Talk:Mithril/Archive 1

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Why not spin off a Tolkienpedia for all this elvish underbrush? All these articles are written as if this stuff were real without even bothering to note that it is all made up, and mithril is no realler than kryptonite or cavourite (and no more interesting either). Ortolan88 14:58 Aug 9, 2002 (PDT)

Kryptonite: KrF2. Mithril is actually the metal above titanium in the periodic table – only that a sinister conspiracy of the government, have covered up its existence. Said: Rursus 20:11, 13 August 2007 (UTC)

Hm. I'm tempted to write Bergotte, Heathcliff, Emma Woodhouse, Yossarian, and The Wart, for starters ... -- Tarquin 15:18 Aug 9, 2002 (PDT)

Hi. I'm taking responsibility for the Tolkien related articles here, and I'm in the process of cleaning them up and marking them clearly as fictional, and not that they contain spoilers. Mithril has managed to escape my attention so far, but I'm tracking everything down. Articles on characters in litterature is an asset to Wikipedia.

I can't really comment on the presence of a page on Mithril, a fictional metal of little importance, compared with the lack of a page on as complex a character as, say Heathcliff, without coming off as sounding like a cultural snob, can I? A page on Mithril isn't bad per se, it's just that... arg... Could someone with greater diplomatic skills say it? -- Tarquin 15:36 Aug 9, 2002 (PDT)

There are, at the moment, probably more people who feel competent to write a page on mithril than one on Heathcliff, though--in part because it is a simpler topic. Vicki Rosenzweig
It certainly is. I just finished Wuthering Heights last week, and I don't know where to begin on describing Heathcliff's character. I have this unfounded and silly worry that when people who do feel competent to write about literature find Wikipedia, they'll think it's largely about technical subjects and won't feel inclined to contribute -- yes, I know that's a horribly broad generalization -- worse, it's completely untrue, as I've spent hours reading on philosophy and history here -- I just worry ... anyway, maybe we should make rough starts on major works of fiction that we haven't covered yet, and see if we can snowball some of them. Here's an idea -- how about a Wikipedia Book Group, where the aim is to collectively write an article on the book after everyone involved has read it? -- Tarquin
Gah! Two edit conflicts in a row. But it's given me time to make my thoughts a bit more concise. If fiction is going to be in the Wikipedia (and I think there's so much of it in already it'd be difficult to excise it), I think addressing the balance between fiction that happens to be popular with the core of Wikipedia contributors and fiction that is less popular with that audience (to try and phrase it diplomatically) may turn out to require people making a special effort to include the latter group, in the same way that some people make a special effort to read up to write an article on Polish history, or whatever. (Of course, as more contributors join, the more likely it is we'll get someone who does like X, but I think Tarquin does have grounds for worry). I think a Book Group might be a good way to encourage that. -- Bth

This is a do-mocracy. Efforts on certain articles are usually not drawing time away from other articles, but from non-Wikipedia occupations. It's not a question of having either Tolkien articles or articles about characters from serious literature. It's about having Tolkien articles or nothing. And I say fine, let's have Tolkien articles. There is a tendency to be a lot of them (as we're getting saturated, I'm trying to go more in depth (see Saruman)), sure, that effect is drowned by the sheer amount of Wikipedia articles. Besides, they're an asset. --GayCom

BTW, how to phrase this diplomatically... efforts on talk pages like this do draw time away from other articles. :) -- GayCom

Yes, certainly, if people want to create Tolkien articles let them create Tolkien articles. However, I think that if the end-state of the Wikipedia (in some sort of hypothetical after-infinite-time sense) were unbalanced in such a fashion, it would be a shame. And I don't think this talk page effort has been wasted; it's already spawned a very good suggestion for how those who feel that those other articles ought to be created could go about doing so. Just as do-mocratic. -- Bth

I'm glad I started it. Ever consider spinning off a Simpsonspedia? heh heh. Ortolan88, the old English major.

I thought mith meant "gray"? -phma

It means both gray and fog, or mist. -- Zoe

Look. Nobody is forcing anybody to read this. If you don't like it, go somewhere else. There was a link already established, and I created an entry for the ALREADY ESTABLISHED LINK. What one person thinks is important, means as little me as all of the scientific articles on the various importances of various minute articles that have no meaning in my world. I don't read them because I don't know anything about them. Are you really interested in driving me and other people away? IT SURE IS STARTING TO BECOME LESS AND LESS INTERESTING FOR ME TO COME HERE! -- Zoe

Well, I for one welcome the Tolkien articles! Whether certain stuffed shirts like it or not, Tolkien's work has earned a place in our literature and cultural consciousness. It's certainly a heck of a lot more interesting to me than random entries from a 19-th century bible dictionary... Those of you who feel you'd like more articles on Wuthering Heights, go and write them. --Brion VIBBER
I didn't mean to hurt anyone's feelings. I am sorry. I just asked (in what I meant, unsuccessfully it seems, to be a wry tone; it sure looks sarcastic now) if people could please label fictional substances and fictional languages as fictional. I don't apologize for that. As long as people don't do that, other people will have to come here and fix these articles so that we have an accurate encyclopedia. I see no reason we shouldn't have articles on cavourite and kryptonite too, but if the articles said unequivocally that the one blocks gravity and the other causes people from other planets to go all weak, we'd have a problem, don't you think?
I can easily imagine someone making an allusive reference to some real, existing silvery thing or other as "made of mithril" and some reader looking the subject up in the Wikipedia. If they had looked it up before I edited this article, they would have been given the impression that mithril was a real substance and a word in the real Elvish language.
I have read LOTR many times over the years, including reading it to my children, who are now reading it to their children, listened to the BBC version and the books on tape, saw all the movies, played the board game, and I love, respect and admire it. But I think we ought to be able to discuss it without YELLING or calling people names. Ortolan88 20:54 Aug 10, 2002 (PDT)
You're absolutely correct Ortolan88 in asking for a fictional tag at the top. Moreover, I think that the move of these subjects as subcategories of Middle Earth was distinctly retrograde and intellectually unsound. My Heathcliff article is somewhat Micawber btw... user:sjc
The articles were already indicated as fictional, by starting off by saying that they were in the works of J. R. R. Tolkien. And it was certainly delivered in a tone which indicated that the articles weren't worth the electrons they were written with. Unlike all of the articles about David Niven and Richard Burton and word games and Lillie Langtry, which are all so much more important. -- Zoe
Well, curiously some of us do not have quite the high regard for Professor Tolkien's far right adventures in the realms of fantasy that others do. If you were to study the source material from which his witterings are constructed you would realise just how poor and thin his three-volume staircase mystery actually is. If you want to read someone who can really do fantasy why not have a look at Lord Dunsany (who Tolkien also assiduously borrows from btw). Articles about e.g. mithril are important but then again should I be writing articles about my pet subjects in Dunsany (Slith, gnolls, etc)? - I suspect not. user:sjc
What makes you think I haven't read Dunsany, or any of the other high masters of fantasy? I've only been working on Tolkien articles because there had already been links created to them and nobody had filled in those articles. If you have such a high regard for Dunsany, or Eddison (whose work I prefer), why don't you write an article on the gnolls, or other subjects? What you and Ortolan are doing is just trying to make yourselves come across as superior to those of us who ARE writing these articles. Nobody on this project is any better than anybody else, just more polite. -- Zoe
The reason I wouldn't even think to write articles on Dunsany's creations is that I do not think that it is appropriate material for an encyclopedia; in any case why spoil the ineluctable mysteries of Dunsany for people? In the same way I don't really think that a standalone article on mithril is appropriate (I'm not even sure about a subclassed article) for an encyclopedia. OK, so that's what we now have. Let's open the asylum gates for a moment and take a peek at where this leads us. Cavorite, kryptonite (red and green) etc have already been mooted. Are we ready for an article on samite? Or even one on reversite? (I made that one up, it appears in a short story I wrote a long time ago, but hey, it's fictional!) It is a very slippery slope. My take on it is as follows: fictional content should be firmly contextualised as a subclass of the work of fiction which contains it or marked e.g. (fictional substance). user:sjc
I apologized once for being sarcastic. I apologize again. But if you look at the diffs on those articles you cited, I think you'll find I improved every one of them, and I improved the article on mithril too, and plenty of others, sincerely, Tom Parmenter.
Why do I get the feeling I should jump in here blowing a Referee's whistle?! I've seen occasional comments on other fictional entries, to the effect that they don't belong in the wikipedia or that they should be covered in the main article because they're a waste of time. I happen to disagree, and so do many other people. The wikipedia is INclusive not EXclusive. There's plenty of room for articles on popular culture, fiction, movies etc alongside the science/technology stuff. The only worry is one that I have seen on many articles, not just fictional ones - many people writing an article ASSUME that the reader is familiar with the context of the article and so they don't bother to state the most basic information about it, eg.articles on award-winning authors or actors that fail to say what country they're from, entries on cities that don't tell you what country they're in etc. But the main fact is that there is plenty of room for everyone - if you know about Tolkien then write about him by all means! KJ 21:47 Aug 10, 2002 (PDT)
FWIW, I believe there should be an article on Kryptonite (as indeed there is); it's part of the cultural vocabulary here in the United States at least. Of course it and all such things should be marked as fictional (just as real things should be contextualized), no one is disputing that so certain people who keep harping on that issue can please stop sticking pins in their straw man and find something productive to do. --Brion VIBBER 21:52 Aug 10, 2002 (PDT)


I agree with Karen and Brion -- so long as the names are unique (or are made to be unique through disambiguation) and are about a character/fictional thing from the arts, then there is no reason not to have (especially when we are dealing with popular works or ones that are deemed to be important). I wouldn't go nuts over providing disclaimers; it is more than enough to simply say; Frodo, a fictional character in J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth,.... --mav
This page will definitely need disambiguation. There are at least two altogether more significant (i.e. real)Mithrils out there: the programming language and the Steve Schwartz's memory glasses project at MIT. Now it gets really interesting: which gets primacy: the real subject or the fantasy? Sysops, your elevated views, please.... user:sjc
Even if we hadn't had this "discussion" before, I vehemently disagree that those other items are more significant. After all, they were named for the fictional item, which preceded them by a considerable amount of time and is probably more well-known. -- Zoe (And here I'd planned on stopping discussing this subject)
Sjc, please see Wikipedia:Naming conventions. The programming language belongs at Mithril programming language, and the wearable computing project belongs at MIThril. I recommend including a brief "see also" block at the top of each of these three pages. --Brion VIBBER 22:47 Aug 10, 2002 (PDT)
Once an idea from fiction is so well known that people are naming real things after it (not that I'd call a programming language a "real thing", but no matter) it probably deserves its own article. It's just human nature to take interest in strange fictional ideas (see Batman, which is entirely about some comic stip character, with a real city of Batman, Turkey added as a footnote). My complaint about the current mithril article is that is surely does not need a spoiler warning (these seem silly at the best of times, but here it's just ridiculous.)
I seem to remember that Frodo did not know the coat of mail was mithril, until he left Moria, so there is a minor spoiler in the article. Anyway, I believe that it is better to have a spoiler warning more than needed than one less. Valhalla

Just a thot -- we're going for at least one hundred thousand articles. Why not a quarter-million? The point is that there's plenty of space for articles on just about anything and everything, assuming that http://www.bomis.com (rhymes with Thomas) can afford to keep the project up. And, after all, once all the articles on Mithril and Kryptonite are written, then maybe more articles will be written on real-world things like cherimoya (a fruit) and McLeod (a tool) and helictite (a cave formation) and hickory horned devil (a caterpillar) and the Dogon (an African tribe that believe in blue aliens from the region of Sirius) and all the other wonderful stuff that fills our universe. In other words, what's all the hassle? And, after all, Mithril and Kryptonite are organic parts of our popular culture. --John Knouse

Full Metal Panic!

I see what you meant by that last comment, and I agree with you in a sense. I will expand eventually the realtive Full Metal Panic! article. Federico Pistono 23:17, 2005 August 28 (UTC)

That's fair. The issue is that Full Metal Panic is not any more significant to this article than any other of the other entries. How significant mithril is to Full Metal Panic is up to someone who knows about Full Metal Panic to decide. -Aranel ("Sarah") 23:20, 28 August 2005 (UTC)


Analogous real-world substances

Discussions of which real-world substances most closely resemble mithril turn up repeatedly on this talk page, and sometimes in the article itself. This section combines the sections in the talk page that were not archived as of this refactoring. —Steve98052 (talk) 04:35, 20 March 2013 (UTC)

adamant

Tolkien used the word "adamant" in his notes before creating the elven word mithril. I think it is molded after this mythological metal --Lacrymology 02:54, 29 September 2005 (UTC)

Adamant is however not a good comparison. Refer to Virgil (Aeneis Book 6, line 550): Porta adversa ingens, solidoque adamante columnae, vis ut nulla virum, non ipsi exscindere bello caelicolae valeant; Mithril can be destroyed by gods (even by mortals -- it is a strong material, but not indestructible), but Adamant cannot be.

Also refer to the castration of Uranus by Khronos, which was done with an Adamant sickle. Thus, not only can adamant not be destroyed by gods, it can indeed harm gods.

No comparable quality is ever attributed to Mitrhil, to my knowledge. Morgoth or Sauron would hardly have been much of an issue in Middle-Earth if a simple mithril sword could have destroyed them.

Tolkien himself distinguishes Adamant being more a cristalline (diamond-like) substance by stating Nenya being made of Mithril and bearing an Adamant gem. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 87.169.244.58 (talk) 13:16, 17 November 2016 (UTC)

which material?

I'd say that description of titanium is wrong - titanium isn't 'silvery', it could more be described as 'goldish' and I'd even say 'brownish' metal.

And well, mentioning 'silk' 'which nothing can pierce'... seems like Kevlar to me ;)

BTW.
To add to the discussion above... I got here because I typed 'mithril' in the search box... not 'Heathcliff' ;) I mean, maybe it is more interesting topic for someone, but there are people (me for example...) who are more interested in mythology, classical or contemporary. What I like about Wikipedia (and any encyclopedia) is that it is helpful when I think of something like "Hmm, what exactly is that mithril (or whatever else) supposed to be"; so i look it up and find out about it. On the other hand, if I wanted to learn more of a character in a classic novel, I'll most likely read it and then contemplate on it (and it that light it seems clear it's not quite easy to write an article on such topic). Someone else might think otherwise. So, no need to argue about it, let everybody have what they wish. Enough rambling now, thanks for your patience ;) --Arny 08:36, 30 January 2006 (UTC)
According to the entry on titanium, it is silvery.
Some of it's properties indicate that it is a parallel to titanium. And titanium is silvery as far as I know. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 92.118.191.48 (talk) 16:25, 18 April 2008 (UTC)
Well steel is a lot stronger then titanium, unlike in the movies.
Titanium nitride is used to coat drill bits and the like, and it's gold colored, but pure Titanium is silvery.
24.246.26.75 (talk) 04:01, 3 September 2012 (UTC)

added my guess of some indentation, please see Help:Using_talk_pages#Indentation David Woodward ☮ ♡♢☞☽ 13:51, 18 November 2012 (UTC)

Real-World Analogue to Mithril?

I would like to see a new section that discusses real-world metals and alloys that approximate the properties of mithril, such as titanium and perhaps Liquidmetal. Does anything exist that is: strong, light, malleable yet hardenable, not subject to rust/corrosion/tarnish, white with high luster? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.77.45.13 (talk) 14:00, 7 September 2008 (UTC)

That is actually a valid question. Are there any metallurgists on here? As a layman I'd say that titanium comes pretty close to mithril, but is too brittle. De728631 (talk) 18:29, 7 September 2008 (UTC)
It's not a metal, of course, but what do you think about carbon fiber? It's stronger, lighter and more "malleable" than steel. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 190.135.139.205 (talk) 01:27, 24 September 2008 (UTC)
You can't really mine carbon fiber though, making the whole story of its origin rather pointless. - Alltat (talk) 03:54, 19 March 2010 (UTC)
"titanium comes pretty close to mithril, but is too brittle." But JRRT says that "the Dwarves could make of it a metal, light and yet harder than tempered steel." Presumably an alloy could fix the brittleness issue without sacrificing other qualities, which is why titanium is so widely used in alloys today. Platinum, being a heavy metal, would seem a very unlikely candidate. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 76.93.231.132 (talk) 06:19, 9 October 2010 (UTC)
I just read about the new lightest weight material. Its made from nickel I think, but can be made of ceramics, metals or even diamond. It is like Aerogel, but made with structure. Its strong, flexible and *shiny*; and it just made me think of mithril.--OpenTheGait (talk) 07:59, 19 November 2011 (UTC)

Mithril is something altogether weird

Galdalf says it can be beaten like copper (a soft metal), and that the Dwarves "could make a metal of it..." This could lead one to the possibility that Mithril isn't a metal itself, but can be made into a metal once it is enchanted. If Mithril can be hammered like copper it cannot be harder than steel. Or perhaps it is only something "harder than steel" once alloyed with some other metal (which would indicate that it's a metal), or at the very least something that can be mixed with iron or other metals (like coke). It could be Titanium, which when alloyed with steel makes something stronger than steel, and lighter as well. Regardless, it's a weird thing, and pity Tolkien didn't give us more to go on. 173.20.224.196 (talk) 00:53, 10 December 2008 (UTC)

I've always taken that line "could make a metal of it..." to mean the Dwarves could mine the ore and refine it into mithril metal. (69.236.102.232 (talk) 10:19, 26 December 2008 (UTC))
"Alloys usually have different properties from those of the component elements." David Woodward ☮ ♡♢☞☽ 13:58, 18 November 2012 (UTC)

Materiel

I think mithril is an isotope of titanium, possibly with so many neutrons that it has never been discovered by scientists. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Kylesailor (talkcontribs) 21:51, 10 December 2012 (UTC) Then wouldn't it be unstable.

Platinum, titanium, aluminum

I found this paragraph in a previously-deleted version of the main article, cleaned up the citation that was there, and added a new citation. (I neglected to view the talk section, where I would have found that it's a persistently recurring topic of discussion.) However, a more experienced editor pointed out that neither the citation I cleaned up nor the one I added was a reliable source. I agreed with the objection to those citations' source quality. For reference, here's the edit that was removed:

The malleability, lack of tarnishing and use of the metal in jewelry suggest some similarity to the real-world metal platinum, while its strength and lightness suggest titanium.[1] Aluminum has also been suggested as a possible identity for mithril.[2] There is, however, no authorial indication that Tolkien had a real-world metal in mind.
  1. ^ "Mithril". Tolkien Gateway. Retrieved 2013-03-19.
  2. ^ Nelson, Arvid (2012-03-16). "The Atomic Number of Mithril". Arvidland. Retrieved 2013-03-19.

Steve98052 (talk) 05:38, 20 March 2013 (UTC) (signed twice because I'm adding two sub-sections)

What would justify including analogous materials in the article?

So, what would constitute a reliable source for discussion of analogous real-world materials? In my reply to the more experienced editor, I proposed what sort of source would be sufficiently reliable:

Comparisons to real-world metals are a reasonable topic to address on an article about a fictional metal, but to count as a reliable source such observations should probably come from a stronger source, whether it's reliable by virtue of publication in a book, journalistic source, or blog by someone with literary or metallurgy credentials.

So, to get to the matter of how (or whether) the main article might be improved by this line of discussion, here are two questions:

  1. Does the fact that people interested in the fictional mithril are interested in what sort of real-world materials are most similar to it justify addressing that topic in the mithril article?
  2. Have I proposed a reasonable definition of what sort of source is sufficiently reliable to stand as a citation for such a discussion?

Steve98052 (talk) 05:38, 20 March 2013 (UTC) (signed twice because I'm adding two sub-sections)

Outside of Tolkien's writings

Several discussions of the word mithril (or variants) outside of Tolkien's writings appear on this page, and there is an Outside of Tolkien's writings section in the article itself. This section combines the sections in the talk page that were not archived as of this refactoring. —Steve98052 (talk) 04:43, 20 March 2013 (UTC)

Mithril is not in Guild Wars

I've played guild wars for quite a while and googled "Mithril guild Wars" and found nothing exept a guild. Whoever wrote this proebly never played the game.

Mithril in Elder Scrolls

I was thinking someone who should write up that Mitril is a material of the Elder Scrolls series. All I know is that it is a form of light armour, less effective then glass but better then elven I believe, it's heavy armour equivalent is orcish. I don't know the backstory of why or how Mitrhil is there but I believe it deserves comment. TostitosAreGross 18:19, 15 August 2006 (UTC)

Never mind, I see it has some mention but does anybody know anything else about Mithril in TES? There never is any verbal or written mention of it in the game.

Mithril is infact a metal (or something, we don't acctualy know, it might be a manefacturing method like elven) and has appeared in Arena (ES1), Daggerfall(ES2) and Oblivion. See The imperial Library (http://til.gamingsource.net/) the Unofficial Elder Scrolls pages, or UESP for short. They have a lot of Information on all things elderscrollian, although both are unofficial. --ArneHD 13:37, 20 August 2006 (UTC)
in oblivion i know is that mithril's less effective than elven. . . and one thing i really really am desired to know more is about the material of GLASS which is green in the elder scrolls. . . i still dun find any of proof to prove that a 'glass' is even a srong enough to be forged as armor.. is it some kind of gifts of The Nine or what? oblivion has the other kind of 'glass' such as hour-glas, et cetera, but not that kind of material of armor. .Jcupu (talk) 13:50, 23 January 2008 (UTC)

Mythril and Final Fantasy series

It is believed that Final Fantasy series (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Final_fantasy) are the true founder of this word Mythril . The first use of Mythril is in Final Fantasy I which was released on 18 December 1987 . Final Fantasy series use this word Mythril as a metal name in all versions of the series . It is far earlier than Lord of the Rings . So I believed that the main article Mythril is misleaded and it mixed Mithril & Mythril up .

Please comment .

Funny, I was sure that 1954, the year The Lord of the Rings came out, was before 1987. I was also certain that 1937, the year The Hobbit (in which Mithril was used) was even before that. -- Meni Rosenfeld (talk) 18:29, 23 August 2006 (UTC)
While you are obviously correct that Tolkien coined the term 'mithril' long before Final Fantasy existed (circa 1945, though not published until 1954 as you note) it did not appear in the original version of The Hobbit... it was added there in 1966. Until then the mail given to Bilbo was described as being of 'silvered steel'. --CBD 00:09, 31 August 2006 (UTC)
Oh well. I certainly don't claim to be an expert on this - I extracted the relevant information from the Wikipedia articles. But, as much as I like the Final Fantasy series (which I do), the claim that it has coined the word "mithril" (or "mythril", which is just an alternative spelling) was laughable to the extent that I had to respond. -- Meni Rosenfeld (talk) 07:04, 31 August 2006 (UTC)

Other Mithrils

Mithril is not only in Lord of the rings. It is also a ficticious metal in the game World of Warcraft. Yeahz4 20:39, 30 October 2007 (UTC)

Major fantasy series that use it aren't worth mentioning?

I'm surprised they don't mention where else it has appeared, since that is normally the thing to do.

The article mentions Runescape as an example of a game where Mithril is used, but doesn't mention any of the books or other media that uses it. The Dungeons and Dragons series I believe is worth mentioning, they taking it among many other things from Tolkien's work. For example, in the Icewind Dale Trilogy, the dwarves tunneled down too far, and lost a mithril mine to a black dragon. In the Lord of the Rings the dwarves tunneled too far down, and lost their mithril mine to a balrog. Other things, besides Mithril they took from Tolkien, are his Hobbits, calling them Halflings, a name Tolkien referred to them also at times in his books, and giving them similar properties. I mention that just to point out the fact that they based a lot of their work, much of their fantasy world even, on his works, and thus their use of Mithril, can not be coincidental. Dream Focus (talk) 19:54, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

Early (earliest?) and notable example of "mithril appropriation". If I'm not mistaken they had to use "mithral" to avoid lawsuits. Thanks. Uthanc (talk) 14:43, 21 February 2008 (UTC)

With the information given, I agree that it does seem like the use of Mithril cannot just be owed up to coincidence --DavidD4scnrt (talk) 00:53, 6 April 2008 (UTC)

mythril i'm sure didn't come from lord of the rings! —Preceding unsigned comment added by 217.33.43.2 (talk) 18:01, 17 July 2008 (UTC)

D20 (D&D) Use

http://www.d20srd.org/srd/specialmaterials.htm In the D20 SRD it is "mithral" not "mithril", a slight difference, but a difference just the same. 192.44.136.113 (talk) 18:44, 9 December 2008 (UTC)

In popular culture

I don't like the in pop culture section. I do think a list of all the fanatasy books or games fits. Do we need more than a simple comment that mentions that it is common to find it in fanasty books/games? If any one wants to keep a list perhaps we should have a seperate page. Eomund (talk) 00:07, 21 August 2011 (UTC)

irony or ? Fictional only AFAIK. David Woodward ☮ ♡♢☞☽ 14:00, 18 November 2012 (UTC)

Merge With Mithril shirt

It has been proposed that mithril shirt be merged into this article, but nobody began a discussion. I for one support a merge. Prometheus-X303- 13:54, 13 November 2006 (UTC)

Agreed, and I've merged it into the appropriate section. Radagast83 05:17, 16 December 2006 (UTC)

Dwarves?

Didn't Tolkien stated the plural for his dwarves was the "incorrect" Dwarfs? 189.37.112.113 (talk) 04:05, 22 February 2012 (UTC)

He did, he believed the correct plural was 'Dwarrow'. This lives on in the westernised for of Moria, The Dwarrowdelf GimliDotNet (talk) 05:58, 22 February 2012 (UTC)

Trademark

In all this article in seems like Mithril metal was invented by J. R. R. Tolkien in his Middle-earth book, but this is not true. The use of the Mithril metal, with various different (but derived) name, in books and games was much older than the Tolkien book and continue also now. Previous versions (from GimliDotNet) also asserted that Tolkien Estate has trademarked the term, without any reference. I know that the Mithril has become famous worldwide thanks to the Tolkien book, but this doesn't mean that all the article should be only centered on Tolkien book. Farqad (talk) 08:30, 23 June 2012 (UTC)

First off, I haven't asserted anything of the kind, please do not say things that are not true. Please provide WP:RELIABLE sources that have the metal Mithril that predate the Lord of the Rings (Indeed Tolkien's work dates back to the 1910's. when he first started on what would become the Silmarillion GimliDotNet (Speak to me,Stuff I've done) 08:42, 23 June 2012 (UTC)

Ok, sorry. It doesn't matter who wrote that. The fact is that this page assert that Tolkien Estate has trademarked the term Mithril ("..., since the Tolkien Estate did not trademark the term."). Is this true? No reference is given. Is this a WP:RELIABLE source? Furthermore Mithril is NOT ONLY "a metal in J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth fantasy writings.", as it is written. It is used in a long list of books, games, videogames and cartoons. I made the changes that GimliDotNet had revert because, in my humble opionion, it is better to introduce it as: "Mithril (also known as Mythril or Mithral) is an imaginary light metal, extremely resistant. It is present in many books and games. In the J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth book...". Farqad (talk) 11:31, 23 June 2012 (UTC)

Mithril originated in Tolkien's work, the estate did not trademark the term (which is what the article says) so later games and books copied the name. This is the same has 'halflings' which appear in numerous works because 'hobbit' was trademarked. There is already a section for it's use in other works, it does not need to take over the introduction. GimliDotNet (Speak to me,Stuff I've done) 12:16, 23 June 2012 (UTC)
I've adjusted the opening to make it more balanced. GimliDotNet (Speak to me,Stuff I've done) 12:24, 23 June 2012 (UTC)

Capitalised?

Since the quotation given spells "mithril" in lower-case, shouldn't the article do the same? Or does Tolkein spell it with an upper-case M? — 146.179.8.172 (talk) 16:27, 20 August 2012 (UTC)

yes, thank you. I have wreaked havoc upon intital caps throughout. David Woodward ☮ ♡♢☞☽ 12:19, 18 November 2012 (UTC)

Archiving

The purpose of a Wikipedia talk page... is to provide space for editors to discuss changes to its associated article or project page. Article talk pages should not be used by editors as platforms for their personal views on a subject.

— wp:talk.

As to why an article about mithril? Please see Wikipedia:Notability, WP:OOUOnly, WP:NBOOK, Wikipedia:99 Bottles of Beer test, and Wikipedia:Notability (films) wp:fict,David Woodward ☮ ♡♢☞☽ 12:39, 18 November 2012 (UTC)

Properties

shirley this should be "glowed or luminesced or fluoresced [or something to do with glowing]" rather than the implication of invisibiltiy under all but star or moonlight. & shoudn;t this section be called "ithildin", not "properties" or alloys or summat David Woodward ☮ ♡♢☞☽ 13:38, 18 November 2012 (UTC)

no it should be "Properties", but maybe there should be another section on ithildin. David Woodward ☮ ♡♢☞☽ 14:09, 18 November 2012 (UTC)

Awkward sentence.

In The Lord of the Rings, Tolkien wrote that mithril is found only in the Dwarven mines of Moria, where it was mined by the Dwarves.

This does not flow at all well now. Not sure how best to fix it? GimliDotNet (Speak to me,Stuff I've done) 14:56, 18 November 2012 (UTC)

[indented for clarity, please see Help:Using_talk_pages#Indentation] i just meant to make sure that people know that it was the Dorfs that dug the mines, not the Elves. Maybe just take some Dwarfs out. David Woodward ☮ ♡♢☞☽ 15:57, 18 November 2012 (UTC)
I've changed it to "In The Lord of the Rings, Tolkien wrote that mithril is found only in the mountains of Moria, where it was mined by the Dwarves." De728631 (talk) 09:43, 19 November 2012 (UTC)
I have edited the page to state that mithril was found in the mines of Moria beneath Hithaeglir/Misty Mountains. Moria is not a mountain range, it is a mine.Caleneledh (talk) 23:12, 25 April 2015 (UTC)

Hervarar saga

the Hervarar saga ok Heiðreks article says (or implies) that the saga features a mithril mail coat, and this article has an (unexplained) link to that one. Is this the case - that mithril originally occured by that name in the old saga? If so, that definitely needs to be described here. (I presume it would also put to rest any arguments about copyright or trademark over the name). Or is it just talking about similar themes and tropes that were an inspiration for Tolkien? Iapetus (talk) 17:05, 2 December 2013 (UTC)

American punctuation > British

I've changed the punctuation style in this article to British (." > ".). It was used more often, and the subject was created by a South African writer. Any objections?

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South African mines... I don't think so

The very idea that a 3-year-old Tolkien was influenced by South Africa's mines in his writing of Khazad-dûm or Mithril is ridiculous. He left South Africa aged 3 – it is far, far, far more likely (and even probable) that he was influenced by (if anything) British coal mining which was wide-spread during Tolkien's life; he has even said he was introduced to the Welsh language by seeing Welsh coal trains passing through the Midlands. I have removed all mention that he was influenced by South African mines for this reason. – Dyolf87 (talk) 09:11, 19 October 2022 (UTC)

You are entitled to your opinions, but you have unjustifiably removed reliably-cited materials by different authorities, only one even related to the point you make. And even that one does not require that Tolkien was somehow inspired at the age of three: people in Britain were taught old-fashioned Geography in school in those days, and mining in South Africa was just that sort of topic. But leaving plausibility aside, the fact is that we rightly report on what scholars have written about a subject, and not liking something is not grounds for removing it. If authorities differ, then we report both sides, however much we personally feel one side is right. Chiswick Chap (talk) 16:23, 19 October 2022 (UTC)

Exact origin of the word is known

In the ‘History of Middle-Earth’ volume 7, The Treason of Isengard, on page 184, Christopher Tolkien describes a draft for ‘Fellowship of the Ring’ from the year 1940:

“On one of the pages of drafting for Gimli’s song my father wrote: ‘Gandalf on Ithil Thilrvril Mithril (i.ey Gandalf is to speak on the subject). This is the first appearance of the name Mithril.”

The name was only afterwards added to later editions of the Hobbit.

Not sure if this has a place in the article somewhere. 2A02:8109:3B40:388:29F4:9744:D0F0:F9DA (talk) 16:28, 11 February 2023 (UTC)

Quite. But the "exact origin" is not in the quoted text. The mention tells us nothing about how the word came into Tolkien's head, which would be the interesting bit, i.e. it was related to the name of some mineral in Old Norse or whatever. That it came into his head is not in doubt. Chiswick Chap (talk) 09:03, 15 February 2023 (UTC)