Rakatan revolt


The Rakatan revolt was an uprising of the Rakata species against the Celestials that occurred millennia before the birth of the Old Republic whose inception and outcome have been lost in time.

Prelude


The Kwa uplifted the Rakata from their primitive state, teaching them the ways of the Force on Lehon.

The Kwa uplifted the Rakata from their primitive state, teaching them the ways of the Force on Lehon.

The origins of the Rakatan revolt dated back to the dawn of the Rakata species' civilization on the planet Lehon, a terrestrial world located in the Tempered Wastes of the Unknown Regions. Many years before 36,453 BBY, the Kwa—a Force-sensitive reptilian species from the planet Dathomir—uplifted the Rakata civilization, who were taught the power of the Force and were given advanced technology. During these times the Rakata became the client species of the Celestials, who were the dominant galactic power and Kwa's own beneficiaries.

Following the devastating conflict with the Kwa, the Rakata promptly developed the first known hyperdrive, discovering that they could use the energy of Force-sensitive slaves among the populations they conquered to fuel their warships. Thus the Infinite Empire was born, which expanded with each new conquest and discovery of another planet rich in the Force.

The revolt


Speculation holds that the Celestials had crafted the western barrier that bisected the galaxy west of the Deep Core with the help of their servants, the Gree, the Kwa, and the Killiks in order to contain the upstart Rakata. However, the newly-formed Infinite Empire had spread out over the Unknown Regions and conquered much of the eastern galaxy around 35,000 BBY. Sometime prior to 33,598 BBY, the Rakata had captured the forest world of Kashyyyk, and installed a terraforming computer on the planet to manipulate Kashyyyk's wroshyr trees.

The ancient grimoires of the Gree Enclave, which referred to the Celestials as the "Ancient Masters," recorded that their work was undone by curses unleashed by the Rakata, or the "Soul Hunters," which they called the "Gray Swallowing" and the "Hollowers of Beings," and further referred to them as the "Faceless Mouths" and "Eaters of Worlds." At some point more than 30,000 years before 1 BBY, the Celestials disappeared from the galaxy. By 30,000 BBY, the Celestials were nowhere to be found.

Aftermath


By 30,000 BBY, the Celestials were nowhere to be found, and therefore ceased to pose a threat to the expanding Infinite Empire. The Rakatan Infinite Empire had taken center stage as a dominant galactic power stretching from the Tempered Wastes to the furthest reaches of the eastern galaxy, linking over five hundred Force-rich worlds. The Rakata turned their attention to the subjugation of their major rivals among the Celestial client species, namely the Killiks, the Gree Empire and the Kwa holdings. The Gree were driven back to their home cluster, while the Kwa were all but exterminated by the Infinite Empire.

The victory in the Rakatan revolt brought about an era of stability to the Infinite Empire that persisted until the Rakata Civil War.

The victory in the Rakatan revolt brought about an era of stability to the Infinite Empire that persisted until the Rakata Civil War.

Similarly, the Killiks vanished from the galaxy and migrated beyond the veil of the Unknown Regions, which was an act presumed to be attributed to the Celestials. After the construction of Centerpoint Station, it was claimed by the Killiks that the Celestials had grown angry with their Kind and had emptied them from their homeworld of Alderaan. It was theorized that the Celestials drove the Killiks into the Unknown Regions after they devoured their own homeworld and attempted to lay claim to another planet. The Mnggal-Mnggal similarly claimed that it had witnessed the sudden withdrawal of the Celestials from the galaxy in this era.

The eventual fate of the Celestials was unclear to later historians. Dr. Insmot Bowen posited that they may have been trapped inside the galaxy by their barrier and destroyed by the Rakatan revolt, or they may have escaped through the barrier. He also suggested that they may have withdrawn from this dimension completely. Others, like the Dark Lord of the Sith Darth Plagueis mused on the possibility that the Celestials were the ones who, according to Jedi and Sith legend, merged into the Force to control its path.

Legacy


In the year 1 BBY, Dr. Insmot Bowen, a specialist in pre-Republic history at the Obroan Institute for Archaeology, gave a debriefing to General Arhul Kurumenga of the Imperial Department of Military Research, Admiral Conan Antonio Motti of the Imperial Navy, and Master of Imperial Projects Bevel Lemelisk relating to various discoveries that would provide hints, albeit minimal, regarding aspects of the Celestials, including their conflict with and eventual defeat at the hands of the Rakata.

Motti doubted the historicity of the Rakata and Celestial species in general, going so far as to dismiss the stories about them as little more than "arrant nonsense" fit only to be the subject of "holothrillers." However, the aforementioned Dr. Bowen, believed the stories of the Celestial species and the war in which they fought, going so far as to suggest that the Celestials might still be out in the universe in one form or another, a potential threat to the stability of the New Order.

Behind the scenes


The Rakatan revolt was supposed to have been mentioned in The Essential Guide to Warfare but was cut by Jason Fry. It was eventually unveiled in the Star Wars Blog article Star Wars: The Essential Guide to Warfare Author's Cut — The Celestials.

Sources


  • The Essential Guide to Warfare
  • Dangerous Covenants

Appearances