Every Dragon in Tolkien Ranked by Power | Silmarillion Explained
Tolkien bred his dragons in ascending order of apocalypse. From the pits of Angband came Glaurung, the wingless Father of Dragons whose hypnotic gaze could erase memories and shatter families -- a psychological weapon more devastating than any flame. Centuries later, Morgoth unveiled his masterwork: Ancalagon the Black, a winged fire-drake so colossal that his falling body shattered three volcanic peaks. His deployment temporarily reversed a war fought by the gods themselves. By the Third Age, dragonkind had diminished. Smaug the Golden terrorized the Lonely Mountain for nearly two centuries but fell to a single arrow from a mortal bowman -- a far cry from the Silmaril-bearing mariner required to defeat Ancalagon. Between them lurked Scatha the Worm and an unnamed cold-drake who shattered Dwarven kingdoms in the Grey Mountains. The ranking reveals a mythology built on decline: the belly-strike pattern drawn from Beowulf, corrupting dragon-sickness that outlives the dragon itself, and a world where even its greatest horrors grow smaller with each passing age.