diogenesfa
Member
I like the concept. It is one that appears from time to time in Sci-Fi. I'm not sure if it's been done well yet though.
Legends of the Rangers *may* end up being a good analysis of the concept.
We've seen the Jedi Knights. I guess the fedayakin? in Dune can be regarded as such (of course there's the bene gesserit).
George Lucas was eventually conceded that the Jedi Knights were based on the historical warrior monks that were created to protect the Holy Land during the Crusades. These were the Knights of St John (Hospitaller), the Knights Templar, the Teutonic Knights - and a bunch of other smaller groups.
The Chinese, of course, had the Shaolin warrior monks.
These historic knights were formed to protect the roads from brigands and staff the border castles of the crusader states. They were completely independent of the local government, answerable only to the pope. They had their own law, structure, resources, estates, ships etc. They were also regarded as "elite" as they were the only standing army of their time. They were regarded as "mystical" because they spent as much time in the monastery as they did in the battlefield.
See the parallels?
No criticism is implied. History is always inspiration for fiction (just as the politics before, during and after WWII were used for Babylon 5 - at JMS's own admission)
I guess the "flavor" of the Rangers will come down to whether JMS was more inspired by the Grail knights of arthurian legends than the Militant Orders of history.
B5 was certainly more Arthurian. But, perhaps now that more detail is needed to "flesh out" the Rangers, the historic stuff will appear.
Either way, there is a lot of history in both - and a lot of very, very murky politics.
A lot of potential for "transformation" into the B5 universe
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Legends of the Rangers *may* end up being a good analysis of the concept.
We've seen the Jedi Knights. I guess the fedayakin? in Dune can be regarded as such (of course there's the bene gesserit).
George Lucas was eventually conceded that the Jedi Knights were based on the historical warrior monks that were created to protect the Holy Land during the Crusades. These were the Knights of St John (Hospitaller), the Knights Templar, the Teutonic Knights - and a bunch of other smaller groups.
The Chinese, of course, had the Shaolin warrior monks.
These historic knights were formed to protect the roads from brigands and staff the border castles of the crusader states. They were completely independent of the local government, answerable only to the pope. They had their own law, structure, resources, estates, ships etc. They were also regarded as "elite" as they were the only standing army of their time. They were regarded as "mystical" because they spent as much time in the monastery as they did in the battlefield.
See the parallels?
No criticism is implied. History is always inspiration for fiction (just as the politics before, during and after WWII were used for Babylon 5 - at JMS's own admission)
I guess the "flavor" of the Rangers will come down to whether JMS was more inspired by the Grail knights of arthurian legends than the Militant Orders of history.
B5 was certainly more Arthurian. But, perhaps now that more detail is needed to "flesh out" the Rangers, the historic stuff will appear.
Either way, there is a lot of history in both - and a lot of very, very murky politics.
A lot of potential for "transformation" into the B5 universe
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