindar appear to have very closely resembled the Exiles, being dark-haired, strong and tall, but lithe.' JRRT Quendi And Eldar


Tolkien also published that the Eldar were dark-haired in The Lord of the Rings (noting the golden house of Finarfin there). This would seem a general statement since other colours were seen in certain of the Eldar of course.

Quote:
'Elwe himself had indeed long and beautiful hair of silver hue, but this does not seem to have been a common feature of the Sindar, though it was found among them occasionally, especially in the nearer or remoter kin of Elwe (as in the case of Círdan).' JRRT


The passage in The Lord of the Rings seems to leave out the Eldarin Vanyar who were said (WJ) to be in nearly all members of the clan yellow or golden-haired. Perhaps the description there is (or could be said to be) more concerned with the Eldar of Middle-earth, considering the history of the Vanyar.

The Sons of Feanor

Maedros was said to have inherited some of the rare red-brown hair of Nerdanel's kin (Russandol 'Copper-top')

The twins named Amros (in the context of the Shibboleth the two younger sons were named Ambarussa/Amros) were both red-haired too. It was said the first and last of Nerdanel's children had the 'reddish hair' of her kin, and Nerdanel gave the twins both the name Ambarussa – for they were much alike and remained so while they lived (though at one point it was said of the elder Amros that he: 'grew darker in hair, and was more dear to his father. After childhood they [?were not to be] confused...'

Curufin was said to have resembled Feanor very much in face and was called Atarinke 'little father' 'referring to his physical likeness to Feanor...' (partial quote)

Caranthir Morifinwe was said to be black-haired like his grandfather -- but under 'mother-names'... 'he was dark (brown) haired but had the ruddy complexion of his mother'.

Celegorm: in Quenta Silmarillion (The Lost Road) 'golden was his long hair'. In the Lay he has 'gleaming hair', and his Old English name was Cynegrim Fægerfeax ('Fair-hair'). Christopher Tolkien explains his choice to leave out the detail with respect to the published (constructed) Silmarillion 'on account of the dark hair of the Noldorin princes other than in the golden house of Finarfin..' but he remains 'Celegorm the fair'.

There's a marginal note describing that Nerdanel 'herself had brown hair and a ruddy complexion' (Vinyar Tengwar 41)

Still working on Maglor Smile Smilie