Rura Penthe
From Memory Alpha, the free Star Trek reference
Rura Penthe was a penal colony asteroid of the Klingon Empire. Located in the trinary Rura Penthe system within two sectors of the Federation border, it was widely known as "the aliens' graveyard".
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[edit] Overview
The asteroid contained one of the most important sources of dilithium ore in the Klingon Empire. To mine the precious material, a penal colony for both Klingon and alien prisoners was established there, providing sufficient labor force for the extensive exploitation of the asteroid's resources.
The surface temperature of Rura Penthe was extremely low, and the landscape was dominated by glaciers. Without proper clothing, no humanoid lifeform was able to survive for very long on the surface, so most of the mining and prison facility was located underground. A magnetic shield encased the mining facility and a vast area surrounding it in order to prevent prisoners from being beamed away. The prison complex was patrolled by armed guards. Other security measures were minimal, as they were deemed largely unnecessary due to the harsh surface climate. (Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country)
[edit] History
Rura Penthe had been a penal colony of the Klingon Empire since at least the early 22nd century. Banishment to its submontane dilithium mines was one of the most feared punishments throughout the Klingon Empire and its enemies. It was said that almost no one survived more than a year in the mines.
In 2152, Earth Starfleet Captain Jonathan Archer and his former Klingon advocate Kolos were sentenced by a tribunal on Narendra III to labor on Rura Penthe (Archer for the remainder of his life and Kolos for a period of one year). However, Archer was soon rescued by his crew, whereas Kolos decided to stay. (ENT: "Judgment")
In 2293, Starfleet Captain James T. Kirk and Commander Leonard McCoy were sentenced to a life of hard labor on Rura Penthe. They managed to escape after a few days, though it later emerged that their escape was facilitated so that the Klingon guards could kill them in the attempt. The setup failed, however, as Kirk and McCoy were successfully beamed aboard the USS Enterprise-A after trekking across the glaciers to escape the magnetic shield, thanks to a tracking device that was placed on Kirk's shoulder by Spock just before Kirk and McCoy left the Enterprise to investigate the events that eventually led to their arrest. (Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country)
[edit] Appendices
[edit] Related topics
[edit] Background
- Rura Penthe was a reference to the 1954 movie adaption of Jules Verne's 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, in which Rura Penthe was a slave labor camp that inspired Captain Nemo's rage against society.
- In 2293 when Captain James T. Kirk and Doctor Leonard McCoy were imprisoned in Rura Penthe, it was stated that no one had ever escaped Rura. Obviously this was not true, as Captain Jonathan Archer escaped in 2152, but it could be speculated that this was propaganda to discourage criminals from attempting to escape.
- The surface scenes of Rura Penthe in Star Trek VI were filmed at Knik Glacier, east of Palmer, Alaska, while interior shots were partly filmed at Bronson Caves in Griffith Park in Los Angeles, California. The rest of the interiors and exteriors were done on Paramount Stage 15. For Rura Penthe's appearance in Enterprise, the interior shots were filmed at Paramount Stage 9 on a set that was built by a construction crew headed by Tom Purser and Thomas J. Arp.
- In all, there were 40 aliens and 15-20 Klingon guards used in the scene featured in Enterprise. Several of the actors were the same ones who appeared in Star Trek VI.
- Although not stated on-screen, Rura Penthe was the "Klingon prison planet" referenced in 2009's Star Trek. A deleted scene from the film shows that Nero and his crew from the Narada were captured by the Klingons and imprisoned on Rura Penthe for twenty-five years after their ship was crippled by the USS Kelvin in 2233. The attack on the prison planet referenced in the film was Nero and his crew escaping from Rura Penthe and reclaiming their vessel.[1][2]
- In etymology terms, Rura Penthe means "wasteland of misery" coming from roots shared by the words "rural"[3] and "Nepenthe."[4]
