Cheron was a formerly inhabited planet. This was the homeworld of the Cheron natives, an extinct warp-capable humanoid species that destroyed itself in internecine warfare. The planet was located in the southern region of the Milky Way Galaxy, near the Coalsack Nebula.
History
Prior to stardate 5730.2, this planet and its inhabitants were unknown to the United Federation of Planets. In 2268, first contact was made with two of this planet's inhabitants.
But unfortunately, in the course of that year, when the USS Enterprise scanned the planet, its instruments revealed large uninhabited cities, extensive traffic systems that were now barren of any traffic, and lower animal lifeforms and vegetation encroaching on the cities. There was no sign of sapient life, and there were vast numbers of unburied corpses in the cities. The entire Cheronian civilization had evidently totally destroyed itself in a war generally fueled by racism, and specifically fueled by hate. The Enterprise left the last two surviving members of the species, Bele and Lokai, behind on this world, to which Bele had forced Kirk to return him and Lokai. (TOS: "Let That Be Your Last Battlefield")
In 2371, the location of Cheron was labeled in the star chart Data and Picard were studying in stellar cartography on the USS Enterprise-D. (Star Trek Generations okudagram)
As Bele and Lokai were the last known survivors of their homeworld, they were well-known for many years following the war on Cheron. In fact, a photograph of Lokai was hanging on the wall of a bar at Starbase 25. (LD: "An Embarrassment Of Dooplers")
By 2381, Cheron was part of Romulan space, beyond the Romulan Neutral Zone. (LD: "Empathological Fallacies")
Appendices
Background information
"CHE-ron" was the pronunciation for the name of this planet, according to the script pronunciation guide for DS9: "Blood Oath". [1] Other than the guide, however, Cheron was not mentioned elsewhere in the final script. The pronunciation used throughout the actual shooting was "sheh-ROHN."
According to Star Trek: Star Charts (p. 66) and Stellar Cartography: The Starfleet Reference Library ("Stellar Cartography", pp. 32-33, 39; "Federation Historical Highlights, 2161-2385"), this planet was located in the Cheron, or Omicron Gruis, system of the Beta Quadrant. This was either a single star system with a F-class star (Star Trek: Star Charts) or a binary system with a pair of F-class stars (Stellar Cartography: The Starfleet Reference Library). In 2160, the Battle of Cheron, the final battle of the Earth-Romulan War, was fought in this system. According to a map of the Romulan Empire – prepared by the Stellar Archivist Lsel Essik, from the Romulan Master Data Catalog, in 2366 – Cheron was identified as a Romulan system. (In what possibly might be a mistake, Star Trek: Star Charts (p. 60) identified the 83 Leonis system as Cheron.) A revised version of that star chart was, however, used in PIC: "Disengage", confirming its location.
The Star Trek Encyclopedia, 4th ed., vol. 1, p. 137 classified Cheron as a class M planet.
Apocrypha
According to the reference book Star Trek: Federation - The First 150 Years, Cheron was the planet where the Battle of Cheron of the Earth-Romulan War took place.
According to the novels The Buried Age, Kobayashi Maru, and To Brave the Storm, the planet Cheron was the fifth planet in the 83 Leonis B star system, and was the site of the Battle of Cheron in 2160. Cheron was a strategically important planet for the Romulan Star Empire and was occupied with a military outpost at the time. Cheron was also where a Romulan fleet of 81 ships massed in preparations for an all out attack on Earth. The fleet was defeated and forced to retreat by allied starships. After the war, Cheron remained on the Federation side of the Romulan Neutral Zone.
In the novel No Time Like the Past, the Enterprise briefly returns to Cheron, with scans revealing that Bele and Lokai have now set up bases for themselves on different sides of the planet; a time-displaced Seven of Nine notes that, even in her era, the Federation avoids Cheron due to the unpredictable power and life span of the surviving natives. The novel also reveals an attempt by Bele's side to create a virus that would infect only their enemies resulted in the virus being released during an enemy assault before it was ready, and both sides were destroyed (although Kirk and Seven, temporarily trapped in the past, were unaffected by the virus).
External links
- 83 Leonis B V at Memory Beta, the wiki for licensed Star Trek works
- 83 Leonis at Wikipedia
- Planets in TOS and TOS Remastered at Ex Astris Scientia