Sith
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Template:Otheruses1 Image:Vaderrots.png Within the fictional Star Wars universe, the term Sith is used to describe two separate but related groups. The most common use of the word applies to a cult of warrior priests devoted to the dark side of the Force, serving as the evil counterparts of the Jedi Knights. This article deals primarily with this group, the leaders of which were known as "Sith Lords."
The second group was a near-human race enslaved by the future members of the aforementioned cult, who later took the name of this race as their own.
Etymology of the word Sith
Template:Unreferenced The first use of the word Sith was in the script for Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope, as a title for Darth Vader, the "Dark Lord of the Sith." George Lucas did not explain in the script what exactly this meant, however. Early works of Expanded Universe fiction interpretted the term "Lord of the Sith," under the guidance of Lucas, as implying that there was some sort of group that Darth Vader was lord over, and from this created the story of the Sith race, who were enslaved by early practitioners of the dark side. For a decade or more additional fictional works fleshed this story out, elaborating on how, once this race had faded to obscurity, the word Sith remained the name of the villains in George Lucas's prequel Star Wars films.
Sith philosophy
- Fear leads to anger.
- Anger leads to hate.
- Hatred leads to power.
- Power leads to victory.
- Let your anger flow through you.
- Your hate will make you strong.
- True power is only achieved through
- testing the limits of one's anger,
- passing through unscathed.
- Rage channeled through anger is unstoppable.
- The dark side of the Force
- offers unimaginable power.
- The dark side is stronger than the light.
- The weak deserve their fate.
- –tenets of Sith philosophy
Sith Lords are devoted to the dark side of the Force and are expected to draw on their anger, fear, and hatred in order to gain power. The Sith therefore maintain a certain psychological isolation where they continue to hold themselves above all others.
The Sith Code
The Sith Code was the mantra that reinforced the core beliefs of the Sith Order. This code was developed many millennia before the Star Wars films take place, and was taught specifically as a foundation of Sith Philosophy at the Sith Academy on Korriban as far back as the Old Republic:
- Peace is a lie, there is only passion.
- Through passion, I gain strength.
- Through strength, I gain power.
- Through power, I gain victory.
- Through victory, my chains are broken.
- The Force shall free me.
Another expression of Sith philosophy related to this "code" can be found in the PC video game Star Wars: TIE Fighter. An agent of Emperor Palpatine, providing secondary mission objectives, makes the statement: "Do not let your anger blind you. Rather, let it consume you and in the purity of your hatred you will find the deaths of your enemies."
History of the Sith Order
Timeline for ancient Jedi-versus-Sith conflicts
The Second Great Schism
- 7,000-6,900 BBY — The Hundred-Years Darkness
- 6,900 BBY — The Battle of Corbos
The Golden Age of the Sith
- 5,000 BBY — The Great Hyperspace War
- The Battle of Coruscant
- The Battle of Koros Major
- The Battle of Kirrek
- The Battle of Primus Goluud
- The Battle of Korriban
The Old Sith Wars
- 4,002 BBY — The destruction of Ambria
- 3,997-3,996 BBY — The Great Sith War
- 3,996 BBY — The Battle of Basilisk
- 3,996 BBY — The Dark Reaper Campaign
- 3,996 BBY — The Battle of Foerost
- 3,996 BBY — The First Battle of Coruscant
- 3,996 BBY — The Battle of Vento
- 3,996 BBY — The Second Battle of Coruscant
- 3,996 BBY — The Battle of Kemplex IX
- 3,996 BBY — The Battle of Ossus
- 3,996 BBY — The Battle of Al'Har
- 3,996 BBY — The Battle of Onderon
- 3,996 BBY — The Battle of Yavin IV
- 3,996 BBY — The Battle of Empress Teta
- 3,995-3,993 BBY — The Great Hunt
- The Cleansing of the Nine Houses
- 3,965-3,960 BBY — The Mandalorian Wars
- 3,965 BBY — The First Battle of Onderon
- 3,965 BBY — The First Battle of Dxun
- 3,963 BBY — The Battle of Serroco
- 3,963 BBY — The Battle of Cathar
- 3,963 BBY — The Battle of Iridonia
- 3,962 BBY — The Battle of Dagary Minor
- 3,962 BBY — The Battle of Eres III
- 3,962 BBY — The Battle of Duro
- 3,962 BBY — The Battle of Althir
- 3,961 BBY — The Battle of Taris
- 3,961 BBY — The Battle of Jaga's Cluster
- 3,960 BBY — The Second Battle of Onderon
- 3,960 BBY — The Second Battle of Dxun
- 3,960 BBY — The Battle of Malachor V
- 3,959-3,956 BBY — The Second Sith War
- 3,959 BBY — The Battle of Foerost
- 3,959 BBY — The bombing of Telos IV
- 3,957 BBY — The capture of Darth Revan
- 3,956 BBY — The Battle of Taris
- 3,956 BBY — The attack on Dantooine
- 3,956 BBY — The Battle of Rakata Prime
- 3,955-3,951 BBY — The Sith Civil War
- 3,952 BBY — The destruction of Katarr
- 3,951 BBY — The Battle of Dantooine
- 3,951 BBY — The Onderon Civil War
- 3,951 BBY — The Battle of Telos IV
- 3,951 BBY — The destruction of Malachor V
The New Sith Wars
- The Battle of Uba IV
- c. 1,500 BBY — The Dark Underlord Campaigns
- 1,466 BBY — The Battle of Mizra
- The Battle of Hoth
- The Battle of Dromund Kaas
- The Battle of Malrev IV
- The Light and Darkness War
- 1,000 BBY — The Battle of Harpori
- 1,000 BBY — The Battle of Balowa
- 1,000 BBY — The Battle of Almas
- 1,000 BBY — The First Battle of Ruusan
- 1,000 BBY — The Second Battle of Ruusan
- 1,000 BBY — The Third Battle of Ruusan
- 1,000 BBY — The Fourth Battle of Ruusan
- 1,000 BBY — The Fifth Battle of Ruusan
- 1,000 BBY — The Sixth Battle of Ruusan
- 1,000 BBY — The Seventh Battle of Ruusan
The Hundred-Year Darkness
According to Expanded Universe fiction, the Sith Order, or cult, was first established when dissident Jedi came to believe that "true" power was achieved not through reflective meditation, as taught by their Jedi Masters, but through emotion. The tension between the Jedi and these dissident "Dark Jedi" grew until conflict erupted, seven thousand years before the Battle of Yavin and the events of A New Hope. This conflict, called the Hundred-Year Darkness, the Second Great Schism of the Jedi Order, led to the Dark Jedi being banished by the Old Republic. These outcasts found a new home on the distant planet of Korriban, a desolate world inhabited by the relatively primitive Sith people. However, the Force flowed strongly with the Sith, allowing them to create their own brand of black magic. The Dark Jedi saw this as an opportunity to gain additional power. Using their training in the Force, the Dark Jedi amazed the Sith and elevated themselves to god-like status on Korriban, becoming the rulers of the Sith people. As years passed, and interbreeding occurred between the Dark Jedi and the Sith, the term "Sith" came to mean not the original near-human inhabitants of Korriban, but their Dark Jedi masters as well. It is from this rise to power and integration into Sith culture that the term Dark Lord of the Sith was first conceived as a title bestowed upon the leader of the Sith Empire by a council of lesser Sith Lords.
The Great Hyperspace War and the Naddist Uprising
In 5,000 BBY, the Republic rediscovered the Sith and the Great Hyperspace War began. It ended with Dark Lord of the Sith Naga Sadow hiding in suspended animation on Yavin 4, his great war fleets destroyed. Within 10 years, the Sith Empire was dead.
Centuries later, a Jedi Knight named Freedon Nadd fell to the dark side. On Yavin 4, he awakened former Dark Lord Naga Sadow, who trained him in the ways of the Sith. Though Sadow's definite fate is not known, it is believed he perished and his spirit was destroyed at his pupil's hand. Freedon Nadd used his newfound powers to conquer the Onderon system. But Freedon Nadd's extraordinary reign of power eventually came to a close. His death created a great power vacuum all throughout the galaxy. His dark gloomy tomb, constructed on Dxun and greatly tainted by the dark side, would remain an outpost for Sith knights for many years to come.
Sith teachings would bring constant civil war throughout their civilization however, as the primal instinct of their teachings was based upon the principle that they must continually prove their strength against each other.
The Great Sith War
Four hundred years after Nadd's death, the Jedi Exar Kun sought out his tomb, a place strong in the dark side. Nadd's spirit materialized and succeeded in corrupting Kun, but was eventually destroyed by his student. Exar Kun was pronounced the new Dark Lord of the Sith by the ghost of the ancient Dark Lord Marka Ragnos. As his first apprentice he took another fallen Jedi, Ulic Qel-Droma, and the Great Sith War began. Although many Jedi turned to the dark side and still more were killed, Exar Kun was finally defeated when Ulic realized the error of his ways and led the Old Republic's forces to Kun's stronghold on Yavin 4. Using the drained life energies of his Massassi warriors, Kun shed his physical body and imprisoned his spirit within the walls of Yavin 4's Massassi temples. His ghost, driven half-mad by millennia of isolation, was destroyed by a group of Luke Skywalker's students thousands of years later. Most of what remained of his Sith Brotherhood by the end of the Great Sith War was hunted down by the Old Republic in a purge known as "the Cleansing of the Nine Houses."
The Second Sith War
Less than four decades later, the Jedi Revan and Malak, heroes of the Mandalorian War (a bloody conflict instigated by the remnants of Exar Kun's Sith), fell to the dark side and founded the Second Sith Empire. Using the ancient Rakatan Star Forge factory, they built a massive war fleet and began attacking the Old Republic. Thus began the second Sith War, later called the Jedi Civil War (and, still later, the War of the Star Forge), a conflict that proved even more devastating than Kun's war as more Jedi fell to the dark side, were killed in battle, or were murdered by Sith Assassins. Revan was the greatest military genius the Jedi had ever seen. It was through his cunning alone that the Mandalorian Wars had been won, as the Old Republic soon discovered. During the Mandalorian Wars, Revan and Malak had discovered a mysterious force called the "True Sith" in the Unknown Regions, and were therefore careful to preserve the Republic's shipyards to use against this threat once they had conquered the galaxy. After an attempted coup by Malak, however, Revan's mind was destroyed and he was captured by the Jedi. He was re-trained in their ways and sent against his traitorous apprentice. Taking up the mantle of Dark Lord, Malak redoubled his empire's offenses against the Old Republic, no longer caring about preserving his enemy's resources. Following a long and arduous quest for the five Star Maps that would lead him to the Sith's stronghold, the new Revan led a frontal assault on the Star Forge. He battled his way through the Forge's droid army and legions of Sith and Dark Jedi. After redeeming Malak's apprentice, Bastila Shan, he slew Malak himself in a final confrontation between the two old friends, allowing the Old Republic to destroy the Star Forge and win the day.
Despite this great victory won for the Old Republic by Revan, the galaxy soon grew even darker. Barely a hundred Jedi remained after the Jedi Civil War, and those who did soon found their ranks thinning at an alarming rate. Everywhere Jedi congregated, they were murdered, struck down by an invisible enemy who, incredibly enough, was somehow attacking them through the Force itself. Darth Nihilus, the Lord of Hunger, and Darth Sion, Lord of Pain, were students of Revan's former Jedi Master, Kreia (now a Sith called Darth Traya, Lady of Betrayal), had begun a shadow war against the surviving Jedi. Despite their incredible powers, they did not believe themselves strong enough to defeat the Jedi in the same kind of open warfare employed by Revan and Malak. (Revan himself had disappeared into the Unknown Regions a year after the destruction of the Star Forge, hoping to put an end to the ever-present threat posed by the so-called True Sith, and has not been heard from since.)
Five years after Malak's defeat on the Star Forge, a Jedi exile who had served Revan as a general during the Mandalorian Wars returned from the Outer Rim to find the Jedi Order virtually extinct. Thought to be the last of the Jedi by Nihilus and Sion, the exile was hunted mercilessly by Sith Assassins from planet to planet as the "last of the Jedi" tracked down the surviving members of the Jedi Council. In the end, several of these Jedi were killed, but the exile managed to turn the tide against the insidious shadow Sith, slaying Nihilus, Sion, and Traya in battle, thereby ending their Jedi purge and giving the Jedi Order a chance to rebuild.
In modern history texts, the Great Sith War, the Cleansing of the Nine Houses, the Mandalorian Wars, and the War of the Star Forge are often grouped together under the collective appellation of "the Old Sith Wars."
The Sith'ari
Around the time of the Jedi Civil War, the coming of the Sith'ari, an ancient Sith prophecy, became somewhat well known in Darth Revan's Sith Empire. The Sith'ari was said to be a perfect being who would rise to power and bring balance to the Force. According to prophecy, the Sith'ari would rise up and destroy the Sith, but in the process would return to lead the Sith and make them stronger than ever before. It is believed that the prophecy of the Sith Sith'ari and the prophecies of the Jedi Chosen One refer to the same individual; namely Anakin Skywalker/Darth Vader, who made the Sith stronger than ever by wiping out the Jedi Knights and assisting Darth Sidious in his rise to power, but then destroyed the Sith when he betrayed and killed Sidious, thus fulfilling the ancient prophecy of the Sith'ari.
The New Sith Wars
Slowly, over the next thousand years, the Jedi Order rebuilt itself back to its former strength. Then, some 2,000 years before the Battle of Yavin, yet another Jedi, chafing under the restrictions of the Jedi Council, fell to the dark side, stole a Sith Holocron, renamed himself "Darth Ruin," formed a new Sith Order, and began recruiting others to his cause. This spawned a new series of conflicts, called the New Sith Wars, which lasted for a millennium.
However, the Sith very nearly proved to be their own undoing. Hungry for power, they turned on each other, all but destroying their order. The survivors reformed under the leadership of Lord Kaan, calling themselves "the Brotherhood of Darkness." To appease his disheartened minions, Kaan abandoned the millennia-old tradition of one ruling Dark Lord and granted the title to a good number of his followers, though very few of them were truly deserving of it.
The final conflict of the New Sith Wars, the War of Light and Dark or the Light and Darkness War (sometimes also referred to, as Exar Kun's war had been, as the Great Sith War), came to a head in the titanic seventh Battle of Ruusan, in which the Jedi Lord Hoth and the Army of Light clashed with Lord Kaan and the Brotherhood of Darkness for the last time. In the end, a deranged Kaan activated a thought bomb, an ancient Sith technique that sapped the life energy of all Force-sensitives in the vicinity. Both armies were all but destroyed, and only one Sith Lord survived: Darth Bane.
To guard against the Sith again engaging in fratricidal internecine war or losing sight of their "ideals" again, Bane took only one apprentice, starting a "one master, one apprentice" tradition to prevent the Sith from destroying themselves again. "Two there should be; no more, no less," he is said to have explained; "One to embody power, the other to crave it." He also restarted the tradition of passing the name "Darth" to each of his successors, a trend which appears to have originated with Darth Revan millennia before. In a nod to Kaan's earlier pronouncement, both master and apprentice in Bane's Sith Order held the title "Dark Lord of the Sith," making them, nominally at least, equals. The new tenets of this sinister order would be cunning, stealth, subterfuge, and a virtue learned from their worst enemy, patience.
The Revenge of the Sith
Image:DarthxMaul.jpg Image:264277.jpg
Bane's reformed Sith Order went into hiding, though they were soon discovered by the Jedi and believed to be destroyed. They survived, but would not resurface for almost one thousand years, with the depredations of Darth Sidious and Darth Maul that began shortly before the Battle of Naboo.
Though Darth Maul was slain in that battle at the hands of Jedi Padawan Obi-Wan Kenobi, the day proved an unparalleled victory for the Sith; Darth Sidious, generally known to the public as Senator Palpatine of Naboo, was elected to the office of Supreme Chancellor of the Galactic Republic, and set his sights on making Anakin Skywalker, newly discovered by the Jedi and rumored to be the prophesied "Chosen One," his new apprentice.
More than a decade passed, during which Palpatine manipulated the Senate into granting him more and more power. His new apprentice, former Jedi Master Count Dooku (renamed Darth Tyranus in the Sith tradition), formed the Confederacy of Independent Systems (or the Separatists), which seceded from the Galactic Republic, beginning a long and bloody conflict known as the Clone Wars.
During the Clone Wars, many Jedi lost their lives at the hands of the Separatists and their Kaleesh cyborg military leader, General Grievous. The Clone Wars eventually reached even Coruscant, where the cunning general captured Supreme Chancellor Palpatine. A great battle erupted above the planet-city. In that battle, Anakin Skywalker, now a full-fledged Jedi, brutally executed Count Dooku, as he was goaded on by Palpatine.
The Chancellor then started to use his emergency powers to control the Jedi Order. The Jedi were instantly suspicious of Palpatine's motives, and suspected that Darth Sidious was a part of Palpatine's inner circle and was controlling him. Palpatine appointed Anakin to the Jedi Council to use as a spy, and convinced him that the Jedi were trying to take over the Republic.
It was also during this time that Anakin began to be plagued with visions of the death of his pregnant wife, Senator Padmé Amidala, in childbirth. Haunted by the murder of his mother three years earlier by Tusken Raiders on Tatooine, Anakin had been determined to find a way to prevent death using the Force.
Eventually Palpatine revealed to Anakin that he was, in fact, Sidious. In doing so, he offered him the secret he had been looking for (claiming it had been discovered by his former master, Darth PlagueisTemplate:Ref), so long as he joined him as his new apprentice. Instead, Anakin went to the Jedi Council and told Jedi Master Mace Windu of Palpatine's true identity. Windu, along with the Jedi Agen Kolar, Saesee Tiin, and Kit Fisto, moved to arrest the Chancellor. However, Sidious quickly cut down the latter three and was battling with Windu when Anakin arrived. Skywalker demanded that Palpatine be arrested and stand trial, but the Jedi master argued that Sidious was far too dangerous to be allowed to live any longer. As Windu moved to kill the Sith Lord, Anakin turned on his ally, allowing Palpatine to strike him down.
Image:Revenge-of-the-sith-lg-01.jpg Skywalker became Sidious's new apprentice as Darth Vader, and instructed him to dispose of all the Jedi in the Jedi Temple, including children. Most surviving Jedi not present at the temple were disposed of by "Order 66," which instructed all clone troopers to execute their Jedi commanders. Very few Jedi survived this treachery, the most notable among them Yoda and Obi-Wan.
When it was over, the Jedi ranks had been thinned considerably. At last, the moment had come for the Sith to reclaim their former glory. Sidious/Palpatine replaced the ancient Republic with the Empire, an oppressive, galaxy-spanning dictatorship the likes of which had not been seen for a millennium.
The Great Jedi Purge continued, led by Vader and other Force-sensitive minions of the Emperor, such as the Inquisitorius and the Emperor's Hands, until only a handful of Jedi were left alive. It was a dark time for the galaxy, in which the Force became thought of throughout the Empire (except in the cases of Vader, Palpatine, and their Dark Jedi minions, of course) as an arcane philosophy, almost like a fairy tale. (This was used as an explanation for absence of the term "Sith" in the original trilogy.)
The fall of the Galactic Empire
Image:Return of the jedi 4.jpg
Eventually, however, the Rebel Alliance arose to threaten the Empire's unchallenged sovereignty. The Galactic Civil War drew many into its fold, perhaps the most notable of whom was Luke Skywalker, the son of Anakin. Shortly after Luke destroyed the Empire's terrifying Death Star superweapon, the Emperor and Vader became aware of the young man's identity. Both Sith Lords hoped to corrupt Luke to the dark side, but each had a different motive. Vader desired to kill the Emperor and rule the galaxy with his son, but Palpatine wished to replace Vader with the boy. During the Battle of Endor, Skywalker refused to join the Emperor, who then began torturing him with Force lightning. His son's suffering and pleas for help finally freed Anakin Skywalker from the Emperor's grip, and he threw his master down the Death Star's reactor shaft, in the process subjecting himself to the full force of the Emperor's lightning. Severely injured by the Emperor's assault and with his life-sustaining armor non-functional, the former Sith Lord died a few minutes later. Luke escaped with his father's body shortly before the new Death Star was destroyed, marking the end of the Emperor's reign, until his clones appeared years later.
Dark Jedi
The Lords of the Sith are not the only ones capable of calling upon the corrupting powers of the dark side of the Force, though they are by far the most dangerous Force-wielding foes of the Jedi. The blanket label "Dark Jedi" is often used to refer to non-Sith Force-users, though these darksiders may never have been true Jedi, as can be seen by the countless "Dark Jedi" trained during the reign of the Empire, during which the Jedi Order was nearly extinct.
Image:Quinlanvos.jpg During the Clone Wars, Sidious and Tyranus had a number of Dark Jedi serving the Separatist side. Among the most notable of Count Dooku's inner circle were Asajj Ventress, Sora Bulq, Artel Darc, Dustrose, Karoc, Vinoc, Sev'rance Tann, Nikkos Tyris, Saato, Tol Skorr, Kadrian Sey, Trenox, and Quinlan Vos. Sidious, as Emperor, continued this trend after the formation of the Empire, with Dark Jedi such as the Inquisitorius, the Secret Order, the Emperor's Hands, the Dark Side Elite, the Emperor's Royal Guard, and various Dark Side Adepts. Such agents of the Sith were the Dark Jedi Mara Jade and Jeng Droga who would often be sent on missions of subterfuge. After the death of the Emperor, the former Inquisitor Jerec and his cadre of six Dark Jedi made an attempt to seize the Valley of the Jedi, the place of imprisonment of the souls of all those who were destroyed by Kaan's thought bomb during the Battle of Ruusan; Jerec and his cohorts, however, were eliminated by Kyle Katarn.
New Dark Jedi are constantly crawling out of the woodwork, many of them fallen students of Luke Skywalker, like Gantoris, Kyp Durron, Brakiss, Kueller, Bey Gandon, Dal Konur, and Desann.
The Sith hierarchy
Like the Jedi Order, which has a clearly defined hierarchy of titles (Jedi Initiate, or "youngling," to Jedi Padawan to Jedi Knight to Jedi Master to Jedi Grand Master), the Sith Order has a ranking system to divide the strong from the stronger, though it should be noted that, due to the great number of successive incarnations of the order, Sith hierarchy didn't maintain a single continuous ranking system throughout its history. Like the Jedi and the Old Republic, the Sith underwent a great reformation after the apocalyptic Battle of Ruusan, and the ranks of the Sith Order were among the things changed. Prior to that, however, Sith hierarchy remained much the same for almost 6,000 years: Sith Minion to Sith Acolyte to Sith Warrior to Sith Lord to Dark Lord of the Sith. For the most part this ranking system remained the same, through the ancient Sith Empire, Exar Kun's Brotherhood of the Sith, and Darth Revan's Sith Empire, until Lord Kaan declared that all of his highest ranking followers in the Sith Brotherhood of Darkness were Dark Lords of the Sith. Following the Sith Order's destruction at the Seventh Battle of Ruusan, Darth Bane reformed the order and decreed that there would only be two Sith at a time from that point onward: a Master and an apprentice. Both would bear the title "Dark Lord of the Sith," which at that point in time became interchangeable with the term "Sith Lord."
Sith prestige classes
Note: the following text refers to the Sith class structure as presented in the Star Wars D20 RPG System; the division of classes is for gameplay purposes and does not necessarily represent the "real" structure of the Sith.
In addition to their standard hierarchy, the Sith maintained a system of titles called "prestige classes," similar to the Jedi sub-categories of Guardian, Consular, Sentinel, Master, Watchman, and Weapon Master.
Sith Assassins
Sith Assassins are Sith who prefer to attack from the shadows and assassinate targets rather than engaging them in standard combat. Almost always working solo or in small groups, they stride through crowded areas undetected using special stealth field generators or the rare art of Force camouflage, launching a surprise attack on a victim. While most may use lightsabers, some may use electro-staffs or blasters especially designed for sniping. Darth Sion commanded legions of Sith Assassins in the aftermath of the Second Sith War, causing the near-destruction of the Jedi.
Sith Marauders
Sith Marauders are often responsible for the most brutal murders carried out by the Sith; they are trained to become a living embodiment of a combat master empowered by the dark side. They are drawn from diverse groups, as varied as Jedi Knights, survivalists, martial artists, dark side marauders, mercenaries, and pirates, but they all use a lightsaber more often than the Force, with few emotions other than hate, rage, and cruelty; the dark side rewards these emotions with immense power, thusly a single Sith Marauder can often go toe-to-toe with any single normal Jedi in saber combat and win. While Marauders are not always the masterminds behind dark plots, they are usually the ones carrying out the plans of their Sith Lord masters. Being the Sith'ari, Darth Vader was most likely the greatest and most powerful Sith Marauder.
Sith Lords
Sith Lords (this a title distinct from the appellation given the most powerful Sith) are the geniuses behind the most insidious plots and murders. Using the dark side of the Force to inflict misery, suffering, and corruption, few dare step in their way; Sith Lords are also charged with preserving the ancient lore of the Sith by passing them onto other Sith and their acolytes, and delving deeper into the mysteries of Sith alchemy and the dark side itself. While they don't enter combat as often as the other classes (for they have more pawns and servants), they are the most fearsome of the Sith prestige classes, as they are the pinnacle of a Sith's evolution; almost all Sith Lords were previously a Warrior or Assassin, as rarely is an Acolyte talented enough to make the transition. Each Lord takes the long view; Their goal is to utterly destroy the Jedi, assuring themselves dominion of the galaxy, and so their role is to nurture this grand project, extending their tendrils of influence throughout the galaxy. Each Lord may never see the fruition of his life-long dream, and must be content in the knowledge that they have advanced the project in the shadows a little bit, and that one day it will succeed. The most effective and infamous (and probably the most powerful as well) Sith Lords would likely be Darth Sidious and Darth Revan.
The Sith legacy
Six years after the Battle of Endor, Palpatine returned to threaten the New Republic. Unbeknownst to the Rebellion, the Emperor had maintained a secret supply of Spaarti cloning cylinders on the planet Byss in the Deep Core. Years before his death at Endor, Palpatine's body had begun to decay so rapidly from the ravaging dark side energies it manipulated that he had been forced to consider periodically transferring his soul into fresh clones of himself. Vader's treachery, however, had been unexpected, and the spirits of the ancient Dark Lords of Korriban had been forced to intervene and draw Palpatine back from the "madness beyond death" themselves. Palpatine's spirit, lacking a nearby clone body to inhabit, took possession of the Emperor's Hand Jeng Droga. Though Droga went mad in the process, he journeyed to Byss, where Grand Vizier Sate Pestage exorcised the disembodied Emperor, allowing him to possess a fresh clone. Unfortunately, the trauma of his unexpected death, the transference of his spirit across astronomical distances, and the length of time spent outside his body had considerably weakened the Emperor's mental stability. He would spend five years rebuilding his personal power in the Force and subtle galactic influence, but his mind would never fully recover. Though he and his loyal Imperial forces managed to briefly retake the galactic capital of Coruscant and wreak havoc on the galaxy for a year, the mental and physical health of the resurrected Palpatine continued to deteriorate due to his repeated deaths and the genetic tampering done to his clones by the treacherous Sovereign Protector Carnor Jax. He died a final death on the planet Onderon, when the dying Jedi Knight Empatojayos Brand, a survivor of the Jedi Purge, bound the Emperor's departing life essence to his own, taking the Dark Lord with him as he became one with the Force. Palpatine, the greatest Dark Lord of the Sith, descended into Chaos, the eternal "madness beyond death."
Though Jedi have continued to fall into darkness since then, none have proved as great a threat as that posed by the newest Sith Order. Lumiya, a former Emperor's Hand and Darth Vader's secret apprentice, became Dark Lady of the Sith following her master's death at Endor. She trained two consecutive apprentices: Flint, who was redeemed by Luke Skywalker, and Carnor Jax, who was killed by Palpatine loyalist Kir Kanos shortly after the Emperor's final death on Onderon.
Lumiya supported both the Nagai and Tof alien invasions in the aftermath of the Battle of Endor, crossed paths with Leia Organa on Herdessa and dueled with Luke Skywalker on Kinooine, though all her endeavors ultimately ended in failure. Afterwards, Lady Lumiya went into hiding, returning the Sith Order to the secret, underground existence begun by Darth Bane a millennium before. She reappeared briefly during the Yuuzhan Vong War when she attempted to steal a sample of bafforr pollen from Yaga Minor. After battling the Yuuzhan Vong invaders to a standstill, she vanished once more and has not been heard from since.
Following the Yuuzhan Vong War, however, Jedi Master Kyle Katarn encountered a Force-strong Yuuzhan Vong female in the mysterious Cloak of the Sith region of the galaxy, where it was rumored that post-Palpatine Sith still lived. Powerful though she was, Kyle sensed an even darker hand behind her training. Ominously, this Yuuzhan Vong apparently had a Master.
Dark Lords of the Sith
Template:Main The Dark Lords of the Sith are acknowledged as the leaders of their order, and the most powerful Sith of their time. Only one Dark Lord existed at a time until the reign of Kaan.
An asterisk (*) denotes that the Sith returned to the light side at some point.
Dark Lord | First Chronological Appearance | Last Chronological Appearance |
---|---|---|
Ajunta Pall* | Knights of the Old Republic | Knights of the Old Republic |
Dathka Graush | ||
Adas | ||
Tulak Hord | ||
Darth Andeddu | ||
Marka Ragnos | Tales of the Jedi: The Golden Age of the Sith | Jedi Knight: Jedi Academy |
Naga Sadow | Tales of the Jedi: The Golden Age of the Sith | Tales of the Jedi: The Fall of the Sith Empire |
Ludo Kressh | Tales of the Jedi: The Golden Age of the Sith | Tales of the Jedi: The Fall of the Sith Empire |
Freedon Nadd | Tales of the Jedi: The Freedon Nadd Uprising | Tales of the Jedi: Dark Lords of the Sith |
Exar Kun | Tales of the Jedi: Dark Lords of the Sith | The Jedi Academy Trilogy: Champions of the Force |
Darth Revan* | Knights of the Old Republic | Knights of the Old Republic |
Darth Malak | Knights of the Old Republic | Knights of the Old Republic |
Darth Ruin | ||
The Dark Underlord | ||
Belia Darzu | ||
Darth Rivan | ||
Lord Kaan | Jedi vs. Sith | "Bane of the Sith" |
Lord LaTor | Dark Forces: Jedi Knight (flashback) | Dark Forces: Jedi Knight (flashback) |
Lord Qordis | "Bane of the Sith" | "Bane of the Sith" |
Lord Kopecz | Jedi vs. Sith | Jedi vs. Sith |
Lady Githany | Jedi vs. Sith | Jedi vs. Sith |
Kaox Krul | "Darkness Shared" | "Darkness Shared" |
Seviss Vaa | ||
Darth Bane | Jedi vs. Sith | "Bane of the Sith" |
Darth Zannah | Jedi vs. Sith | Jedi vs. Sith |
Darth Millennial | ||
Darth Plagueis | ||
Darth Sidious | Star Wars Republic #64: "Bloodlines" (flashback) | Empire's End |
Darth Maul | "Marked" (flashback) | The Phantom Menace |
Darth Tyranus | Legacy of the Jedi (flashback) | Revenge of the Sith |
Darth Vader* | Episode I Adventures: The Ghostling Children | The New Jedi Order: The Unifying Force |
Lady Lumiya | Star Wars Marvel #55: "Plif" | "Lumiya: Dark Star of the Empire" |
Lord Flint* | Star Wars Marvel Annual #3: "The Apprentice" | Star Wars Marvel #92: "The Dream" |
Carnor Jax | Crimson Empire | Crimson Empire |
Lesser Sith
Note: An asterisk (*) denotes that the Sith returned to the light side at some point.
The Ancient Sith Empire
- Shar Dakhan
- Gav Daragon
- Dor-Gal-Ram
- Garu
- Horak-Mul
- Kla
- Komok-Da
- Mondrak
- Najus
- Tritos Nal
- Larad Noon
- The Patron
- Poxall
- Simus
- Bo Vanda
The Onderonian Dynasty
The Brotherhood of the Sith
The Second Sith Empire
- Kel Algwinn*
- Yuthura Ban
- Darth Bandon
- Veren Gal
- Hajita
- Elassa Huros
- Lashowe
- Golan Lor
- Thalia May*
- Mekel
- Dustil Onasi*
- Selene
- Shaardan
- Bastila Shan*
- Tariga
- Jorak Uln
- Dak Vesser
- Uthar Wynn
The Lords of Malachor
The New Sith Empire
The Sith Legacy
- Darth Krayt
- Darth Talon
The Fist of the Empire Template:Ref
- Gwellib Ap-Llewff
- Argor
- Boc Aseca
- Yasinda Bardak
- Picaroon C. Boodle
- Brakiss
- Adalric Cessius Brandl
- Jaalib Brandl
- Joruus C'baoth
- Cronal
- Sa Cuis
- Burr Danid
- Ameesa Darys
- Nial Declann
- Drayneen
- Jeng Droga
- Baddon Fass
- Alum Frost
- Vill Goir
- Gorc
- Gornash
- Kvag Gthull
- Halmere
- Kile Hannad
- Hethrir
- Roganda Ismaren
- Mara Jade*
- Shela Jalahafi
- Teles Jalahafi
- Jedgar
- Jerec
- Kadann
- Kir Kanos
- Zasm Katth
- Ven Kennede
- Danaan Kerr
- Vess Kogo
- Arden Lyn
- Malorum
- Maw
- Merilli
- Krdys Mordi
- Nefta
- Xecr Nist
- Vin Northal
- Lanu Pasiq
- Quarmall
- Sarcev Quest
- Loam Redge
- Rillao*
- Sa-Di
- Sancor
- Sariss
- Sedriss
- Kam Solusar*
- Maarek Stele
- Lemmet Tauk
- Tedryn-Sha
- Savuud Thimram
- Laddinare Torbin
- Tremayne
- Vialco
- Yun*
Cultural influences
The concept of the ancient Sith Empire may have been influenced by the culture of Ancient Egypt. Particularly, the god-like status accorded the Dark Lord of the Sith is similar to that of the Egyptian Pharaohs, and much of the architecture on Korriban (as seen in the comics) bears a noticeable resemblance to that of Egyptian tombs.
Despite the name "Sith" being identical to one version of an Irish term for fairies (sidhe), which in folklore were sometimes malignant, there appears to be no relation between the terms.
Though not confirmed another possible origin Lucas used were the secret societies of the Egyptian Seth and or the Set (both groups being preoccupied with a rebellion against nature and an argument for the lefthanded path), as well as Nietzsche's The Will to Power. A final comparison can be made to Satanism.
Pronouncing "Sith"
The /th/ sound (written as a "Θ" by linguists as for all voiced interdental aspirate phonemes) is not used in several languages, including French, German, Italian, Swedish, Polish, Chinese and Japanese. In foreign language versions of the Star Wars franchise, the first consonant in "Sith" was pronounced as a /t/ in German, and as a /s/ in Japanese.
Footnotes
- Template:NoteAlthough it is never stated in the movie that Sidious was Plagueis's apprentice, it is included in the novelization of Revenge of the Sith and implied in the film. See Darth Plagueis.
- Template:NoteThough technically not Sith, the darksiders who belonged to the Galactic Empire are sometimes referred to as the Emperor's Army of Sith Knights: the Fist of the Empire. See Inquisitorius, Prophets of the Dark Side, Emperor's Royal Guard, Emperor's Hand, Dark Jedi, and Dark side devotee.
External links
- The Sith Explained (Howstuffworks.com)
- http://obscurearchives.stupidquestion.net/sith.html
- Sith Article at Wookieepediaca:Sith
da:Sith de:Figuren aus Star Wars#Die Sith es:Sith fr:Sith he:סית' it:Sith nl:Sith ja:シス pl:Sithowie pt:Sith ru:Ситхи sk:Sith sl:Sith fi:Sith sr:Sith sv:Sith