The Hobbit, or There and Back Again
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Does Tolkien own the Dragon sleeping on a pile of gold idea?
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Michael
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Jan 14, 2014 05:27PM

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It is also used in Dungeons & Dragons. A dragon by necessity has a hoard of relative size to it's level/size.
I'm curious, when you say 'own', do you mean 'own the rights', or are you just asking if he invented the idea?


https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...


It is also..."
Own the rights I mean.



Can anyone tell me the first time a dragon was ever ridden?


You can't really own the rights to a concept like a dragon sleeping on a pile of gold. You can own a particular image, or the text of a story that has such an idea in it, or you could own plot of such a story and its characters, but the idea of a dragon sleeping on treasure isn't copyrightable.
You can have things like copyrights, trademarks and patents, but those are on specific intellectual properties. That is, you can copyright a work of fiction about the first mouse shot into space, but you can't copyright the concept of doing experiments on rats in orbit. You can trademark the image of a cartoon character, but you can't own the idea of a talking mouse. You can patent the mechanism of a mouse trap, but you can't own the idea of dealing mechanical death to rodents.

Unlikely. The earliest Chinese civilisation actually reliably attested (and the beginning of Chinese writing) starts around 1000 years after Gilgamesh's death (and the earliest surviving texts of the Gilgamesh legends, including him fighting 'Huwawa', are from just a couple of centuries later).
It's possible, I suppose that the people living in China thousands of years ago were telling stories about dragons, but there's no evidence of this - there can't be any evidence until the invention of writing. And it's also probable, of course, that the Sumerians also had stories of dragons before they wrote them down.

Smaug was very likely inspire by Beowulf's dragon.

[A good claim for 'first dragon' might be Apep, Lord of Evil. In the early depictions he's just an extremely long snake, but I think later on they give him arms as well]



If I'm correct in making this connection then please, OP, do share why you are so occupied with who copied or borrowed from who?
If I'm not correct, than I apologize for bringing this up.





I have to say "probably" because the dates of when these stories came about is basically unknowable. We only know of them because some kindly scribe decided to jot the oral tradition down. The manuscript with Beowulf is from somewhere between 7th and 10th century, and the Poetic Edda is found within the Icelandic Codex Regius of the 13th century. Although, we have evidence that puts the tale of Sigurd and Fafnir many many centuries before.
Tolkien was not only aware of these two stories, he was, in his time, arguably the worlds foremost scholar on both. His analysis of Beowulf is still highly regarded today in academia, and during his life he gave a great many public lectures on the Codex Regius.

For the rest - I believe there are three (five? not many anyway) posited fiction themes.
One of which is THE QUEST. Read the Rivan Codex, where David Eddings (another Professor of English Literature) gives a potted history of Fantasy and how to write one.

^^^This is correct, and, if I'm not mistaken (which is often the case) I read somewhere online that his translation of the text will be published (if it isn't already). It happens in part three of Beowulf (if you handle Beowulf in parts), and Fafnir the dragon in the Norse/Germanic mythos guards a gold-horde as well. Tolkien was a medievalist and handled Anglo-Saxon works such as this, and other influential Germanic and Celtic themes. I was told by several people, but with no sources to back it up: The Lord of the Rings was written to be a sort-of compiled folklore/mythology for England and its people (not in the sense that we regard mythology today, more of just I dunno, "book-like"??). Most of the other creatures in Lord of the Rings are based on/influenced by their Germanic counterparts, such as the elves and dwarves. I really like this discussion, I never looked into dragons before. Thanks for all the info, people, and thank you op for triggering this interesting discussion. And sorry if I come off as rude. I'm sorry ;-;
My question is: did Tolkien create orcs, or were they already a thing?

He did create orcs but he got the name throughout a German word I think so anyone can use the creature. The only evidence I have to back that up is the orc series that was published a few years ago

If I remember correctly, there is a line in the first part of "Beowulf" which says that Grendel is descended of the line of Cain. It goes on to list other members of the lineage including orcnaeas. Its a small step from orcnaea to orc.

Well, I guess now I'm rereading Grendel again.... It's been a few years. Probably about time anyway.
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