N. Tavrobel loc.
Village in Tol Eressea where Ælfwine record the tales of the Elves in Silmarillion drafts from the 1930s (SM/263), an idea that disappeared from later versions of the Silmarillion. In The Etymologies, it was given as a combination of tavor “woodpecker” and the lenited form of gobel “village” (Ety/PEL(ES), TAM).
Conceptual Development: This village G. Tavrobel appeared in the earliest Lost Tales, though it was the earlier character Eriol who did the recording rather than Ælfwine (LT1/25). At this stage the name translated “Wood Home” and was a combination of tavros “forest” and the lenited form of pel “village” (GL/64, 69) and sometimes appeared in the variant form G. Tavrost (LT2/292). In The Etymologies of the 1930s, it was reinterpreted as noted above. In its final mention in Silmarillion drafts from the 1930s, it was written Tathrobel (LR/203); this last form might be Old English (SM/282 note #3).
This name was also used as an early name of Ephel Brandir (LR/412-3, WJ/157).
References ✧ Ety/PEL(ES), TAM; LR/203; LRI; SDI2/Tavrobel; SMI; TII; WJ/157; WJI
Variations
Changes
Elements
tavor | “woodpecker, knocker” | ✧ Ety/TAM | |
gobel | “walled house or village, town” | ✧ Ety/PEL(ES) | |
ᴹ√TAM | “knock” | ✧ Ety/PEL(ES) | |
ᴹ√PEL(ES) | “revolve on fixed point” | ✧ Ety/TAM |
G. Tavrobel loc. “Wood Home”
References ✧ GL/64, 69; LT1A/Tavrobel; LT1I/Gilfanon, Tavrobel; LT2/292; LT2I/Taurossë, Tavrobel, Tavrost; PE13/94
Glosses
Variations
Related
Elements
tavros | “forest, wooded land” | ✧ GL/69; LT1A/Tavari | |
†pel | “village, hamlet, -ham” | soft-mutation | ✧ GL/64 (†pel); LT1A/Tavrobel |
Element In
Cognates
G. Tavrost loc. “Haywood”
References ✧ LT1A/Tavrobel; LT2/292; LT2I
Glosses
Related
Elements
tavros | “forest, wooded land” | ✧ LT1A/Tavari |
rost | “slope, hill side, ascent” | ✧ LT1A/Tavrobel |
Cognates