Wednesday 22 May 2013

Galactic Civilization

We have perhaps three sources of information about the galactic civilization that will exist long after the Terran Empire and the Long Night:

"Starfog";

Donvar Ayeghen's Introduction to "The Star Plunderer";

Michael Karageorge's Introduction to "Sargasso of Lost Starships."

It was inappropriate that The Long Night (see image) included "The Star Plunderer," about the founding of the Terran Empire, and "Outpost of Empire," set during the Imperial period, since the Long Night is precisely what happens after the Fall of the Empire.

Strictly speaking, the Long Night is the period between the Fall and the restoration of civilization. However, an Imperial might use the term more loosely just to mean anything and everything happening after the Empire. In that broader sense, the Introductions to "The Star Plunderer" and "Sargasso" are written during the Long Night. Ayeghen and Karageorge must be later even than the Commonalty described in "Starfog" because that organization serves just one spiral arm of the galaxy whereas Ayeghen, to whom Karageorge refers, is the President of a Galactic Archaeological Society.

Winston P Sanders was a pen-name of Poul Anderson and a character in Anderson's Tales Of The Flying Mountains and now we learn that a Winston P Sanders IX is a contemporary of Ayeghen and Karageorge! However, since Karageorge's Introduction is neither written by Anderson nor even intended seriously, perhaps we should treat it with some skepticism? Fortunately (?), it does not tell us a great deal except that the history and literature of the early Empire remain well known in that remote period.

Since Ayeghen refers to the Empire founded by Manuel in "The Star Plunderer" as the First Empire and since Laure in "Starfog" reflects on strange forms of humanity in other spiral arms, we might deduce that some of those strange forms remain Imperialist?

6 comments:

Sean M. Brooks said...

Hi, Paul!

A quick comment on the last paragraph. I discussed with Poul Anderson the possibility that aliens might conquer and PRESERVE the Terran Empire. After all, that's what SOME of the aliens in "Tiger by the Tail" wanted to do. And Poul Anderson speculated in his reply to my letter that a "ragged remnant" of the Empire might survive somewhere, a remnant ruled by non humans who sincerely believe they are preserving the heritage left by mankind.

Sean

Paul Shackley said...

Far out.

Jim Baerg said...

Sean:
Something like the Russian notion of 'the third Rome"?

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Jim!

Not quite. I had more in mind the Eastern Roman Empire, centered in Constantinople, which endured from AD 395 to the Turkish conquest in 1453.

Ad astra! Sean

Jim Baerg said...

I thought of Constantinople too, but Moscow is the 3rd Rome seems like an even more ragged remnant. See also the 'Holy Roman Empire'. A 'Terran Empire' might be so revered that lots of later & lesser governments would try to claim some of the 'glory.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Jim!

True, the awe with which Rome was regarded certainly encouraged ideas about "later Romes" arising to take its place, which is what Muscovy/Russia aspired to do. Albeit, by about 1500, Muscovy/Russia was already territorially a colossus, not a mere "ragged remnant."

Yes, I can see the Terran Empire being so widely revered after its fall that pretenders arose claiming to be be preserving the Imperial heritage. In "A Tragedy of Errors" the planet Nike, several centuries after the Empire fell, was a patchworks of small states called "cavedoms," over which a shadowy Emperor held nominal suzerainty.

And other, more powerful and prominent planets, almost certainly had their own "Emperors," claiming to be in the line of succession from the Terran Emperors.

Ad astra! Sean