DS9
D’k’tahg
Klingon knife, standard-issue to Klingon military personnel; the d’k’tahg featured a pair of retractable blades at the hilt, which could be deployed or retracted at the touch of a button.[1]
References
Disruptor rifle
Disruptor rifle (TNG-167)
Romulan disruptor rifle (TNG-208)
Rutian disruptor rifle (TNG-160)
Energy beam weapon used—in various forms—by numerous species in the 22nd through 25th centuries.[1, 2, 3]
References
- 1. “The High Ground.” Star Trek: The Next Generation, Episode 160. Television. 29 January 1990.
- 2. “Captain’s Holiday.” Star Trek: The Next Generation, Episode 167. Television. 2 April 1990.
- 3. “Unification, Part I.” Star Trek: The Next Generation, Episode 208. Television. 4 November 1991.
Disruptors
Disruptor (TNG-151)
Disruptor (TNG-167)
Klingon disruptor (ENT-91)
Romulan disruptor (TNG-251)
Disruptor rifle (TNG-167)
Romulan disruptor rifle (TNG-208)
Rutian disruptor rifle (TNG-160)
Energy beam weapon used—in various forms—by numerous species in the 22nd through 25th centuries.[1, 2, 3, 4, 6] Distruptors were commonly used in pistol,[1] rifle,[4] and shipboard[6] configurations.
References
- 1. “The Survivors.” Star Trek: The Next Generation, Episode 151. Television. 9 October 1989.
- 2. “The High Ground.” Star Trek: The Next Generation, Episode 160. Television. 29 January 1990.
- 3. “Captain’s Holiday.” Star Trek: The Next Generation, Episode 167. Television. 2 April 1990.
- 4. “Unification, Part I.” Star Trek: The Next Generation, Episode 208. Television. 4 November 1991.
- 5. “Timescape.” Star Trek: The Next Generation, Episode 251. Television. 14 June 1993.
- 6. “Affliction.” Star Trek: Enterprise, Episode 91. Television. 18 February 2005.
Bat’leth
Traditional Klingon edged weapon.[1] Legend held that Kahless forged the original bat’leth from a lock of his hair, which he dipped in a river of molten lava after seeing the sword in a dream.[2]
References
Rooney
Starfleet officer, stationed at Deep Space 9, who was killed on Stardate 50049.3 along with three fellow officers in a conflict with the Jem’Hadar at Torga IV. Rooney was a trumpet player, and once had people dancing in the aisles of Quark’s.[1]
References
- 1. “The Ship.” Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Episode 500. Television. 7 October 1996.
Picard, Jean-Luc
Jean-Luc Picard (ST-08)
Jean-Luc Picard (ST-09)
Jean-Luc Picard (ST-07)
Jean-Luc Picard (TNG-225)
Locutus (ST-08)
Jean-Luc Picard (TNG-165)
Jean-Luc Picard (TNG-110)
Jean-Luc Picard (TNG-212)
Jean-Luc Picard stabbed (TNG-241)
Young Jean-Luc Picard (TNG-233)
Jean-Luc Picard on holodeck (ST-07)
Jean-Luc Picard (TNG-241)
Jean-Luc Picard disguised as a Romulan (TNG-208)
Jean-Luc Picard was born in 2305, in the French town of Labarre on Earth.[17] His parents, Maurice Picard[17] and Yvette Gessard Picard,[2] were staunch traditionalists who brought him up with a very strong sense of his cultural roots and family history. The Picard family shunned modern technology such as replicators, and Maurice clearly hoped that Jean-Luc would stay in Labarre like his elder brother Robert.[17] Jean-Luc, however, was fascinated by space from an early age. He made several visits to the Smithsonian Institution, where he saw the Phoenix—the ship in which Zefram Cochrane made the first warp flight[33]—and he started building models of spaceships, such as a Promellian battle cruiser, in bottles.[11]
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Kolos
An associate of Quark‘s attending an auction of Gamma Quadrant objet d’art collected by Vash. Kolos paid 36 bars of gold-pressed latinum for a statue and bid 3,000 bars for another item.[1]
References
- 1. “Q-Less.” Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Episode 407. Television. 8 February 1993.
Jack
A genetically-engineered Human. Intellectually brilliant yet given to agitated ranting, Jack and his fellow Augments—Patrick, Sarina Douglas and Lauren—twice left the Daystrom Research Institute for encounters with Julian Bashir.[1, 2]
References
- 1. “Statistical Probabilities.” Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Episode 533. Television. 24 November 1997.
- 2. “Chrysalis.” Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Episode 555. Television. 27 October 1998.
Evek
In 2370, Cardassian Gul Evek led a mission to planet Dorvan V to survey the buildings and equipment that would be left behind when the Human settlers evacuated. When the colonists refused to leave, it appeared an armed conflict would ensue. Evek, who had lost two of his three sons in a war with the Federation, agreed to withdraw his troops from the surface until some solution could be reached. Following the incident at Dorvan V, Gul Evek remained in the Demilitarized Zone.[1]
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E’tyshra
E’tyshra helped negotiate the end of her people’s war with the Kellerun in 2370. E’Tyshra collaborated with Sharat, the Kellerun ambassador, to destroy all information of the harvester technology and also to kill everyone who had technical knowledge of their manufacture, including Deep Space 9 personnel Dr. Julian Bashir and Miles O’Brien.[1]
References
- 1. “Armageddon Game.” Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Episode 433. Television. 31 January 1994.
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