Prefatory
Note. Dr. Shackley kindly published on his blog (April 26, 2012) an
earlier version of this essay written by me. Since then, I decided it
needed to be revised, mostly from dating the birth of Nicholas van Rijn
to 2421 instead of my earlier suggestion he was born in 2424. And that
made it necessary to revise my suggested dates for the birth of David
Falkayn and many of the stories set during the Polesotechnic League. I
also found it necessary to change some of the dates for the stories set
in the Imperial era.
Several editions of the Technic
Civilization stories of Poul Anderson (Gregg Press, Ace Books, Baen
Books) have attached to them a chronology compiled by Sandra Miesel, an
excellent commentator on the works of Anderson. This chronology lists
in internal chronological order all the stories and novels of the
Technic Civilization series through periods like that of the
Polesotechnic League and the Terran Empire. Miesel also added many
annalistic notes to her chronology.
For those who wish
to read the Technic Civilization stories in chronological order, or
merely to have a list of the stories in a correct temporal sequence,
Sandra Miesel has done readers of Anderson's works a real favor.
However, commentators like Dr. Paul Shackley have discovered
inconsistencies in some of Miesel's proposed dates which contradicts
what the texts says.
For example, Miesel dates the
birth of Nicholas van Rijn to AD 2376 and the crucial Polesotechnic
League's Council of Hiawatha to 2400. However, as discussed by Dr.
Shackley in his note "Inconsistencies II," Nicholas van Rijn was born
too late to have attended that council. The section of Chapter IX of
MIRKHEIM which discussed the Council of Hiawatha ended with "But when a
century had passed--". Nicholas van Rijn could not have attended that
council because he was 80 years old at the time of the Mirkheim/Baburite
crisis. He would need to have been, implausibly, well over a century
in age.
I have no objection to keeping Miesel's dating
of the Council of Hiawatha to 2400, but I believe dating van Rijn's
birth to 2421 is more accurate. And since the Mirkheim/Baburite war
came when van Rijn was 80 years old, that means it should be dated 2501
(not in 2456, Miesel's date). This has the advantage of not
contradicting what Chapter IX of MIRKHEIM said about "But when a century
had passed."
Another error in Miesel's chronology
contradicting what the texts say are her dates for "Lodestar" and
MIRKHEIM. She dates the events in "Lodestar" and MIRKHEIM to 2446 and
2456. However, the Prologue to MIRKHIEIM clearly dates the events in
that book to EIGHTEEN, not 10, years after Mirkheim was discovered. My revision of
her chronology dates "Lodestar" and MIRKHEIM to 2491 and 2501.
The
next major inconsistency in Miesel's chronology contradicting what the
texts say came from her dating the foundation of the Terran Empire to
the 28th century and the birth of Dominic Flandry to AD 3000. These
dates clash with what Chapter 10 of ENSIGN FLANDRY says, as the Merseian
prime minister Brechdan Ironrede was going to the Imperial embassy for
an official reception: "His destination was another offense, a compound
of residences and offices in the garish bubble style of the Imperium
four hundred years ago." This indicates the Empire had existed for over
four centuries by the time of ENSIGN FLANDRY (because it is reasonable
to think schools of architecture needed some time after the Empire arose
to become popular).
Some evidence supporting the argument I made in the immediately preceding paragraph can be found in "Day of Burning," after David Falkayn explained to a powerful Merseian leader, Morruchan Long-Ax, that the lethal radiation from the explosion of the star called Valenderay would take less than three of his years to reach the planet. We then read: "The time unit Falkayn actually used was Merseian, a trifle greater than Earth's" (THE EARTH BOOK OF STORMGATE, Berkeley/Putnam, 1978, page 293). Since Merseia's year was only a "trifle" longer (possibly three percent?) than Earth's year, that supports my argument that the Empire was older than the three centuries or so Miesel's Chronology gives it by the time of ENSIGN FLANDRY.
Moreover, Miesel herself
contradicts her chronology when she wrote in her "Introduction" for THE
PEOPLE OF THE WIND (Gregg Press: 1977): "The Empire is its third
century when it moves against the Domain in its first aggressive
campaign against a civilized foe." Another chronological indication can
be found in Chapter 8 of Anderson's THE DAY OF THEIR RETURN, as Ivar
Frederiksen briefly summarized the history of relations between the
Empire and the Domain of Ythri: "Still, it [the Domain] grew. So did
Empire, Terra's, that is, till they met and clashed. Couple centuries
ago, they fought." Now, if the Empire had existed a little over two
centuries by the time of the Ythrian War and then that conflict was at
least two centuries in the past by the time of THE DAY OF THEIR RETURN,
that can only mean it had lasted more than four centuries by then.
Therefore,
I would argue for dating the birth of Dominic Flandry to AD 3100, not
3000 (the year Miesel chose). The later date better fits the
chronological evidence I collected from the texts. I am still puzzled
how Miesel could have missed, for example, such crucial indications as
the Prologue of MIRKHEIM saying the Baburite war occurred 18 years after
"Lodestar."
Because
of Dr. Paul Shackley's zeal and devotion to accuracy, I became aware of
mistakes I made in my proposed ordering of the Dominic Flandry stories
beginning with "Tiger By The Tail" and ending with WE CLAIM THESE
STARS. While working on a revision of Sandra Miesel's Chronology of
Technic Civilization, I erred in too quickly accepting Miesel's listing
of these stories when I should have paid attention to certain texts in
THE PLAGUE OF MASTERS and WE CLAIM THESE STARS. This time I made what I
believe is a more accurate listing and "dating" of these six stories.
24th century "The Problem of Pain," FANTASY AND SCIENCE FICTION, February, 1973
2400 The Council of Hiawatha
2421 [2376] Birth of Nicholas van Rijn
2451 [2406] Birth of David Falkayn
2461 [2416] "Margin of Profit," ASF, September, 1956
2461 [2416] "How to be Ethnic in One Easy Lesson," FUTURE QUEST, ed. Roger Elwood, Avon Books, 1974
2468 [2416] "The Three Cornered Wheel," ASF, October, 1963
2471 [2426] WAR OF THE WING MEN, Ace Books, 1958
2471 [2426] "Esau," ASF, February, 1970
2472 [2427] "Hiding Place," ASF, March, 1961
2472 [2427] "Territory," ASF, June, 1963
2473 "A Sun Invisible," ASF, April, 1966
2476 [2427] "The Trouble Twisters," as "Trader Team," ASF, July-August, 1965
2478 [2433] "Day of Burning," as "Supernova," ASF, January, 1967
3478 [2433] "The Master Key," ASF, July, 1964
2482 [2437] SATAN'S WORLD, Doubleday, 1969
2482 [2437] "A Little Knowledge," ASF, August 1971
2482 [2437] "The Season of Forgiveness," BOY'S LIFE, December, 1973
2491 [2446] "Lodestar," ASTOUNDING: THE JOHN W. CAMBPBELL MEMORIAL ANTHOLOGY, ed. by Harry Harrison, Random House, 1973
2501 [2456] MIRKHEIM, G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1977
Early 26th century [late 25th century], settlement of Avalon
26th century, "Wingless on Avalon," BOY'S LIFE, July, 1973
26th century, "Rescue on Avalon," in CHILDREN OF INFINITY, ed. Roger Elwood, Franklin Watts, 1973
26th centruy, dissolution of the Polesotechnic League
The Time of Troubles and the Terran Empire
2600-2700 [27th century] The Time of Troubles
Late 27th century, "The Star Plunderer," PLANET STORIES (cited as PS), September, 1952
2700 Manuel Argos founds the Terran Empire, Principate phase begins
28th century, "Sargasso of Lost Starships," PS, January, 1952
29th century [30th C], Covenant of Alfzar
2925 [29th century], THE PEOPLE OF THE WIND, New American Library, 1973
3100 [3000] Birth of Dominic Flandry
3119 [3019] ENSIGN FLANDRY, Chilton, 1966
3121 [3021] A CIRCUS OF HELLS, New American Library, 1971
3122 [3022] Josip succeeds Georgios as Emperor
3125 [3025] THE REBEL WORLDS, New American Library,1969
3127 [3027] "Outpost of Empire," GALAXY, December, 1967
3128 [3028] THE DAY OF THEIR RETURN, Doubleday, 1973
3132 [3032] "Tiger by the Tail," PS, January, 1951
3135 [3033] "Honorable Enemies," FUTURE COMBINED WITH SCIENCE FICTION STORIES, May, 1951
3137 [3038] "A Plague of Masters," as EARTHMAN, GO HOME, Ace Books, 1961
3139 [3040] "The Game of Glory," VENTURE, March, 1958
3140 [3040] WE CLAIM THESE STARS! (also HUNTERS OF THE SKY CAVE), Ace Books, 1959
3142 [3041] Hans Molitor succeeds Josip as Emperor after brief civil war, supplants short lived Imperial relative as Emperor.
3143 [3042] "Warriors from Nowhere," as "Ambassadors of Flesh," PS, Summer, 1954
3148 [3047] A KNIGHT OF GHOSTS AND SHADOWS, New American Library, 1975
3155 Dietrich succeeds Hans as Emperor
3157 Gerhart succeeds Dietrich as Emperor
3162 [3061] A STONE IN HEAVEN, Ace Books, 1979
3167 [3064] THE GAME OF EMPIRE, Baen Books, 1985
Early fourth millennium, the Empire enters its Dominate phase
Circa AD 3500, Fall of the Terran Empire, the Long Night begins. War, piracy, anarchy, economic collapse, and isolation devastate countless worlds.
The Long Night
3600 "A Tragedy of Errors," GALAXY, February, 1968
3900 THE NIGHT FACE, Ace Books, 1978
4000 "The Sharing of Flesh," GALAXY, December, 1968
7100 "Starfog," ASF, August, 1967