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Encyclopedia > Shadow (Babylon 5)

The Shadows are an ancient alien species in the science fiction television series Babylon 5. Their homeworld is Z'ha'dum. In contrast to the Vorlons who ask "Who are you?" the Shadows ask the question "What do you want?" centering towards desire rather than identity. J. Michael Straczynski, the show's creator, once explained that he chose the name "Shadows" because of its meaning in Jungian psychology. [1] Image File history File links Information. ... Science fiction is a form of speculative fiction principally dealing with the impact of imagined science and technology, or both, upon society and persons as individuals. ... A television program is the content of television broadcasting. ... Babylon 5 is an epic American science fiction television series created, produced, and largely written by J. Michael Straczynski. ... In the fictional Babylon 5 universe, Zhadum was the homeworld of the ancient, mysterious race known as the Shadows. ... The Vorlons are a fictional alien race in the Babylon 5 universe. ... Joseph Michael Straczynski (born July 17, 1954) is an award-winning American writer/producer of television series, novels, short stories, comic books, and radio dramas. ... This article or section includes a list of works cited or a list of external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks in-text citations. ... Jungian psychology refers to a school of psychology originating in the ideas of Swiss psychologist Carl Jung and advanced by many other thinkers who followed in his tradition. ...


For further information on the Shadows, Mongoose Publishing created an RPG book called Darkness and Light that talks about the Vorlons and Shadows. The now defunct Agents of Gaming RPG books also have information relating to the Shadows which is considered canon information. This article is about games in which one plays the role of a character. ... This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...

"Shadow battlecrab" in Babylon 5
"Shadow battlecrab" in Babylon 5

Contents

Fair Use Screenshot from the Babylon 5 DVDs This work is copyrighted. ... Fair Use Screenshot from the Babylon 5 DVDs This work is copyrighted. ... Babylon 5 is an epic American science fiction television series created, produced, and largely written by J. Michael Straczynski. ...

Physiology

Several Shadows surround Mr. Morden
Several Shadows surround Mr. Morden
John Sheridan is approached by a Shadow on Z'ha'dum.

A Shadow is an insect-like organism with a spiky, violet-black carapace. They are similar in shape to a praying mantis with an upper body, shoulder spines, a mobile head and at least one pair of grasping forelimbs. The rear of the body is supported by multiple pairs of legs. Image File history File links Babylon_5_-_Shadows. ... Image File history File links Babylon_5_-_Shadows. ... This article or section may need to be cleaned up and rewritten because it describes a work of fiction in a primarily in-universe style. ... Fair Use Screenshot from Babylon 5 DVDs. ... Fair Use Screenshot from Babylon 5 DVDs. ... John J. Sheridan is a lead character in the fictional universe of the science-fiction television series Babylon 5, played by Bruce Boxleitner. ... In the fictional Babylon 5 universe, Zhadum was the homeworld of the ancient, mysterious race known as the Shadows. ... The term carapace refers to a dorsal section of an exoskeleton or shell, in a number of animal groups. ... A praying mantis, or praying mantid, is the common name for an insect of the order Mantodea. ...


The Shadows have fourteen eyes in total divided into four groups. Two sets of three arranged, slanted upward and two sets of four arranged to align perfectly under the first sets.


The spoken language of the Shadows is a rapid series of high-frequency bursts and chirps like a cricket or grasshopper. The Shadows' own name for themselves is ten thousand letters long, and unpronounceable by many.


Detailed descriptions are rare, due to their ability to "cloak" their physical bodies to visual wavelengths of light. They are thus rarely seen except as shadowy, mirage-like silhouettes, which can be seen by telepaths, those using visual enhancement devices, or when the entity chooses to partially or wholly reveal itself. A Klingon Bird of Prey from Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country fires while using a cloaking device In several science fiction universes, a cloaking device is an advanced stealth system which causes a spaceship or individual to be invisible and extremely difficult to detect with normal sensors. ...


Other manifestations take the form of the Shadows' three pairs of glowing orange eyes, usually as a symbolic image within a telepathic or dream vision.


Homeworld

Z'ha'dum is the homeworld of the Shadows. No one leaves the same as they arrived. --Delenn
If you go to Z'ha'dum, you will die.Kosh to John Sheridan

In the fictional Babylon 5 universe, Z'ha'dum was the homeworld of the ancient, mysterious species known as the Shadows. Although a blasted, devastated world from which the Shadows were frequently driven over the eons, they kept coming back out of respect for Lorien — the first of the First Ones — who for a long time resided on the planet. Delenn is a fictional lead character in the universe of the science fiction television series Babylon 5, played by Mira Furlan. ... This article is about the Babylon 5 character. ... John J. Sheridan is a lead character in the fictional universe of the science-fiction television series Babylon 5, played by Bruce Boxleitner. ... Babylon 5 is an epic American science fiction television series created, produced, and largely written by J. Michael Straczynski. ... In the fictional Babylon 5 universe, Zhadum was the homeworld of the ancient, mysterious race known as the Shadows. ... Lorien, played by Wayne Alexander, is a fictional character from the television science fiction television series Babylon 5. ... The First Ones is the collective name of a group of aliens from the television science fiction drama Babylon 5. ...


There also appears to be more than one place of power for the Shadows and their minions. According to Markab Ambassador Fashar: "When the darkness was defeated long ago, they scattered, hid themselves away in secret places." This suggests that the Shadows apparently have colony worlds within their realm.


The Shadows, according to Anna Sheridan in "Z'ha'dum" believed they'd die if anything Vorlon touched their homeworld. It is not known whether this is true or merely an old superstition. Many of them did die when Sheridan arrived with a piece of Kosh and detonated the White Star (partially based on Vorlon technology) in a kamikaze attack. And Lyta's telepathy, enhanced by the Vorlons (and, indeed, genetically seeded by the Vorlons in the first place) later triggered the destruction of Z'ha'dum itself. Perhaps they foresaw these events - and their belief was not far from the truth. List of Babylon 5 episodes Zhadum is the final episode of the third season of the science fiction television series Babylon 5. ... For other uses, see White Star. ... USS Bunker Hill was hit by Ogawa (see picture left) and another kamikaze near Kyūshū on May 11, 1945. ... Lyta Alexander, played by Patricia Tallman, is a fictional character from the television science fiction drama Babylon 5. ...


Government

Very little is known about the actual structure of Shadow society; it is unknown whether it is organized into anything that most people would recognize as a "government". While they have no clear domain, the Shadow's Homeworld of Z'Ha'Dum is a subject of whispered interest, as no one who has ever set foot on the planet has returned the same or at all.


History

Before recorded history

The Shadows are presumed to have evolved from arachnoid creatures. Little is known about what the Shadows evolutionary history was like.


Some records indicate that the Shadows first achieved Hyperspace capability as far back as 100 mya, maybe earlier. Around this time the Shadows also became a major galactic power, exploring the universe and making contact with alien races. The first of these races was that of the being Lorien, who was the first of the First Ones. In physics, hyperspace is a theoretical entity. ... For other uses of mya, see mya (disambiguation). ... The First Ones is the collective name of a group of aliens from the television science fiction drama Babylon 5. ...


The Shadows waged many wars with other ancient powers, including the Vorlons, Walkers and many more. The reasons for these wars are unknown, but some theorize the Shadows attacked out of fear of the telepathic talents of their enemies. In these wars the Shadows were defeated, but never destroyed. Retreating to their home Z'Ha'Dum, the Shadows enjoyed thousands of years of truce with their neighbours before reemerging a more powerful and learned force. It is believed that this cycle of defeat and adaptation laid the basis for the Shadows' ideology of "facilitated survival of the fittest," which they would later enforce on the younger races. Herbert Spencer coined the phrase, survival of the fittest. ...


10,000 years ago

Millions of years later, many younger races had begun to evolve on thousands of worlds and the First Ones realized that in order for these new sentients to succeed, the ancient races would have to move on. Thus many of the First Ones moved beyond the Galactic Rim, to explore the vast emptiness between galaxies and perhaps explore the numerous other galaxies throughout the universe. Several of the First Ones decided to stay behind and shepherd the younger races until they were fit to control their own destiny. The primary caretakers were the Vorlons and surprisingly enough, the Shadows.


At first there was a balance between the two sides. Then the Vorlons began tinkering with races on a genetic level, in an effort to make the younger races evolve more like them. Among these genetic dabblings, the Vorlons manipulated the younger races to see them as angelic creatures, using their telepathic abilities to shield their true form from the beings they manipulated.


Through this action, the Vorlons were able to control the perceptions of the younger races. Finding the actions of their fellow ancients appalling, the Shadows and the Vorlons began to fight amongst themselves and those who tried to mediate, like the Walkers of Sigma 957, left the conflict embittered.


Over the course of the centuries that passed, the wars between the Shadows and Vorlons persisted. Then at some unknown point in time they decided to have their students fight for them, in an effort to prove who was right. This led to the last Shadow War before the time in which the Babylon 5 television series was set.


Circa 1260

Around the Earth year 1260, the penultimate Shadow War raged between the Shadows and the combined forces of the Vorlons, Minbari, and various other younger races allied with the Vorlons. The primitive and agrarian Narn homeworld was occupied by the Shadows, and the planet became a Shadow staging area. The Shadows had no interest in the Narn themselves at that time. The Shadow Wars refer to the great wars involving the Shadows in the television science fiction series Babylon 5. ... The Vorlons are a fictional alien race in the Babylon 5 universe. ... This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ... Andreas Katsulas as GKar in Babylon 5 The Narns are a race of humanoid aliens in the television series Babylon 5. ...


Somehow, Narn telepaths learned that they could hurt the Shadows' ships, and may have begun guerilla operations against the Shadows. Through an unknown mechanism the Shadows slew all Narn telepaths of breeding age in order to prevent the Narn from resisting the Shadows, but the surviving telepaths, led by G'Quan, were still able to drive the Shadows from the planet. Guerrilla (also called a partisan) is a term borrowed from Spanish (from guerra meaning war) used to describe small combat groups. ...


Realising the war was lost, the Shadows seeded hundreds of worlds across the galaxy with their ships so their forces couldn't be wiped out in a single attack, as even the Vorlons could never find them all. They then retreated and hid themselves away, going into a state of hibernation.


Year 2259

In 2259, there were increasing reports of a black, spidery ship being encountered in hyperspace, which instilled a dark fear in all who looked upon it. Meanwhile, Narn ambassador G'Kar realized that these ships were those described in the ancient writings of the Narn philosopher G'Quan, which told of a great enemy that rose to power a thousand years in the past. Known as the Shadows, they spread from their homeworld Z'ha'dum to rival the stars themselves: Scene from Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope depicting the inside of the Millenium Falcon when entering hyperspace. ... The Babylon 5 Universe: Topic index - Episode list - People list Articles by category Characters - Crusade - Episodes - Films Novels - Planets - Races - Ships - Wars GKar, played by the late Andreas Katsulas, is a fictional character in the universe of the science-fiction television series Babylon 5. ... In the Babylon 5 science fiction saga, the Book of GQuan is a Narn holy book. ...

"And the Spirit of Darkness moved upon the land. It screamed in the dreams of the Mindwalkers; and they fell, destroyed by it to their children and their children's children. Then did the Darkness come to Narn until it was driven out by G'Quan and the last of the surviving Mindwalkers."

The text is accompanied by pictures of the black ship, and ends on a chilling note: Telepathy, from the Greek τῆλε, tele, remote; and πάθεια, patheia, to be effected by, describes the hypothetical transfer of information on thoughts or feelings between individuals by means other than the five classical senses. ...

"There is a darkness greater than the one we fight. It is the darkness of the soul that has lost its way. Greater than the death of flesh is the death of hope, the death of dreams. Against this foe we can never surrender."

Year 2260

In late 2260, Captain John Sheridan was invited to Z'ha'dum for a meeting with the Shadows. The Shadows badly wanted to have Sheridan on their side because if he unravelled the Army of Light, it would stay unravelled, but, as past experience had showed them, if they killed him, someone else would simply take his place. John J. Sheridan is a lead character in the fictional universe of the science-fiction television series Babylon 5, played by Bruce Boxleitner. ...


Sheridan did go to Z'ha'dum but the negotiations collapsed, and he jumped into a ravine two miles deep to evade capture once his suspicion that he had been led into a trap was confirmed.


Before doing so, he remotely piloted his ship, the White Star, to crash into the Shadows' capital city, which he was visiting. The White Star was carrying two nuclear bombs in its cargo bay, each with a yield of over 500 megatons. (The strongest nuclear bomb to be detonated as of 2007 was the Tsar Bomba, which had a yield of 50 megatons.) For the British white cider, see White Star (cider) The White Star is a fictional, medium-sized combat spacecraft type employing a mix of Vorlon and Minbari technology in the science fiction television series Babylon 5. ... The mushroom cloud of the atomic bombing of Nagasaki, Japan, in 1945 lifted nuclear fallout some 18 km (60,000 feet) above the epicenter. ... A megaton or megatonne is a unit of mass equal to 1,000,000 metric tons, i. ... Site of the detonation. ...


Seconds after Sheridan jumped into the abyss, the White Star crashed into the city and the nuclear weapons it contained detonated. Both the White Star and the city were destroyed. The crater left from the blast was the size of a large Earth country and was clearly visible from space.


Year 2261

The explosion on Z'ha'dum destroyed the Shadows' biggest city, throwing them into chaos and forcing them to regroup. They then went to seek outside help, and enlisted the Centauri to shelter a fleet of their ships on Centauri Prime.


At the Battle of Coriana 6, the second Shadow War ended, and the Shadows passed beyond the Galactic Rim. Nonetheless, their servants, the Drakh, stayed behind, and retained the advanced technology and aggressive philosophy of the Shadows. The Shadow Wars refer to the great wars involving the Shadows in the television science fiction series Babylon 5. ... The Drakh are a race from the fictional Babylon 5 universe. ...


Sheridan, along with Alfred Bester and Lyta Alexander, went back to Z'ha'dum in early 2261 in search of some of this technology. This triggered a self-destruct security feature that caused the entire planet to explode, leaving nothing behind — except for what the Drakh took with them in their quick exodus from the planet. Alfred Bester is the name of a fictional character in the television series Babylon 5, played by Walter Koenig. ... Lyta Alexander, played by Patricia Tallman, is a fictional character from the television science fiction drama Babylon 5. ...


The Drakh aren't the only race who worked for the Shadows, but neither the surgeons and pilot in "Ship of Tears" nor the creature in "The Long Dark" were seen to be helping with the evacuation, though of course the Drakh might have been the only Shadow servants to have been living on Z'ha'dum at that time. Ship of Tears is an episode from the third season of the science-fiction television series Babylon 5. ... The Long Dark is an episode from the second season of the science-fiction television series Babylon 5. ...


With the destruction of Z'ha'dum, those beings that had faithfully served the Shadows down through the centuries found themselves homeless. Now these thralls sought to become masters of chaos themselves. Thus, the legacy of the Shadows lived on.


Alliances and agents

The Drakh are a race from the fictional Babylon 5 universe. ... This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ... Londo Mollari is a fictional character in the universe of the science fiction television series Babylon 5, played by Peter Jurasik. ... Morden, played by Ed Wasser, is a fictional character on the television science fiction drama Babylon 5. ...

Ships

Every Shadow ship has a sentient being enslaved as its central processing unit (CPU). This gives it incredible control and maneuverability, but leaves the ship vulnerable to telepathic attack, which the Shadows attempted to counter by installing telepaths into their ships' cores. Unlike conventional ships, Shadow vessels do not form "Jump Points" to enter Hyperspace. Instead they slide or phase into Hyperspace. Die of an Intel 80486DX2 microprocessor (actual size: 12×6. ... Telepathy, from the Greek τῆλε, tele, remote; and πάθεια, patheia, to be effected by, describes the hypothetical transfer of information on thoughts or feelings between individuals by means other than the five classical senses. ...


Agents of Gaming RPG books make mention that the Shadows a long time ago actually piloted their own craft but gave up the practice perhaps due to their limited numbers; instead they used members of the younger races as cannon fodder, and made it possible for their warships to be bred more quickly.


One Man Fighters

Current records on the Shadow fighter indicate that the ships, like Shadow capital ships, can both cloak and phase into Hyperspace, making it the smallest vessels ever seen to have Jump capability.


Shadow one-man fighters have more than enough firepower to dispatch an entire conventional fighter squadron single-handed. Like the Shadow warships, all technology in these fighters is organic, and most were piloted by minions of the Shadows. They were launched from motherships in large spiky balls which split apart.


Capital ship

Shadow capital ships, also known as battle crabs, were the standard warships of the Shadows. These powerful vessels, while all similar in design, appear to be varied in size and power. It has been documented that the Shadow beam weapon could literally slice a small planetoid into shards. This weapon was theoretically powerful enough to turn the entire surface of a planet into wasteland when used on continuous fire. Shadow ships could also fire a type of tractor beam and a burst weapon capable of destroying enemy jump points by making them collapse and destabilize. Once locked onto a target, a Shadow vessel would follow that target until it had destroyed it.


Shadow capital ships were also equipped with a cloaking device that made use of hyperspace technology. Essentially, Shadow vessels cloaked by phasing somewhere between real space and first level Hyperspace. A Shadow capital ship would be virtually invulnerable to attack in real space or hyperspace when cloaked. It was not vulnerable until it fully entered either dimensional plane. This cloaking system was apparently susceptible to large graviton shifts. Current documentation indicates that some of these vessels could carry up to forty one-man fighters.


Shadow Scout Ship

Fast, maneuverable and very well armed, this class vessel was one of the last warships in the Shadows' arsenal to be seen. This heavy assault fighter/scout ship is about 2/3 the size of a White Star vessel and was armed with a powerful energy burst weapon that was much more powerful than the energy cannons used by Shadow fighters. They usually did not break radio silence until they had something to report.


Shadow Planet Killer

One of the most terrifying weapons seen by the eyes of man was the Shadow Planet Killer or Death Cloud. The Shadow Death Cloud consisted of several layers. The outer layer of the Shadow planet killer was its trademark black cloud that completely obscured the mechanism's inner workings.


The inner workings of the Death Cloud appear to be a larger, web-like construct which started out in a compacted form and was then able to expand to encompass an entire planet. Once a planet was locked within the grip of the Death Cloud, the mechanism's offensive systems went to work. The cloud surrounding the mechanism prevented anything within the cloud from escaping, as it had exhibited a capability to depower starships, thus leaving them both defenseless and vulnerable to the missiles and various hand-shaped weapon turrets on the construct inside the cloud. The hand-shaped turrets had several "fingers" which could fire the infamous purple Shadow "slicing beams" individually. However, as seen in "A Call to Arms", these "fingers" could touch together and form a super slicing beam capable of wreaking havoc on powerful vessels like a Victory-class cruiser and, theoretically, even shielded Vorlon vessels.


Unlike the Vorlon Planet Killer, which used a massive energy bolt to obliterate a planet, the Shadows took a much more conservative approach to destroying a planet. The Death Cloud fired multi-gigaton missile-like projectiles at the target planet, which would burrow down through the planet's crust and detonate once they reached the planet's core. This literally turned a planet inside out, transforming it into a radioactive, molten wasteland. The rationale behind this was not one of efficiency, but rather the promotion of chaos and strife — while the Vorlon method is swift and deadly, thus exhibiting their "punishment" of races who have become "disobedient" to them, the Shadows preferred to prolong the fear and panic brought on by their rather imposing weapon, sowing more and more chaos with each passing minute. Also, by leaving the targeted world intact but defiled, the Shadows left testaments to their work for their enemies to see.


While in its molten form, the planet was stripped of any and all organic and useful inorganic materials by the planet killer, and this material was used to fuel the Death Cloud. Once a planet had been stripped of all useful materials, it was left as little more than a cold, dead boulder in space — all organic life, in any form, having been devoured with no chance of life ever springing up on that world again. This suggests that the Death cloud also acted as a portable factory, producing its own missiles en route to its next target, using the remains of its most recent victim.


Technology

The Shadows developed many other weapons of war. These include deadly bioengineered viruses and an artificial intelligence pod capable of operating a vessel in lieu of a normal crew. These weapons were scavenged by the Drakh following the Shadows' departure from the galaxy; it is unknown what other horrors the Shadows may have left behind. The Shadows may also have created a special type of jumpgate called a Null field which appears as a black hole and establishes an instantaneous connection between two points. They were also the creators of a bio-plague that used nanites to wipe out entire species. The Drakh are a race from the fictional Babylon 5 universe. ... In science fiction, Jumpgate (or jump gate) refers to a device that allows fast travel between two points in space. ... A nanobot is a nanotechnological robot nanomachine, also called a nanite, which is a mechanical or electromechanical device whose dimensions are measured in nanometres (millionths of a millimetre, or units of 10-9 metrer). ...


The Shadows may also be the originator of technology that gives the Technomages their powers (making them cyborgs). It seems likely that the Technomages were developed to serve as some of the Shadows' many soldiers of darkness, against telepaths in the Vorlon army of light, but the Technomages learned of this and rebelled, though attempts were made on many occasions to draw them back into the ranks of the Shadows. A Technomage performing a spell on the series Babylon 5. ... A cyborg is a cybernetic organism (i. ... The Vorlons are a fictional alien race in the Babylon 5 universe. ...


It is also interesting to note that the Vorlons were at least partially capable of creating their own version of Technomages, as exemplified by the "Sebastian" the Inquisitor who had the capability to "conjure" many objects like manacles, shackles (for Sheridan), fire and light, teleportation, and many other "talents" not far from those exhibited by Technomages.

The Babylon 5 Universe:
Topic index - Episode list - People list
Articles by category
Characters - Crusade - Episodes - Films
Novels - Planets - Races - Ships - Wars

Also there is some debate over the eye of Z'ha'dum. The fact that it was shaped like the Shadows' eyes at first suggests that it was them telepathically projecting themselves. However the fact that they apparently left these devices behind proves that they were a machine of some kind. It appears to telepathically contact the minds of any ships crew, probing their minds and drawing them to the planet. It was this device that was tracking Ivanova during her journey in the Great Machine on Epsilon 3 in "Voices of Authority." The Eye also appears to be the Shadows' main defense system. That would explain why the White Star was able to get to the surface unharmed in "Z'ha'dum." It wasn't touched by the Eye because there was nobody on board to influence it. Babylon 5 is an epic American science fiction television series created, produced, and largely written by J. Michael Straczynski. ... Articles related to Babylon 5 and Crusade: Spoiler warning: Alphabetically by Subject Contents: Top - 0–9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z By Topic Episodes - Characters - Races - Locations Alphabetic Index... This is a list of Babylon 5 episodes. ... The following is a list of people involved in a significant way with the science-fiction television series Babylon 5. ... Voices of Authority is an episode from the third season of the science-fiction television series Babylon 5. ... List of Babylon 5 episodes Zhadum is the final episode of the third season of the science fiction television series Babylon 5. ...


References


  Results from FactBites:
 
Babylon 5 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (5783 words)
Babylon 5 is a center of political intrigue and conflict, and eventually becomes a pawn in a massive interstellar conflict from which it emerges with a victory over forces of darkness and chaos, albeit at great cost.
Babylon 5 is often cited as raising the bar for science fiction television, using an arc-driven storytelling style now prevalent in science fiction and in mainstream drama.
Babylon 5 also revolutionized the use of computer technology (using Amiga-based Video Toasters at first, and later Pentium and DEC Alpha-based systems [2]) in creating visual effects at a time when using models and miniatures was the norm.
Shadow (Babylon 5) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1263 words)
In the fictional Babylon 5 universe, Z'ha'dum was the homeworld of the ancient, mysterious race known as the Shadows.
A Shadow is an insect-like organism with a spiky, violet-fl carapace.
In addition, the Shadows developed many other weapons of war, including artificial intelligence pods capable of operating a vessel in lieu of a normal crew, vast, cloud-enveloped, nuclear-armed superstructures designed to annihilate the surface of a planet, and deadly bioengineered viruses.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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