I always figured INS was around It's Only A Paper Moon too because of the Worf thing... but I hadn't really thought of this. The mention of the Son'a is in Penumbra seven episodes later...There is a mention in DS9 about the Son'a helping the Dominion with production of the white.
It's been a while since I watched INS to be fair... how many "Son'a" even were there? Weren't they basically just some Ba'ku who left with Ruafo years ago and then started calling themselves the Son'a? I mean there can't really have been that many of them, not like a whole civilization? And given the ending of the movie with Ruafo defeated and IIRC the other Son'a reuniting with their old Ba'ku families, wouldn't that essentially be the end of "the Son'a"?
Again, I haven't watched it in ages. But if so, would that DS9 line fit? Either it takes place before INS, or there are still some rogue Son'a out there
How literally are we supposed to take the stardates? I thought they kind f made them ambiguous for production reasons. I want to plan my story around solid dates, so that people don't say I got it wrong later...Well, according to this Stardate Calculator there's about three and a half months between Penumbra (the beginning of DS9's finale arc) and Dogs of War (last DS9 to mention the stardate).
According to the calculator, Penumbra is set on July 30, 2375 while Dogs of War is on November 11. However, they also claim Extreme Measures is on August 24, which means there's a gap of over two months between Extreme Measures and Dogs of War, but only one month between Penumbra and Extreme Measures.
How literally are we supposed to take the stardates? I thought they kind f made them ambiguous for production reasons. I want to plan my story around solid dates, so that people don't say I got it wrong later...Well, according to this Stardate Calculator there's about three and a half months between Penumbra (the beginning of DS9's finale arc) and Dogs of War (last DS9 to mention the stardate).
According to the calculator, Penumbra is set on July 30, 2375 while Dogs of War is on November 11. However, they also claim Extreme Measures is on August 24, which means there's a gap of over two months between Extreme Measures and Dogs of War, but only one month between Penumbra and Extreme Measures.
Thank you for your reply. This is certainly interesting. You went to a lot of work to make this. I'm not sure your are right though. You have the war ending in 2376, but memory alpha has it ending in 2375. Although memory alpha let me down with the location of the Antares Shipyards, so who knows.Hi BrentMc,
I’m afraid that there isn’t any commonly-agreed “definitive” timeline for the Dominion War, or for anything else in “Star Trek”.
The stardate calculator recommended by The Wormhole is “semi-official” in that it’s been used in at least some of the Pocket Books novels to calculate stardates, so those dates might match up. It doesn’t reflect the progression of stardates actually used in the televised stories at all, though.
If you click on the link at the bottom of this message, then you’ll find that I’ve gone into this in far more detail than is really possible, if you expect anyone to agree with the conclusions. If any of it is useful to you, don’t hesitate to use it. I can guarantee that everyone will think you’ve got it wrong, though.
If dredging through the site is more work than you have any idle interest in, there’s a brief overview of the main bits of the timeline here:
http://atavachron.wdfiles.com/local--files/calendars:calendars/Trek Calendars.pdf
My go at a stardate/Klingon/Bajoran date calculating spreadsheet is here:
http://atavachron.wikidot.com/calendars:calendars
If you really want to avoid problems with chronology, I’d recommend sticking to the “screen used” stardates, any internal dating references that were mentioned (like the three months between “Call to Arms” and “A Time to Stand”) and not being in any way specific about how that links to the “conventional” calendar (or trying to be precise about what the intervals between stardates are), other than it’s probably sometime in 2374 or 2375 if the Dominion War is being fought. Ithekro’s suggestions are every bit as good as anyone else’s, and certainly reflect what consensus there is better than my ideas.
I’d be the first to admit that it’s all a bit ramshackle, but that’s the way it is.
Best wishes and good luck,
Timon
Not exact number since there are not a lot of stardates give. But no more than five months and probably more like four month from the time the Breen start negotiating with the Dominion to the end of the war. Negotiations start near the end of July and beginning of August. Earth is attacked around the middle to late August. The Counter measure for the Breen weapon being introduced fleet wide is in early November. The war likely ends before the end of November. December at the lastest.
All in the year 2375.
Hello BrentMc,
Now it’s the weekend, I have time to look through my bookshelves, and see if there are any licenced, published books that you could use as references, and I find that I might be able to help your decision.
If money is no object, then the prime source is Larry Nemecek’s “Stellar Cartography”, published by 47 North (Amazon) in 2013. Map IX covers the Dominion War; there’s a brief text overview in the book, and a huge folded map. Rough dates are assigned to most major events, with some events getting a precise date (Operation Return is 25th March, 2374). The war itself is said to run from December 2373 to December 2375, and the Breen attack on Earth is dated to August 2375. It seems from Ithekro’s post that the dates have been sort of fixed using the same principle as the stardate calculator suggested by The Wormhole. Mike and Denise Okuda’s “Star Trek Chronology”, published by Pocket Books in 1996, first proposed that stardates operate so that the year 2367 (for example) runs from stardate 44000.0 to 44999.9. That’s been adopted by Memory Alpha, because it’s the only system for stardates associated with any “Star Trek” production office or officially licenced publication; at least until the 2009 film came along. In spite of that, the stardates assigned to events in televised “Star Trek” really don’t reflect any system at all. That seems to have been quite deliberate, and decided on very early.
The “Stellar Cartography” dates do match up approximately (as far as I can see with a fairly quick check) with the dates in Geoffrey Mandel’s “Star Trek Star Charts”. The captions themselves are not as precise as you might think, since each one summarises the events of quite a long period, not just the individual month specified. I’m guessing that the summary of the position labelled “October 2375” covers all the major events that happened since the previous summary for “April 2375,” allowing the attack on Earth to be in August 2375 in both versions of events. This is especially clear when you compare specific events with “Stellar Cartography”, as you’ve already found out by a slightly different route.
Finally, Jeff Ayers’ “Star Trek Voyages of Imagination”, published by Pocket Books in 2006, has the most recent “official” timeline available. It’s not really a timeline, more a list of titles with copious footnotes, including all the Pocket Books fiction. It does put everything in order, assign a year to everything (although rarely more than that), and list stardates where they’re available. You might find it helpful in assigning stardate ranges.
If your available funds are anything like mine, you may decide to forgo this level of research. That really doesn’t matter too much. The fact is, although it seems that there must have been some sort of a system in the “Star Trek: Deep Space Nine” production office when they say “such and such a story happened four months ago” in one story, and a story somewhere in between the first two stories implied that it was September. If there was such a system, I’ve not been able to find it. More to the point, if there had been a method beyond “reasonable guesses,” it surely would have turned up by now, and be the “official” way to do it. Having gone into all this in far too much detail, I’d be very surprised if there was even ever a rough “year planner” with events listed on it, let alone something more detailed. It’s only a personal opinion, but I do think they just guessed at things as they went along.
I’ve been playing around with this for a long time, and I don’t think I’m anywhere near finished yet. I wish you the very best of luck, and if you want to stay really true to what’s gone before, don’t get too bogged down in the details. Take a guess, and if it seems about right, there you are.
Best wishes,
Timon
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