The Encyclopedia of Arda - Bag End (original) (raw)

Dates Excavated in approximately III 28901 Location Race Culture Family Important peaks Meaning Refers to a place at the end of a road2 Indexes: Alphabetical: B Cities and Buildings About this entry: Updated 24 May 2009 Updates planned: 1 The great smial beneath Hobbiton Hill Map of Bag End A large and comfortable Hobbit-hole, well-known as the home of Bilbo Baggins and his heir, Frodo. Its round green door opened into a large, well-appointed Hobbit-hole that took up much of the Hill above Hobbiton. In the tradition of Hobbit-holes, all the rooms at Bag End were on the same level, and there were many of these.; '...bedrooms, bathrooms, cellars, pantries (lots of these), wardrobes ([Bilbo] had whole rooms devoted to clothes), kitchens, dining-rooms...'.3 Notes 1 The exact date that Bag End came into existence is unknown, but we do know that it was excavated by Bilbo Baggins' father Bungo, after he had married Belladonna Took: 'Bungo, that was Bilbo's father, built the most luxurious Hobbit-hole for her (and partly with her money)...'. The latest possible date for the building of Bag End is III 2926, the year of Bungo's death, but the context of the text quoted here seems to suggest that Bungo built it rather earlier than this. Actually the dating of Bag End is slightly more problematic than the foregoing might suggest. This is because the surname 'Baggins' is explicitly connected with a place named 'Bag End', and we have records of Hobbits named Baggins going back at least two generations before Bungo's time. The implication seems to be that, while the familiar Bag End of Bilbo and Frodo was built by Bungo Baggins, there must have been an older 'Bag End' of some kind on the same site for at least a century beforehand. 2 The name 'Bag End' is almost exactly equivalent to the French cul-de-sac, a place at the end of a road or lane that leads nowhere else. In fact the Hobbit-hole of Bag End took its name from a real place, a farm owned by Tolkien's aunt Jane Neave in the village of Dormston in Worcestershire, England. 3 From The Hobbit, Chapter 1, An Unexpected Party. See also... Adelard Took, An Unexpected Party, Baggins Family, Bagshot Row, Balin, Battle Gardens, Belladonna Took, Better Smials, Bilbo Baggins, Bilbo Gamgee, Birthday Party, Blanco Bracegirdle, Boffin Family, Bucklebury Ferry, Bungo Baggins, [See the full list...]Burrowes Family, Burrows Family, Bywater Pool, Bywater Road, Chica Chubb, Cress, Crickhollow, Daddy Twofoot, Daisy Gamgee, Eastfarthing of the Shire, Farewell Party, First Eastfarthing Troop, Folco Boffin, Frodo Baggins, Frodo Gardner, Gaffer Gamgee, Gamgee Family, Glóin, Golden Tree, Green Hill Country, Hamfast ‘Gaffer’ Gamgee, Hardbottle, Harding of the Hill, Hobbit-holes, Hobbiton, Hobbiton Hill, Holman Greenhand, Jago Boffin, Khamûl, Lobelia Sackville-Baggins (née Bracegirdle), Longo Baggins, Lotho Sackville-Baggins, Mice, Milo Burrows, Nasturtians, Odo Proudfoot, Old Winyards, Otho Sackville-Baggins, Overhill, Party Tree, Peregrin ‘Pippin’ Took I, Pimple, Primrose Boffin, Primula Brandybuck, Ring-inscription, Robin ‘Cock-robin’ Smallburrow, Roper Gamgee, Rowan, Ruby Gamgee, S.-B.s, Sancho Proudfoot, Saruman, Sharkey’s End, Sharkey’s Men, Shire-reckoning, Smials, Snapdragons, Stock Road, Sunflowers, Thain of the Shire, The Boss, The Hill, The Wilderness, There and Back Again, Thorin and Company, Travellers, Underhill, Vigo Boffin, Water-valley Indexes: Alphabetical: B Cities and Buildings About this entry: Updated 24 May 2009 Updates planned: 1 For acknowledgements and references, see the Disclaimer & Bibliography page. Original content © copyright Mark Fisher 1998, 2001, 2009. All rights reserved. For conditions of reuse, see the Site FAQ. Website services kindly sponsored by Discus from Axiom Software Ltd.Our interactive DISC interpretation service explains the key features of some of the more common DISC profile shapes.