Mars (Hektor Heresy)

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Revision as of 03:27, 18 May 2016 by 1d4chan>Lumey (start history)
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This page details people, events, and organisations from the /tg/ Heresy, a fan re-working of the Warhammer 40,000 Universe. See the /tg/ Heresy Timeline and Galaxy pages for more information on the Alternate Universe.

Mars
Segmentum

Segmentum Solar

Sector

Sol Sector

System

Sol System

Population

20,000,000,000

Planetary Governor

Fabricator-General Kalkas Tygian

Orbital radius

1.52AU ± 0.14AU

Gravity

0.38G


Mars was the home world of the Mechanicum. Due to its history and might, the planet also served as the machine cult's spiritual and political center. After the coming of the Emperor and the Treaty of Mars, Martian Forge-Fanes produced enormous quantities of war material for the Great Crusade. However, under the fanatical rule of Fabricator-General Kalkas Tygian, Mars squandered its strength enforcing a narrow orthodoxy on the Forge Worlds of the Galaxy. Eventually the orthodox Mechanicum outreached themselves and had to accommodate heterodox views that fell short of outright Tech Heresy, leading to the formation of the Non-Conformist League headed by Al-Sherar. Worse, corruption was gnawing at Mars itself, leading to a Chaos-led uprising and civil war as the Hektor Heresy gripped the Galaxy. Despite this devastation, Mars recovered in the period of Imperial Reformation and although Kalkas Tygian's vision of the Machine Cult in complete ritual union across the Galaxy never came to pass, the Red Planet was able to assert its political authority over the Non-Conformist League.


History

Humans first settled Mars during M3, shortly after the emergence of the species as a space-faring civilisation. The colony grew to rival the sophistication and wealth of Terra. Under the auspices of the industrial cartels that ran the Red Planet, some terraforming took place and the first Hive Cities were constructed. By the time that humans began to spread across the Galaxy Mars and Terra stood as equal partners, and their friendly co-existence did much to shape the politics of the human-settled worlds. In the Dark Age of Technology, worlds might hold respect and prominence over their peers, but humanity had no capital.

That age of wonders came to a terrible end at the end of the 25th Millenium, and humanity was plunged into the horrors of the Age of Strife. On Mars, destruction and isolation were compounded by the failure of the great atmospheric shields that had protected life from the ravages of solar radiation. The survivors retreated underground, into shelters in the depths of their hives. But unlike on other human worlds where technology was the terrible font from which the Men of Iron had sprung, on the Red Planet it was also the wellspring of life. Only the machines of the ancients, half-understood and often malfunctioning, could keep the Martians from extinction. It was this dual nature of man's relationship with his technological wonders that created the peculiar creed of the Machine Cult.


The Forge Temples of Mars

The Mechanicum gathered in ancient hives dedicated to industry and the praise of the Machine God. Just one of the Red Planet's great Forge Temples could out-produce any Imperial planet short of a Forge World or the most sophisticated Hive World. The most famous Forge Temples include:

  • The Temple of All Knowledge, more commonly known as Olympus Mons for the volcano about which it is built. This is the center of the Machine Cult and stands close to the Tharsis region.
  • Mondus Occulum, the second most powerful of all the Forges on Mars and home to the Tsiolkovsky towers that shipped manufactured material, weapons and munitions from the Martian Surface to the Iron Ring in orbit. The foremost manufacturer of Astartes Armor and weaponry on Mars, it would gain dark renown as the seat of the Autopostate Motoka Isidore and the unofficial head of the traitor Mechanicum alliance on Mars. Though there were strident calls to raze the Forge post-Rebellion, Mondus Occulum would instead be cleansed and rededicated to the Machine God, though darkness continues to linger there.
  • The Fane of Urbis Tyrrhena or "Crater City", was a Forge Temple specialising in civilian goods. It was built on the crater fields of Tyrrhena Terra, but became infamous as the birthplace and power center of the Autopostate Vilyon Luthier. After the Loyalist victory, Urbis Tyrrhena was razed and never rebuilt.
  • The Fane of Urbis Syrtis or "Hourglass City", was a Forge Temple built on the mineral-rich Syrtis Major Planum. Due to its heterodox beliefs (including a notion of interspecies reincarnation), Urbis Syrtis was ruthlessly conquered by Kalkas Tygian's forces shortly before the Treaty of Mars. During the Great Crusade the hive was rebuilt and its mines brought back into service to produce materials for foundries elsewhere on Mars. This luckless realm was also the first Forge Temple to fall to Vilyon Luthier's Giorea Choristers.
  • "Liberty City" or Urbis Juventas once stood on the Hebes Mensa, surrounded by the natural moat of the Hebes Chasma. Their defensible position convinced the citizens of Liberty City that they could defy Kalkas Tygian, and the Fabricator General had their once-beautiful home destroyed as a lesson to the people of Mars. The ruins of Liberty City served as a foundation for a second Urbis Juventas, known as "Phoenix City" and constructed in honour of the Treaty of Mars in 805.M30.