Celestis: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox Organisation | {{Infobox Organisation | ||
|image = Lord Smoking Mirror.jpg | |image = Lord Smoking Mirror.jpg | ||
| | |aka = {{il|[[Celestial Intervention Agency|CIA]]|Celestial House|Lords Celestial|Lords of the Celestis|Gods of [[Amerika]]|Spineless monstrosities}} | ||
| | |type = [[Conceptual entity|Conceptual entities]] | ||
|affiliation = [[Intervention]]ists | |affiliation = [[Intervention]]ists | ||
|origin = [[Gallifrey]] | |origin = [[Gallifrey]] | ||
|bases = [[Mictlan]] | |bases = [[Mictlan]] | ||
|first = Alien Bodies (novel) | |first cs = Alien Bodies (novel) | ||
|appearances = {{il|[[PROSE]]: | |appearances cs = {{il|[[PROSE]]: {{cs|Interference - Book Two (novel)}}|[[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Taking of Planet 5 (novel)}}|[[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Book of the War (novel)}}|[[PROSE]]: {{cs|Print the Legend (short story)}}|[[PROSE]]: {{cs|Against Nature (novel)}}|[[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Brakespeare Voyage (novel)|The Brakespeare Voyage}}}} | ||
}} | }} | ||
The '''Celestis''' were the [[Celestial Intervention Agency]] after they removed themselves from history to escape the [[War in Heaven]], | The '''Celestis''' were what the "elite cadre" of the [[Celestial Intervention Agency]] became after they removed themselves from history to escape the [[War in Heaven]], becoming an amoral and selfish group of [[Conceptual entity|conceptual entities]] sustained by others' belief. They saw themselves as aloof [[god]]s far above the [[Spiral Politic]], but were viewed as [[demon]]ic [[traitor]]s by the rest of the major powers. They sometimes called themselves the '''Celestial House''', with their members stylising themselves the '''Lords Celestial''' or '''Lords of the Celestis''', but they were not actually formally recognised as a [[Great House]] by anyone but themselves. In fact, [[House Military]] habitually called them the "'''spineless monstrosities'''". | ||
== Nature == | |||
Even though they continued to call themselves [[Time Lord|Lords]], the Celestis had fallen from [[grace (theology)|grace]] and no longer had any links to [[the Homeworld]] in their [[biodata]]; the other [[Great House]]s did not recognise them as being of their own kind. They only existed as networks of [[idea]]s and needed more tangible minds to believe in them to continue to exist. They retained a "rudimentary" power over [[life]] and [[death]] which allowed them to grant [[immortality]] to lesser beings in exchange for taking their [[Mark of Indenture]], a biodata tag that permanently bound its bearer to [[Mictlan]], so that they would become the Celestis's servant in Mictlan forever if and when they finally passed. | |||
They had no true bodies, but could manifest in semi-real forms wherever there existed [[sentience|sentient]] [[mind]]s to believe in them. They preferred to manifest in overtly monstrous, awe-inspiring forms to inspire, in the words of [[Twin Leopard]], "[[fear]] and nothing else". Each Lord or Lady tended to maintain an entire "wardrobe" of god-forms sculpted out of the superstitious [[idea]]s of the [[lesser species]], ranging from "[[demon|devils]] and carved idols" to "stoned-faced [[gargoyle]]s" to "[[God]]s of [[War]] with grotesque and elaborate skins of armour". They sometimes tried to appear as beautiful and [[angel]]-like, but they had fairly limited concepts of "beauty", and moreover, because they were "fallen", the Celestis were innately "monstrously corrupt", so that even when they tried to manifest in beautiful forms, there was something "distinctily ''sickly''" about them. | |||
Their god-forms were relatively easy to slay, but it was very difficult to actually kill a Lord Celestial, as this could only be achieved by erasing the idea of them from all minds which held it. In any case, they rarely entered the battlefield themselves, using their god-forms for intimidation only; when actual action was needed, the Celestis sent in their Marked agents or, in high-stakes situations, their [[Investigator]]s. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Book of the War (novel)}}) | |||
== History == | == History == | ||
=== Origin === | === Origin === | ||
The Celestis began as the [[Celestial Intervention Agency]], ([[PROSE]]: | The Celestis began as the [[Celestial Intervention Agency]], ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Alien Bodies (novel)}}) a prominent [[intervention]]ist group. They believed that the [[Great Houses]] were gods of history, which allowed them to casually violate the [[Protocols of the Great Houses|Protocols]] and commit acts of retroactive genocide at whim. When [[war prediction|word of the coming war]] first reached [[the Homeworld]], the interventionists understood that, unlike in a regular war, where one simply risked losing their life, in a [[time war]] the risks involved losing one's history. | ||
Rather than being forcibly removed from time by [[the enemy]], the Celestis decided to exit history on their own terms, so they carefully excised themselves from the past in such a way that, though none of them had ever physically existed, their [[conceptual entity|idea]] survived. They were remembered on the Homeworld as traitors who abandoned the Houses in their hour of greatest need. | Rather than being forcibly removed from time by [[the enemy]], the Celestis decided to exit history on their own terms, so they carefully excised themselves from the past using a [[forced-paradox state]] in such a way that, though none of them had ever physically existed, their [[conceptual entity|idea]] survived. They were remembered on the Homeworld as traitors who abandoned the Houses in their hour of greatest need. | ||
The Celestis, now | The Celestis, now conceptual entities rather than physical beings, used [[flux]] theory ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Book of the War (novel)}}) and [[the Matrix]] to build themselves a world outside [[spacetime]] called [[Mictlan]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Alien Bodies (novel)}}) | ||
Though they sometimes referred to themselves collectively as the "Celestial [[Great House|House]]", the Lords Celestial were fractious and divided to the point that each Lord was considered their own | Though they sometimes referred to themselves collectively as the "Celestial [[Great House|House]]", the Lords Celestial were fractious and divided to the point that each Lord was considered their own House, making a total of "ninety-nine Houses". ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Book of the War (novel)}}) They were split on whether to support the Time Lords or their enemy in the [[War in Heaven]], ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Alien Bodies (novel)}}) and individual Lords often interfered on behalf of one side or another as if it were all a game. Conceptual entities made by the Celestis, ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Book of the War (novel)}}) such as [[anarchitect]]s and [[Shift]]s, were supplied to the enemy. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Alien Bodies (novel)}}, {{cs|The Book of the War (novel)}}) | ||
=== Interactions with humanity === | === Interactions with humanity === | ||
Though they were much more difficult to destroy in their new existence as [[conceptual entity|ideas]], ([[PROSE]]: | Though they were much more difficult to destroy in their new existence as [[conceptual entity|ideas]], ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Alien Bodies (novel)}}) the Celestis required real people not only to act on their behalf but also to think of them in order for them to exist. To achieve this, they often appeared to [[lesser species|lesser beings]] in a "[[god]]-form" in order to intimidate them, then offering a Faustian bargain to extend their life in exchange for the [[Mark of Indenture]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Book of the War (novel)}}) Bearers of the Mark would then serve in Mictlan for eternity after their death. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Alien Bodies (novel)}}) | ||
The [[Sidhe (Autumn Mist)|Sidhe]] were aware that the Celestis were collecting those that died during the [[Battle of the Bulge]]. ([[PROSE]]: | The [[Sidhe (Autumn Mist)|Sidhe]] were aware that the Celestis were collecting those that died during the [[Battle of the Bulge]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Autumn Mist (novel)}}) | ||
The Celestis created an "agency" of [[Investigator]]s to act on their behalf in the inner universe, generally as [[detective]]s and [[assassin]]s. ([[PROSE]]: | The Celestis created an "agency" of [[Investigator]]s to act on their behalf in the inner universe, generally as [[detective]]s and [[assassin]]s. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Book of the War (novel)}}) | ||
The Celestis sent a recorporated agent called [[Trask]] to represent them at the auction for [[The Relic (Alien Bodies)|the Relic]]. ([[PROSE]]: | The Celestis sent a recorporated agent called [[Trask]] to represent them at the auction for [[The Relic (Alien Bodies)|the Relic]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Alien Bodies (novel)}}) | ||
The Celestis made a deal with the early [[21st century]] scientific genius [[James Moriarty|Jimmy Moriarty]] which involved giving him knowledge of a ritualistic method of [[time travel]]. ([[PROSE]]: | The Celestis made a deal with the early [[21st century]] scientific genius [[James Moriarty|Jimmy Moriarty]] which involved giving him knowledge of a ritualistic method of [[time travel]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Erasing Sherlock (novel)}}) | ||
By making a compact with [[Thomas Jefferson]]'s [[witch]] lodge, the Celestis created [[Amerika]] and became its [[God]]s; together with [[Faction Paradox]], they eventually betrayed the nation and erased significant parts of it from history. ([[PROSE]]: | By making a compact with [[Thomas Jefferson]]'s [[witch]] lodge, the Celestis created [[Amerika]] and became its [[God]]s; together with [[Faction Paradox]], they eventually betrayed the nation and erased significant parts of it from history. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Print the Legend (short story)}}) | ||
The Celestis established complete control over the government of a major country on early [[21st century]] [[Earth]]. ([[PROSE]]: | The Celestis established complete control over the government of a major country on early [[21st century]] [[Earth]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|Head of State (novel)}}) | ||
=== Destruction === | === Destruction === | ||
Because the [[City of the Saved]] included many humans with memories of servitude in Mictlan, the Celestis knew that their realm would one day be destroyed. They sent Lord [[Foaming Sky]] to the City through an ambassador exchange program, and there he used [[worldofme]] devices to create an army of duplicates of himself. He tried to use these duplicates to conquer a City District, in the hopes that this would give him the leverage to force ex-slaves (organised into the [[Ghetto of the Damned]]) back to Mictlan, where they would be interrogated. However, the [[Rump Parliament]] intervened in the attack and destroyed all the duplicates. Foaming Sky returned to Mictlan a disgrace. ([[PROSE]]: | Because the [[City of the Saved]] included many humans with memories of servitude in Mictlan, the Celestis knew that their realm would one day be destroyed. They sent Lord [[Foaming Sky]] to the City through an ambassador exchange program, and there he used [[worldofme]] devices to create an army of duplicates of himself. He tried to use these duplicates to conquer a City District, in the hopes that this would give him the leverage to force ex-slaves (organised into the [[Ghetto of the Damned]]) back to Mictlan, where they would be interrogated. However, the [[Rump Parliament (Of the City of the Saved...)|Rump Parliament]] intervened in the attack and destroyed all the duplicates. Foaming Sky returned to Mictlan a disgrace. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Book of the War (novel)}}) | ||
After the [[Eighth Doctor]] put a Celestis [[Mark of Indenture]] on the [[Shift (Alien Bodies)|Shift]], it was kept in a [[zoo]] in Mictlan and lived through the fall of the Celestis under the [[Memeovore]]. ([[PROSE]]: | After the [[Eighth Doctor]] put a Celestis [[Mark of Indenture]] on the [[Shift (Alien Bodies)|Shift]], it was kept in a [[zoo]] in Mictlan and lived through the fall of the Celestis under the [[Memeovore]]. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Book of the War (novel)}}) This came to pass when their former agent, [[One (The Taking of Planet 5)|One]], discovered that Mictlan could lure [[Swimmer (species)|Swimmers]] to the universe; to stop the universe from being devoured in this way, he arranged for Mictlan to be devoured by the [[Memeovore]], and the [[Eighth Doctor]] and a fleet of [[War TARDIS]]es cut the realm away from the rest of the universe. As a result, the Celestis were virtually all destroyed. ([[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Taking of Planet 5 (novel)}}) | ||
== Behind the scenes == | == Behind the scenes == | ||
* [[Rassilon]]'s plan for the [[Time Lord]]s to survive the [[Ultimate Sanction]] at the end of the [[Last Great Time War]] by becoming "creatures of pure [[consciousness]]" resembles the actions taken by the CIA in becoming the Celestis. ([[TV]]: ''[[The End of Time (TV story)|The End of Time]]'') | * [[Rassilon]]'s plan for the [[Time Lord]]s to survive the [[Ultimate Sanction]] at the end of the [[Last Great Time War]] by becoming "creatures of pure [[consciousness]]" resembles the actions taken by the CIA in becoming the Celestis. ([[TV]]: ''[[The End of Time (TV story)|The End of Time]]'') | ||
== External | == External links == | ||
{{fpx}} | {{fpx}} | ||
{{Celestis}}{{Great Houses}} | |||
[[Category:Celestis| ]] | [[Category:Celestis| ]] | ||
[[Category:Time-active factions]] | [[Category:Time-active factions]] | ||
[[Category:Supposed deities]] | |||
[[Category:Conceptual entities]] |
Latest revision as of 18:40, 3 November 2024
The Celestis were what the "elite cadre" of the Celestial Intervention Agency became after they removed themselves from history to escape the War in Heaven, becoming an amoral and selfish group of conceptual entities sustained by others' belief. They saw themselves as aloof gods far above the Spiral Politic, but were viewed as demonic traitors by the rest of the major powers. They sometimes called themselves the Celestial House, with their members stylising themselves the Lords Celestial or Lords of the Celestis, but they were not actually formally recognised as a Great House by anyone but themselves. In fact, House Military habitually called them the "spineless monstrosities".
Nature[[edit]]
Even though they continued to call themselves Lords, the Celestis had fallen from grace and no longer had any links to the Homeworld in their biodata; the other Great Houses did not recognise them as being of their own kind. They only existed as networks of ideas and needed more tangible minds to believe in them to continue to exist. They retained a "rudimentary" power over life and death which allowed them to grant immortality to lesser beings in exchange for taking their Mark of Indenture, a biodata tag that permanently bound its bearer to Mictlan, so that they would become the Celestis's servant in Mictlan forever if and when they finally passed.
They had no true bodies, but could manifest in semi-real forms wherever there existed sentient minds to believe in them. They preferred to manifest in overtly monstrous, awe-inspiring forms to inspire, in the words of Twin Leopard, "fear and nothing else". Each Lord or Lady tended to maintain an entire "wardrobe" of god-forms sculpted out of the superstitious ideas of the lesser species, ranging from "devils and carved idols" to "stoned-faced gargoyles" to "Gods of War with grotesque and elaborate skins of armour". They sometimes tried to appear as beautiful and angel-like, but they had fairly limited concepts of "beauty", and moreover, because they were "fallen", the Celestis were innately "monstrously corrupt", so that even when they tried to manifest in beautiful forms, there was something "distinctily sickly" about them.
Their god-forms were relatively easy to slay, but it was very difficult to actually kill a Lord Celestial, as this could only be achieved by erasing the idea of them from all minds which held it. In any case, they rarely entered the battlefield themselves, using their god-forms for intimidation only; when actual action was needed, the Celestis sent in their Marked agents or, in high-stakes situations, their Investigators. (PROSE: The Book of the War [+]Loading...["The Book of the War (novel)"])
History[[edit]]
Origin[[edit]]
The Celestis began as the Celestial Intervention Agency, (PROSE: Alien Bodies [+]Loading...["Alien Bodies (novel)"]) a prominent interventionist group. They believed that the Great Houses were gods of history, which allowed them to casually violate the Protocols and commit acts of retroactive genocide at whim. When word of the coming war first reached the Homeworld, the interventionists understood that, unlike in a regular war, where one simply risked losing their life, in a time war the risks involved losing one's history.
Rather than being forcibly removed from time by the enemy, the Celestis decided to exit history on their own terms, so they carefully excised themselves from the past using a forced-paradox state in such a way that, though none of them had ever physically existed, their idea survived. They were remembered on the Homeworld as traitors who abandoned the Houses in their hour of greatest need.
The Celestis, now conceptual entities rather than physical beings, used flux theory (PROSE: The Book of the War [+]Loading...["The Book of the War (novel)"]) and the Matrix to build themselves a world outside spacetime called Mictlan. (PROSE: Alien Bodies [+]Loading...["Alien Bodies (novel)"])
Though they sometimes referred to themselves collectively as the "Celestial House", the Lords Celestial were fractious and divided to the point that each Lord was considered their own House, making a total of "ninety-nine Houses". (PROSE: The Book of the War [+]Loading...["The Book of the War (novel)"]) They were split on whether to support the Time Lords or their enemy in the War in Heaven, (PROSE: Alien Bodies [+]Loading...["Alien Bodies (novel)"]) and individual Lords often interfered on behalf of one side or another as if it were all a game. Conceptual entities made by the Celestis, (PROSE: The Book of the War [+]Loading...["The Book of the War (novel)"]) such as anarchitects and Shifts, were supplied to the enemy. (PROSE: Alien Bodies [+]Loading...["Alien Bodies (novel)"], The Book of the War [+]Loading...["The Book of the War (novel)"])
Interactions with humanity[[edit]]
Though they were much more difficult to destroy in their new existence as ideas, (PROSE: Alien Bodies [+]Loading...["Alien Bodies (novel)"]) the Celestis required real people not only to act on their behalf but also to think of them in order for them to exist. To achieve this, they often appeared to lesser beings in a "god-form" in order to intimidate them, then offering a Faustian bargain to extend their life in exchange for the Mark of Indenture. (PROSE: The Book of the War [+]Loading...["The Book of the War (novel)"]) Bearers of the Mark would then serve in Mictlan for eternity after their death. (PROSE: Alien Bodies [+]Loading...["Alien Bodies (novel)"])
The Sidhe were aware that the Celestis were collecting those that died during the Battle of the Bulge. (PROSE: Autumn Mist [+]Loading...["Autumn Mist (novel)"])
The Celestis created an "agency" of Investigators to act on their behalf in the inner universe, generally as detectives and assassins. (PROSE: The Book of the War [+]Loading...["The Book of the War (novel)"])
The Celestis sent a recorporated agent called Trask to represent them at the auction for the Relic. (PROSE: Alien Bodies [+]Loading...["Alien Bodies (novel)"])
The Celestis made a deal with the early 21st century scientific genius Jimmy Moriarty which involved giving him knowledge of a ritualistic method of time travel. (PROSE: Erasing Sherlock [+]Loading...["Erasing Sherlock (novel)"])
By making a compact with Thomas Jefferson's witch lodge, the Celestis created Amerika and became its Gods; together with Faction Paradox, they eventually betrayed the nation and erased significant parts of it from history. (PROSE: Print the Legend [+]Loading...["Print the Legend (short story)"])
The Celestis established complete control over the government of a major country on early 21st century Earth. (PROSE: Head of State [+]Loading...["Head of State (novel)"])
Destruction[[edit]]
Because the City of the Saved included many humans with memories of servitude in Mictlan, the Celestis knew that their realm would one day be destroyed. They sent Lord Foaming Sky to the City through an ambassador exchange program, and there he used worldofme devices to create an army of duplicates of himself. He tried to use these duplicates to conquer a City District, in the hopes that this would give him the leverage to force ex-slaves (organised into the Ghetto of the Damned) back to Mictlan, where they would be interrogated. However, the Rump Parliament intervened in the attack and destroyed all the duplicates. Foaming Sky returned to Mictlan a disgrace. (PROSE: The Book of the War [+]Loading...["The Book of the War (novel)"])
After the Eighth Doctor put a Celestis Mark of Indenture on the Shift, it was kept in a zoo in Mictlan and lived through the fall of the Celestis under the Memeovore. (PROSE: The Book of the War [+]Loading...["The Book of the War (novel)"]) This came to pass when their former agent, One, discovered that Mictlan could lure Swimmers to the universe; to stop the universe from being devoured in this way, he arranged for Mictlan to be devoured by the Memeovore, and the Eighth Doctor and a fleet of War TARDISes cut the realm away from the rest of the universe. As a result, the Celestis were virtually all destroyed. (PROSE: The Taking of Planet 5 [+]Loading...["The Taking of Planet 5 (novel)"])
Behind the scenes[[edit]]
- Rassilon's plan for the Time Lords to survive the Ultimate Sanction at the end of the Last Great Time War by becoming "creatures of pure consciousness" resembles the actions taken by the CIA in becoming the Celestis. (TV: The End of Time)
External links[[edit]]
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