Order of the Black Sun: Difference between revisions
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|first = 4-D War (comic story) | |first = 4-D War (comic story) | ||
|appearances = {{il|[[COMIC]]: ''[[Black Sun Rising (comic story)|Black Sun Rising]]''|[[COMIC]]: ''[[The Final Chapter (comic story)|The Final Chapter]]''}} | |appearances = {{il|[[COMIC]]: ''[[Black Sun Rising (comic story)|Black Sun Rising]]''|[[COMIC]]: ''[[The Final Chapter (comic story)|The Final Chapter]]''}} | ||
}}The '''Order of the Black Sun''' was a group that waged the [[First Great Time War]] against the [[Time Lord]]s, the first [[time war]] the latter had ever fought. | }}The '''Order of the Black Sun''' was a group that waged the [[4-D War|First Great Time War]] against the [[Time Lord]]s, the first [[time war]] the latter had ever fought. | ||
== Membership == | == Membership == |
Revision as of 07:29, 30 August 2024
The Order of the Black Sun was a group that waged the First Great Time War against the Time Lords, the first time war the latter had ever fought.
Membership
Several different species, some humanoid, others only vaguely humanoid, made up the Order. They wore capes and black unitards with a logo on them. (COMIC: 4-D War, Black Sun Rising) They used hand-held black orbs as the focus for blasts of power. (COMIC: 4-D War)
They were represented by an Elder, as well as representatives for different space sectors. (COMIC: Black Sun Rising)
History
Origins
One account noted that a "Cult of the Black Sun" was among the many secret societies which Faction Paradox created among the "lesser species", telling them "all the nastiest secrets of the Time Lords". (PROSE: Interference - Book One)
Indeed, a mysterious black sun which functioned as a corrupt antithesis of the Time Lords' Eye of Harmony was a prominent omen of the post-War universe that would follow from the fall of Gallifrey, (PROSE: The Adventuress of Henrietta Street [+]Loading...["The Adventuress of Henrietta Street (novel)"]) and had been a cause of concern and speculation among the Time Lords well before the War in Heaven that would bring it about. (PROSE: The Gallifrey Chronicles [+]Loading...["The Gallifrey Chronicles (novel)"])
The Black Sun in the Wrarth Galaxy turned the peaceful Meeps into a race of violence and conquest under the banner of the Black Sun. (COMIC: Doctor Who and the Star Beast [+]Loading...["Doctor Who and the Star Beast (comic story)"])
Time War
- Main article: Black Sun War
30 years after the disappearance of the Time Lord Omega, they sent ambassadors to trade with Gallifreyans and Sontarans. Their Elder was killed because of a Sontaran plot, whose fault fell on the Gallifreyan delegation. The diplomatic incident triggered a conflict against the Time Lords. (COMIC: Black Sun Rising)
About 30000 years later, they had developed a time travel technology, the time-jumper, with which they sent back an agent to prevent the birth of the Time Lord civilisation itself, but they failed, inadvertently helping Rassilon to develop time travel. (COMIC: Star Death)
20 years after the disappearance of Omega, a group of them showed up inside the Question Hall on Gallifrey to stop the telepathic parahuman Viridian from unearthing information from Fenris the Destroyer's ruined mind. 11 people who were inside the Hall were killed, including Viridian and Fenris. (COMIC: 4-D War)
Aftermath
Long after the time war, a member of the Order of the Black Sun would serve as a High Evolutionary. (COMIC: The Final Chapter)
Jim Sheldrake wrote a series of back-up stories for a licensed comic based on the Mister E television series. One of these stories explored Mister E's homeplanet being in a time war with a terrorist organisation known as the Black Sun Brigade whose motivations lay in the actions Mister E's people had yet to take. This story was said to be "a shade too close to the truth". (PROSE: The Enemy of My Enemy Is My Enemy)
Behind the scenes
- Alan Moore said that the Order of the Black Sun "were an Earth-5 version of the Green Lantern Corps" of the DC Comics multiverse, whose main realities were Earth-1 and 2.[1]
References
- ↑ 1983 interview in Cerebro, quoted in "Doctor Who and the Genesis of Alan Moore" by Lance Parkin.