Black Speech

This article is about fictional language. For the variety of American English known as "Black English", see African American Vernacular English.
Black Speech
Created by J. R. R. Tolkien
Date c. 1945 – 1973
Setting and usage Mordor in Middle-earth
Users None since J. R. R. Tolkien. 
Purpose
Language codes
ISO 639-3 None (mis)
Glottolog None

The Black Speech is a fictional language created by J. R. R. Tolkien.

One of the languages constructed by J. R. R. Tolkien in Tolkien's legendarium, it was spoken in the realm of Mordor. Tolkien describes the language as being created by Sauron as an (in-universe) constructed language to be the sole language of all the servants of Mordor, thereby replacing (with little success) the many different varieties of Orkish, Common Speech and other languages used by his servants. Tolkien describes the language as existing in two forms, the ancient "pure" forms used by Sauron himself, the Nazgûl, and the Olog-hai, and the more "debased" form used by the soldiery of the Barad-dûr at the end of the Third Age.

Development by Tolkien

The Black Speech is one of the more fragmentary languages in the novels. Unlike Elvish, Tolkien did not write songs or poems in the Black Speech, apart from the One Ring inscription. Tolkien stated [1]

The Black Speech was not intentionally modeled on any style, but was meant to be self consistent, very different from Elvish, yet organized and expressive, as would be expected of a device of Sauron before his complete corruption. It was evidently an agglutinative language. [...] I have tried to play fair linguistically, and it is meant to have a meaning not be a mere casual group of nasty noises, though an accurate transcription would even nowadays only be printable in the higher and artistically more advanced form of literature. According to my taste such things are best left to Orcs, ancient and modern.

From a fan, Tolkien received a goblet with the Ring inscription on it in Black Speech. Because the Black Speech in general is an accursed language, and the Ring inscription in particular is a vile spell, Tolkien never drank out of it, and used it only as an ashtray.[2]

Fictional History of the Language

Sauron attempted to impose Black Speech as the official language of the lands he dominated (ultimately, to include all of Middle-earth) and all his servants, but he was only partially successful. The Nazgûl, the Uruk-hai (the elite Battle Orcs of Mordor), and several of Sauron's major lieutenants and officers (e.g. the Mouth of Sauron) learned and used the Black Speech, but it never really caught on with the Orcs, or the various groups of Men from the east and south that Sauron conquered. The Orcs tended to corrupt and debase any language they were exposed to, so while Black Speech strongly influenced their vocabulary and perhaps grammar, it soon mutated into the myriad Orkish dialects, which are not mutually intelligible. By the end of the Third Age, while Orc vocabulary was peppered with certain terms from Black Speech, even they generally communicated using Westron, albeit heavily debased. The Elves refuse to utter Black Speech, as it attracts the attention of the Eye of Sauron.

Black Speech may have had at least some influence from Valarin, the language of the angelic spirits known as the Ainur, because Sauron himself originated as one of the Maiar (the lesser Ainur) and thus this was his own original language. Valarin itself is also said to have been unpleasant for Elves to listen to, though this was because it radiated such force and power that non-Ainur were discomforted by it.

The One Ring inscription

The only example of "pure" Black Speech is the inscription upon the One Ring:

Ash nazg durbatulûk, ash nazg gimbatul,
ash nazg thrakatulûk agh burzum-ishi krimpatul.

Translated into English:

One Ring to rule them all, One Ring to find them,
One Ring to bring them all and in the darkness bind them.

These are the last two lines of a verse about the Rings of Power. This corresponds to the following table as explained by J.R.R. Tolkien.[3] (Words and morphemes marked with an asterisk are those that occur in the ring-rhyme.)

Black SpeechEnglish
ash*one
nazg*ring
durb-*constrain, force, dominate
-at*verb ending, like a participle
ulûk* verbal ending expressing object 3rd person pl. "them" (ul) (sic) in completive or total form "them-all".
gimb-*seek out, discover
-ul*them
thrak-*bring by force, hale, drag
ghâsh- fire
agh*and
burzum*darkness
ishi*in, inside
krimp-*bind, tie
-haifolk
uruk-orc
olog-troll
gûlwraith

Other examples

Some other Black Speech words are known, given by Tolkien in Appendix F of The Return of the King. These include Lugbúrz, meaning "Dark Tower" (Barad-dûr), snaga, meaning "slave", and ghâsh "fire". The name Nazgûl is a combination of "nazg" meaning "ring" and "gûl" meaning "wraith(s)", therefore giving the translation "ringwraiths".[4] Many Orkish dialects had adopted words from it. A substantial sample of debased Black Speech/Orkish can be found in The Two Towers, where a "yellow-fanged" Mordor Orc curses the Isengard Uruk Uglúk:

Uglúk u bagronk sha pushdug Saruman-glob búbhosh skai!

In The Peoples of Middle-earth, Christopher Tolkien gives the translation: "Uglúk to the cesspool, sha! the dungfilth; the great Saruman-fool, skai!". However, in a note published in the journal Vinyar Tengwar, this alternative translation is given: "Uglúk to the dung-pit with stinking Saruman-filth, pig-guts, gah!"

Film use

For The Lord of the Rings film trilogy, the linguist David Salo used what little is known of the Black Speech to invent two phrases:

Gu kibum kelkum-ishi, burzum-ishi. Akha-gum-ishi ashi gurum.
("No life in coldness, in darkness. Here in void, only death.")

The word burzum-ishi ('in darkness') is taken from the Ring Verse, and three other abstract nouns are invented with the same ending –um. The word ashi, meaning 'only', is taken from ash ('one') in the Ring Verse. The other words were made up by Salo.

Parallels to natural languages

Russian historian Alexander Nemirovski claimed a "strong lexical similarity" to Hurrian,[4] which had recently been deciphered at the time of the writing of The Lord of the Rings, E. A. Speiser's Introduction to Hurrian appearing in 1941.[5] The four -atul- morphemes suggest that the language was agglutinative.

In music

As its more common subject matter includes fantasy and dark, demonic or diabolical themes, some black metal bands have taken their names and occasionally song and album titles from Black Speech or invented their own Pseudo-Black Speech:

See also

Notes

  1. J.R.R. Tolkien, "Words, Phrases and Passages in Various Tongues in The Lord of the Rings", Parma Eldalemberon 17, p. 11-12.
  2. The Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien, Letter 343
  3. J.R.R. Tolkien, "Words, Phrases and Passages in Various Tongues in The Lord of the Rings", Parma Eldalemberon 17, p. 11.
  4. 1 2 Fauskanger, Helge K. "Orkish and the Black Speech". Ardalambion. University of Bergen. Retrieved 2 September 2013.
  5. The annual of the American Schools of Oriental Research, v. 20, N.H. 1941.
  6. "Nazgûl – Bridge | Seymour Duncan". www.seymourduncan.com. Retrieved 2016-05-30.

External links

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