Two sculptures celebrating the legacy of JRR Tolkien have been unveiled in a village that helped inspire one of his stories.
The hand-carved artworks in Roos, East Yorkshire, depict the author and his wife, Edith.
One shows Edith dancing in a wood near the village in the summer of 1917, an event that became the basis for a scene in The Silmarillion – Tolkien’s history of the mythical Middle-earth.
Tolkien, who is best-known for writing The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings, spent 18 months in the area recovering from trench fever contracted while serving during World War One.