Every dragon the histories trouble to name — from Balerion the Black Dread, who carried the Conqueror over the Field of Fire, through the wyrms that burned each other from the sky in the Dance, to the three that woke on a Dothraki pyre three centuries later. Colours, riders, and ends, drawn from the record and not the songs.
The Conquest
The three that took a continent, and the pale dragon that failed to hold it.
Balerion
the Black Dread
Black scales, black fire, black wings — a shadow with a mouth
Riders
Aegon I→ Maegor I→ Aerea Targaryen→ Viserys I
Life
hatched in Old Valyria before the Doom — died 94 AC
Size
The greatest wyrm the world has known; jaws that could swallow an aurochs whole and flame that fused the stones of Harrenhal.
FateOutlived every dragon of the Conquest and three of his riders, only to die of old age at Dragonstone in 94 AC. No sword ever slew the Black Dread; time alone brought him down.
The last living thing to have looked upon Valyria before the Doom. Aegon rode him over the Field of Fire, and every dragon since is measured against his shadow.
Vhagar
Greenish bronze, as the later heralds paint her — the histories dwell more on her roar than her hue
In her dotage the largest living dragon in the world, grown near a rival to Balerion himself; her flame could melt stone and steel alike.
FateDied over the Gods Eye in 130 AC, locked in mutual ruin with Caraxes. The two came down together into the lake, and Aemond and Daemon with them.
The longest-lived of the Conquest three, she passed through four riders across more than a century. By the Dance she was a monster from an older age set loose on a younger one.
Meraxes
Silver, by the later account, with eyes of molten gold — the chronicles are surer of her eyes than her scales
Riders
Rhaenys Targaryen
Life
hatched before the Conquest — died 10 AC
Size
Larger than Vhagar in her prime, though smaller than Balerion — no small thing, to stand second only to the Black Dread.
FateFell at the Hellholt in 10 AC when a scorpion bolt took her in the eye. Dragon and rider were lost together, though the maesters quarrel yet over how Rhaenys truly died.
Her death in the First Dornish War taught the realm a lesson kings preferred to forget: that a dragon is not proof against a well-aimed bolt and a patient man.
Quicksilver
Pale as milk, with wings the colour of a winter morning
Riders
Aenys I→ Aegon the Uncrowned
Life
hatched c. 12 AC — died 43 AC
Size
A young dragon of the Conquest's stock, said to resemble Balerion in miniature — and to share none of his fortune.
FateSlain beneath the Gods Eye in 43 AC by Balerion and Maegor, and the young pretender Aegon with her. Proof, the maesters note, that a smaller dragon is still a dead dragon before a larger.
The first dragon of the Targaryen line to die dragon against dragon, a full century before the Dance made such deaths a fashion.
The Dance of the Dragons
The civil war that burned the dragons out of the world, one wyrm at a time.
Caraxes
the Blood Wyrm
Dark red, lean and serpentine, with a long sinuous neck — an ugly, wicked-looking beast
Riders
Aemon Targaryen→ Daemon Targaryen
Life
hatched c. 75 AC — died 130 AC
Size
Large and battle-hardened, though built long and lean rather than broad; no dragon of the Dance was more accustomed to war.
FateThe Blood Wyrm took Vhagar down over the Gods Eye in 130 AC and died of the wounds soon after — the last blow of the last true duel between dragons.
Daemon's mount rode with the Rogue Prince through the Stepstones and the Dance both. Fierce as his rider and half as reckless, which was reckless enough.
Syrax
Yellow scales, bright as a new-minted golden dragon
Riders
Rhaenyra Targaryen
Life
hatched c. 104 AC — died 130 AC
Size
Large and well-fed but soft with peace, kept close and pampered in the Dragonpit rather than blooded in the field.
FatePulled from the sky and butchered by the mob during the fall of King's Landing in 130 AC. Her queen would follow her within days.
Rhaenyra's dragon since she was a girl of seven. A cautionary tale, the maesters say, on what becomes of a war-beast raised as a pet.
Meleys
the Red Queen
Scarlet scales like beaten copper, with wings of rose and pink
Riders
Alyssa Targaryen→ Rhaenys Targaryen
Life
hatched c. 55 AC — died 129 AC
Size
Old and grown large, yet counted the swiftest dragon in the realm despite her bulk — a rare pairing of age and speed.
FateCaught and killed above Rook's Rest in 129 AC by Sunfyre and Vhagar together — the first great dragon to die in the Dance, and a warning none who lived heeded.
The Red Queen bore two princesses across her long life. That two dragons and an ambush were needed to bring her down flattered no one but her.
Sunfyre
the Golden
Golden scales that flashed in the sun, with membranes of pale pink
Riders
Aegon II
Life
hatched c. 107 AC — died 130 AC
Size
Not the largest of his generation, but by every account the most beautiful dragon ever to spread its wings.
FateGrievously burned at Rook's Rest and again over Dragonstone, the golden dragon lingered on crippled and died of his hurts in 130 AC.
Aegon II's mount was as vain and ill-starred as his rider. The two of them ended the war maimed, poisoned, and unmourned by half the realm.
Dreamfyre
Pale blue, with markings and horns of silver
Riders
Rhaena Targaryen→ Helaena Targaryen
Life
hatched before 52 AC — died 130 AC
Size
An older, well-grown she-dragon, long past her first century, dangerous still despite years spent chained in the Dragonpit.
FatePerished in the storming of the Dragonpit in 130 AC, breaking her chains to bring the great dome down upon herself and hundreds of her killers.
She served two Targaryen queens generations apart. Her last act — collapsing the Dragonpit — killed more men than most dragons manage in a war.
Vermithor
the Bronze Fury
Bronze scales with tan wings, weathered like an old shield
Riders
Jaehaerys I→ Hugh Hammer
Life
hatched c. 37 AC — died 130 AC
Size
Second in size only to Vhagar among the living, and near a century old — the largest dragon any smallfolk rider ever dared to claim.
FateRoused after a lifetime's slumber to burn at Tumbleton, then torn apart on the ground in 130 AC when the he died at Second Tumbleton, locked in battle with Seasmoke at once.
The Old King's own mount, given over to a bastard sellsword at the Sowing. That such a beast could be claimed by a baseborn man unsettled lords more than any battle.
Silverwing
Pale silver scales with wings tinged the blue of a clear sky
Riders
Alysanne Targaryen→ Ulf White
Life
hatched c. 44 AC — fate unknown after 130 AC
Size
Large and old, a little shy of Vermithor, gentle by dragon standards — which is to say, only lately grown deadly.
FateOne of the few dragons to outlive the Dance. She flew wild about the Gods Eye for years afterward, and where at last she ended no maester can say.
Good Queen Alysanne's mount, later claimed by Ulf the Sot. Of a peaceable temper by nature; it took a drunkard and a civil war to teach her killing.
Vermax
Green, in the reckoning of most heralds, though the histories leave his colour vague
Riders
Jacaerys Velaryon
Life
hatched c. 115 AC — died 130 AC
Size
A young dragon, grown but not yet great, still short of the war-mass of the elder beasts.
FateLost at the Battle of the Gullet in 130 AC; the histories say he went down into the sea, and his young rider with him.
Jacaerys flew him on the errand that raised the North and the Vale for his mother. The tale that Vermax left a clutch of eggs at Winterfell the maesters file under rumour.
Arrax
Pale and young-scaled — the record fixes no firm colour, only his smallness
Riders
Lucerys Velaryon
Life
hatched c. 116 AC — died 129 AC
Size
Small and young, no match in mass for aged Vhagar — a fact the storm off Storm's End made cruelly plain.
FateTorn apart above Storm's End in 129 AC by Vhagar, in a chase neither dragon's rider fully meant to press home — the death that lit the whole war.
Lucerys was sent as an envoy, not a warrior. Arrax's death turned an errand of peace into the first blood of the Dance, and there was no calling it back.
Tyraxes
Uncredited in the histories — a young dragon of the Dragonpit, colour unrecorded
Riders
Joffrey Velaryon
Life
hatched c. 118 AC — died 130 AC
Size
A young dragon, still small, chained in the Dragonpit and never blooded in open battle.
FateDied chained in his cell during the storming of the Dragonpit in 130 AC, fighting to the last — and those who came to kill him did not all come out again.
Joffrey Velaryon died trying to reach him; the boy never made it to the pit. Tyraxes sold his life dearer than any of the caged dragons that fell that night.
Tessarion
the Blue Queen
Cobalt blue, with claws, crest, and wing-bones of hammered copper
Riders
Daeron Targaryen
Life
hatched c. 116 AC — died 130 AC
Size
A young she-dragon, swift and splendid, still shy of the mass the elder beasts carried into battle.
FateThe Blue Queen fell at the second battle of Tumbleton in 130 AC, one of three dragons to die in that single dreadful day.
Daeron the Daring's mount, and the loveliest thing on either side of the war. Tumbleton proved that beauty and youth were no armour against a general melee of dragons.
Seasmoke
Pale silver-grey, the colour of mist over water
Riders
Laenor Velaryon→ Addam of Hull
Life
hatched c. 115 AC — died 130 AC
Size
A middling grown dragon, well past hatchling but no giant — outmatched in mass at Tumbleton, though not in spirit.
FateDied over Tumbleton in 130 AC, locked with Tessarion and Vermithor — a dragon that had outlived one rider and been claimed by another, gone at the last.
Riderless for years after Laenor left the field of life, Seasmoke chose a new rider himself in the bastard Addam of Hull — a rare thing, and a redeeming one.
Moondancer
Pale green, with scales, horns, and crest of pearl and silver
Riders
Baela Targaryen
Life
hatched c. 122 AC — died 130 AC
Size
Slight and young, no larger than a warhorse — the smallest dragon to give a great one real trouble.
FateYoung and swift, she met old broken Sunfyre above Dragonstone in 130 AC and died game — her rider survived the fall, if barely.
That a dragon a fraction of Sunfyre's size nearly finished him is the wonder of it. Baela flew Moondancer straight at the invader and cost him what little was left of his wings.
Stormcloud
Pale and storm-grey, if the name is any guide — the histories leave it unfixed
Riders
Aegon III
Life
hatched c. 127 AC — died 130 AC
Size
A hatchling barely grown, ridden more from desperation than from strength.
FateCarried his boy-prince clear of the Gullet in 130 AC, riddled with crossbow bolts and burning, and died of it soon after reaching Dragonstone.
Aegon the Younger's first dragon, lost when the prince was scarcely ten. The horror of that flight, the maesters believe, is why the boy would never willingly mount a dragon again.
Morning
Pale pink scales edged in black, fresh from the shell
Riders
Rhaena Targaryen
Life
hatched 129 AC — survived the Dance
Size
A hatchling through the whole of the war, too small to fight and so, uncommonly, still alive at its end.
FateHatched too late for the war she was born into, she lived on past the Dance — one of the last handful of dragons to see the century out.
The twin of the boy-king Aegon III's dread of dragons, Rhaena kept and cherished her dragon. Morning is where the dwindling age of dragons made its last small stand.
Sheepstealer
Muddy brown, the drab colour of dirt and old iron — the ugliest dragon of the age
Riders
Nettles
Life
wild since c. 1 AC — fate unknown after 130 AC
Size
A large old wild dragon, decades untamed, dangerous with the caution of a beast that had never known a saddle.
FateVanished into the Mountains of the Moon with the girl Nettles in 130 AC. No raven ever brought word of dragon or girl again.
Wild on Dragonstone for a century until a lowborn girl won him with a daily offered sheep. The pairing scandalised princes and outlived them — no small revenge.
Grey Ghost
White and pale grey, the colour of morning mist — seldom seen and never caught
Riders
Wild — never ridden
Life
wild — died 130 AC
Size
A shy wild dragon of middling size, more given to fishing the narrow sea than to fighting.
FateFound half-devoured on Dragonstone in 130 AC, killed and eaten by the Cannibal. Dragons, the maesters remind us, are not gentle even to their own.
The most retiring of the three wild dragons of Dragonstone, and the only one a would-be rider tried and failed to tame. His end came not from man but from another dragon's hunger.
The Cannibal
Coal black, greenish about the eyes and crest — blacker even than Balerion, some swore
Riders
Wild — never ridden
Life
wild — fate unknown
Size
The oldest and largest of Dragonstone's wild dragons, and the most feared — for he ate dead dragons, and hatchlings, and eggs.
FateNever tamed and never slain, so far as any record shows. He flew from Dragonstone during the Dance and passed out of all report thereafter.
Every man who sought to claim the Cannibal died for the trying. That he simply left, uncaught and unaccounted, unsettles the maesters more than a clean death ever could.
Morghul
Unrecorded — a young unclaimed dragon of the Dragonpit
Riders
Wild — never ridden
Life
died 130 AC
Size
A young caged dragon, never ridden and never fully grown.
FateButchered in his cell during the storming of the Dragonpit in 130 AC — a chained dragon killed by a mob that had learned, that night, that dragons could die.
Named for death in the old tongue, and fitting it. Kept caged and unclaimed, Morghul never flew free a day in his life and never had the chance.
Shrykos
Unrecorded — a young unclaimed dragon of the Dragonpit
Riders
Wild — never ridden
Life
died 130 AC
Size
A young caged dragon, small and unblooded, kept chained beside her kin.
FateKilled in the Dragonpit in 130 AC when a woodsman drove an axe between her eyes — an ignoble end the singers pass over in silence.
That a common man with a common axe could fell a dragon at all is the true horror of the Dragonpit's fall. Shrykos died proving dragons were only flesh.
The dwindling
After the Dance the fire guttered, until only a sickly hatchling remained.
The last dragon
Green and sickly, stunted and misshapen — a shadow of the fire that made a dynasty
Riders
Wild — never ridden
Life
died 153 AC
Size
No larger than a cat, the maesters record, with wings too small to lift her and a clutch that never quickened.
FateDied at Dragonstone in 153 AC, a stunted, sickly thing — and with her the age of dragons ended for the better part of a century and a half.
The dwindling had many causes and one certain end. Whether the dragons shrank in captivity, sickened, or were quietly helped along, the maesters argue still; the fact of the empty skies they do not.
The dragons return
Three hundred years of empty skies, ended on a funeral pyre — the novels' own tale.
Drogon
Black scales shot with red, red-black wings, eyes like molten pits — named for a khal
Riders
Daenerys Targaryen
Life
hatched 298 AC — living, in the novels
Size
The largest and fiercest of the three, and growing swiftly — already the terror of the fighting pits of Meereen.
FateIn the novels he grows the greatest of her three and bears his queen away from Meereen into the Dothraki sea — wild, unbroken, and far from finished.
Woken into the world on Khal Drogo's pyre alongside his brothers, the first dragons in a century and more. Named for the sun of her sun.
Rhaegal
Green scales with bronze markings, bronze wings — named for a slain prince
Riders
Daenerys Targaryen
Life
hatched 298 AC — living, in the novels
Size
Green and growing, the middling of the three, no less deadly for standing in his black brother's shadow.
FateChained in the dark beneath Meereen in the novels for a killing his brother did, he languishes there still when last the histories look upon him.
Named for Rhaegar, the prince who died on the Trident. Of the three, his fate hangs most unfinished — a dragon in the dark, waiting on a tale not yet told.
Viserion
Cream and pale gold, with horns and wing-bones of gold — named for a would-be king
Riders
Daenerys Targaryen
Life
hatched 298 AC — living, in the novels
Size
Cream-and-gold and growing, the gentler of her three by temper, though a dragon's gentleness is a relative thing.
FatePenned beside Rhaegal below Meereen in the novels, the cream-and-gold dragon waits in the dark — starving, the tale runs, without his mother's hand.
Named for Viserys, the brother who bought his crown of gold too dearly. In the novels his story, like Rhaegal's, is a door George R. R. Martin has yet to open.
Estas separações nomeiam mortes, desfechos e estradas ainda não percorridas nos livros. Desvele-as apenas se ambas as estradas te forem conhecidas — ou se não temes saber.
Estas separações nomeiam mortes, desfechos e estradas ainda não percorridas nos livros. Desvele-as apenas se ambas as estradas te forem conhecidas — ou se não temes saber.
The greatest dragons, by size
A rough reckoning against Balerion the Black Dread, the largest wyrm the world has known. Dragons never stop growing, so these measures mix beasts at different ages — a maester's estimate, not a surveyor's chain.
Balerionthe Black Dread100
Vhagar90
Meraxes82
Vermithorthe Bronze Fury70
Silverwing60
Meleysthe Red Queen55
Sunfyrethe Golden52
Caraxesthe Blood Wyrm50
Syrax46
In the chronicle
The great burnings and turnings where these dragons made their mark.
How many dragons are there in Game of Thrones?
The histories name close to thirty dragons across three centuries — the Conquest's Balerion, Vhagar, and Meraxes; the full roster of the Dance of the Dragons; the last dragon that died in 153 AC; and Daenerys Targaryen's three, Drogon, Rhaegal, and Viserion. Many more hatchlings and unhatched eggs go unnamed.
What was the largest dragon in Game of Thrones?
Balerion the Black Dread, the mount of Aegon the Conqueror. His teeth were as long as swords and his jaws wide enough to swallow an aurochs whole; his fire fused the stones of Harrenhal. No larger dragon is recorded, and he died of old age in 94 AC, never bested in battle.
What are the names of Daenerys's dragons?
Drogon, Rhaegal, and Viserion — named for Khal Drogo, her brother Rhaegar, and her brother Viserys. All three hatched from petrified eggs on Khal Drogo's funeral pyre in 298 AC, the first dragons born in more than a century. Drogon, black-and-red, is the largest and fiercest of the three.
How did the dragons die out in Westeros?
The Dance of the Dragons (129–131 AC) killed most of the Targaryen dragons, dragon against dragon and mob against beast. The handful that survived dwindled and sickened in the years after, until the last dragon — a stunted, cat-sized thing — died at Dragonstone in 153 AC, leaving the skies empty for nearly a century and a half.