John Ronald Reuel Tolkien, was born on the 3rd January, 1892. He and his brother Hilary, experienced a difficult childhood; when Tolkien was just four, they lost their father, Arthur, to rheumatic fever. As a widow with low income, his mother Mabel, home school the brothers and played a vital role in their early education and development. Tolkien was a smart young boy, with a fascination and thirst for languages. Tolkien sat the entrance exam for King Edward's School, Birmingham and passed. From the Autumn of 1900, for a fee of 12 pounds a year, Tolkien would be educated in an environment that would help fulfil his academic potential. [John Garth] Going to King Edward's was vitally important to Tolkien; he was an exceptionally talented boy. King Edward's offered him a vast amount of scope and also the company of other boys who were similarly talented. Which was probably quite hard for Tolkien to find. [Simon Stacey] Not only did he play rugby but he was a leading light in the debating society and the literary society; he was the life and soul really and he missed the school a great deal, I think, when he finally had to leave. [VO] At the age of just 11, Tolkien and his brother Hilary, lose their mother, Mabel, to diabetes. Grief stricken, he plunges himself into school life more energetically than before. Academically he excels, but in 1905, meets his intellectual rival, Christopher Wiseman. [John Garth] Tolkien met his greatest friend at King Edward's, Christopher Wiseman on the rugby pitch. A musician, a mathematician; quite different from Tolkien. They developed such a strong bond on the rugby field that they called themselves; "The Great Twin Brethren", which was a phrase from "Lays of Ancient Rome" by Lord Macauley. [Simon Stacey] They also were friendly rivals in the school, both being very academic boys. Wiseman had a formidable intellect and he was interested in a lot of the things that Tolkien was getting interested in; languages, I think he was looking at Egyptian and was looking at hieroglyphics. [John Garth] Tolkien and Wiseman must have helped define each other through their teenage years because they would argue; they would argue strongly about all their beliefs in life. [Simon Stacey] Wiseman was a very talented musician; Tolkien was supposed to be tone deaf but that didn't stop them getting on! [VO] Tolkien also befriends, son of the headmaster, Rob Gilson. Tolkien, Wiseman and Gilson, form a strong bond which will last throughout their school years and beyond.