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Narn i Chîn Húrin
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Narn i Chîn Húrin : ウィキペディア英語版
Narn i Chîn Húrin

A portion of the ''Narn i Chîn Húrin'' or ''The Tale of the Children of Húrin'' is a part of the book ''Unfinished Tales'' by the English author J. R. R. Tolkien. It is a prose version of an earlier narrative poem called ''The Lay of the Children of Húrin''. A complete version of the Narn called ''The Children of Húrin'', edited by Christopher Tolkien, was released as a new book in 2007.〔news.bbc.co.uk. 〕
The ''Narn'' (as it has been called) is a long story of what happened to Húrin and his children Túrin Turambar and Nienor, after Húrin was cursed by Morgoth. A coherent but less detailed version of this story appears as ''Of Túrin Turambar'' in ''The Silmarillion'', the first posthumous adaptation of Tolkien's works.
In the published ''Silmarillion'' and ''Unfinished Tales'', the title of the Narn is given as ''Narn i Hîn Húrin''. This was an editorial decision by Christopher Tolkien which he later regretted, done only to prevent people from pronouncing Chîn like English "Chin" with a voiceless palato-alveolar affricate, rather than a voiceless palatal fricative as in the German ''dich'' or the initial sound of the English word ''huge''. ''The Children of Húrin'' uses "Chîn".〔http://www.tolkienlibrary.com/press/Children-of-Hurin-FAQ.htm Retrieved 20 March 2007.〕
==Fictional history==
The original version of the ''Narn'' was supposedly composed in Sindarin in the ''Minlamad thent/estent '' meter by one Dírhaval, a mortal poet who had nevertheless great mastery of the elvish tongue, and the Elves praised the poem.〔; 〕 The poem dates to only a few decades after Túrin's death (); Dírhaval is said to have lived at the Mouths of Sirion and died in the raid by the Sons of Fëanor in Y.S. 538.

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