By Aleks Buczkowski
“The Lord of the Rings” trilogy is definitely one my top favourite novels. Actually “The Hobbit” was the first book I’ve ever read and the map of Middle-Earth was one of the first maps I’ve carefully studied piece by piece. Who knows, maybe this is why I got interested in cartography…?
This is why when I heard that news, my heart started to beat faster… A Middle-earth map with annotations by J.R.R. Tolkien has been recently discovered in a copy of the LOTR book owned by illustrator Pauline Baynes, whose coloured maphas been published in the 1970 edition of the famous novel.
While working on the map Baynes had been in touch with Tolkien who gave her precise comments. He corrected place names, provided extra ones, and gives Baynes suggestions about the flora and fauna of the Middle-Earth. Hobbiton, he notes, “ is assumed to be approx at latitude of Oxford”.
The map is currently on exhibit in Oxford and can be yours for the asking price of £60,000. Blackwell‘s, the book seller currently in possession of the map, calls it “perhaps the finest piece of Tolkien ephemera to emerge in the last 20 years at least”.
Take a look:
Bottom right corner of the map (Blackwell’s Rare Books)Top left corner of the map. (Blackwell’s Rare Books)Top right corner of the map. (Blackwell’s Rare Books)Bottom left corner of the map (Blackwell’s Rare Books)
source: Guardian and Geoawesomeness
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