Mithril

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
"As light as a feather, yet as hard as dragon scales."


"Mithril! All folk desired it. It could be beaten like copper, and polished like glass; and the Dwarves could make of it a metal, light and yet harder than tempered steel. Its beauty was like to that of common silver, but the beauty of mithril did not tarnish or grow dim."
Gandalf, The Lord of the Rings, Book II, Chapter 4 "A Journey in the Dark".

Mithril is a fictional metal from J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth fantasy writings. It is silvery and stronger than steel but much lighter in weight. The author first wrote of it in The Lord of the Rings, and it was Retconned in the second, revised edition of The Hobbit in 1966. In the first 1937 edition, the mail shirt given to Bilbo was described as being made of "silvered steel". This metal was the reason for the Dwarves of Khazad-dûm's wealth and power. Greed for this metal eventually led to the downfall of the dwarves when they found a vein of mithril that led to a sleeping Balrog.

The name "mithril" or similarly spelled variations (mithral, mythril, and others) is present in other fictional contexts like role-playing games, since the Tolkien Estate did not trademark the term, unlike "Hobbit" or "Balrog". One early example is Dungeons & Dragons and its derivatives (e.g. Forgotten Realms). It appears in many computer and video games such as: The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion (it also appeared TES II: Daggerfall, although there it was a mid-weight material), EverQuest, RuneScape, Tales (series) series, Dark Age of Camelot, Dungeons & Dragons Online, Diablo, Terraria, World of Warcraft, Final Fantasy, Kingdom Hearts and Nethack. The name is usually used for a special type of metal (often used as armor), or as a denomination of currency, or as a name for a project or device. It's very useful to have an exotic trope metal that is more rare and valuable than mundane metals like steel or gold. Citadel Miniatures even produce a color of (metallic) paint named Mithril Silver.

As to whether Mithril was ever based on a real metal, Tolkien never said. Guesses for this metal have been aluminium, titanium, naturally occurring titanium-molybdenum alloy and platinum (and yttrium silver if you want to get technical).

Compare with Thunderbolt Iron, Orichalcum, Unobtainium, and Silver Has Mystic Powers.

Not to be confused with Heavy Mithril, or the fictional mercenary organization of the same name.

Examples of Mithril include:

Literature

  • The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit, naturally, features both. The armor protects both Bilbo and his grandson Frodo at crucial times during their quests. Frodo sustains what would have been a fatal blow and makes it to Rivendell.

Newspaper Comics

  • Naturally, FoxTrot features mithril in a week-long Imagine Spot about Jason and Marcus playing Frodo and Sam respectively on The Lord of the Rings film set. One strip has the boys late for their next scene because they spilled root beer on their mithril costumes.

Tabletop Games

  • Dungeons & Dragons also has mithril. it is also sometimes called Mithral. Mithral dragons are the rarest and most powerful within the game.