1:[2,#B],35:[3,#B],44:[2,#B],58:[22,#I],81:[8,#B]@1Carrington Award@2Prestigious scientific award given annually by the Federation Medical Council, honoring outstanding work in the field of medicine. Generally regarded as a lifetime achievement award, the Carrington in 2371 was awarded to Dr. Henri Roget. Also nominated that year was Dr. Julian Bashir, the youngest nominee in the history of the award. (“Prophet Motive” [DS9]). The Federation official who presented the Carrington Award, listed as “Medical Big Shot” in the episode's credits, was played by Bennet GSuillory. SEE: P'Trell, Chirurgeon Ghee; Senva, Healer; Wade, Dr. April.
~1:[1,#B],9:[1,#B],12:[1,#B],51:[13,#I]@1Cassandra@2(Julia Nickson). Colonist who settled on planet Orellius in 2360. Alixus sent Cassandra to seduce Deep Space 9 officer Benjamin Sisko in the hopes that he would want to live there. Cassandra believed in Alixus's teachings and, when offered passage off-planet, chose to remain with the colony. (“Paradise” [DS9]). Julia Nickson also played Ensign Lian T'su in “The Arsenal of Freedom” (TNG).
~1:[3,#B],10:[2,#I],26:[2,#B]@1Cavit, Lieutenant Commander@2(Scott Jaeck). Starfleet officer aboard the Starship Voyager. Cavit was fatally injured on the bridge during the ship's violent passage to the Delta Quadrant in 2371. (“Caretaker” [VGR]).
~1:[2,#B]@1cellular toxicity@2Measurement of biological waste products accumulating within a life-form's cells. Neelix's cellular toxicity level rose after his lungs were removed in 2371, due to his body's inability to oxygenate and remove wastes from his bloodstream. (“Phage” [VGR]).
~1:[1,#B],7:[3,#B]@1cenotaph@2Coffin-like enclosure used in the Vhnori transference ritual. (“Emanations” [VGR]).
~1:[3,#B],5:[3,#B]@1Central Command, Cardassian@2SEE: Cardassian Central Command.
~1:[3,#B],5:[4,#B]@1Certificate of Dismemberment@2SEE: Ferengi Certificate of Dismemberment.
~1:[2,#B]@1Cestus Comets@2One of the six baseball teams organized in mid 2371 on Cestus III. (“Family Business” [DS9]).
~1:[1,#B],8:[2,#BI],15:[1,#B],34:[2,#B],51:[1,#B],62:[1,#B],84:[1,#B],96:[1,#B],112:[2,#I],119:[2,#B],145:[2,#B],152:[2,#B],157:[2,#B],198:[2,#B],214:[3,#B],231:[1,#B],253:[7,#I]@1Chakotay@2(Robert Beltran). First officer of the Starship Voyager and former member of the Maquis resistance group. Chakotay was of Native American descent and fiercely proud of his heritage. Chakotay graduated of the Starfleet Academy, but later left Starfleet to join the Maquis in defense of his homeworld against the Cardassians. He commanded a Maquis ship that was lost in the Badlands in 2371 while fleeing from a Cardassian ship. Chakotay and his crew were swept into the distant Delta Quadrant by the Caretaker, where they were trapped when their ship was destroyed by the Kazon-Ogla. Chakotay and his fellow Maquis subsequently accepted an invitation to join the crew of the Starship Voyager under the command of Captain Kathryn Janeway. Under this arrangement, Chakotay became the ship's first officer, replacing Lieutenant Commander Cavit.
Chakotay was proud of his ancestral heritage and practiced his people's vision quest rituals, seeking direction from his guide animal. He used his medicine bundle to help invoke these rituals. Chakotay would occasionally help those close to him experience the vision quest in search of their own guide animals. (“The Cloud” [VGR]). Chakotay honored his people's traditional medical practices, including the use of a medicine wheel to help guide his spirit back to his body when it was displaced by trianic energy beings on stardate 48734. (“Cathexis” [VGR]).
While in the Maquis, Chakotay was romantically involved with Seska, unaware that she was a Cardassian agent who had been surgically altered to appear Bajoran. (“State of Flux” [VGR]). (“Caretaker” [VGR]). Chakotay's first appearance was in “Caretaker” (VGR).
~1:[2,#B],28:[4,#B],39:[3,#B]@1Chaltok IV@2Planet. A Romulan research colony located on Chaltok IV was nearly destroyed during the testing of a polaric ion device. The incident led to the Polaric Test Ban Treaty of 2268. (“Time and Again” [VGR]). See: polaric ion energy.
~1:[3,#B],5:[4,#B]@1Chamber of Ministers@2SEE: Bajoran Chamber of Ministers.
~1:[2,#B],8:[7,#I]@1chambers coil@2Component of a communications system. (Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan). In 2370 on planet T'Lani III, Chief Miles O'Brien attempted to activate a communication system by resetting the actuators on the chambers coil. (“Armageddon Game” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B]@1Chapman, Professor@2Instructor at Starfleet Academy. Professor Chapman was one of B'Elanna Torres's teachers at the academy and although they often disagreed, he thought she was one of the most promising cadets he'd ever taught. (“Parallax” [VGR]).
~1:[2,#B],7:[1,#B],15:[2,#B]@1Chateau Cleon@2Champagne. On stardate 48959, Quark served Chateau Cleon, vintage 2303, to celebrate Benjamin Sisko's promotion to captain. (“The Adversary” [DS9]).
~1:[1,#B],4:[1,#B],13:[1,#BI],52:[2,#B]@1Chell@2(Derek McGrath). Maquis resistance fighter who joined the crew of the Voyager. During the first few weeks after the ship was lost in the Delta Quadrant in 2371, Chell became regarded as a disruptive and unreliable worker. Accordingly, Chell was among several Maquis crew members assigned to Lieutenant Tuvok for field training. (“Learning Curve” [VGR]).
~1:[2,#B],12:[2,#B],32:[2,#B]@1Chen, Governor@2Governor of California on Earth in 2024. During the Bell Riots, Governor Chen believed rumors that government hostages had been killed, so he ordered government troops to storm the Sanctuary District, resulting in the death of hundreds of Sanctuary residents. (“Past Tense, Part II” [DS9]).
~1:[1,#B],18:[1,#B],49:[18,#I],69:[18,#I]@1Ches'sarro@2(Dan Curry). Bajoran mining engineer who collaborated with the Cardassians during the Bajoran occupation. In 2370, Pallra discovered evidence of his collaboration and used it to blackmail him. Shortly after the evidence was uncovered, Ches'sarro's body was discovered, in a pond on his property. (“Necessary Evil” [DS9]). It was not made clear who was responsible for Ches'sarro's death. The face of Ches'sarro was that of Star Trek visual effects producer Dan Curry, a re-use of the photo of Curry as Dekon Elig from “Babel” (DS9).
~1:[2,#B],10:[1,#B],25:[1,#B],36:[2,#B],51:[2,#I],81:[4,#B],85:[9,#I]@1Chez Sandrine@2Wharf-side bistro, owned by a woman named Sandrine, in the city of Marseilles, France, on Earth. The bistro, which featured a traditional pool table, had been in Sandrine's family for over 600 years. Thomas Paris frequented Chez Sandrine when he was a cadet at Starfleet Academy. After the Starship Voyager was swept into the Delta Quadrant in 2371, Paris created a replica of Chez Sandrine on the ship's holodeck. (“The Cloud” [VGR]; “Jetrel” [VGR]; “Learning Curve” [VGR]). SEE: Daliwakan; Gaunt Gary; Ricky. Chez Sandrine was first seen in “The Cloud” [VGR].
~1:[2,#B],13:[1,#B]@1chiraltan tea@2Beverage that Benjamin Sisko once ordered instead of his usual raktajino. (“Second Sight” [DS9]).
~1:[1,#B]@1Chow-yun@2Twenty-third century Earth playwright. Bashir felt that Earth writers after Chow-yun's time were too derivative of alien drama. (“The Die is Cast” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B],4:[4,#B]@1Circle, the@2SEE: Alliance for Global Unity.
~1:[2,#B],7:[1,#B]@1citrus blend@2Common foodstuff consumed by Trill. The replicators on Deep Space 9 were able to produce a decent copy of it. (“Playing God” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B]@1class-D planet@2Designation for gas giant planets like Jupiter and Saturn. Class-D worlds were not considered to be suitable for habitation. (“Emanations” [VGR]).
~1:[5,#B],7:[2,#B],18:[6,#I],26:[3,#I]@1cliffs of Bole@2Benjamin Sisko and Curzon Dax took a memorable trip there once. (“Invasive Procedures” [DS9]). Cliffs of Bole was named after Star Trek director Cliff Bole.
~1:[2,#B],14:[2,#B],22:[2,#B]@1Club Martus@2Casino on the Promenade of station Deep Space 9, opened by Martus Mazur in 2370. The club boasted several gambling devices and was located across from Quark's bar. It drew away most of Quark's customers, but was only in business for a few days until it was forced to close by a run of bad luck. (“Rivals” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B],6:[1,#B],8:[1,#B]@1cobalt-thorium device@2Weapon. In 2370 Maquis operative Sakonna purchased cobalt-thorium devices from Quark. (“The Maquis, Part I” [DS9]).
~1:[3,#B],8:[2,#B],23:[2,#B],42:[1,#B],59:[2,#B]@1Coleridge, Biddle “B.C.”@2(Frank Military). Resident of Sanctuary District A in San Francisco on Earth in 2024, and a leader in the Bell Riots. Coleridge was a violent, troublesome individual, who in the slang of the era, would be called a ghost. During the riots, B.C. was a guard of the hostages that were held in the District Processing Center. He was killed when government troops stormed the District. (“Past Tense, Parts I and II” [DS9]).
~1:[1,#B],15:[2,#B],52:[1,#B],56:[1,#B]@1Colyus@2(Kenneth Mars). A sentient holographic life-form, and the law enforcement authority on planet Yadera II. As the Protector of his village, Colyus investigated the disappearance of 22 villagers in 2370. In fact, all of the villagers were living holograms, and the disappearances were the result of a malfunction in the hologenerator. (“Shadowplay” [DS9]). SEE: Rurigan.
~1:[1,#B],3:[1,#B],49:[1,#B]@1combadge@2Personal communicator, incorporated into the Starfleet emblem worn on the uniforms of Starfleet personnel. Could broadcast a subspace beacon. Starfleet combadges were programmed to activate automatically when the casing was destroyed, a feature designed to help rescuers locate a seriously injured person. (“Time and Again” [VGR]). SEE: communicator.
~@1nope@2
~1:[2,#B],50:[7,#I]@1combat rations@2Starfleet emergency food provisions. The brown flattened ovoids were packaged in a silver plastic wrapper and were capable of providing a timed release formula of all the nutrients needed by a humanoid body for three days. Unfortunately, few Starfleet personnel found them especially palatable. (“The Siege” [DS9]). For some reason, Miles O'Brien liked them.
~1:[4,#B]@1compressed tetryon beam weapon@2Directed energy weapon. Security scanners on station Deep Space 9 do not normally detect such devices. A compressed tetryon beam weapon was used to attack Quark in 2370. (“Necessary Evil” [DS9]).
~1:[1,#BI]@1comra@2Ocampa term for soul or spirit. (“Emanations” [VGR]).
~1:[1,#B],3:[2,#B]@1conservator@2SEE: public conservator.
~1:[2,#B],7:[1,#B]@1core behavior@2Term coined by philosopher Alixus to describe humanity's essence, which would be released when people were free of technology. (“Paradise”[DS9]).
~1:[1,#B],7:[1,#B],12:[2,#B]@1cormaline@2Mineral substance mined by the Kazon-Ogla. The crust of the Ocampa planet had rich deposits of cormaline. (“Caretaker” [VGR]).
~1:[2,#B]@1corn salad@2Dish prepared for Chakotay by Neelix. (“Faces” [VGR]).
~1:[1,#B]@1cortolin@2Resuscitative drug used on station Deep Space 9. (“Necessary Evil” [DS9]).
~1:[1,#B],17:[2,#B],31:[2,#B]@1Cos@2(Albert Henderson). Humanoid who had suffered a long string of bad luck to due a gambling device. In 2370, Cos shared a detention cell on Deep Space 9 with Martus Mazur. When Cos died, Martus took the gambling device. (“Rivals” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B],12:[2,#B]@1counterinsurgency program@2Security program installed into the computer system on station Terok Nor while the facility was still a Cardassian station. The counterinsurgency program was designed to activate automatically in case of a revolt by the station's Bajoran ore processing workers. It broadcast throughout the station a series of recorded visual messages of Gul Dukat entreating rebellious workers to surrender or face a series of escalating consequences, up to the destruction of the station. The counterinsurgency program was accidentally triggered in 2371, long after the station was no longer under Cardassian control. (“Civil Defense” [DS9]).
~1:[1,#B],11:[2,#B],50:[1,#B]@1Coutu@2(Philip LeStrange). Leader in the rebel faction on planet Parada II in 2370. Coutu discovered a Paradan government plot to sabotoge peace talks with the rebels using an exact replica of Miles O'Brien. Coutu was also responsible for rescuing the real O'Brien from government forces. (“Whispers” [DS9]). SEE: Paradas.
~1:[2,#B],7:[2,#B],12:[2,#B],20:[2,#B],26:[1,#B],65:[5,#B]@1Coyote Stone@2Icon placed on the medicine wheel. In 2371, when Commander Chakotay was declared brain dead after his bio-neural energy was displaced by the Komar, the Coyote Stone was one of several markers placed on the medicine wheel to guide Chakotay's soul back into his body, although placement at the crossroads of the fifth and sixth realms might divert his soul into the Mountains of the Antelope Women. (“Cathexis” [VGR]).
~1:[2,#B],5:[1,#B],11:[2,#B],60:[1,#B],70:[2,#B]@1cranial implant@2Highly classified Cardassian biotechnological device used by the Obsidian Order. The implant, which was placed into the skull of one of the order's operatives, was designed to stimulate the pleasure centers of the brain. This would release large quantities of endorphins, making the operative impervious to pain in the event the operative were tortured by an enemy. Garak volunteered to receive a cranial implant while in the Obsidian Order. The device was never designed for continuous operation for any length of time, so when Garak left it on for two years straight, it failed, causing excruciating pain. (“The Wire” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B]@1credit chip@2Instrument of monetary exchange used in the early 21st century United States on Earth. (“Past Tense, Part I” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#BI],7:[2,#B],18:[1,#I],20:[9,#I]@1Crockett, U.S.S.@2Federation starship that conveyed Admiral Mitsuya to station Deep Space 9 in 2370. (“Paradise” [DS9]). The Crockett was named after Davey Crockett, American frontiersman and politician.
~1:[1,#B],5:[1,#B],8:[1,#B],19:[1,#I],22:[1,#B],36:[1,#I]@1Culluh@2(Anthony DeLongis). First maje of a Kazon-Nistrim vessel. In 2371, Culluh helped set up a deal with Voyager crew member Seska, in which Seska agreed to provide Federation replicator technology to the Kazon-Nistrim. When Voyager personnel discovered Seska's scheme, she transported over the Culluh's ship and escaped. (“State of Flux” [VGR]).
~1:[2,#B]@1cytoplasmic stimulator@2Medical instrument. A cytoplasmic stimulator was used to stabilize cellular toxicity levels in Neelix after his lungs were removed by the Vidiians in 2371. (“Phage” [VGR]).
~1:[1,#BI],15:[1,#B]@1d'akturak@2Klingon word for ice man. Curzon Dax used it in 2289 to describe Koloth, who was an unyielding negotiator. (“Blood Oath” [DS9]).
~1:[1,#B],24:[1,#B],48:[3,#B],65:[1,#B],70:[1,#B]@1D'Ghor@2(Carlos Carrasco). Head of a wealthy Klingon family. From 2366 through 2371, D'Ghor systematically attacked the financial assets of the House of Kozak, with the intention of acquiring the Kozak's wealth for himself. This would have made D'Ghor powerful enough to gain a seat on the Klingon High Council. After Kozak's death in 2371, D'Ghor's plans were thwarted by intervention from Kozak's widow, Grilka, and her new husband, Quark. D'Ghor's financial machinations resulted in his being shamed by the High Council. (“The House of Quark” [DS9]).
~1:[1,#B],22:[1,#B]@1Daggin@2(Eric David Johnson). Gardener who worked in a botanical garden in the Ocampas' subterranean complex at the time of the Caretaker's death. (“Caretaker” [VGR]).
~1:[2,#B],18:[1,#B]@1Dahar Master@2Highly honored title bestowed upon only the greatest of Klingon warriors. (“Blood Oath” [DS9]). See: Kor.
~1:[2,#B],6:[1,#B],13:[2,#B],19:[1,#B]@1Dahkur Hills@2Locale on planet Bajor. In 2361, during the Cardassian occupation, Kira Nerys and members of the Shakaar spent a winter in the Dahkur Hills, hounded by Cardassian troops. (“Second Skin” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B],8:[1,#B],15:[2,#B],27:[3,#B],63:[2,#B]@1Dahkur province@2Geographical sub-division of the planet Bajor. Dahkur was the home province of Kira Nerys (“Second Skin” [DS9]), as well as other members of the Shakaar resistance cell. Resistance members utilized the mountainous terrain of Dahkur to hide from the Cardassians during the occupation. In 2371, Dahkur province became the site of a minor political struggle over the possession of two soil reclamators. (“Shakaar” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B],7:[3,#B],15:[3,#B]@1Dakeen Monastery@2Religious temple on planet Bajor. Vedek Bareil spent the week preceding the Kendra Valley Massacre on retreat at the Dakeen Monastery. (“The Collaborator” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B],5:[1,#B],14:[1,#BI],22:[1,#B],47:[1,#B],61:[2,#I],93:[2,#B]@1Dalby, Kenneth@2(Armand Schultz). Maquis resistance fighter who joined the crew of the Voyager. Dalby spent his troubled youth on the Bajoran frontier, settling down for a time when he fell in love. His anger returned when the woman he loved was raped and murdered by Cardassians, and Dalby subsequently joined the Maquis. During the first few weeks after the Starship Voyager was lost in the Delta Quadrant in 2371, Dalby became regarded as a disruptive and unreliable worker. Accordingly, Dalby was among several Maquis crew members assigned to Lieutenant Tuvok for field training. (“Learning Curve” [VGR]).
~1:[1,#B],8:[2,#B],20:[5,#I]@1Daliwakan@2Humanoid life-form. A gigolo who frequented Chez Sandrine in a Tom Paris holographic simulation was half-human and half-Daliwakan (and played by Luigi Amodeo). (“The Cloud” [VGR]).
~1:[2,#B]@1dampening field@2Energy field that inhibits transmission of most forms of energy including communications. In 2371, a dampening field was activated on Deep Space 9 as part of a Level-1 counter-insurgency protocol. This dampening field remained in effect until the DS9 staff were able to overload the station's power grid. (“Civil Defense” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B],28:[1,#B],42:[2,#B],49:[2,#I]@1dark-matter nebula@2Interstellar gas or dust cloud that emits or reflects little or no detectable light or other energy. In 2371 trianic energy beings known as the Komar inhabiting a dark-matter nebula in the Delta Quadrant, unsuccessfully attempted to absorb the bio-neural energy from the crew of the Starship Voyager. (“Cathexis” [VGR]).
~1:[1,#B],20:[1,#B],42:[1,#B],55:[3,#B],67:[1,#B]@1darts@2Indoor game of skill involving the throwing of pointed projectiles at a circular target. The game originated on Earth during the middle ages and had become very popular on that planet during the 19th and 20th centuries. In 2371 Chief O'Brien installed a dart board in one of the cargo bays on station Deep Space 9. (“Prophet Motive” [DS9]). A few weeks later, he convinced Quark to put up the dart board in his bar. (“Visionary” [DS9]). O'Brien even enjoyed a remarkable 46-game winning streak in late 2371, during which he felt he was “in the zone.” (“Shakaar” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B],12:[1,#I]@1darvot fritters@2Breakfast food. Neelix made darvot fritters from vegetables from Voyager's hydroponics bay. To be properly prepared, darvot fritters should be rotated every ten minutes until they turn a deep chartreuse (“Phage” [VGR]).
~1:[2,#B],12:[3,#B],19:[1,#B],28:[3,#B],32:[2,#B]@1data clip@2Handheld information storage device. In 2370, command personnel from Deep Space 9 reviewed information from a Kellerun data clip relating to the supposed death of Dr. Julian Bashir and Miles O'Brien. (“Armageddon Game” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B],10:[1,#I],21:[2,#B],30:[2,#B],32:[9,#I]@1Davenport, Lucille@2(Kate Mulgrew). Holonovel character portrayed by Voyager captain Kathryn Janeway. Mrs. Davenport was to be governess for Lord Burleigh's children. (“Cathexis” [VGR]; “Learning Curve” [VGR]). SEE: Janeway Lambda-1. Davenport's first name was mentioned only in the script.
~1:[2,#B],7:[2,#B]@1DaVinci Falls@2Waterfalls on terraformed planet Blue Horizon. (“Second Sight” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B],7:[1,#B]@1Davlos III@2Planet located on the Klingon border. In the latter half of the 24th century, inhabitants of Davlos III did over ninety percent of their trade with the Klingon Empire. (“Visionary” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B],11:[1,#B],58:[2,#B],63:[1,#B],109:[2,#U],111:[2,#B],122:[2,#U],124:[2,#B],131:[2,#U],133:[2,#B],138:[2,#U],140:[2,#B],146:[3,#B],159:[2,#U],161:[2,#B],179:[2,#U],181:[2,#B],209:[2,#U],211:[2,#B],223:[2,#U],225:[2,#B]@1Dax (symbiont)@2Trill parasitic life-form. As is normal for the Trill joined life-form, Dax lived in symbiosis with a succession of humanoid hosts. Each joined pair of the Dax symbiont and a host was a new individual, each sharing knowledge and memories from earlier joinings. Over a two hundred year period, the Dax symbiont served as a field docent to numerous Trill initiates, becoming somewhat notorious for recommending the rejection of 57 host candidates from the program. (“Playing God” [DS9]). Hosts of the Dax symbiont have been a father more than once. (“Explorers” [DS9]). As of 2371, Dax had been joined seven times prior to Jadzia. (“Meridian” [DS9]). First host: Lela Dax, the first woman to serve on the Trill council. Second host: Tobin Dax, a shy, scientifically knowledgeable man. Third host: Emony Dax, a professional gymnast. Fourth host: Audrid Dax, a member of the Trill Symbiosis Commission, and mother of at least two children; died in 2284. Fifth host: Torias Dax was joined for less than a year before he suffered a fatal shuttle accident in 2285. Sixth host: Joran Dax was a criminal who was joined for only six months before committing a murder. All records of Joran's existence have been suppressed by the Symbiosis Commission. Seventh host: Curzon Dax, a noted diplomat and friend to Benjamin Sisko. Died 2367. Eighth host: Jadzia Dax, science officer at station Deep Space 9. (“Equilibrium” [DS9]; “Facets” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B],7:[2,#B],10:[2,#B],17:[3,#B]@1Dax, Audrid@2Fourth host to the Dax symbiont, succeeding Emony Dax. Audrid was head of the Trill Symbiosis Commission, as well as a loving mother to at least two children. Died in 2284. (“Facets” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B],7:[2,#B],10:[2,#B],26:[12,#I]@1Dax, Emony@2Third host to the Dax symbiont, succeeding Tobin Dax. Emony was a gymnast who discovered her coordination improved following her joining. (“Facets” [DS9]). Emony's name was not mentioned in dialog, and is from the script.
~1:[3,#B],8:[2,#B],18:[2,#B],27:[3,#B]@1Dax, Jadzia (mirror)@2(Terry Farrell). In the mirror universe, Jadzia Dax was an aggressive leader of the Terran rebellion. She was also the mistress of the Benjamin Sisko (mirror). (“Through the Looking Glass” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B],7:[2,#B],10:[2,#B],28:[3,#B],63:[1,#B],146:[2,#B],189:[2,#B],203:[2,#B],205:[23,#I],233:[1,#BI]@1Dax, Joran@2Sixth host to the Dax symbiont, succeeding Torias Dax. Joran's body was unsuitable for joining, but he was mistakenly accepted as an initiate by the Trill Symbiosis Commission. When Joran's body rejected the Dax symbiont in 2285, six months after being joined, the commission moved quickly to cover up the incident because it illustrated that about half of the humanoid Trill population could be joined. The commission had maintained publicly that only a tenth of a percent of the population could be joined, and that joining with an unsuitable host would result in death in only a few days. After Joran's death, official Symbiosis Commission records were altered to suggest that Joran had never been joined, and that Joran had been killed after he murdered a doctor that had recommended Joran be dropped from the initiate program. Commission records also suggested that following Torias Dax's death in 2285, that the Dax symbiont was implanted directly into Curzon. Memories of Joran were even biochemically erased from Dax's mind. The commission was largely successful in maintaining this fiction until 2371, when the memory block deteriorated and friends of Jadzia Dax uncovered the truth while trying to save her life. (“Equilibrium” [DS9]). SEE: Belar, Joran. Jadzia and her friends subsequently agreed not to reveal the truth, so the information in this entry presumably did not become public knowledge. In 2371 during Jadzia's zhian'tara, Benjamin Sisko volunteered to embody the memories of Joran Dax. (“Facets” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B],7:[2,#B],30:[29,#I]@1Dax, Lela@2First host to the Dax symbiont. Lela was a legislator, one of the first women to be named as a council member. (“Facets” [DS9], “Playing God” [DS9]). No dates have yet been established for Lela's life, but it seems possible that she could have been joined as far back as the middle of Earth's 21st century.
~1:[4,#B],10:[1,#B],14:[2,#B],22:[1,#B]@1Dax, son of Kang@2Firstborn son of Klingon warrior Kang and godson of Curzon Dax, murdered as a child by the Albino. (“Blood Oath” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B],7:[2,#B],63:[1,#B],69:[3,#B],85:[3,#B]@1Dax, Tobin@2Second host to the Dax symbiont. Tobin was one of Dax's hosts prior to Curzon. (“Invasive Procedures” [DS9]). Though Tobin was socially inept and unimaginative, he was renowned for his knowledge of phase coil inverters. (“The Siege” [DS9]). Tobin was the only Dax host to try his hand with botany but didn't have much success. (“The Wire” [DS9]). While on Vulcan, Tobin Dax met Cardassian poet Iloja of Prim. (“Destiny” [DS9]). Prior to his death, Tobin worked on a new proof of Fermat's last theorem. (“Facets” [DS9]).
~1:[2,#B],7:[2,#B],10:[2,#B],58:[1,#B],77:[28,#I],109:[28,#I],138:[6,#B]@1Dax, Torias@2Fifth host to the Dax symbiont, succeeding Audrid Dax. Torias hosted the Dax symbiont for less than a year before he was critically injured in a shuttle accident in 2285 and, according to official Trill records, remained comatose for six months following the accident. Despite the efforts of the Trill physicians caring for him, Torias's isoboramine concentrations fell below acceptable levels and the Dax symbiont was removed. Torias's death was recorded on stardate 8615.2. Official Trill records show that the Dax symbiont was subsequently implanted into Curzon; the fact that it was first implanted into Joran is not reflected in commission records. (“Equilibrium” [DS9]; “Facets” [DS9]). Sisko's discovery that the Dax symbiont was placed into Joran Belar following Torias' injury seems to place Torias's death six months earlier than his “official” date of death. SEE: Belar, Joran; Dax, Curzon; Dax, Joran.