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The ''Enterprise''-B and ''Enteprise''-C and their crews are briefly visible on screen, and are also the subject of several licensed (but non-[[canon (Star Trek)|canon]]) novels published by [[Pocket Books]].
The ''Enterprise''-B and ''Enteprise''-C and their crews are briefly visible on screen, and are also the subject of several licensed (but non-[[canon (Star Trek)|canon]]) novels published by [[Pocket Books]].


[[Image:Excelsior07.jpg|thumb|left]]
[[Image:USS_Enterprise-B_in_drydock.jpg|thumb|left]]


'''Registry:''' [[USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-B)|USS ''Enterprise'' (NCC-1701-B)]]<br />
'''Registry:''' [[USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-B)|USS ''Enterprise'' (NCC-1701-B)]]<br />

Revision as of 05:37, 28 January 2008

Enterprise or USS Enterprise are the names of several fictional starships, some of which are the focal point for various television series and films in the Star Trek franchise created by Gene Roddenberry. The majority of these vessels share "NCC-1701" as part of their registry, with later ships appending a letter to the registry to differentiate them.

History

According to The Star Trek Encyclopedia, the ship's registry number, "NCC-1701"

"was devised by Matt Jefferies, art director of the first Star Trek series. Jefferies, who is a pilot, based NCC on 20th century aircraft registration codes. In such 20th century usage, an "N" first letter refers to an aircraft registered in the USA. A "C" second letter refers to a civil aircraft. Jefferies added a second "C", just because he thought it looked better."[1]

The name Enterprise itself comes from a long series of ships. The first was the French frigate L'Entreprise, captured by the British in 1705. The British rechristened the ship HMS Enterprise for use by the Royal Navy. The first United States ship to use the name USS Enterprise was a Revolutionary War-era sloop-of-war. The eighth American ship to bear this name was the world's first nuclear aircraft carrier.

To capitalize on the popularity of Star Trek, as well as to honor the actual, historical vessels, NASA named an initial flight-test space shuttle Enterprise.[1] For Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home, external shots of the aircraft carrier USS Ranger substituted for the aircraft carrier USS Enterprise, at sea during filming.[1] In 1994, the real aircraft carrier Enterprise played host to a Star Trek convention and Star Trek memorabilia can be found throughout the ship and in the movie, The Hunt for Red October, Enterprise is referred to by its call sign, "Starbase".

Pre-Federation era

Two ships predate the United Federation of Planets.

Registry: USS Enterprise (XCV 330)
Class: Declaration (apocryphal)
Service: circa 2130s
Captain: Unknown
Drawings of this ship are visible in background images in Star Trek: The Motion Picture and Star Trek: Enterprise.

File:Enterprise (NX-01).jpg

Registry: Enterprise (NX-01)
Class: NX
Service: 2151 – 2161
Captain: Jonathan Archer
The United Earth Starfleet's Enterprise is the main setting of Star Trek: Enterprise.

The Original Series era

Two ships named USS Enterprise are featured in the original Star Trek television series and the first through sixth Star Trek films.

Registry: USS Enterprise (NCC-1701)
Class: Constitution
Service: 2245 – 2285, refitted 2271
Captain: Robert April, Christopher Pike, James T. Kirk, Willard Decker, Spock
The Federation Starfleet's first Enterprise is the main setting for Kirk’s historic five-year mission as depicted in the original Star Trek series and The Animated Series (2265–2270). Two-and-a-half years later, the newly refitted Enterprise appears in The Motion Picture, and again in The Wrath of Khan, before being destroyed in The Search for Spock.

Registry: USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-A)
Class: Constitution (refit)
Service: 2286 – 2293
Captain: James T. Kirk, Spock
This ship, which originally was the USS Yorktown refitted but was renamed following the destruction of the original Enterprise, first appears at the end of The Voyage Home, and is the main setting of the films The Final Frontier and The Undiscovered Country. The ship is ordered decommissioned at the end of The Undiscovered Country. No canon source has given further details, although paperwork from the model kit indicated the ship was mothballed at the Memory Alpha ship museum, and in the novel The Ashes of Eden, by William Shatner, the Enterprise-A is removed from the mothball fleet before being destroyed defending the planet Chal.

Between TOS and TNG

The Enterprise-B and Enteprise-C and their crews are briefly visible on screen, and are also the subject of several licensed (but non-canon) novels published by Pocket Books.

Registry: USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-B)
Class: Excelsior upgrade[2]
Service: 2293 – 2320s
Captain: John Harriman
Launched at the start of Star Trek Generations. James T. Kirk goes missing during the ship's maiden voyage. According to the Star Trek novels, Demora Sulu becomes captain, after Harriman.

Registry: USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-C)
Class: Ambassador
Service: 2330s – 2344
Captain: Rachel Garrett
This ship plays a major role in the Next Generation episode "Yesterday's Enterprise". According to dialog in the TNG episode "Redemption, Part II", the ship was destroyed attempting to defend the Klingon outpost Narendra III from Romulan attack. Survivors included Tasha Yar, whose alternate timeline version from Yesterday's Enterprise travels with the ship back in time to the battle over Narendra III.

The Next Generation era

Two ships named Enterprise are featured in Star Trek: The Next Generation and four TNG-era films.

Registry: USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-D)
Class: Galaxy
Service: 2363 – 2371
Captain: Jean-Luc Picard, William Riker, Edward Jellico
The main setting of The Next Generation TV series. She is destroyed in the film Generations. In the alternate future featured in the TNG series finale All Good Things..., this Enterprise is shown intact, albeit heavily refitted, in 2395. The refits included a third warp nacelle, new weapons, and a cloaking device.

File:Star Trek - Enterprise-E fires Quantum torpedoes.jpg

Registry: USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-E)
Class: Sovereign
Service: 2372 – Active (as of 2380)
Captain: Jean-Luc Picard
The main setting for the films: First Contact, Insurrection, and Nemesis.

Beyond The Next Generation

File:USS Enterprise NCC-1701-J.jpg

Registry: USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-J)
Class: Unknown
Service: circa 26th century
Captain: Unknown
The "Azati Prime" episode of Star Trek: Enterprise involves time travel and features a scene in which this Enterprise is briefly shown.

The Enterprise-J operates in one possible version of the 26th century, with a diverse crew that includes Xindi and Klingons. The ship, along with a fleet of other Federation vessels, fights and defeats the Sphere Builders at the Battle of Procyon Five (depicted in the episode "Azati Prime"). Crewman Daniels brings Captain Jonathan Archer forward from the 22nd century so that Archer can witness the battle. Archer subsequently works with the Xindi in the 22nd century to defeat the Sphere Builders earlier in history.

The Enterprise-J is featured in the 2005 Ships of the Line calendar that features images of the various starships seen from Star Trek throughout the years, as well as in the Ships of the Line book released in 2006. The Enterprise-J is also seen in the "Ships of the Line" poster released in the Star Trek Magazine issue #1.

References

  1. ^ a b c Okuda, Michael & Denise (1994,1997,1999). The Star Trek Encyclopedia. New York: Pocket Books. ISBN 0-671-03475-8. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |year= (help)CS1 maint: year (link)
  2. ^ "Enterprise-B, U.S.S." StarTrek.com. Retrieved 2007-05-24.

See also