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Talk:Sword of Kahless

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[edit] The sword of Kahless

In "The Sword of Kahless", Worf, Kor, and Jadzia Dax find the sword, and then transport it into deep space. My question is: After this episode, is the sword ever mentioned again, or does anyone ever find it? —Barclay 23:14, 24 Jun 2004 (CEST)

No and no. :) -- Cid Highwind 23:43, 24 Jun 2004 (CEST)
Well, to be fair, it was found in one of J.G. Hertzler's "Left Hand of Destiny" novels, It was recovered and given to Martok to help him regain power after a coup killed the entire Klingon High Council.. not canon, of course, but a good book (with cloned Hur'q to boot!). --Captain Mike K. Bartel 00:24, 25 Jun 2004 (CEST)

Thanks, guys. —Barclay 04:02, 25 Jun 2004 (CEST)

Why not add that info from the novel to the article's Background section, or as an inline note at the end. I think this info should be included. -- Redge | Talk 14:59, 11 Aug 2004 (CEST)
Too Bad the Sword of Kahless was used in only one epsiode and is last seen drifting in space-from the novel description {above}-it could have been used again for a lose-end tie up episode such as described above-with Worf rescuing the Klingon Empire!!! Or even better yet--Toral was not killed by Worf; he follows Worf and Kor and retrieves the "Sword of Kahless" and becomes a great Klingon hero for retrieving this relic-and shamming Worf; then with the help of the prestige of the finding the "relic"; his powerful family connections and the Cardassians {who decided to use him as a figurehead for Power and war};-Toral launches a coup de against the Klingon Council and takes ultimate power as Emperor and Chanceller. Worf is killed trying to defend the Council and the ultimate Cliffhanger is Toral and Alexander in a personal duel for control of the ultimate fate of the Klingon Empire. To parallel a popular saying...Trek Fans will never know this episode! The preceding unsigned comment was added by 134.53.145.36 (talk).

[edit] Removed

  • The artifact holds real-world parallels with the Shroud of Turin, revered as the shroud that covered Jesus in his tomb. The only difference is that fake Shrouds were not discovered, as with the Shroud of the Sword; only the veracity of the one held in Turin, Italy is contested.

Unless this was it's intent there's no reason this should be there — Morder 21:42, 5 February 2009 (UTC)