I thought it might be fun to list some of the historical figures and events who are mentioned in passing in the ST Universe. Usually, they do this by listing a couple of names or events we already know, and then tossing in an additional, fictional person who did something equally important. TVTropes lists this trope as Famous, Famous, Fictional. It's a shorthand way to establish we're IN THE FUTURE!!! by casually name-dropping someone who did something significant that hasn't occurred yet.
I poked around on Star Trek Script Search a bit and here are the examples I found:
From TOS: "What Are Little Girls Made Of?":
From TOS: "Court Martial":
From TOS: "Patterns of Force":
From TOS: "The Ultimate Computer":
From TOS: "Whom Gods Destroy":
From TOS: "The Savage Curtain":
From Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan:
From TNG: "The Defector":
From TNG: "The Enemy":
From TNG: "New Ground":
From DS9: "The Muse":
From VOY: "Threshold":
From VOY: "The Thaw":
Now some, like Zephram Cohrane, Surak, and Kahless, have been quite developed in the ST Universe over the years, but is anyone aware of further development on the others? Short stories, novels, further mentions? We've apparently got a lot more dictators and conquerors to look forward to, if the names Ferris, Maltuvis, Lee Kuan, Krotus, Col. Green, and Zora are anything to go by. Lee Kuan must have been really bad, since he or she gets a couple of mentions.
Can anyone think of some other examples that I missed? What's your favorite tantalizing passing mention of Star Trek history?
I poked around on Star Trek Script Search a bit and here are the examples I found:
From TOS: "What Are Little Girls Made Of?":
KORBY: By continuing the process I could've transferred you, your very consciousness into that android. Your soul, if you wish. All of you. In android form, a human being can have practical immortality. Can you understand what I'm offering mankind?
KIRK: Programming. Different word, but the same old promises made by Genghis Khan, Julius Caesar, Hitler, Ferris, Maltuvis.
From TOS: "Court Martial":
STONE: Counsels will kindly direct their remarks to the bench.
COGLEY: I'd be delighted to, sir, now that I've got something human to talk about. Rights, sir, human rights. The Bible, the Code of Hammurabi and of Justinian, Magna Carta, the Constitution of the United States, Fundamental Declarations of the Martian colonies, the Statutes of Alpha Three. Gentlemen, these documents all speak of rights. Rights of the accused to a trial by his peers, to be represented by counsel, the rights of cross-examination, but most importantly, the right to be confronted by the witnesses against him, a right to which my client has been denied.
From TOS: "Patterns of Force":
MCCOY: It also proves another Earth saying. Absolute power corrupts absolutely. Darn clever, these Earthmen, wouldn't you say?
SPOCK: Yes. Earthmen like Ramses, Alexander, Caesar, Napoleon, Hitler, Lee Kuan. Your whole Earth history is made up of men seeking absolute power.
From TOS: "The Ultimate Computer":
KIRK: Genius doesn't work on an assembly line basis. Did Einstein, Kazanga, or Sitar of Vulcan produce new and revolutionary theories on a regular schedule? You can't simply say, today I will be brilliant. No matter how long it took, he came out with multitronics. The M-5.
From TOS: "Whom Gods Destroy":
GARTH: On your knees before me! All the others before me have failed. Alexander, Caesar, Napoleon, Hitler, Lee Kuan, Krotus! All of them are dust! But I will triumph! I will make the ultimate conquest!
From TOS: "The Savage Curtain":
SPOCK: Surak.
KIRK: Who?
SPOCK: The greatest of all who ever lived on our planet, Captain. The father of all we became.
ROCK: Captain, Mister Spock, some of these you may know through history. Genghis Khan, for one. And Colonel Green, who led a genocidal war early in the 21st century on Earth. Zora, who experimented with the body chemistry of subject tribes on Tiburon. Kahless the Unforgettable, the Klingon who set the pattern for his planet's tyrannies.
From Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan:
DAVID: Well, don't have kittens. Genesis is going to work. They'll remember you in one breath with Newton, Einstein, Surak...
From TNG: "The Defector":
PICARD: Splendid, Data. Splendid. You're getting better and better.
DATA: Freeze program. Thank you, sir. I plan to study the performances of Olivier, Branagh, Shapiro, Kullnark...
From TNG: "The Enemy":
PICARD: But we must measure our response carefully, or history may remember Galorndon Core along with Pearl Harbor and Station Salem One as the stage for a bloody preamble to war.
From TNG: "New Ground":
LAFORGE: No, no, no, no. I mean, we're going to see something that people will talk about for years. I mean, think about it. No more bulky warp engines or nacelles. A ship just generates a Soliton wave and then rides it through space like a surfboard. This is going to be like being there to watch Chuck Yeager break the sound barrier, or Zephram Cochrane engage the first warp drive.
From DS9: "The Muse":
(This was a reference to Phineas Tarbolde from TOS's "Where No Man Has Gone Before.")ONAYA: It's not what I am that matters, it's what I do. You don't know the minds I've touched. Catullus, Tarbolde, Keats. a hundred others. I unlocked their potential.
From VOY: "Threshold":
JANEWAY: Well, good luck, Mister Paris. If this works, you'll be joining an elite group of pilots. Orville Wright, Neil Armstrong, Zefram Cochrane and Tom Paris.
From VOY: "The Thaw":
CLOWN: Ultimatum? Ultimatum? She would give me an ultimatum? Did Napoleon give an ultimatum after Waterloo? Did Chulak of Romulus give an ultimatum after his defeat at Galorndon Core? We won! We give the ultimatums around here.
Now some, like Zephram Cohrane, Surak, and Kahless, have been quite developed in the ST Universe over the years, but is anyone aware of further development on the others? Short stories, novels, further mentions? We've apparently got a lot more dictators and conquerors to look forward to, if the names Ferris, Maltuvis, Lee Kuan, Krotus, Col. Green, and Zora are anything to go by. Lee Kuan must have been really bad, since he or she gets a couple of mentions.
Can anyone think of some other examples that I missed? What's your favorite tantalizing passing mention of Star Trek history?