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Sangheili
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Many countless worlds would fall under the control of the Covenant and its various successor factions.[1] The Covenant and seemingly many of its worlds were based in the Orion Arm[2][3][4][5][Note 1] with base worlds established by the Sangheili were considered the Covenant's primary worlds.[6]
History
Pre-Great Purification
- Main article: Human-San'Shyuum alliance
Prior to the Great Purification, an ancient San'Shyuum civilization participated in the Human-Forerunner wars. Following their defeat, the San'Shyuum were quarantined to the Qom Yaekesh system. Various Forerunner facilities were built on and around worlds in the system.[7][8] During the Forerunner-Flood war, the San'Shyuum rose up in the system on their homeworld of Janjur Qom.
The Forerunners built numerous facilities on various other Covenant worlds including the Guardian Custode support areas on Sanghelios,[9] a portal to Sarcophagus from Hesduros,[10] and a facility in the Y'Deio system.[11] They also maintained facilities on other worlds that they Covenant would subsume such as Zhoist.[12]
The Former Age
- Main article: The Former Age
Following the Great Purification, an unknown complication occurred and the Forerunner starship Anodyne Spirit crashed onto the surface of Janjur Qom.[13][14][15] This would invariably lead to the War of Wills, where two factions would fight over control of the ship.
Several hundred years before the Covenant,[16] the Sangheili colonized dozens of worlds,[17] the 76th of which was Creck.[18] Qikost and Suban, the moons of Sanghelios, were among the first colonized, with the Sangheili setting up armories on Qikost[18] and mines on Suban.[19] These collective worlds were bound by blood and belief over any centralized authority.[16].
It was on one such colony world, Ulgethon, that the Sangheili first encountered the San'Shyuum thus commencing the War of Beginnings.[20] Fighting in the war would take place on other Sangheili colonies[18] such as Codisfold[21] and even Sanghelios itself.
Covenant era
Following the War of Beginnings, Sanghelios would be the capital of the Covenant until High Charity was completed.[22] The remaining Sangheili colonies became some of the primary worlds for the Covenant.[6] The signing of the Writ of Union would however lead to the Rending which would take place at several points in Covenant space including Sanghelios.[23] The homeworld of the Covenant,[24] High Charity began construction in 851 BCE over Sanghelios.[23] Construction of the station would continue over Tuluk'katho.[25] Various physical materials from each of the incorporated species' homeworlds were used in the Skin of the First Worlds.[26]
With each species added to the alliance, so too were their worlds on top of new worlds being settled and the subsuming of certain Forerunner installations[6] like Strilun IV.[5] In at least one case, the Covenant wiped out an unidentified civilisation on the planet Karava[27] and settled it afterward.[28]
Since the incorporation of the Jiralhanae, the San'Shyuum settled them on resource-rich worlds to guard them against anyone seeking to claim them for themselves.[29]
War of Annihilation
- Main article: Human-Covenant War
Early in the War of Annihilation, the UNSC counterattacked the invading Covenant and struck at Zhoist. UNSC Nuclear weapons destroyed two out of the Ten Cities of Edification.[30]
The UNSC would make further attempts to strike Covenant-controlled worlds. In 2537, SPARTAN-III Alpha Company was deployed to asteroid K7-49 in order to disrupt Covenant operations there. While they succeeded, 300 SPARTAN-IIIs were killed in the process.[31] A similar action would be repeated at Pegasi Delta in 2545 with Operation: TORPEDO. While also a victory, it would cost the lives of 298 SPARTAN-IIIs of Beta Company.[32]
At some point during the war, Linda-058 was deployed to the world of Odenli'sh to assassinate a San'Shyuum missonary.[33]
Near the end of the war, and during the Great Schism, a NOVA bomb was detonated at Joyous Exultation by accident. A quarter of the world was vaporized and its moon was shattered.[34]
Post-war
- Main articles: Sangheili-Jiralhanae war, Blooding Years
Just days after a tentative peace treaty was formed between the group that would become the Swords of Sanghelios and the UEG, the Sangheili colony of Glyke was mysteriously destroyed, killing billions. Rumors had it that the colony's destruction was either an internal conflict or a Jiralhanae retaliation, but in truth it was destroyed by SPARTAN-II Gray Team with a NOVA bomb as part of Operation: SUNSPEAR, an effort to strike a blow at a major enemy world to try to cause the Covenant to reconsider. Having last heard that Earth was under attack, Gray Team were unaware of the war's end due to damaged deep-space communications equipment and thus that their mission was no longer necessary.[36]
After the dissolution of the Covenant and the exodus of the local San'Shyuum governors,[37] many of the Covenant's colonies fell under the control of the hegemony's various splinter factions, while others were claimed by unaffiliated members of the Covenant client species, especially the Sangheili or Kig-Yar. Some worlds were contested between species and governments,[28] while Joint Occupation Zones were established between the Unified Earth Government and the Swords of Sanghelios to allow colonies to be administrated by multiple species.[38]
The Sangheili colonies fell into internecine conflict while the Kig-Yar interplanetary colonies and Balaho remained stable.[39] Sangheili colonies also had to contend with raids and other fighting with the Jiralhanae.[29][40] One of the Sangheili worlds to fall into internecine conflict was Malurok.[41]
Created uprising
- Main article: Created uprising
As the Created uprising began to take shape in 2558, a global war started on Sanghelios.[43] With the onset of The Reclamation, Sanghelios was directly hit by Guardian Custodes[44] and despite proximity, Suban suffered minimal damage.[45] The immediate loss of communications and disruption of logistics would inhibit previously ongoing independence movements on Qikost.[46]
The Reclamation did not affect the Urs system alone. Created forces would end up occupying Malurok, prompting a detente among the warring parties on the world.[41]
Balaho sided with the Created, meaning no Guardian was sent to the world.[47] Old factories were reactivated and supplies from the Created were shipped to the planet.[48] A skirmish would break out on the planet between various forces of the UEG and Unggoy on the planet.[47]
Doisac was hit quite hard, being completely destroyed by a fleet of Guardians on the direct orders of Cortana.[49] The exploding debris of the planet would obliterate the moon of Soirapt, and heavily damaged the moons of Teash and Warial. A large amount of survivors from Teash managed to resettle on the colonies of Gathved, Ordun Dal, and Savadok.[50]
Distant future
With the end of the Created conflict and the rise of the Banished, many Sangheili worlds waited to get direction from Sanghelios.[16] However, the debilitated security situation in Urs saw several factions make claims on the moon of Suban.[45]
Government and politics
Administration
Interstellar
Collectively, the non-cradle worlds of the Covenant were referred to as "tithe worlds".[1][17] Worlds employed with military planning and production were known as "fortress worlds."[51] Overall, these key fortress and stronghold worlds served as key proxies for High Charity in administering the empire.[52]
The High Council was responsible for the administration of these interstellar territories, assigning tithes and levies, and allocating resources across the numerous member worlds.[53] San'Shyuum governors handled administrative duties on a local scale; most of them joined the rest of the species on their mass exodus during the Great Schism.[37]
Fringe
- Main article: Covenant fringe
Most of the Fringe species were relegated to their homeworld or remote locations and most often administered by San'Shyuum executors and a cortege of Kig-Yar enforcers.[54]
Planetside
Sangheili
Sangheili planets are run in a style similar to feudal manorialism. Multiple Sangheili clans, known as Keeps, ally together and are led by a single Kaidon who controls the surrounding territory. Smaller Sangheili colonies are often governed by only a handful of keeps, which control the entirety of the world's resources. On larger worlds like Sanghelios, hundreds of keeps vie for power and influence using politics and military force. [55][16]
After the fall of the Covenant, some keeps have transformed into military sects.[16]
-confusion in the meaning of keep
Jiralhanae
Despite being settled on numerous resource worlds by the San'Shyuum, the Jiralhanae lacked the ability to mine the resources themselves.[29]
Kig-Yar
For the Kig-Yar, and in the case of Eayn specifically, it is ruled by an alliance of arch-matriarchs[56] with pseudo-governments on the world being ochlocracies and Luck egalitarianism forming the base of justice systems.[57] Some of these pseudo-governments ruled over full continents of the world such as with the continents of Ruuht and Ah'lomet.[58]
Scale
The scale of the Covenant was large, though the Covenant would often leave a world untouched unless it offered particular treasures both religious and practical.[6]
Sangheili
Around the time of the War of Beginnings, there were Sangheili 76 colonies including Creck,[18] Glyke,[59] and Hesduros.[60] By the time of the Post-Covenant War conflicts, there was a primary "complex" of Sangheili worlds.[61]
List of known worlds
Post-Great Purification
Non-canon and dubious canon appearances
Silver Timeline
- Main article: Silver Timeline
This article contains information about the Silver Timeline, and is not a part of the established Halo canon. |
- Aspero
Notes
- ^ The Halo Waypoint article for the Covenant claims that the empire "dominated much of the galaxy". However, most sources (including Halo: Warfleet and several Waypoint articles) agree that the Covenant Empire was based out in the Orion Arm.
Sources
- ^ a b Halo Encyclopedia (2022 edition), page 232
- ^ Halo Waypoint: Axl
- ^ Halo: Warfleet, page 12-13
- ^ Halo Waypoint: San'Shyuum
- ^ a b Bungie.net, Bungie Weekly Update 01/11/08: "It’s on an alien world discovered and controlled by the Covenant. It’s location is secret, but it is in this spiral arm of the Galaxy. Close to human occupied space. If you look through the glass floors of the Covenant structures, you’ll see Forerunner artifacts buried beneath the ice." (Retrieved on Jan 30, 2021) [archive]
- ^ a b c d Halo Waypoint, Universe - Covenant (Retrieved on Jun 1, 2020) [archive]
- ^ Halo: Cryptum, page 144
- ^ Halo Encyclopedia (2022 edition), page 190-191
- ^ Halo 5: Guardians, campaign level Alliance
- ^ Halo: The Thursday War, page 398-399
- ^ Halo Encyclopedia (2022 edition), page 192
- ^ Halo: Silent Storm, chapter 26
- ^ Halo Waypoint: Mendicant Bias
- ^ Halo Encyclopedia (2011 edition), page 27
- ^ Halo Encyclopedia (2022 edition), page 384-385
- ^ a b c d e Halo Encyclopedia (2022 edition), page 198-199
- ^ a b Halo Encyclopedia (2022 edition), page 234
- ^ a b c d Halo: Broken Circle, chapter 1
- ^ Halo: The Essential Visual Guide, page 128
- ^ Halo 2: Anniversary, Terminal 5
- ^ Halo Encyclopedia (2022 edition), page 258
- ^ Halo Encyclopedia (2022 edition), page 229
- ^ a b Halo: Broken Circle, chapter 1
- ^ Halo Encyclopedia (2022 edition), page 189
- ^ Halo Encyclopedia (2022 edition), page 226
- ^ Halo Encyclopedia (2022 edition), page 227
- ^ Halo Encyclopedia (2022 edition), page 289
- ^ a b Halo: Escalation, issue 5
- ^ a b c Halo: Escalation, issue 1
- ^ Halo: Silent Storm, Epilogue
- ^ Halo: Ghosts of Onyx, page 83-86
- ^ Halo: Ghosts of Onyx, page 16-27
- ^ Halo Waypoint, Linda-058 (Retrieved on Oct 30, 2021) [archive]
- ^ Halo: Ghosts of Onyx, page 244-245
- ^ Halo: Rise of Atriox, issue 4
- ^ Halo: Envoy
- ^ a b Halo: Warfleet, page 54
- ^ Halo: Fractures - Oasis
- ^ Eleventh Hour reports, Report 2
- ^ Halo Waypoint Forums, Catalog Interaction (Retrieved on Oct 21, 2018) [local archive] [external archive]
- ^ a b Halo Encyclopedia (2022 edition), page 233
- ^ Halo Encyclopedia (2022 edition), page 195
- ^ Halo: Legacy of Onyx, chapter 21
- ^ Halo: Bad Blood, chapter 1
- ^ a b Halo Encyclopedia (2022 edition), page 230
- ^ Halo Encyclopedia (2022 edition), page 231
- ^ a b Halo: Bad Blood, chapter 3-4
- ^ Halo Waypoint, Canon Fodder - Driving Force
- ^ Halo Infinite, campaign mission Reckoning: Repository
- ^ Halo Encyclopedia (2022 edition), page 446-447
- ^ Halo Encyclopedia (2022 edition), page 189
- ^ Halo Waypoint, The New Halo Encyclopedia is Out Today (Retrieved on Mar 11, 2023) [archive]
- ^ Halo: Warfleet, page 52
- ^ Halo Encyclopedia (2022 edition), page 214
- ^ Halo Waypoint, Universe - Sangheili (Retrieved on Jun 1, 2020) [archive]
- ^ Halo: Warfleet, page 54
- ^ Bestiarum
- ^ Halo Waypoint Forums, Catalog Interaction (Retrieved on Apr 13, 2016) [local archive] [external archive]
- ^ Halo Encyclopedia (2022 edition), page 232
- ^ Halo Encyclopedia (2022 edition), page 235
- ^ Halo: Hunters in the Dark, page 87 (Google Play edition)
- ^ Halo: Legacy of Onyx, chapter 8
I love bees
character locations
- Jersey Morelli and Janissary James - New Jersey
- Chapter 9 mentions Kamal needing to head to New Jersey. This is in reference to having to go meet Jersey Morelli. This is reiterated in Chapter 10 with Kamal being told that a driver at Jerry's Diner (possibly in Pittsburgh) will take him to New Jersey. When Kamal and Jersey meet, Jersey makes a sarcastic remark about heading to Atlantic City. When Jersey meets Rani in Boston in Chapter 10, he has NYC on his bags, something that Rani notices immediately. Also, he has an NYC accent something that Jersey himself mentions. As for Janissary, Jersey and Janissary live in the same building as mentioned in Chapter 1. Also when Durga brings up the emergency call it is for Bergen County, New Jersey which is on the western banks of the Hudson in the NYC area.
- Rani Sobeck - Boston, Kentucky, and Washington DC
- Sarah and Rani talk about leaving Boston in Chapter 10.
other info
- Chapter 9, public health law requires people to be tested for intestinal TB if they are exposed to it. Testing costs money
- Chapter 10, people not from Earth referred to as colonial. Jersey turned 18 in June of that year.