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Human colonies

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Map of the Epsilon Eridani system, including Human colonies.
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Under the administration of the Unified Earth Government, humanity has surveyed and colonized several hundred worlds across a portion of the Orion Arm of the Milky Way galaxy over 200 years of superluminal travel via slipstream space, following nearly three centuries of expansion across the Sol system. The planets under the jurisdiction of the UEG, together with humanity's homeworld, are collectively referred to as "Earth and Her Colonies".[1][2] Human space is divided into three regions: the Sol system itself, the Inner Colonies, and the Outer Colonies.

History

Prehistory

Main article: Prehistoric human civilization

Over 110,000 years ago, humanity was an advanced, spacefaring race, and had colonized thousands of worlds across the Orion Arm of the galaxy. However, after being exhausted by the parasitic Flood and eventually suffering a disastrous defeat against the Forerunners in the human-Forerunner wars, the Forerunners forcibly regressed humanity to a Tier 7 species and all traces of this advanced civilization were erased.

Interplanetary age

Main article: Early history of the UNSC

The concept of space colonization was born out of the need to expand human habitation outside of Earth to prevent overpopulation, to alleviate the consumption of Earth's resources by conducting planetary mining on other worlds, and to better understand the universe as human civilization expanded. Various approaches were suggested to achieve this, such as colonization efforts of the Moon and Mars, building facilities on orbiting asteroids and creating artificial platforms.

The first recorded success of human colonization in the modern age was made in the later half of the 21st century, more specifically in 2080. The Moon and Mars saw humanity's first expansion, followed by a number of asteroids and the natural satellites orbiting Jupiter. The rapid pace of interplanetary colonization was driven by commercial interests more than the efforts on the part of national governments: Earth bio- and nanotechnology corporations sought to conduct scientific research unhindered by Earth's international law as well as its gravity. Mars, in particular, quickly became an important hub of leading-edge science and industry, and would continue to be so for hundreds of years, particularly in the area of spaceship manufacturing. Advancements in terraforming technologies transformed many of the formerly inhospitable planets and moons of the Solar System into worlds capable of sustaining life.[3]

Despite these successes, the efforts did not solve Earth's overpopulation issue. It eventually led to political unrest, contributing to the formation of political movements promising independence from the national governments on Earth and the perceived oppression by the United Nations.[4] Operating across the colonized worlds and orbital platforms of the Sol system, the Frieden movement and the Koslovics were the most prominent of these rebel factions. Beginning with a Frieden attack on the United Nations Colonial Advisors in the Jovian Moons and the subsequent UN response, battles were fought over the colony worlds—as well as Earth itself—from 2160 to 2170, culminating in a UN victory in the Interplanetary War. The outcome of the space wars led to the establishment of the Unified Earth Government as a centralized governing body tasked to ensure Earth's influence over the colony worlds and a powerful, united military force known as the United Nations Space Command.[4]

Dr. Wallace Fujikawa (left), and Dr. Tobias Fleming Shaw (right) are co-creators of the Shaw-Fujikawa Translight Engine.

Expansion beyond Sol system

Main article: Domus Diaspora

The technological innovation of the Shaw-Fujikawa Translight Engine in 2291 sprung the human civilization into the space-faring age, allowing them to travel beyond Sol system. In 2362 CE, the UEG constructed its first line of colony ships - led by Odyssey - to initiate the expansion of human habitation, relieving the growing pressure of overpopulation on Earth and the off-world colonies across the Sol system.[4] To manage governance in the extrasolar colonies as well as to ensure their security from pirates and other threats, the UEG established the Colonial Administration Authority and the Colonial Military Administration in 2310.[5] Two centuries later, both bodies would be marginalized—the latter due to widespread insurgent sympathies in its ranks—and eventually absorbed into the UNSC's emergency military government in 2525.[6]

Domus Diaspora

Main articles: Domus Diaspora, Inner Colonies, Outer Colonies
Phoenix-class colony ships settling Arcadia during the Domus Diaspora.

As faster-than-light travel was still new and highly expensive, potential colonists were subjected to rigorous physical and mental testing to determine their suitability for the extrasolar colonization programs. As such, the colonists who formed the basis for the 210 first-wave colonies settled before 2390 formed humanity's elite; these worlds would later be known as the Inner Colonies. Earth and the Inner Colonies soon became the political and economic basis of the UNSC as humanity began expanding to the Outer Colonies.[4] For humanity at large, this was a time of unparalleled prosperity and optimism which has later come to be referred to as the "Golden Age" of human colonization,[7] a period which would eventually come to a violent end in the later years of the 25th century.[8]

By the time the settlement of the Outer Colonies began, many of the initial difficulties of interstellar travel had been alleviated; by extension, the selection criteria for the colonists became far more lax, resulting in the populace of the Outer Colonies being far more varied than that of the prestigious Inner Colonies.[8]

Colonial expansion continued and by 2490, UEG colonial space encompassed over 800 colonies in the Orion Arm, including planets, moons, asteroids, mining facilities, and relay stations.[9] The success of colonization of the Outer Colonies made the Inner Colonies the primary stronghold, both military and economic, though they relied heavily on raw materials supplied by the Outer Colonies. During this period, the planet Reach (orbiting Epsilon Eridani, right on Earth's metaphorical doorstep) became the UNSC's primary naval yard and training academy. Reach was a major producer of warships and colony vessels, as well as a training ground for covert operatives and Special Forces.

Insurrection

Main article: Insurrection

The Inner Colonies' reliance on the Outer Colonies prompted the Unified Earth Government to maintain its hold over the Outer Colonies, but it inevitably began to lose its ability to do so as the Outer Colonies eventually surrounded the core worlds and far surpassed them in number. The overbearing influence of the Earth government, enforced by the UNSC and, initially, the Colonial Military Administration, led to a growing secessionist sentiment among Outer Colony citizens. The more radical elements of this movement took up arms against the UNSC, sparking a series of brushfire wars—collectively known as the Insurrection—in the late 2490s.[8]

The human colony Kholo being completely devastated by the Fleet of Righteous Vigilance before being ultimately glassed.
The attack on Kholo, a typical fate for colonies in the Covenant war.

The Covenant War

Main article: Human-Covenant War

On April 20, 2525, contact with the Outer Colony, Harvest, was lost. After failing to re-establish contact with Harvest, the Colonial Military Administration sent a scout ship, the CMA Argo, to investigate. Contact with the Argo was subsequently lost after the ship arrived in the Harvest system, plunging humanity into a deadly war with an alien hegemony known as the Covenant. Harvest was bombarded from orbit in a process which would come to be known as glassing, marking the beginning of a 28-year war with the Covenant. During the war, hundreds of human colonies were destroyed and billions of human civilians and military personnel were killed by the Covenant. The conflict would see the near-annihilation of the Outer Colonies by the mid-2530s, with the Covenant flooding into the Inner Colonies until they destroyed humanity's military stronghold of Reach in 2552. At that point, humanity only had a few dozen colonies remaining in total.[10] The Inner Colonies narrowly avoided annihilation before the UNSC finally achieved victory against the Covenant in the same year, but communication and unity among Earth's surviving colonies had been utterly compromised amidst the galaxy-wide devastation.

Darkstar Station on Meridian, an attempt to rebuild on a glassed colony.

Post-war

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Following the conclusion of the war, an extensive reconstruction process began in order to rebuild humanity's shattered colonial empire. With hundreds of worlds having been razed by the Covenant, numerous advanced pioneer groups were comissioned by the UEG to begin surveying and charting new potential habitable worlds, such as Eudemon.[11] In addition to new worlds, colonists began returning to previously-glassed worlds to begin the extensive process of "de-glassing"; digging up the glass to prepare the planet for re-terraforming. Several large corporations including Liang-Dortmund[12] and BXR were involved in these efforts, employing large scale mining machinery and thousands of people - by the time the reconstruction process is done, the corporations will own land rights to entire planets. The vitrified soil and other minerals on the surface of glassed worlds also proved to be a valuable source of revenue for these corporations, though questions remained about the ethical status of digging up and selling the glassed remains of entire cities and their occupants.[13][14]

By 2559, a number of former-colony worlds were involved in such de-glassing elements including Bliss and Meridian.[12] Biko was also at least partially re-settled, and a number of settlers returned to Reach by to begin the process of restoring their homeworld.[15] By 2589, Reach had been re-terraformed to some degree and open for re-settlement.[16]

The absence of the Covenant threat in the post-war era also marked a resurgence in insurrectionist and secessionist activity, with worlds including Venezia rejecting Earth's offers of cooperation, accusing the UNSC of abandoning them during the war.[17] The UEG and Sangheili both administrated Joint Occupation Zones where the Shadow of Intent participated in combined anti-piracy operations with UNSC forces between May 6 and June 1.[18] In early 2558, the region experienced in upsurge in Jiralhanae raids due to the Jiralhanae's dwindling resources.[19]

Government and politics

While the Unified Earth Government is technically a confederation of equal, independently-governed worlds, this is not true in practice;[20] the interests of Earth and the Inner Colonies weigh more heavily in the government's decision-making than those of the Outer Colonies. This has led to tensions and even civil war between the UNSC and the outer settlements,[21] which many of the Inner Colonies relied on for their foodstuffs and resources.[4]

Various organizations exist to provide military defense for the colonies. The Colonial Military Administration was created to act as a unified security force for the colonies but was eventually sidelined due to widespread corruption. The CMA's role was taken over by the United Nations Space Command, which many colonists resent due to its perceived draconian influence. Some colonies maintain their own territorial defense forces, including Sedra's Colonial Guard, as well as the Gao Republic's military. Anti-UNSC sentiments are not uncommon among these organizations, some of which—such as the Venezian militia—are openly secessionist. The UNSC also operated its own Colonial Militia program to train colonial citizens to deal with emergencies as well as local rebellion.[22]

Many colonies are named after locations on Earth, while others receive more descriptive or abstract names. Some worlds are only known by their astronomical designation, with the name of the star the world orbits followed by a numeric designation most often rendered in Roman numerals. On some colony worlds such as New Jerusalem, the capital city shares its name with the planet, as it is common for a colony's initial population center to be considered synonymous with the colony itself.[23] The Earth Survey Catalog also exists to document various extrasolar planets, assigning them identification codes.[24]

Scale

As of 2490, human-controlled space encompassed around 800 colonized sites, including planets, moons, asteroids and various other outposts. The colonies ranged from heavily-populated and economically, politically and strategically significant worlds to struggling pioneer outposts which could barely sustain 10,000 colonists. Some worlds were terraformed to greater degrees than others depending on the local conditions and presence of indigenous life.[20] Many of the colonies were firmly under the influence of the UEG with some seeking to secede from humanity's empire.[4] The worlds are generally divided among the stable Inner Colonies and the more numerous and restless Outer Colonies, and are highly diverse in terms of culture; some worlds have their foundations in the cultural heritage of a single Earth nation, while others have more varied population bases.[25] After the Human-Covenant War, some worlds became even more heterogeneous with the emigration of former Covenant client species to the human sphere.[26]

The Inner Colonies encompassed a region of space in at least a 10.5 light-year three-dimensional radius from Earth. Beyond that were the Outer Colonies. Other colonies were established even further - Coral, at 42 light-years;[27] and Madrigal, the most distant known colony, which lay in the 23 Librae system, 83.7 light-years from Earth.[28] Despite its relatively short distance from Earth, at approximately 12 lightyears, Harvest was considered the furthest Outer Colony in 2525, at six weeks of Slipspace travel away from Madrigal and two months from Reach.[29] Despite its relative scale, humanity's empire takes up only a minuscule portion of the Milky Way galaxy itself, all human-colonized systems existing within a bubble of 100 light-years around Sol in contrast to the overall scale of the galaxy which is 100,000 light-years in diameter.[30][Note 1] However, humans often use the word "galaxy" in colloquial speech when describing humanity's sphere of influence.[31]

The following is a list of all populated star systems in human space with a known stellar location, categorized in relation to how distant they are from Sol in light-years:

List of known colonies

Pre-Human-Forerunner war

Post-Great Purification

Main article: Great Purification

Sol colonies

Inner Colonies

Outer Colonies

Other/unspecified

Notes

  1. ^ All identified real-world stars housing human colonies are within dozens of light-years of Sol. The original edition of Halo: The Fall of Reach suggested that humanity had colonized the Beta Centauri system, which is 350 light-years away. The 2010 reprint removed the reference to Beta Centauri, evidently because of the distance being deemed too long for the system to be feasible as a human colony. Therefore it can be assumed that all human-colonized systems are closer to Sol than Beta Centauri's 350 light-years.

Sources

  1. ^ Halo 3, campaign level Halo
  2. ^ Halo: The Fall of Chapter, ??
  3. ^ Halo Encyclopedia, p. 42 (2011)
  4. ^ a b c d e f Xbox.com: Halo Storyline (Defunct, Copy on HBO Forums, Wayback Machine, and Halopedia)
  5. ^ Halo 4: The Essential Visual Guide, page 228
  6. ^ Halo Story Page, Frank O'Connor/Robt McLees Interview - August 2008 (Retrieved on Jun 1, 2020) [archive]
  7. ^ Halo: Evolutions, "The Impossible Life and the Possible Death of Preston J. Cole", p. 415-416
  8. ^ a b c Halo: Evolutions, "The Impossible Life and the Possible Death of Preston J. Cole", p. 428-429
  9. ^ Halo Mythos, p. 54
  10. ^ Halo Mythos, p. 85
  11. ^ Halo Waypoint, The Halo Bulletin: 10.25.12 (Retrieved on Nov 16, 2012) [archive]
  12. ^ a b Halo 5: Guardians, campaign level Meridian Station
  13. ^ Hunt The Truth, Season 1 blog post, BENJAMIN_GIRAUD_ENTRY_0384
  14. ^ Hunt The Truth, Season 1, Episode 11: Down to the Bone
  15. ^ HSoR
  16. ^ Halo: Reach, campaign level Lone Wolf
  17. ^ Halo: Glasslands, page 70
  18. ^ Halo Waypoint, Catalog Interaction - Page 14 (Retrieved on Jun 1, 2020) [archive]
  19. ^ Halo: Escalation, issue #1
  20. ^ a b Halo Encyclopedia, p. 43 (2011)
  21. ^ YouTube, Halo: From A to Z with Frank O'Connor (Retrieved on Jun 1, 2020) [archive]
  22. ^ Halo: Contact Harvest, chapter 66
  23. ^ Halo Waypoint: Canon Fodder - That Escalated Quickly
  24. ^ Halo: Combat Evolved: Sybex Official Strategies & Secrets, page 64
  25. ^ Halo: Contact Harvest, page 61-62
  26. ^ Halo: Nightfall - Chapter One
  27. ^ I Love Bees
  28. ^ Halo: The Cole Protocol, ??
  29. ^ Halo: Contact Harvest, ??
  30. ^ An Inside Look at Halo: Warfleet – A Guide to the Spacecraft of Halo. "...do we also wanna have a map of UNSC space that's more centralized on Sol? Maybe shows like, you know, a hundred light year radius around Earth."
  31. ^ Hunt the Truth
  32. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Halo Encyclopedia (2022 edition), page 51 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Enc22" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Enc22" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Enc22" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Enc22" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Enc22" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Enc22" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Enc22" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Enc22" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Enc22" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Enc22" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Enc22" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Enc22" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Enc22" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Enc22" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Enc22" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Enc22" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Enc22" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Enc22" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Enc22" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Enc22" defined multiple times with different content Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; name "Enc22" defined multiple times with different content