ASOIAF Dragon Lore
Quicksilver
The silver she-dragon of King Aenys I and his ill-fated son Aegon the Uncrowned. Her pale white fire was said to be pretty rather than terrible. Bonded with the sickly infant Aenys, whose health turned for the better the day she came to him. She was the first dragon killed by another dragon since the Doom of Valyria.
- Type
- Dragon
- Rider
- Aegon Targaryen (Aegon the Uncrowned)
- Hatched
- Reign of Aenys I Targaryen
- Died
- 43 AC, Battle Beneath the Gods Eye
- Era
- Reign of Aenys I, Maegor I Targaryen
- House
- Targaryen
- Status
- Dead
Quicksilver was a dragon of House Targaryen hatched during the reign of Aenys I Targaryen and bonded to his son, Prince Aegon Targaryen. As a dragon raised in the generation following Aegon I Targaryen, Quicksilver represented the continuation of Targaryen dragon power into the second generation of the dynasty. However, unlike the great Conquest dragons such as Balerion, Quicksilver was significantly smaller and less experienced in war.
Quicksilver’s physical characteristics are not described in extensive detail in surviving records, though she is known to have been smaller and younger than the older dragons of the time. By the early 40s AC, she had reached a size sufficient for battle, but had not yet achieved the immense scale or combat experience of dragons like Balerion. This disparity would prove decisive in her only major engagement.
During the reign of Maegor I Targaryen, Aegon the Uncrowned rose in rebellion to challenge his uncle’s claim to the Iron Throne. In 43 AC, Aegon mounted Quicksilver and confronted Maegor, who rode Balerion, above the Gods Eye in what became known as the Battle Beneath the Gods Eye. This marked one of the earliest recorded dragon-versus-dragon battles in Targaryen history.
The engagement was brief and overwhelmingly one-sided. Balerion, vastly larger and more powerful, quickly closed with Quicksilver in mid-air. He seized her in his jaws, tearing into her body and ripping off one of her wings. Both Quicksilver and her rider were brought down during the attack. Aegon the Uncrowned was killed in the fall, and Quicksilver died shortly thereafter from her wounds. Balerion emerged from the battle largely unscathed.
Quicksilver’s death demonstrated the critical importance of size and age in dragon combat, establishing a precedent that would be observed repeatedly in later conflicts. Her defeat also solidified Maegor’s hold on the Iron Throne, eliminating one of the most immediate threats to his rule.
Quicksilver is remembered as one of the earliest dragons to die in combat against another dragon, and her death stands as a defining example of the imbalance that can exist between dragons of different generations. Though she did not possess the power of the great dragons of the Conquest, her role in the Battle Beneath the Gods Eye marks her as an important figure in the early history of Targaryen rule in Westeros.