Memory Alpha
Register
Memory Alpha
(→‎References: add "Broken Bow")
m (Robot: Automated text replacement (-{{USS|Defiant|NX-74205}} +{{USS|Defiant|2370}}) !!wikia-credits fix!!)
Line 24: Line 24:
 
Later that year, Martok expressed his belief that the Council would not accept him as Chancellor for being a common man from the [[Ketha lowlands]] in [[Ketha Province]]. [[Worf]] believed that Martok's reverence by the troops would force the Council to accept him. Worf later challenged [[Gowron]], calling him unfit to lead the council. ({{DS9|Tacking Into the Wind}})
 
Later that year, Martok expressed his belief that the Council would not accept him as Chancellor for being a common man from the [[Ketha lowlands]] in [[Ketha Province]]. [[Worf]] believed that Martok's reverence by the troops would force the Council to accept him. Worf later challenged [[Gowron]], calling him unfit to lead the council. ({{DS9|Tacking Into the Wind}})
   
In an [[alternate timeline]] in which [[Captain]] [[Benjamin Sisko]] suffered [[temporal displacement]], [[Worf]] was able to persuade the High Council to let the {{USS|Defiant|NX-74205}} enter the Klingon-controlled [[Bajoran system]] to attempt a rescue. ({{DS9|The Visitor}})
+
In an [[alternate timeline]] in which [[Captain]] [[Benjamin Sisko]] suffered [[temporal displacement]], [[Worf]] was able to persuade the High Council to let the {{USS|Defiant|2370}} enter the Klingon-controlled [[Bajoran system]] to attempt a rescue. ({{DS9|The Visitor}})
   
 
== Klingon officials ==
 
== Klingon officials ==

Revision as of 14:15, 4 August 2010

File:Great Hall.jpg

The Great Hall in the First City

The High Council (also referred to as the Imperial Command or High Command) was the legislature and ruling body of the Klingon Empire.

Located in the Klingon capital of Qo'noS, the First City, it was comprised of some two dozen representatives of the most powerful houses and headed by a Council Chancellor. The members of the Council are charged with overseeing the welfare of the Klingon Empire and its citizens, with each member usually heading a major department. When the Council is summoned to determine policies, the input from each department head will be used. They meet in the Great Hall.

Women generally cannot serve on the Council, though there are exceptions. (TNG: "Reunion", "Redemption", DS9: "The House of Quark"; Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country)

The Council has a long history of political intrigue, as the Great Houses battle for control over the Empire. Assassinations, duels, and hostilities were common during power struggles. When the Council Chancellor is deposed, either through assassination or other means, a Rite of Succession is performed to instate the new Chancellor. As with all Klingon occasions, a dose of honorable battle is inevitable, after which the two remaining contenders are to fight it out for the coveted position.

History

Klingon Council

The Klingon High Council building in 2151.

In 2371, Gowron and the High Council sent the Intelligence operatives Morka, Bo'rak and Atul to Deep Space 9 to spy on a Romulan delegation. (DS9: "Visionary")

After Worf opposed the invasion of the Cardassian Union, Gowron had Kurn expelled from the High Council. (DS9: "The Way of the Warrior", "Sons of Mogh", "Rules of Engagement")

In 2373, the High Council decided to provide the Maquis with cloaking devices to help them fight the Cardassians. (DS9: "Blaze of Glory")

Later that year, the Council gave General Martok a mission to find the IKS B'Moth, which had disappeared near the Cardassian border. They also told him not to not enter Cardassian space. However, the IKS Rotarran was required to do so when the B'Moth was discovered to have drifted over the border. The Council did not reprimand Martok for crossing the border, as they viewed the rescue of thirty-five Klingons and the destruction of a Jem'Hadar fighter as justification for doing so. (DS9: "Soldiers of the Empire")

In the early months of the Dominion War, the High Council assigned the Rotarran to escort a convoy to Donatu V. It was the only starship they could spare. (DS9: "Sons and Daughters")

In 2375, Martok often had to send reports to the council, something which irked him greatly. (DS9: "Once More Unto the Breach")

Later that year, Martok expressed his belief that the Council would not accept him as Chancellor for being a common man from the Ketha lowlands in Ketha Province. Worf believed that Martok's reverence by the troops would force the Council to accept him. Worf later challenged Gowron, calling him unfit to lead the council. (DS9: "Tacking Into the Wind")

In an alternate timeline in which Captain Benjamin Sisko suffered temporal displacement, Worf was able to persuade the High Council to let the USS Defiant enter the Klingon-controlled Bajoran system to attempt a rescue. (DS9: "The Visitor")

Klingon officials

Chancellors

See: Chancellor of the Klingon High Council

High Council members

Advisers

  • General Chang, Chief of Staff
  • Brigadier Kerla, military adviser

Diplomats

See also

Governors

Minor bureaucrats

Related topics

Background

  • In "Reunion", K'Ehleyr is offered a seat on the High Council; yet in "Redemption" and subsequent episodes, it is said that women may not serve on the Council. Concerning the place of women, Ronald D. Moore commented: "I co-wrote both "Reunion" (in which K'Ehleyr was offered the Council seat) and "The House of Quark" (in which Grilka was told she could not serve on the Council because she's a woman). The reason for the change was: a) to service a plot element in "House of Quark"; and b) to differentiate the Klingons from the UFP and the Romulans. The idea was that the Klingons were a traditionally patriarchal society and that while many elements of that have disappeared over the years, the Council itself was still the province of male warriors. This is not an endorsement of that idea, but rather an attempt to make them different than us. For example, their government is not a democracy, but rather an oligarchy ruled by powerful Houses, with an Emperor as head of state and we certainly aren't promoting that either! It's an alien society with alien values and we shouldn't be able to identify with all aspects of their culture. That said, I've always tried to treat Klingon men and women with a great deal of respect and have never tried to show the female warriors of the Empire as any less worthy or respected than their male counterparts. No male Klingon would ever question for even a moment the notion of serving under a woman on a ship, or fighting with them at his side". (AOL chat, 1997)

References