A Question:

Because it is now summer and I have more free time, I was thinking of possibly making some posts/masterposts addressing common mistakes people make or just talking about useful things to know when writing Star Wars. Would anyone be interested in that? If so, what kinds of things would you like to see?

ladytharen:

operaticspacetrash:

Does anyone know how to do dates in the Star Wars calendar outside of years? Are there names for standard months? I’ve only managed to find some info on the days of the week so far.

@writebetterstarwars any answers?

I don’t normally answer questions on other people’s posts, so I hope you don’t mind @operaticspacetrash, but this one is relatively straightforward. Within the Galactic Standard Calendar there are no names for months, and they are known by their number (e.g., Month 5). You probably know that there were many different variants of the calendar, all with different numbers of months in a year, weeks in a month, and days in a week. The GSC consists of 24 hours in a day, 5 days in a week, 7 weeks in a month, and 10 months in a year. These 10 months, plus 3 festival weeks and 3 holidays make up a year with a total of 368 days. In the Old Republic, the Treaty of Coruscant was used as year 0; in the New Republic, it was the Battle of Yavin.

I’m guessing that what you’re wondering about is how to write this out and refer to specific dates, like how we would say [day]/[month]/[year]? This is covered by the Great ReSynchronization. It was a notation system established in 35 BBY which used the format [year]:[month]:[day] to write dates. 35 BBY was the reference point, so, for example, the Jedi Purge occurred in the year 16 and the Battle of Yavin in the year 35. Years before 35 BBY are written with “BrS” (before resynchronization) after the number, so Qui-Gon would have been born in 57 BrS. Adding in the months and days, you get something like the date 13:5:21 (13 years after 35 BBY, on the 21st day of Month 5), on which occurred the First Battle of Geonosis. Much like how we might say “June of 2015” you can omit the day and just write [year]:[month].

This system was used through the Imperial period (though some preferred to use the Empire’s creation as year 0) and was reorganized in 25 ABY into the BBY/ABY system that we often use. Before the Great ReSynchronization and after it was disbanded, there is no canonical system for writing dates. It is possible that the [year]:[month]:[day] format was still used, but this is not confirmable.

You may also want to take a look through my tag on calendars.

Hope that helps!

~ Jacen

What is the path for a padawan to become a Jedi Knight? Is it age related? Their master’s approval? There a test, yes? What does it look like? And what happens if they fail it? Are there any rituals or ceremonies? Cutting of the braid?

For a Padawan to become a Knight, they had to pass the Trials of Knighthood. These tests were administered by the High Council, to Padawans they believed to be ready. While age did not directly play a part in the Council’s decision to have someone take the tests, most Padawans were knighted in their twenties. The Master’s approval was not required, though I believe that they could recommend that their Padawan be tested.

During the Trials of Knighthood, a Padawan had to pass five trials: the Trials of Skill, Courage, Spirit, Flesh, and Insight. If deemed appropriate, the Council may have also substituted tests or waived them if the Padawan had shown the same qualities through their actions. For instance, both Anakin and Obi-Wan became Knights without participating in formal trials.

For the Trial of Skill, one must face a three-part assessment consisting of physical, mental, and combat challenges. The physical challenges were usually tests of strength, endurance, climbing, jumping and the like. The mental challenges were tests of levitation, another endurance test, duress and reflection. For the combat challenges, Padawans completed tests of conflict, duelling, and of the calm mind, and were required to face some sort of adversary. The individual or individuals they face would vary a lot, from holograms to droids to other students, or even the Temple Battlemaster or Grand Master. Some students may fight many opponents using many different weapons or altering the appearance of the chamber or their perception. While the tests largely consisted of physical feats, the Battlemaster looked more for the ability of a Padawan to use discipline and focus to avoid distraction. Anakin completed this trial when he defeated Asajj Ventress in combat.

Less is known about the Trial of Courage. In order for the test to work, the student must not know beforehand what they will face. Before the Golden Age of the Republic, courage on the battlefield or facing a Sith was considered a good way to pass the trial, but later tests were largely simulated. The Council could also send a student on a real mission; these missions had the potential to be deadly, which is why only students who are ready may participate in the Trials. When Obi-Wan defeated Darth Maul on Naboo, the Council considered that his Trial of Courage.

The Trial of the Spirit was a test of self-discovery. A Padawan entered a deep meditative trance and confronted their deepest fears and the darkness within themselves. Such deep meditation could be very dangerous, so a Master was always present to help guide the student back to the present. Unlike other tests, the High Council did not dictate what would happen and the student would have to decide what to do on their journey. This test had the potential to be highly traumatising, and some students would wake from a failed test inconsolable.

The Trial of the Flesh was considered the hardest test of the five, and it involved the Padawan experiencing great physical pain, loss, or hardship. In the earlier days of the Republic, the students were subjected to bursts of electricity applied directly to the skin, but this practice was abandoned. During the New Sith Wars, battle scars and lost limbs were often accepted as a way to pass the test. It was not uncommon for a Padawan to pass the Trials of the Flesh, Skill and Courage at the same time by defeating a Sith on the battlefield. Later, the separation of the Master-Padawan pair as the Padawan became a Knight was considered a hardship enough to pass the test, but during the Clone Wars it was once again common to pass through physical injury and loss.

The Trial of Insight was a test that required the Padawan to use the Force to see through deception. To pass, they were forbidden to study any possible challenges in the Archives, as they had to complete it themselves. The Trial sometimes took the form of riddles and puzzles, such as being required to solve the High Riddles of Dwartii. Other known scenarios are having to find one grain of sand among a field of rocks, or being faced with an army of holograms and forced to see through the illusion.

If a Padawan passed all these tests in one way or another, their Master would then prepare them for the Knighting Ceremony. If they failed, they had the opportunity to take them again until they passed. Before the ceremony, the student would meditate in the preparation room in the Tranquility Spire for a whole day. The next day, they would go up to the next level of the Tower, called the Hall of Knighthood. There, they would kneel in front of the Grand Master, the members of the High Council (if the High Council was unavailable, members of the other two Councils would step in), and other Jedi who were influential in the Padawan’s journey. The present Masters would ignite their lightsabers in a circle around the apprentice, and the Grand Master would lower their lightsaber to just above each of the student’s shoulders before severing their braid. The new Knight would then take their braid and leave the Hall in silence.

During Kanan’s knighting during a vision in the Lothal Jedi Temple, the words said were, “By the right of the Council, by the will of the Force, Kanan Jarrus, you may rise.” This may have also been said during more orthodox ceremonies, or another similar phrase.

Hopefully that’s helpful, and good luck!

~ Jacen

How well do you think a lightsaber could cauterize a pre-existing wound? It wouldn’t be the most efficient or safe, and you could easily make it worse, but if someone’s bleeding to death, do you think it would work in a pinch?

I think it could work just fine in an emergency, as long as the wound wasn’t too deep. There is confusion over whether a lightsaber always cauterizes as it’s cutting (canon suggests a lightsaber wound should bleed and Legends suggests the opposite), but using it purposefully as a heat source over a few seconds or so would most likely work. It also shouldn’t be too dangerous, if the one using it has a steady hand, because there should be no need to cut deeper. Holding the blade so it just touches the wound should be enough. You may also want to send an ask to @scriptmedic when their ask box opens again, to find out whether cauterization is the right way to go in your scenario.

~ Jacen

Is there a Star Wars equivalent to Rock-Paper-Scissors?

There is a version called lizard-toad-snake played on Jelucan, where lizard eats snake, snake eats toad, and toad eats lizard. There’s also one called Desert Draw that’s played on Lok with cards instead of hands (the Bounty Hunter card beats the Thermal Detonator card, the Thermal Detonator beats the Sarlacc, and the Sarlacc beats the Bounty Hunter). This one was usually played for money. Although both of these are only known to have been played on their respective planets, due to the nature of the game I think it’s safe to assume they would be played throughout the galaxy, or at least the Outer Rim.

~ Jacen

Were there any Hutts throughout SW’s history (preferably around the Rise of the Empire/Rebellion eras) who didn’t adhere to the typical “fat, lazy crime boss” stereotype? Like, were there any actually good, decent Hutts?

I know of one Hutt who was a highly respected scientist and one who was a Jedi, but the former lived long before the Rise of the Empire era and the latter had already turned to the dark side by that time. There were a couple others who were considered legitimate businessmen, but again none of them lived in that time. It is certainly possible that there were Hutts during the Rise of the Empire/Rebellion eras that were upstanding citizens, but if you were hoping for specific examples I think you may be out of luck.

~ Jacen

Is there an estimate of how many people died on the first Death Star? Thanks!

Various sources give the usual number of people onboard the Death Star as anywhere between 1.1 and 2.2 million. The lower estimates are canon and include only Imperial personnel, while the higher ones include the 850,000-odd passengers that were on the station according to Legends. You also have to consider that as many as 7000 pilots would have been away from the DS during the Battle of Yavin. One estimate says around 1.7 million people were on board at any given time, which seems like a good middle ground, but that’s about as accurate as I can get here. Sorry!

~ Jacen

Do you know who Devaron’s governor was during the Imperial era or, if none was ever shown, who the governor of the Colonies region was during that time?

Devaron was not, to my knowledge, appointed a governor, because it supported the Empire and had its own autonomous government and military. The president of Devaron through the Clone Wars and as the Empire was founded was Aven’sai’Ulrahk, though it is not clear how long she remained in office under the Empire.

As well, Devaron was under the authority of the Grand Moff of the Corellian Oversector. This position was held by Fliry Vorru in the last days of the Republic and under the New Order, until he was succeeded by Naomi Dargon sometime after 7 BBY.

Hope that helps!

~ Jacen

Hi, first of all: awesome blog!! For a story I write I would need a battle or subjugation of a planet during the Empire era before the first Death Star was complete, which the rebellion would consider a war crime and the empire themselves celebrated as a big victory. Is there something that ticks the boxes? Preferably nothing which directly involved Vader. TIA

There are a couple issues here. One, that we don’t know exactly when the Death Star was built. We know it was first used in 0 BBY, and that planning for it began as far back as before the Clone Wars, but not exactly when it was built. It can be inferred from the events of Rogue One that construction probably began roughly around 13 BBY (though the timelines are very conflicting).

The other issue is that before ~5 BBY, there wasn’t much of a Rebellion. There were organized cells, several with higher management such as Bail Organa, but they were very separate and didn’t so much work in tandem as do whatever they felt would deal the biggest blow to the Empire.

Basically, there would be no Rebellion to see this event as a war crime, if the event were to occur before the construction of the Death Star. However, there’s still the leaders of the early rebellion: the Delegation of 2000, namely Bail Organa and Mon Mothma.

If that’s not a huge issue to you, there are some events that could work:

The Ghorman Massacre (18 BBY) — Tarkin landed his ship in the middle of a protest, which led the Delegation of 2000 to begin planning organized rebellion.

The Battle of Naboo (18 BBY) — Naboo was placed under Imperial rule after Queen Apailana and her Jedi protectors were killed.

The Battle of Acherin (18 BBY) — The planet of Acherin is bombarded from orbit because of the presence of Separatist forces, even after their surrender.

The Antar Atrocity (canon, 18 BBY) — A series of massacres, executions and unlawful arrests carried out by Tarkin on Antar IV as punishment for their involvement with the Separatists.

They all happen very early in the Empire’s rule, due to the period of unrest. After this time period, up to the destruction of Jedha’s Holy City, there are very few serious incidents to be noted. I’m not sure any of these incidents could be considered a significant victory for the Empire, but that depends on your context.

I hope this helps!

~ Jacen

I know there are regulations about the height of X-Wing pilots. Joph Seastriker is described as being just barely tall enough, Piggy is just barely short enough. Do we know the actual heights that someone has to be within?

Unfortunately, I don’t think we do. From Piggy’s height we can infer that the maximum is probably around 190-200 centimeters, but Joph’s height is never given. However, I did a quick search regarding Air Force height requirements and fighter jets, and I found that the size of a fighter jet seems to be roughly comparable to the size of an X-wing. Given that, and the fact that the maximum height of a fighter pilot is about 196 cm (just above Piggy’s height), the minimum height an X-wing pilot can be is probably around 160-165 cm (as the minimum height of a fighter pilot is 163 cm).

It’s not exactly canon, but I hope this gives you something to go off of!

~ Jacen