## Cobalt
The word **cobalt** arrives in English bearing the marks of miners' superstition, Reformation-era German metallurgy, and a demon's name. It entered English in the 1680s from German *Kobalt*, a variant of *Kobold* — a mischievous underground spirit of Germanic folklore. The path from goblin to element is not metaphorical: German miners genuinely believed the troublesome blue-grey ore was the work of malevolent spirits.
## The German Mining Connection
By the 16th century, miners in the Erzgebirge (Ore Mountains) of Saxony were encountering a stubborn ore that refused to yield copper or silver as expected, and worse, released toxic arsenic and sulfur fumes when smelted. They called it *Kobold* ore — goblin ore — blaming the contamination on underground demons who had substituted worthless, poisonous material for the metals they sought.
The spelling shifted across regional dialects: *Kobalt*, *Cobalt*, *Cobaldt*. Georg Agricola, the Renaissance mineralogist whose *De Re Metallica* (1556) systematized mining knowledge across Europe, recorded the ore under Latin *cobaltum*, giving the term its first scholarly documentation. Agricola himself was skeptical of the spirit explanation but recorded the miners' usage faithfully.
The Swedish chemist Georg Brandt isolated cobalt as a distinct element in 1735 — the first metal to be discovered since antiquity. Brandt, working in Stockholm, demonstrated that the characteristic blue color of certain glass and pigments came not from bismuth (as was widely assumed) but from this new element. He named it *cobalt* after the ore name already in circulation, formalizing miners' folklore into chemical nomenclature.
This made cobalt the first element to be named after a mythological creature — a distinction it holds to this day. When chemists later systematized the periodic table, the goblin name was enshrined permanently as symbol **Co**.
## Germanic Etymology and the Kobold
The word *Kobold* is attested in Middle High German as *kobolt* (14th century), meaning a household or mine spirit. Its deeper etymology is debated. The most accepted reconstruction traces it to Old High German *kobe* (hut, shelter, stable) combined with *-hold* or *-walt*, related to *waltan* (to rule, govern) — making a *kobolt* something like a 'shelter ruler' or 'household master'. The *kobe* root may connect to Proto-Germanic *\*kubaz* (shelter, enclosure).
Alternatively, some philologists link the second element to *hold* in the sense of 'friendly' or 'loyal' (Gothic *hulþs*, Old English *hold*), suggesting the kobold was originally a *household helper* whose role inverted over time to trickster. Mine kobolds — distinct from house kobolds — developed a specifically malevolent character, perhaps because underground work itself was so dangerous that any unexplained accident needed an agent.
The broader family of Germanic underground spirits includes Old Norse *dvergar* (dwarves) and *álfar* (elves), all associated with metal-working and subterranean spaces. Kobolds occupy a specifically German branch of this tradition.
Cobalt blue is ancient, which creates an ironic timeline: the color long predates the word. Cobalt-based blue glass and pigments (*smalt*) were used in ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia, and medieval European glassmaking — produced unknowingly from the same ore the German miners would later call goblin-ore. The striking blue of medieval cathedral windows often derives from cobalt silicate compounds.
The pigment *zaffre* (roasted cobalt ore) and *smalt* (cobalt-potassium glass ground to powder) were traded across Europe for centuries before anyone knew cobalt was the active element. Persian and Chinese ceramics from the 9th century onward used cobalt from Iranian deposits for their characteristic blue glazes — including Chinese blue-and-white porcelain, where the pigment was called *huiqing* ('Muslim blue'), reflecting its trade route origin.
## Cognates and Related Forms
The *Kobold* name influenced neighboring languages through German metallurgical texts. French adopted *cobalt* directly from German in the 18th century. The chemical *cobalt* and the fantasy *kobold* are etymological twins separated by genre — the same word, one preserved in periodic tables, the other in folklore and role-playing games.
## Modern Usage
Today cobalt is critical to lithium-ion batteries (cobalt cathodes), high-temperature alloys for jet engines, and medical radiation therapy (cobalt-60). The semiconductor and EV industries have made it a strategically significant commodity, sourced largely from the Democratic Republic of Congo.
The semantic journey is complete: a word meaning underground demon, applied in fear by miners who didn't understand what they'd found, now names an element central to the technology of electrification. The goblin got into everything.