MINBARI

The Minbari Federation

The Minbari are a peace-loving and highly evolved race. They are the oldest of the major younger races. Their society is based on the teachings and prophesies of Valen, a religious leader who lived a thousand years earlier. The Minbari are technologically more evolved than the other younger races, but their morals are also more advanced than the morals of many other races - for example no Minbari killed another Minbari in the thousand years between Valen's reign and the civil war of 2261.
The Minbari culture values honesty and serving others, and forbids lying except to save someone else's life or honour.

Appearance:

In broad strokes very human like. The most obvious difference is the external bonecrest on the back of their skull and their ears which are smaller and situated lower than human ears. The Minbari are stronger than humans and have longer life spans (they can easily reach the age of 140).
The Minbari cannot drink alcohol because it causes them fits of paranoia and homicidal rage.
Many of the Minbari, i.e. those who have ascended from Valen, have some human DNA in their genes.

Female MinbariMale Minbari


Planet:

The Minbari homeworld is the seventh planet from their sun and nearly one fourth of it is covered in ice. The planet is rich with crystal formations and many of the cities have actually been built straight inside these formations.

The Minbari CapitalThe Minbari Capital


Society:

The Minbari society is based on three castes - worker, warrior and religious. Within the castes there are clans, which then are divided into families. The Minbari speak three languages - Lenn-ah, Fik and Adrenato - depending on what caste they belong to.
There are many rituals and ceremonies in the every day life of a Minbari and discarding them would bring great shame not only to the individual himself, but also to his family, clan and caste.


Government:

The highest power is held by the Grey Council which has of nine members (known as 'Satai') and a leader. In order to detach itself from the mundane world the Grey Council is permanently situated on a spaceship. The Council was originally founded by Valen who ordered that it must have three members from each cast - a balance that was broken in 2259 when Delenn of the religious caste was replaced by Neroon of the warrior caste. Valen foresaw how Delenn would break the council in 2260, but not the war that followed. After the short but bloody civil war in 2261, Delenn reformed the Council giving five seats to the worker caste and only two to warrior and religious castes.
The Grey Council has not had a leader since Dukhat was killed in the first contact between humans and Minbari. Delenn was offered leadership in 2258, but she refused it and when restoring the Council in 2261 she did not name a leader but left the place empty to honour Neroon who had died during the civil war.


Religion:

All Minbari profess the same religion, but the religious activity itself is left to the religious caste. The Minbari do not believe in individual god or gods, but the base of their religion is that all souls are a part of the universe which is trying to understand itself by manifesting in their form. Without the body the soul cannot be perceived, but the soul is not a part of the body, merely a reflection on its surface.
Valen, the greatest religious icon in the Minbari culture appeared during the penultimate Shadow War bringing with him a spacestation that helped the Minbari defeat the Shadows. For a thousand years the Minbari followed his teachings and prophecies believing him to be a Minbari not born of a Minbari. In reality Valen was just Jeffrey Sinclair who had travelled back in time and used a triluminary to transform himself into a Minbari.


Telepathy:

The Minbari have telepaths and they are held in great respect. Telepaths are expected to serve the society, to use their talent help others, and in return the society offers them a living.


History:


Somewhere during the 13th century (Earth time), soon after achieving interstellar travel, the Minbari became involved in the raging Shadow War. They led the alliance against the Shadows, but there were disagreements among the Warriors that soon began to weaken the alliance. When the Shadows managed to destroy an important Minbari base the alliance was left without a center of operations and almost all hope of winning the war was lost. The tables were turned when Babylon 4 and Jeff Sinclair (who had metamorphosed into a Minbari with the help of a triluminary) travelled back in time. Sinclair, now calling himself Valen, contacted the Vorlons and then took the Minbari under his command. With the Vorlons, Babylon 4 and Valen on their side the Minbari and their allies managed to drive the Shadows back to Z'ha'dum and destroy two thirds of their forces. During the next hundred years Valen made several changes in the Minbari society: he created both the Grey Council and the Rangers and wrote the prophesies and teachings that would form the Minbari culture. He also influenced the Minbari on a deeper level when he married and thus had children with some human-DNA. Some Minbari also believe that his transformation triggered the migration of Minbari souls into human bodies.

The next contact the Minbari had with humans was at the eve of the last Shadow War as the Grey Council, on its way to Z'ha'dum, encountered the EAS Prometheus. As a sign of respect the Minbari vessel approached with its gun ports open, but the humans misinterpreted the gesture and in the following firefight the Minbari leader Dukhat was killed. As a revenge the Minbari tried to annihilate the entire human race in a holy war. Being thousands of years more advanced than humans the Minbari had no trouble in keeping the upper hand throughout the war. One by one they destroyed human colonies and outposts on their way towards Earth itself. During the Battle of the Line, as the Minbari easily went through Earth's last line of defence, the Grey Council abducted Jeff Sinclair, one of the soldiers protecting the planet. When interrogating and examining him they discovered that Minbari souls were reborn in human bodies - this explained the decrease in Minbari population that had been going on for the last thousand years. As the humans were then at least partly human, and as the soul inhabiting Sinclair's body was the soul of none other than Valen himself, the Council immediately ordered their forces to surrender. To avoid a scandal, the truth about the surrender was never told to public and because of this, most of the warrior caste disapproved the surrender. For example, one of the war leaders, Sineval, took his own life rather than surrendered.

After the war humans and Minbari co-operated in the founding of the Babylon Stations. One of their conditions was though that Sinclair would be the commander of the station (this way Satai Delenn, who became their ambassador on Babylon 5, was able to make sure that he didn't remember what had happened during Battle of the Line). Later Sinclair was transferred to Minbar where he was given the leadership of the Rangers and in the end he travelled back in time to save the Minbari in the previous Shadow War.

In 2259, after a thousand years of peace, trouble began brewing between the castes once again. Relations between the warrior caste and the religious caste were deteriorating because of the shift in the balance of power in the Grey Council (Delenn of the religious caste was replaced by Neroon of the warrior caste). In secret from the warrior caste the religious caste began constructing the whitestar fleet, restored the Rangers back to their former glory and took part in the Shadow War alongside other races. When the Grey Council refused to take actions against the Shadows, Delenn made true one of Valen's prophecies by dismantling the Grey Council. This vacuum of power shook the Minbari society so deeply that Neroon was ready to break the thousand years of peace by killing Delenn.

Then again, the peace didn't last much longer anyway. During the following year the warrior caste took advantage of the disunion in the society to gain more power by attempting to create a warriors' council that would replace the Grey Council. There had been disagreements between the two castes ever since the Earth-Minbari war (warrior caste considered the surrender dishonourable), but the proverbial straw that broke the camels back was the new military power, namely the Rangers and the whitestar fleet, that the religious caste had gained. To revenge this the warriors began persecuting the religious caste - for example, in one remote city near the northern polar cap all religious Minbari were driven out of their homes and into the wilderness, and not all of them survived back to civilisation. In early 2261 the persecution led to an open war between the castes. After the brief but bloody battles the religious caste, led by their de facto leader Delenn, surrendered. This surrender didn't mean giving the power to the warriors, though. Delenn challenged Shakiri, the leader of the warriors, to step into the Starfire Wheel where caste wars had been settled before Valen. The caste of the one who would last longer and thus sacrifice himself for his caste would win. As Delenn had suspected, the cowardly Shakiri didn't want to die, but stepped down. Delenn, who was prepared to die, was saved by Neroon, who took her place and announced that although he was born warrior caste, the calling of his heart was religious. In the name of the religious caste Delenn then formed the new Grey Council giving most of the power to the worker caste.

Led by Delenn, the Minbari joined the army of aliens that supported Sheridan during Earth’s civil war. Minbar was also one of the first governments to join the Interstellar Alliance, and the Alliance headquarters were eventually situated in the Minbari city Tuzenor.

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