Memory Alpha
Advertisement
Memory Alpha

Distance of Qo'nos

This article says Qo'noS is 4 days from Sol at warp 5. This is based on Archer stating exactly that in ENT. But that makes Qo'noS like 2 light-years away. That's completely inconsistent. There aren't even any other stars that close to Sol.

This is based on an off the cuff comment made byh Archer to Hoshi, and it has no direct implications on the max spead of the ship. Useing 30 million km a second as a refrence to warp 4, close to the ships standard cruseing speed, you can assume that they use the TNG scale, and that the distence is double. This also makes Archers "To neptune and back in 6 minutes" make more sence, since with the tng scale, it takes 3 minutes to cross the solar system once. Ill Make these comments again in the nx01's page.--Sdamon 07:47, 17 October 2006 (PDT)
And why, pray tell, can we assume they use the TNG scale? --OuroborosCobra talk 15:56, 17 October 2006 (UTC)
Someone wrote that at warp 4.5 for 4 days you could get as far as 400 light years. That's just wrong, someone did some bad math. If warp 4.5 is 91c (TOS warp factor), Enterprise could go about 1 light year in 4 days. So Kronos must be only 1 light year from Earth - that's closer than the nearest star!

Beta Quadrant?

In which episode of which series or which movie is mentioned that the Klingon homeworld is located in the beta quadrant? -- TheQz 23:44, 7 Mar 2005 (GMT)

  • thank you, i didnt know even though i mustve seen that movie a million times..! -- TheQz 15:40, 8 Mar 2005 (GMT)

Qo'nos/Kronos?

Where did the Klingons go after Qo'nos became unihabitable?

Perhaps Kronos became uninhabitable, and they went to Qo'noS... Or they found a way together with the Federation to restore their atmosphere or something. Ottens 10:29, 30 Jun 2004 (CEST)
References please. -- Redge 11:53, 30 Jun 2004 (CEST)
No, that's just a guess. ;) Ottens 12:46, 30 Jun 2004 (CEST)
No, I meant in the article. -- Redge 14:37, 30 Jun 2004 (CEST)
Thanks. I just didn't understand this.

In Star Trek VI spells it Kronos (Caption), and TNG calls it Qo'noS wouldn't the different spelling suggest that they are different planets? BTW, how is it spelt in Enterprise? --TOSrules 02:59, Nov 16, 2004 (CET)

"Kronos" is an Anglicization of the more accurately spelled "Qo'noS". You see a lot with Klingon-- "p'tahk" vs. the more accurate "petaQ". Heck, "Klingon" itself is more accuaretly rended "tlhIngan". It's basically a "Peking" vs. "Beijing" situation. --Steve 03:59, 16 Nov 2004 (CET)

Qo'noS-ian Geography?

I've temporarily removed this passage until the information in it can be verified:

--The surface of Qo'noS comprises a single supercontinent and a vast ocean. In addition, the planet has a severely tilted axis which causes wild seasonal changes, a turbulent atmosphere, and extremes of both warm and frigid weather.--

Where was this ever stated or shown? What is the source of this information? Was this written on some screen somewhere? We should remove it as Speculation or Non-Canon information if it hasn't.

The information comes from the script for TNG: "Sins of the Father". It includes at description of the planet. Since it wasn't stated in dialogue, I'll re-add the information as background. --From Andoria with Love 06:46, 10 September 2006 (UTC)
Well, if it's in the script it does have some measure of credibility, I mean, we do have an Article for Picard's new 1st officer Martin Madden, and he's only in a deleted scene, by that rational, we must include Wesley Crusher on the Titan. It seems to be a gray area, which is sometimes good enough, I was concerned with the level of detail in the blurb and the lack of citation, which seemed to indicate it was either made-up by Random Joe or pulled from some RPG or something. In this case though, it seems good enough to be a regular part of the article, maybe under an apocrypha heading?--Foravalon 10 September 2006 (UTC)
Well, the article on Martin Madden and similar articles are those that will need to be discussed in the near future. The canon policy, as currently written, is pretty recent and we haven't gone through and sorted out those articles for deletion or what-not. By the current policy, articles can't contain information from deleted scenes or items from early draft script that were later removed. The exceptions to these are things which appeared on-screen (such as a planet, etc.) that weren't named in dialogue but did receive a name in the script or was given a name by production staff. In these instances, for article naming purposes, we can use that name (i.e. Neural, Livingston). But I digress... actually, worse than that, I've plum forgotten what I was talking about. Oh, well. Hope I answered your question, at least. Good night. :) --From Andoria with Love 10:02, 10 September 2006 (UTC)

Federation membership

This article says that the Klingons were members of the Federation, based on Wesley's line from Samaritan Snare. Given that every other reference to Federation-Klingon relations treats it as an alliance of partners, not the Klingons joining the Federation, and the fact that the feudal militaristic society of the Klingons would not want to join nor would the Federation let them join, isn't it more logical to assume the line was a misspeak and not a statement of fact?--Foofy Attorney 04:09, 23 January 2007 (UTC)

I think we decided that the line was ambiguous, to say the least. I've changed the wording to state that the Klingons joined the Federation in some fashion, not necessarily (and not likely) membership. --From Andoria with Love 04:22, 23 January 2007 (UTC)
The Samaritan Snare reference was obviously a blunder. The Kilingons are not and never were members of the Fed - it's blatantly obvious. If Jonathan Frakes misspoke a line one day and said "I was asheep" instead of "I was asleep", would we change the Riker article to say "at some point Commander Riker was transformed into a sheep, though he reverted to human form afterwards." No, of course we wouldn't. Not an exact parallel of course, but quite similar. The preceding unsigned comment was added by 84.203.73.202.
Not similar at all, actually, but we get your point. For the record, the line was not a blunder at the time; when TNG first began, the producers really did intend for the Klingons to be members of the Federation! In fact, the three stars in the symbol for the United Federation of Planets (which was introduced on TNG) were meant to represent Earth, Vulcan, and Qo'noS. What happened here was that the writers/producers had an idea but back-tracked on it in later seasons. So it is not a blunder so much as a ret-con. --From Andoria with Love 03:54, 17 February 2009 (UTC)

Providence

Under Names it says "a major providence on the planet Qo'noS". What on Kronos does that mean? The possible meanings of "providence" are foresight, God, or the capital of Rhode Island. Is there a colony there named after Rhode Island? --Nike 23:17, 25 January 2007 (UTC)

I personally think it was a minor spelling error, in that it was supposed to say 'province'. I have made the change. Thanks :) - Enzo Aquarius 23:22, 25 January 2007 (UTC)

Changed info

An anon recently changed some background info on this page to read:

Qo'noS was mentioned as being located four days from Earth at warp 4.5 in the Enterprise episode "Broken Bow". Warp 4.5 equates to appoximately 30,000,000 kilometers per second (100 times the speed of light), and Archer also mentions that the Enterprise is travelling at this speed. If the Enterprise sustained warp 4.5 for the duration of the four days, Qo'noS could be anything up to 400 light years from Earth.

Is this correct or is this speculation based on someone's understanding (or misunderstanding) of how warp drive works? Was the previous information even correct? --From Andoria with Love 09:50, 30 January 2007 (UTC)

I don't know if the information is correct, but it contains a mathematical error. If you're travelling at 100 times the speed of light (100c), it will take you one *year* to travel 100 light years. The above calculation seems to think it would take one day. 4 days is about 0.011 years, so at 100c you'd travel (I think) 1.1 light years in 4 days. - Gregg
Good enough for me. I'll revert the change, but we may also need to discuss the previous statement, as well. --From Andoria with Love 05:11, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
Most people (including me) assume that the Warp Number (Example: Warp 1, Warp 2, Warp 2.5, ect.) is how many times fast than light a starship is travelling, so wouldn't Warp 4.5 be 4 and a half times the spead of light, not 100 times the spead of light? Or is this just a common misconception of how warp drive works, too? Because if a ship is travelling 4.5 times the spead of light for 4 days, wouldn't that mean that Qu'noS is 0.044 light years from the Sol System (using the preivious statment that 4 days is 0.011 of a year)? Not 400? But isn't that impossible, and far too close to the Sol System? ~Casey

Klingon Calendar

An assumption is made that the Klingon calendar starts with Kahless's death. This may or may not be supported elsewhere, but it is also possible that the Klingon calendar follows the practice of the Common Era calendar on Earth, based on the apochryphal birth of Jesus. This would change the purported length of the Qo'nosian year, and should be included in the article.Tfleming 23:38, 30 January 2007 (UTC)

Yeah, birth would be more plausible than death. Alternately, it could count from the time he united the Klingons, or began his campaign of conquest Nik 07:22, 3 May 2007 (UTC)
I would think that when Kahless became the first Emperor is the most likely date for the beginning of the Calender. —MJBurrage(TC) 16:24, July 22, 2010 (UTC)

Klinzhai

hey, in the german edition of The Worlds of the Federation the name of the homeworld of the klingons is mentioned as "Klinzhai", not as "Kling". its realaised in 1996, but the copyright notice stats 1989. is this an error of this article?--Shisma Bitte korrigiert mich 22:44, 19 March 2007 (UTC)

Klinzhai predates both Kling and Qo'noS and was created by John M. Ford for his novel The Final Reflection. It was then used as the name for the Klingon homeworld by other authors and also appeared in many FASA RPG books. When Shane Johnson wrote "The Worlds of the Federation" Klinzhai was still in widespread use, because it had been propagated as the name of the Klingon homeworld in several novels after "The Final Reflection". It has never been mentioned in canon, however, so we only have Kling as the name of the homeworld (1988-1991) and then Qo'noS, of course. --Jörg 06:04, 20 March 2007 (UTC)

Removing Praxis

There is no evidence that Praxis was an actual moon of the Klingon homeworld, and in the film it is only stated that it is "a" Klingon moon in the same sector as the Klingon High Command. In each long view of the moon, both before and after the explosion, there are no proximate terrestrial planets within sight, implying a long orbit around a far more massive body than any terrestrial planet could support. Additionally and more importantly given the severity and magnitude of the shockwave that hits the Excelsior, which was on the opposite side of the Neutral Zone and presumably many light-years away, it is reasonable to assume that any damage the Qo'noSian Ozone received came in much the same way. It is not very likely that if a moon in actual orbit of the Klingon homeworld were to detonate with the force shown on screen, and causing the near-absolute destruction seen in it's aftermath, and with the accompanying sector-wide reaching shockwave which it produced, that the planet would walk away with only relatively minor damage to its upper atmosphere causing subsequent pollution and a potential slow depletion of oxygen over the course of the next half century. Also the only major factor even leading to that inevitability was the economic difficulty faced by the Empire stemming from it's overinflated military budget. If a major body in orbit of a Terrestrial planet were to explode with the release of gravitational and energetic forces which Praxis did anything less than swift and major cataclysmic damage on a planetary scale would be an unreasonable outcome, it would cause a little more than ozone pollution. There is no evidence in the film in support of Praxis being a satellite of Qo'noS and only evidence, like the far flung sector-wide destruction caused by the explosion, showing otherwise. Therefore I'm removing the unsupported assumption from the page. – Foravalon 06:41, 20 July 2007 (UTC)

Removed Text

I removed the following from the Astronomical data section...it seems more history than astronom, and history would more properly go on the "race" page, wouldn't it?

In an early draft of "Rightful Heir", Data gives the exact date of Kahless's death as 1547 years ago (from 2369), or 822 AD. However, from DS9: "Soldiers of the Empire", we know that the Earth calendar year of 2373 coincides with the year of Kahless 999. Assuming that the Klingon calculation of time starts with Kahless's death, we may conclude that one Klingon year, thus one orbital period of Qo'noS, equals 1.552 Terran years.

Capt Christopher Donovan 03:49, 19 February 2008 (UTC)

Also from Astronomical data:
"Warp 4.5 equates to approximately 30,000,000 kilometers per second (100 times the speed of light), and Archer also mentions that the Enterprise is traveling at this speed. If the Enterprise sustained warp 4.5 for the duration of the four days, Qo'noS should only be about one light year from Earth"
This is indefensible, because MA holds that warp factors/speeds/distanced aren't consistently calculable because the canon around warp factors/speeds/distances is so incoherent. That note (I am guessing) has probably been in there since before we got more on top of both defining and enforcing the policies, "original research" being the relevant one, oh, and the one about not being citeable. --TribbleFurSuit 21:49, 5 December 2008 (UTC)

Background Note

  • The use of this name may be a reference by the writers to that act, since Klingon mythology holds that the first Klingons killed their gods after being created by them as noted in DS9: "You Are Cordially Invited".

Considering that the first reference to the planet is long before this episode it's stretching — Morder 18:31, 21 March 2009 (UTC)

Spelling revisited

Per discussion at Talk:Kronos One#Name/Spelling, I found myself wondering whether the spelling "Qo'noS" ever appeared in canon. It certainly doesn't seem to show up in any of the TV scripts archived at twiz.com; a Google search of that site for "Qo'noS" yields no results, while a similar search for "Kronos" shows the spelling "Kronos" in scripts for DS9 and ENT. Similarly, the script for Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country uses "Kronos". I know that Marc Okrand came up with the spelling "Qo'noS" to fit his previously developed rules for Klingon orthography, but strictly speaking that's not canonical, is it? If "Qo'noS" was never used on screen, shouldn't the article be moved to "Kronos"? (We would, of course, leave a redirect at Qo'noS.) —Josiah Rowe 04:25, November 8, 2010 (UTC)

You're right; the writers consistently used "Kronos" in the scripts. The spread of "Qo'noS" probably comes from the Star Trek Encyclopedia, which uses the Okrand spelling.
Having said that, I would not be surprised if "Qo'noS" was used on some Okudagram somewhere, making it canon. Anyone know?– Cleanse ( talk | contribs ) 05:59, November 8, 2010 (UTC)
The spelling "Qo'noS" is, at least, by authority of Marc Okrand, who, as the creator of the Klingon language, definitely gets to decide. The preceding unsigned comment was added by 71.238.148.232.
While important, that's not the sole criterion here. 31dot (talk) 02:20, March 7, 2013 (UTC)
In fact, since the spelling "Kronos" is clearly used on-screen in Star Trek Into Darkness, I recommend this page be moved there.--Defiant (talk) 09:56, May 10, 2013 (UTC)
I agree, but believe we should wait until our american friends have had a chance to see the movie. Defiant, perhaps you could bring this up again after May 15? -- Cid Highwind (talk) 10:08, May 10, 2013 (UTC)
Okay, but I don't really see the point in waiting to start determining whether there's a community consensus on this, as we've chosen to ignore the US release date for other aspects of MA. In the grand scheme of things, a spelling being established is probably not as "spoiler"-heavy as plot points, which have already been addressed on this site. Without understanding your motives for suggesting a waiting period, I nonetheless obviously respect the suggestion, as always. :) --Defiant (talk) 10:19, May 10, 2013 (UTC)
The thing is that people stay the hell away from what they think might be a spoiler, so they won't even be seeing this discussion unless you manage to convince them that this discussion is "spoiler-free". ;) Between that and the fact that moving a page with several hundred incoming links definitely warrants a prior discussion, I just believe that it is easier to simply wait for a week than try to get enough people active now. -- Cid Highwind (talk) 10:28, May 10, 2013 (UTC)
Alright. I get where you're coming from. :) --Defiant (talk) 11:13, May 10, 2013 (UTC)
As an American who probably won't see the film right away, I don't object to a move to Kronos(if it appeared in the film), but are we sure that Qo'noS didn't appear on screen as well? 31dot (talk) 11:20, May 10, 2013 (UTC)
Upon watching Star Trek at the BFI IMAX, I noticed that the spelling Qo'noS seems to be used on the Enterprise viewscreen. --Defiant (talk) 12:48, May 15, 2013 (UTC)
If that is the case, the page shouldn't be moved to Kronos. What counts is what the characters in the film see and the spelling they use. The text visible when the planet is shown is just for us viewers who are too stupid to pronounce Qo'noS. The same is true for subtitles and scripts. --Jörg (talk) 07:26, May 19, 2013 (UTC)

Cut Sections

I have removed these paragraphs from the body of the text.

It was not clear if the Qo'noS seen in ENT: "Broken Bow" was the same planet as that seen in the TNG and DS9 episodes, since the evacuation and a possible relocation of the Klingon capital world had never been seen or mentioned on screen, but merely planned at the Khitomer Conference in 2293. Nevertheless, the two versions of the planet (ENT vs. TNG/DS9) appear quite different from each other. Some believe this was due to pollution in the planet's atmosphere. This possible relocation would also serve to explain the differences in distances between "Broken Bow" and episodes set at later dates. A simpler explanation may be that the Vulcan star charts were simply mistaken, and that the planet was not in fact the Klingon homeworld of Qo'nos seen in other series. The Klingons may have allowed this misconception to develop in order to protect the location of their actual homeworld. (Speculation)

"Kronos", or alternately Cronus, was the name of a mythical Titan who was imprisoned in a dark pit by his offspring, Zeus. (No connection between the mythical figure and the fictional world of Kronos.)

Throwback (talk) 16:38, September 7, 2012 (UTC)

Star Trek into Darkness

Qo'noS is set to appear in the upcoming film Star Trek into Darkness. Bad Robot Productions has confirmed this and it is seen in the teaser trailer very briefly. T-888 (talk) 08:00, December 20, 2012 (UTC)

Answered you at Talk:Carol Marcus. 31dot (talk) 11:44, December 20, 2012 (UTC)
Saw the film tonight in IMAX 3D. Qo'noS is indeed featured. The dialog specifically states that the Ketha Province, and by extension the Ketha lowlands, are uninhabited. A moon that appears to be an already destroyed Praxis is seen in orbit, it is supposedly possible to beam directly to Ketha from San Francisco or London in a matter of seconds, and the Enterprise travels to Qo'noS in less than half a day. Also, Klingons are not affected by the Augment virus and their appearance has been retconned.
Seems to me that, given Klingon lifespans as demonstrated in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, either a childhood Martok or young adult Urthog would be living in Ketha around this time period. Did Red matter black holes cause the galaxy to shrink? How does Enterprise get within 240,000km of Earth after being at warp from the edge of Klingon space for less than a minute? — Khaaaaan! (talk) 04:24, May 16, 2013 (UTC)
To clarify, the moon is not established as being Praxis, so a bg info reference has to be given for this connection; otherwise, it's just fanboy speculation. The beaming between San Francisco and Qo'noS is via transwarp beaming, established in the previous film. And what relevance does the previous post have to the work being done on this article?! --Defiant (talk) 10:44, May 16, 2013 (UTC)
"Transwarp beaming was a transwarp theory originally postulated by Starfleet officer Montgomery Scott, whereby it was possible to beam an object or person from one planet to an adjacent one".
Now, I've inferred from years of Star Trek episodes that Qo'noS is days travel from Federation territory. And I've inferred that even subspace communication at that distance would not be instantaneous. Show me on the wiki where I'm wrong. — Khaaaaan! (talk) 14:36, May 16, 2013 (UTC)


Kronos

Enterprise season 4 screen grab showing the name Kronos not Qo'noS

Question about Kronos/Qo'nos

It looks like the Name Kronos was used for the Klingon Homeworld for Star Trek: Undiscovered Country, Enterprise (in the Closed Captions) and Into Darkness (on the upper left of the screen when 1st seen)

Then it looks like Qo'nos was used for TNG, DS9, VOY for the Klingon Homeworld (at least in the Closed Captions)

Since the plot line of Star Trek 6 was the relocation of the Klingon Homeworld within 50 earth years and the fact that the planet in Enterprise looks nothing like the planet in TNG what is the issue of saying that Kronos was the old homeworld and was evacuated around the 2340's and the Klingon's new homeworld was called Qo'nos in it's honor? the storyline of ST6 stated that the planet Kronos would be dead within 50 years so it can not be the same planet since no other TV show or movie ever states that it was reversed, but all the evidence seems to point to it not being the same planet (the planets look different, the plot line of Star Trek 6 stating it will be dead, the whole reason the Klingon Empire asked for help) by saying that they are the same planet it removes the point of the 6th movie and the turning point in history with the Klingon Empire is lost. Chasemarc (talk) 03:47, May 18, 2013 (UTC)

Klingons used the peace established in ST6 to free up resources to build air shelters for the population on Kronos. Had they not established peace, the population would have died because the economy would have gone to the war effort with the Federation. Some of that dialogue was cut short in editing but the idea was that they didn't evacuate the planet. --Pseudohuman (talk) 06:31, May 18, 2013 (UTC)

Why would the TV Show Enterprise call the Homeworld Kronos and not Qo'nos as it is called in TNG and all 24th century Star Trek Shows? (see the screen grab, used under fair use) Chasemarc (talk) 05:49, May 19, 2013 (UTC)

I would submit that there's a difference between the official, in-universe spelling of a planet's name, and the English/phonetic spelling used in closed captioning. - Aatrek 08:06, May 19, 2013 (UTC)
I concur. (See my above statement) --Jörg (talk) 08:15, May 19, 2013 (UTC)
Indeed- closed captioning should not be used as the basis for spellings or content in general; it is 1)often based on early scripts and 2) made by persons unrelated to the production. 31dot (talk) 09:05, May 19, 2013 (UTC)
It's worth noting in bg if and in what episodes the Qo'noS spelling has been used in closed captioning in TNG-VOY episodes in the official releases, since that is not the spelling that has been used in any of the scripts ever, even when the word Kronos is a part of klingonese dialog. --Pseudohuman (talk) 13:12, May 19, 2013 (UTC)

Per Memory Alpha rules we can only use what is on TV Shows and Movies right? So here is what I have from only seeing TV Shows and Movies.

Star Trek Enterprise spells it Kronos, it is 4 days from earth at warp 5, the Mat painting or CGI of the planet looks nothing like the planet in TNG/DS9. The pictures are on the main Qo'noS page looks nothing alike the 2367 picture has a greener color atmosphere to it than the 2151 planet, the capital city in 2151 has mountains in the background and a deep canyon with a bridge spanning it, the capital city in 2367 (in the info box area) has no mountains and no canyon at all (the mountain i can understand they torpedoed it of the face of the planet but the deep canyon?)

In ST6:TUC the planet is called Kronos as is the Chancellor’s ship being called Kronos one, the president states near the end of the movie, before almost being killed, the evacuation of Kronos can happen within the 50 earth year timeframe, Spock in that same movie not only states they will use up the ozone in 50 years but that they are dying, the CinC in that movie states the Klingon Empire has 50 years of life left to them .

In the Episode of TNG called Heart of Glory they called the Homeworld, Kling “the Traitors of Kling”

From that point on in all of the 24th Century shows it is called Qo’noS, it is not as close to the planet earth as Enterprise-D with better Warp engines takes longer to get to the planet then NX-01 did (sins of the father), the times we see the planet in TNG it looks nothing like the planet in Enterprise (and I should not have to point out the fact that for the fans Enterprise came long after TNG so the creators of Enterprise already had the planet Qo’noS painted/CGI rendered at that point so why did they make a new planet if it was the same one)

Martok stated that he grew up in the Agricultural region called Ketha Lowlands (DS9, year of his birth is unknown but he has a junior officer in 2345) yet In Star Trek Into Darkness (alternate universe 2259) Ketha Lowlands is an uninhabited area of the planet. Granted it is an Alternate Universe, but how would Nero’s time changing in Star Trek 2009 messed up the Klingon Homeworld causing an Agricultural area to become an uninhabited area in less than a year, one should also point out that the remains of the buildings in the new movie looks to be in a state of unused that would take longer than a year to look so the area was uninhabited before the change was made to the timeline.

To Pseudohuman and his claim about Klingons used the peace established in ST6 to free up resources to build air shelters for the population on Kronos. Had they not established peace, the population would have died because the economy would have gone to the war effort with the Federation. Some of that dialogue was cut short in editing but the idea was that they didn't evacuate the planet

Deleted and cut scenes are not canon; it goes under Apocrypha sections (See Star Trek Nemesis and the first officer deleted scene) as for, had they not established peace the population would have died, I will point you to the TNG episode YESTERDAY’S ENTERPRISE (the timeline changed in 2344 long after the events in ST6:TUC) the Klingons had the military might to not only fight the Federation but to be the victors within 20 years per Picard telling Garrett, again the war is an alternate universe but the military forces must have been there before the first battle took place.

So looking at the evidence from using only onscreen sources, it would look like that the producers of not one, but two Star Trek shows (Enterprise, TNG) and one movie (ST6) wanted to make Kronos and Qo’noS two planets not one planet, using only what is on screen it looks like the following took place.

2151 NX-01 under the command of Archer visits the Klingon Homeworld, Kronos for the first time (Broken Bow, called it Kronos)

2293 Kronos’ (the Klingon Homeworld) moon Praxis explodes causing Klingon Empire to ask for help from the Federation (Star Trek VI, called it Kronos)

2343 due to the Ozone layer being depleted by the Praxis explosion, Kronos becomes a dead planet, the Klingon Empire with Federation help settles on a new planet first called Kling (Hart of Glory, called it Kling)

2364-2366 the Klingon Homeworld Kling is renamed Qo’noS in honor of the first Homeworld Kronos lost to the Empire in 2343 (sins of the father, called it Qo'noS)

I am not saying to rewrite the article or split it up into Kronos and Qo’noS (the article is great as is) what I think should be done given the standards and rules set by this Wiki and given the fact that more on screen proof exists in favor of two planets Kronos and Qo’noS, Place a blurb near the Star Trek VI section of the write up, or even at the end of the article, that states something like this,

Although no hard evidence exists, ether way, to the relocation of the Klingon Homeworld after the events of Star Trek VI, it should be noted that the painting or CGI of the planet used in Enterprise (see picture) and the Next Generation (see picture) looks different and all 24th century based shows call the Homeworld Qo’noS whereas all Pre-24th century shows called the planet Kronos , and no episodes after the events of Star Trek VI showed the Klingon Empire De-militarizing to focus of the issues the Praxis explosion caused to the Homeworld.

Unless someone can find any ON SCREEN evidence that states Kronos and Qo'noS is the same planet, we should follow the rules set by this Wiki and add the above blurb or something close to it. and please if you know of any ON SCREEN evidence that disproves the evidence i have given above, please, please type the episodes or movies into this talk page and i will be more then happy to say i'm sorry for wasting peoples time with this Chasemarc (talk) 23:50, May 19, 2013 (UTC)

I think you're overthinking this. Your timeline above about Kronos being a dead planet is pure speculation. Capital cities can be moved(the capital of the US was Philadelphia for a little while) Common sense tells us that we are only dealing with one planet here. 31dot (talk) 00:09, May 20, 2013 (UTC)
I would be surprised if Kronos didn't look a bit different after ST6 since they must have done some pretty major terraforming to restore the planet. My simple question was, has there been any actual episode released by Paramount on bluray or dvd that uses the spelling Qo'noS in the closed captioning. --Pseudohuman (talk) 02:57, May 20, 2013 (UTC)

To 31DOT, no I’m not overthinking this at all, Everything I had listed above are stated in the broadcasted live action TV Shows, and Movies to prove a point.

A point I might add that is (to the people in-universe) the start of a major turning point in HISTORY, peace between the Federation of Planets and the Klingon Empire. Per this Wiki’s rules: Nothing I have typed in the above, all-be-it long winded explanation is pure speculation on my part, it is based on the information from the sources I provided above (Enterprise, ST6, TNG)

As per the policy I am voicing my case with proof that supports it, proof that uses facts at hand from the TV Show and movies, that per this Wiki are valid sources to use.

In fact per the guidelines of this Wiki my statements above are less “pure speculation” then Pseudohuman statement “I would be surprised if Kronos didn't look a bit different after ST6 since they must have done some pretty major terraforming to restore the planet.” My statements are backed up by on screen proof, his statement about “major terraforming” is not backed up by anything but his guessing,

To Pseudohuman, not that I’m 100% disagreeing with what you said about why it looks different from 2151 & 2360’s, you might be right about it but if you are can you provide the episodes like I have to prove this?

Like I said I’m not asking for the article to be altered in any way-shape or form, all I’m asking for is for someone to look at the facts I got from the TV Shows and movies put it to a vote and if it goes in my favor add a little boxed in area to this article that states something like this

Although no hard evidence exists, either way, to the relocation of the Klingon Homeworld after the events of Star Trek VI, it should be noted that the CGI of the planet used in Enterprise (see picture) and the Next Generation (see picture) looks different, all 24th century based shows call the Homeworld Qo’noS whereas all Pre-24th century shows called the planet Kronos, and no episodes after the events of Star Trek VI showed the Klingon Empire De-militarizing to focus on the issues the Praxis explosion caused to the Homeworld.

Qonos

from DS9 season 7 DVD set CC spelling of Qo'nos (or QO*?NOS?)

And to answer your question about Qo'noS in the closed captioning in DS9 What you Leave Behind it is called Qo’nos (with a hiccup in the CC between o and n) on the Closed Captioning on my Season 7 DVD set, That said on Netflix in the same episode it is spelled Kronos, my DVD set came out when Season 7 was first available on DVD, i have no clue when the Netflix video was uploaded Chasemarc (talk) 04:28, May 20, 2013 (UTC)

Advertisement