|klingons|
Native name for the Klingon homeworld, a planet of the star Klingon
and the site of the Imperial Empire's capital First City. It is
sometimes standardized as "Kronos." It includes a lone
huge land mass with a vast ocean, a severely tilted axis that causes
wild seasonal changes, a turbulent atmosphere and extremes of both
warm and frigid weather. The capital city remains neutral to both
sides during the empire's civil war, and even houses Sela and Movar.
|
|INFORMATION|
QUADRANT: Beta Quadrant
PLANET: Q'onoS [Kronos]
POPULATED by: klingons
POSITION/DRIVE:
|
|
The well-statured warrior race has a genetic predisposition to
hostility and a well-known streak of fatalism. Lieutenant Worf says
that Klingons do not like to be "probed" by empathic species.
The culture's warrior ethic runs so deep that rivals in the civil
war can meet and drink as equal fighters for periods of time before
or after battles, thanks to the Capitol City's neutrality. During
these get-togethers, a great deal of growling, wrestling, snarling
and generally loud revelry takes place, Klingons seeming to derive
tremendous satisfaction from drinking with their enemies on the
night before a battle.
A beard is a symbol of courage; a hammer is a symbol of power.
A true warrior fights to the death and would rather be killed than
taken hostage an act which brings dishonor on himself and
his family for three generations. Their most important historic
symbol of leadership, Kahless, said Klingons should fight not just
to spill blood but to enrich the spirit. Their scientists are not
highly regarded in the culture. Shattering the cranial exoskeleton
at the tricipital lobe brings instant death.
In the traditional sense, the Klingon people hold honor above
life although as with any culture, high-level politics and
personal gain get in the way. In Klingon culture, lower-ranked officers
consider it a duty to kill off a superior who is perceived as weak.
Klingons notoriously neither surrender nor bluff, although Chief
Engineer La Forge is skeptical of that based on Lieutenant Worf's
seemingly impenetrable "poker face" during their poker
games on board the U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-D.
The Klingon Klag on board the Pagh admits he does not speak to
his father, who is slowly dying on the homeworld without honor after
escaping from victorious Romulans who would not allow him to die
as a Klingon should die in battle.
Klingon language had no word for the concept of "peacemaker"
until Ramatisian mediator Riva negotiated the early United Federation
of Planets-Klingon treaties just decades ago.
Warriors and their families are responsible for each other's actions.
A challenge to clear a family's name, such as Lieutenant Worf's,
ends in death if unsuccessful. They believe that death is an experience
best shared and view it as a joyful time for one who falls in the
line of duty and earns a place among the honored dead, celebrating
the release of a dead spirit rather than grieving over what they
consider to be the empty shell of the body. One of the most honorable
deaths is a kamikaze-like suicide that takes an enemy's life with
it. Viewed through their Spartan perspective, illness (especially
terminal) is not honorable. One is not supposed to faint, at least
as an adult, a bias that leads to a lack of both research and sympathy
for such patients. Usually cases of paralysis such as Lieutenant
Worf's are left to die or to perform the ritual suicide Hegh'bat.
Of course, half-human Federation emissary, K'Ehleyr thought it was
just more "Klingon nonsense" and "dumb ideas about
honor."
Lieutenant Worf says Earth and humanoid females like the Edo are
too fragile for what his race considers love, although that would
likely apply to a Klingon of either gender with a human mate. A
roaring yell akin to the death wail is the Klingon female's mating
call, Worf says, followed by their hurling of heavy objects and
clawing. The male responds by reading love poetry and ducking
a lot. A form of dominance/submission is seen when he is given a
Klingon female thanks to Commander Riker's temporary Q powers; she
is donned in leather accessories and some armor, she seems jealous
of Yar, takes a strong slap from Worf and comes back on her knees
defiantly growling. The actual act of love can be intermingled
with pain and include the Klingons' highly developed sense of smell.
Once aroused, the combat as well as passion instinct appears hard
to quell; it takes a sharp command to snap Lieutenant Worf and later
K'Ehleyr out of their bloodrush.
Klingons usually mate for life, celebrated with a solemn Oath
of Union, most often in private, rather than in a public ceremony
like marriage; judging by Lieutenant Worf's initial issuance of
the Oath of Union to K'Ehleyr, the Oath doesn't appear include much
talking, and no dancing or crying as in human weddings. If Lieutenant
Worf is any example, male chauvinism is much more pronounced in
mainstream Klingon society than among humans.
Women cannot sit on the High Council, so even the powerful Duras
sisters, Lursa and B'Etor, must find a puppet nephew to rule through.
Lieutenant Worf echoes the modern Klingon attitude toward Romulans
when he says the enemy "considers humans and Klingons a waste
of skin". Romulans and Klingons having been "blood enemies"
for 75 years (or since about 2292), after an extremely brief alliance.
Klingons apparently hold the Ferengi with almost as much disdain
as they do Romulans, thinking them loud of talk, yet weak in action.
Klingon officers do not let their children live with them as a general
rule, although "the son of a Klingon is a man the day he can
first hold a blade". Lieutenant Worf allows his son, Alexander,
to stay with him on the Galaxy-class Enterprise when other options
run out, though he says it is inappropriate for a Klingon to receive
family while on duty and Klag says a Klingon "is his work,
not his family."
Klingons are remarkably skilled hunters, relying on their keen
olfactory senses to pick up and stalk their prey. They eat their
meat raw, seasoned more strongly than humans prefer, and find the
human tradition of "burning their meat" to be somewhat
repulsive. If Lieutenant Worf is any clue, they regard swimming
with as much disdain as they do bathing. At least once, Klingons
use the United Federation of Planets' Earth-derived metric system.
Lieutenant Worf contends that love poetry and the great novel both
reached their height with the Klingons.
T'kar and Yeto were two more Klingons who had no respect for the
Klingon Empire's current state of affairs. Kang fretted that the
warrior ethic was lost among modern Klingons who would open restaurants
and such. Science Officer Dax said that getting Kang angry at Curzon
was the only way to begin to create a bond between the two
a Klingon truism, Kang agreed.
The custom of naming godparents or other relatives is practiced
among Klingons as well as humans. The Jem'Hadar, Third Talak'talan,
expressed regret that his first experience with an Alpha Quadrant
being was not with a Klingon warrior, but with Federation humans
and a Ferengi instead, both of whom he considered weak.
Despite the disillusionment and disrespect of some Klingons, Klingon
honor still counts among the peoples. D'Ghor was not allowed to
claim the House of Kozak based on financial debts alone, and he
was stopped and shamed while attacking the unarmed Quark before
the High Council. Grilka and Gowron alike sneered at financial matters
and normally considered them beneath a warrior's time and attention,
charging D'Ghor with using "money to bring down a great house".
Even so, Quark was able to resurrect a plenitude of complex financial
records.
Challenges to personal honor are settled usually by personal combat,
but Quark used numbers. Klingon females banned from holding
Council seats are not even allowed to head their heirless
dead husband's house, except in special cases. The Klingons must
have some class system, as personal servants are used, usually among
what appear to be the poor. Due to their rough nature, especially
when drunk, Quark charged Klingons double for holosuite use, and
then raised it to triple normal cost. The Klingons' profound hatred
of Romulans continues.
Although they believe in an afterlife, Klingons perform no burial
ritual and dispose of the corpse by the most efficient means possible
although some archeological digs on Qo'noS revealed different
customs at one time.
|
|