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In the Runaway series of adventure games, Trantor is home planet of this universe's alien species. However, no connection besides the name are made to the original.
In the Runaway series of adventure games, Trantor is home planet of this universe's alien species. However, no connection besides the name are made to the original.


In the [[Magic: the Gathering]] multiverse, [[Ravnica]], a plane that exists solely as a planetwide cityscape, brings the concept of Asimov's [[ecumenopolis]] to a fantasy setting. In this incarnation, the cityscape is dominated by a guild-based structure and revolves around the power struggle set forth by the aforementioned guilds. Again, this re-imagination of Asimov's idea concerns an open-air city.
In the [[Magic: the Gathering]] multiverse, [[Ravnica]], a plane that exists solely as a planetwide cityscape, brings the concept of Asimov's ecumenopolis to a fantasy setting. In this incarnation, the cityscape is dominated by a guild-based structure and revolves around the power struggle set forth by the aforementioned guilds. Again, this re-imagination of Asimov's idea concerns an open-air city.


In the ''[[Chung Kuo]]'' series, large portions of [[Earth]] are covered by enormous multilevel structures collectively called City Earth.
In the ''[[Chung Kuo]]'' series, large portions of [[Earth]] are covered by enormous multilevel structures collectively called City Earth.

Revision as of 16:33, 12 April 2011

Trantor
Created byIsaac Asimov
GenreScience fiction space opera
In-universe information
Race(s)Humans
LocationsImperial Palace, Galactic Library, Streeling University, 800 administrative sectors
CharactersHari Seldon, Cleon I, Cleon II, Preem Palver, Arkady Darrell

Trantor is a fictional planet in Isaac Asimov's Foundation Series and Empire Series of science fiction novels.

Trantor was first described in a short story by Asimov appearing in Early Asimov Volume 1. Later Trantor gained prominence when the 1940s Foundation Series first appeared in print (in the form of short stories). Asimov described Trantor as being in the center of the galaxy. In later stories he acknowledged the growth in astronomical knowledge by retconning its position to be as close to the galactic center as was compatible with human habitability. The first time it was acknowledged in novel form was in Pebble in the Sky.[1]

Geography and history

The earlier history of Trantor is recapitulated in The Currents of Space, mentioning the five worlds of the Trantorian Republic growing into the Trantorian Confederation and then Trantorian Empire (evidently modeled on the Roman Republic, originally ruling only part of central Italy, developing into the vast Roman Empire).

At the time when Currents takes place, Trantor controls about half of the worlds in the Galaxy, while the other half is divided into innumerable independent worlds and miniature empires – which naturally makes a Trantorian Ambassador a person of great consequence on any of the still-independent worlds.

Later on, conquest of the entire galaxy made the Galactic Empire, with Trantor as its capital planet, a reality; the planet no longer sending out ambassadors, but only governors to royal subject worlds. This situation had already existed for thousands of years at the time of Pebble in the Sky, the next chronological book on this timeline.

Trantor is depicted as the capital of the first Galactic Empire. Its land surface of 194,000,000 km² (75,000,000 miles², 130% of Earth land area)[2] was, with the exception of the Imperial Palace,[3] entirely enclosed in artificial domes.[4][5]

It consisted of an enormous metropolis (an ecumenopolis) that stretched deep underground, and was home to a population of 45,000,000,000 (45 billion) human inhabitants at its height[6](although the Second Foundation mentions a figure ten times that of administrators alone), a population density of 232 per km² (600 per mile², in comparison, New York City in real life possesses an estimated 27,147.4 people per mile²). Its population was devoted almost entirely to either administration of the Empire or to maintenance of the planet itself.

The Encyclopedia Galactica states further on Trantor: "As the center of the Imperial Government for unbroken hundreds of generations and located, as it was, toward the central regions of the Galaxy among the most densely populated and industrially advanced worlds of the system, it could scarcely help being the densest and richest clot of humanity the Race had ever seen."

A Trantorian day lasted 1.08 Galactic Standard Days.[7]

One of the prominent features of Trantor was the Library of Trantor (variously referred to as the Imperial Library, the University of Trantor Library, and the Galactic Library), in which librarians index the entirety of human knowledge by walking up to a different computer terminal every day and resuming where the previous librarian left off.

Around 260 FE, a rebel leader named Gilmer attempted a coup, in the process sacking Trantor[8] and forcing the Imperial family to flee to the nearby world of Delicass, renamed Neotrantor. After the sack, the population dwindled rapidly from 40 billion to less than 100 million. Most of the buildings on Trantor were destroyed during the sack, and over the course of the next two centuries the metal on Trantor was gradually sold off, as farmers uncovered more and more soil to use in their farms. Eventually the farmers grew to become the sole recognized inhabitants of the planet, and the era of Trantor as the central world of the galaxy came to a close. It began to develop a dialect very different from Galactic Standard Speech, and the people unofficially renamed their planet "Hame", or "home."[9]

As revealed to the reader at the end of Second Foundation, not all these farmers were what they seemed, with the now-rustic Trantor serving as the center of the Second Foundation. From Trantor, the Second Foundationers secretly guided the development of the Galaxy (roughly parallel to the city of Rome becoming, after the fall of its empire, the headquarters of the Papacy, with its enormous influence on the development of Medieval Europe). Indeed, their self-perception as leaders of the future Second Empire is captured in the Second Foundationers' use of the word "Hamish" to describe the farmers despite reserving for themselves use of the word "Trantorian." It is noted that it was the Second Foundation which ensured that the famed library would survive the sacking to Trantor and the destruction of its urban culture – especially significant, considering that the library was vital to the Second Foundation itself.

In the Asimov canon, where events of this time are depicted mainly from a Foundation perspective, the Fall of Trantor is mentioned only as a piece of faraway news and in various later short references. However, Harry Turtledove attempted to fill in the details in his "Trantor Falls", focusing on the efforts by the Second Foundation to survive during the sacking of Trantor (published in the 1989 Foundation's Friends, where various writers took up the Foundation universe).

Food production

According to the original Foundation Trilogy (1951), Asimov states (by way of the Encyclopedia Galactica), "... the impossibility of proper administration... under the uninspired leadership of the later Emperors was a considerable factor in the Fall." To support the needs and whims of the population, food from twenty agricultural worlds brought by ships in the tens of thousands, fleets greater than any navy ever constructed by the Empire. "Its dependence upon the outer worlds for food and, indeed, for all necessities of life, made Trantor increasingly vulnerable to conquest by siege. In the last millennium of the Empire, the monotonously numerous revolts made Emperor after Emperor conscious of this, and Imperial policy became little more than the protection of Trantor's delicate jugular vein..." (Encyclopedia Galactica)[10]

In Prelude to Foundation (1989), Asimov indicates that this was not always so: originally, most of Trantor's basic food needs were fulfilled by Trantor's "vast microorganism farms.".[11] Yeast vats and algae farms produced basic nutrients, which were then processed with artificial flavors into palatable food.[12] The subterranean farms, however, depended entirely on care provided by tik-toks (lesser robots), and their destruction following an abortive uprising (chronicled in Foundation's Fear) left the Imperial capital largely dependent upon food brought from other worlds. Hindsight observers might recognize that it was therefore the tik-tok uprising, perhaps more than any other single event, that set the stage for Trantor's sack and the final collapse of the Galactic Empire. Foundation's Edge mentions algae growing on Trantor, which is called a totally inadequate source of food, so it is possible some of the later Emperors attempted to rectify the situation with limited success.

Symbolism

Trantor represents several different aspects of civilization. At once it is both the center of power in the galaxy, and also the administrative head. It is also an illustration of what could eventually happen to any urbanized planet. Asimov used the Roman Empire as the creative basis for the Foundation series,[13][14] so Trantor is in some sense based on Rome at the height of the Roman Empire. Trantor also illustrates the mentality of human beings that was first encountered in Asimov's The Caves of Steel, wherein human technology will ultimately result in a complete encapsulation of a population, and that population will eventually suffer psychosis associated with that total encapsulation. Asimov did once say that these encapsulated cities represented the kind of place in which he'd like to live (in real life, Asimov was an agoraphobic individual who spent virtually all his time writing inside his New York City apartment; he seldom traveled and when he did, only by train and never by airplane). He did not even realize how distasteful some people found this until someone asked him about it.[citation needed]

Inspired by Trantor

There have been some serious attempts to illustrate a planet like Trantor in the Star Wars films by George Lucas, the first being Coruscant (which was in some early sources called "Jhantor", in homage to Trantor). Coruscant is one of the more convincing images on screen we have today of Isaac Asimov's conception of the world-girdling city of Trantor. Coruscant is a planet-covering open-air city, while Trantor's buildings are all subterranean or under domes.[citation needed] Asimov's Trantor thus differs from Coruscant in that Trantor is more practically adapted to inclement weather, although weather control devices are used on both planets. It should be noted that there is a planet called Trantor in the Star Wars universe, and it is also an ecumenopolis.

Holy Terra in the Warhammer 40,000 universe is also very similar to Trantor in terms of the Imperium.

The planet Helior in Harry Harrison's Bill, the Galactic Hero satirises Trantor, highlighting the problems of atmosphere, waste disposal and navigating about a world-sized city.

The planet Eron in Jack Williamson's Star Bridge novel is a similar world-spanning city and capital of the Eron galactic empire.

The Planet Capitol in The Worthing Saga by Orson Scott Card is very similar to Trantor in that it is entirely covered by buildings except for few places reserved for designated high ranking officials and that it is the capital of the empire. Also it is destroyed so far off planets can grow on their own much like in the Foundation series.

In the Runaway series of adventure games, Trantor is home planet of this universe's alien species. However, no connection besides the name are made to the original.

In the Magic: the Gathering multiverse, Ravnica, a plane that exists solely as a planetwide cityscape, brings the concept of Asimov's ecumenopolis to a fantasy setting. In this incarnation, the cityscape is dominated by a guild-based structure and revolves around the power struggle set forth by the aforementioned guilds. Again, this re-imagination of Asimov's idea concerns an open-air city.

In the Chung Kuo series, large portions of Earth are covered by enormous multilevel structures collectively called City Earth.

Trantor Systems, Ltd., a computer parts manufacturer now part of Adaptec[1], was presumably named for Asimov's planet.

"TrantorCon 23309"[15] was proposed by Larry Niven at Worldcon in 1976

A Darker Trantor, a blog dedicated to urban exploration of buildings in the UK, was inspired by Asimov's planet.

Proto-Trantor

In E.M. Forster's 1909 science fiction story The Machine Stops, the human race on Earth lives entirely underground in a massive network of underground cells. Asimov himself suggested in his non-fiction works that humans should live in underground habitats both on Earth and in the asteroid belt.

Races on Trantor

Although by 22,500 years in the future, there had been much racial intermarriage and most people were multiracial, according to Asimov, in the Galactic Empire as a whole as well as on Trantor itself, there were still some recognizable populations primarily descended from the original races on Earth. What we call Caucasians were called Northerners, what we call East Asians were called Easterners, and what we call Black people were called Southerners. No one could remember why these names were used because no one remembered human origins on Earth.

Administrative sectors

Each planet in the Galactic Empire is divided into administrative sectors. Trantor had over 800, averaging 50,000,000 people each, in 240,000 km² (90,000 square miles), about the size of Uganda or the U.S. state of Kansas. The known sectors are:

  • Dahl—One of the poorer sections of Trantor.[16] The main job of the lower class is heatsinking, where workers supervise the conversion of heat from the planet's core directly into electric power by sinking extremely long rods into the inner core of the planet (the three other major sources of electric power were hydroelectric dams on the underground rivers, fusion energy, and solar energy from Trantor's sun, both from rooftop solar arrays and from solar energy satellites orbiting Trantor that beamed microwave energy to the surface); 'heatsinkers' were generally looked down upon by other Dahlites. Naturally, most Dahlites hated the Empire, and the soldiers of the Empire ('sunbadgers'). Dahlites were dark skinned, black-haired, and fairly short. Dahlite males wore a large, thick mustache, and all carried knives (then very backward). Rather than using 'Mr.', 'Mrs.', or 'Dr.', as forms of address, Dahlites always used 'Master' and 'Mistress' (never 'Doctor'). The name Dahl may be reference to the Indian dalit or untouchable caste. Known Dahlites: Yugo Amaryl, Mother Rittah, Raych Seldon.
    • Billibotton—A slum in Dahl, on the lower level. This was where Mother Rittah lived, and where Hari Seldon and Dors Venabili met their future adoptive son, Raych Seldon. Billibotton was famous for its complete lawlessness. Without the help of Dors, Seldon never would have left it alive.
  • Ery—The sector in which Wanda Seldon and Stettin Palver met Bor Alurin.
  • Imperial—The sector in which the Imperial Palace and the Galactic Library lie. When Seldon first visited Trantor to deliver his speech at the Decennial Convention, fashion in the sector called for bold, bright colors and wearing hats without chinstraps. According to Asimov, many of the inhabitants of this sector were tall Northerner yellowhairs, implying that they were people of what we call Nordic ancestry.
  • Mandanov
  • Millimaru—The sector Raych claimed to be (and maybe was) born in when he infiltrated the Joranumite movement.
  • Mycogen— As Asimov explains in Prelude to Foundation,[11] their name is formed from the Greek stems myco- (meaning 'yeast' or other types of fungi) and -gen (meaning 'maker' or 'producer'), which matches the description of the Mycogen as specialized in breeding and exporting yeast, or "microfood," to other portions of Trantor. It kept the best for itself; the food eaten by Seldon in Mycogen was the best he had ever had. Mycogenians were descendants of the ancient Spacer world Aurora, and revered the use of robots and the lost past. They lived by a strict religion (to Mycogenians, 'history'). The 'high priest' was the leader of the council of elders, the government of Mycogen. During a rite of passage, all Mycogenians are completely depilated, so they can tell the difference between themselves and non-Mycogenians. Because hair is considered so repulsive, most Mycogenians shriek at its appearance; foreigners must wear skincaps at all times. The sight and feel of hair was considered similar to pornography lewdness by Mycogenians. By tradition usually wear a cloak called 'kirtle', men always wear a white kirtle; women, a gray one. Mycogenian names are given by 'cohort', and number in the series. Known Mycogenians: Mycelium 72, Raindrop 43, Raindrop 45, Sunmaster 14, Skystrip 2.[17]
  • Nevrask— One of the last sectors to hold out against Gilmer during the Great Sack
  • North Damiano— A sector with a prominent University, involved in co-operative Nephelometry with Streeling University. North Damiano University operates Jet-downs equipped with sensory electronics.
  • Streeling—At the time Hari Seldon first arrived on Trantor, fashions in Streeling were not quite so boldly colorful as in the Imperial Sector. It was the site of Streeling University,[18] a prestigious university noted for being almost completely out of the hands of the Empire. It later gained fame for housing Hari Seldon and his "Seldon Psychohistory Project."
  • Wye—The ancient Dacian Dynasty of Emperors are the direct ancestors of the hereditary Mayoralty of the sector of Wye. Located by the South Pole, Wye exercised a good deal of political power, because it was the site where excess heat across the planet was released. If it shut down those systems, the heat would build up and destroy Trantor. During the time of Seldon's flight, Wye was preparing an Army for a coup. This action was stopped by Eto Demerzel, and the military of Wye disbanded. Known Wyans: Mayor Mannix IV, Mayor Rashelle I.
  • Ziggoreth— A sector with a prominent University. Ziggoreth University is involved in co-operative Nephelometric research with Streeling University, and operates Jet-downs equipped with sensory electronics.

Retroactive continuity

  • In the original Foundation Trilogy, there is no indication of Trantor being divided among wildly diverse cultures, likewise, the surface is described as covered with towers rather than domes; its depiction in Prelude to Foundation and Forward the Foundation may be considered another example of retconning.
  • Although some have been confused by the apparent conflict between Trantorian self-sufficiency in terms of food supply in Prelude and the subsequent characterization in Encyclopedia Galactica of the planet as dependent upon twenty agricultural worlds for food, there is no conflict. Prelude depicts an earlier period of Imperial history, and as subsequently explained in Foundation's Fear, the food situation on Trantor changed precisely because its subterranean farms were shut down in the wake of the abortive tik-tok rebellion. That book directly establishes that it was this decision that made Trantor dependent on the produce of twenty agricultural worlds—ironically, the same worlds over which Neotrantor would hold its last, feeble sway.

References

  1. ^ Pebble in the Sky By Isaac Asimov, page 27
  2. ^ The Foundation Trilogy By Isaac Asimov, page 13
  3. ^ Foundation and Empire By Isaac Asimov, page 73
  4. ^ Note reference to domes in the "Product Description"
  5. ^ Similar to the Earth depicted in Asimov's "Caves of Steel"
  6. ^ It is interesting to note that in his theory of city planning called Ekistics, Konstantinos Apostolos Doxiadis in 1968 CE predicted that the human race on Earth would by 2100 CE reach zero population growth at a population of 50,000,000,000 in a worldwide ecumenopolis powered by fusion energy.
  7. ^ Foundation's Edge By Isaac Asimov, page 98
  8. ^ Turtledove, Harry. "Trantor Falls." Foundation's Friends, edited by Martin H. Greenberg. Tor, 1989.
  9. ^ Foundation's Edge By Isaac Asimov, page 79
  10. ^ The Foundation Trilogy by Isaac Asimov, page 13
  11. ^ a b Prelude to Foundation by Isaac Asimov, page 62
  12. ^ Prelude to Foundation by Isaac Asimov, page 61
  13. ^ Sf: the Other Side of Realism By Thomas Clareson, page 344
  14. ^ The Science Fiction of Isaac Asimov By Joseph F. Patrouch, page 117
  15. ^ Playgrounds of the Mind
  16. ^ Prelude to Foundation By Isaac Asimov, page 259
  17. ^ Prelude to Foundation By Isaac Asimov, page 29
  18. ^ Prelude to Foundation By Isaac Asimov, page 47