Encyclopedia Galactica
Encyclopedia Galactica A book of the Original Series reference line | ||
---|---|---|
Book No. | 1 | |
Author(s) | Bruce Kraus[1] | |
Adaptation of | ||
No. of Pages | {{{pages}}} | |
Published | September 1979 | |
ISBN | 0525610391 | |
Chronology | ||
Previous | Next | |
The Official Battlestar Galactica Scrapbook | Encyclopedia Galactica | none |
Paperback Version | ||
Available at Amazon.com – Purchase | ||
Available at Amazon.co.uk – Purchase | ||
Available at BOOKSAMILLION.COM - Purchase | ||
Available at Half.com by eBay - Purchase | ||
Audiobook Version | ||
Available at iTunes – [{{{itunes}}} Purchase] |
Encyclopedia Galactica: From the Fleet Library aboard the Battlestar Galactica (Windmill Books and E.P. Dutton 1979, ISBN 0525610391), edited by Bruce Kraus, is an encyclopedia of the Original Series.
Encyclopedia Galactica is presently out of print, although copies of it, at times, are available either through Amazon.com or eBay.
Due to its various inaccuracies, misspellings, and contradictory information, it is not considered a fully canonical source text for the Original Series. Battlestar Wiki does aim to note the difference between this text and aired information however, though makes no guarantees on its status in Battlestar canon.
Errata
A listing of errata in the book that deviates from already established canonical material.
- In general, the timeline given in the book does not correspond to the date Starbuck gives in "The Man with Nine Lives" (yahren 7322).[2]
- The book mentions that after serving with distinction in a dozen major engagements during the "Great War", he "returned to Carillon a hero", instead of Caprica.[3]
- The book mentions that Zac is short for "Zaccariah", although there is nothing to support this.[4]
- The book mentions that Adar was born in 6368, but contradicts this date by saying he became a staff assistant to the Quorum of Twelve in 5997, almost 400 years before he was even born.[5]
- The picture of the alleged Agro Ship is actually a picture of the Mining Ship seen in both the Original and Re-imagined Series.[6]
- The Borellian Nomen are referred to as "Borallians".[7]
- The top picture of a Boray is, in fact, the appearance of Count Iblis without special effects.[8]
- The "dreadnought" depicted in the book is, in fact, a Cylon basestar over Carillon when Apollo and Starbuck set ignite the tylium.[9]
- The term "drone" is defined as "compact, pilotless spacecraft" developed by humans. The term "drone" as defined in the series refers to robots, like Muffit II. Additionally, the small gallery of pictures depicting a drone are the Cylon Mines in the Straits of Madagon.[9]
- Count Iblis is called "Ibley".[10]
Other items
These are items that cannot fit in any other location, due to the lack of canonicy.
- Astralon: high-velocity particles, similar to meteoroids and micro-meteoroids, that are grouped together like a cloud. Armored battle craft are shielded from astralons, but can cause damage to unshielded civilian vehicles, compromising the hull and ship's atmosphere. Smaller astralons are said to be undetectable by low-power scanners.[11]
External links
- Encyclopedia Galactica in PDF format, original JPEGs scanned by jjrakman at ColonialFleets.com.
References
- Please note that page numbers reflect the numbering in the PDF file that is linked above, and not in the actual encyclopedia itself, as the pages are not individually numbered in the actual book.