Every Dragon in Tolkien Ranked by Power | Silmarillion Explained

Mar 27, 2026 ยท 29:13

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.

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