Kor

Dahar Master Kor, son of Rynar was a male Klingon military officer and ambassador in the 23rd and 24th centuries. He was among the most influential warriors and respected military leaders of the Klingon Empire.

Kor was the last son of the House of Kor and descendant of the Klingon Imperial Family. He also had a son. He was descended from Klingons affected with the augment virus created in 2154, a product of 22nd century Klingon genetic engineering. By the 24th century, he was cosmetically indistinguishable from an average Klingon. 

Throughout his illustrious career, Kor played key roles in many legendary battles against the Federation and Romulan Empire. Kor's influence in the Empire eventually elevated him to the status of Klingon Dahar Master. During his life, he saw the Klingon military changing its name from Klingon Imperial Fleet to Klingon Defense Force.

Military career
By the 2260s, Kor had achieved the rank of commander and was assigned to a Klingon warship. 

Conflicts with the Federation
In 2267, following the breakdown of peace talks between the Federation and the Klingon Empire, a broke out. The neutral planet of Organia, a strategic position between the two powers, became a political hotspot between the Empire and the Federation.

On stardate 3102.7, Commander Kor led a battalion of five hundred Klingon soldiers in an invasion and occupation of Organia, where he briefly became their military governor. As governor, Kor ruthlessly maintained order on the planet, ruling with an iron fist by maintaining a stringent list of rules, any violation of which was punishable by death. Unknown to Kor at the time, Captain Kirk, posing as an Organian, and Lieutenant Commander Spock, posing as a dealer in kevas and trillium, were among the subjugated. The two Starfleet officers mounted vain guerrilla attacks against Kor and his army. Meanwhile, in orbit around Organia, the Klingon and Federation fleets faced each other in battle.

Once the hostilities between the two began to reach its climax, all ships suddenly and mysteriously became paralyzed and all weapons became superheated and temporarily rendered useless. Unknown to both sides at the time, the Organians were, in fact, an advanced non-corporeal species, despite their primitive way of life. As quickly as it started, the Organians effectively ended the occupation, the war, and Kor's governorship. The Organians continued to promote peace between the two powers by imposing the Organian Peace Treaty. 

Within two years, Kor became the commanding officer of the. In 2269, Kor again faced his enemy, Captain Kirk, in battle, when the Klothos engaged the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701) in the Delta Triangle region. During the battle, the two starships became entangled in a "time trap," a phenomenon unique to that region, pulling the ships into an alternate universe known as Elysia.

Kor attempted to escape but the Klothos was unable to break free from the region, partly due to its unusual properties, including draining dilithium crystals of their energy. Through cooperation, the crews of the Enterprise and Klothos were able to formulate a strategy by combining their warp power in an effort to overcome both ships' individual power deficiencies.

Prior to their attempt, however, Kor had one of his officers, Kali, plant a bomb-like device in the computer room of the Enterprise, set to explode once the starship cleared the phenomenon and reached warp eight. Both ships were able to escape the region, and the destruction of the Enterprise was averted, moments before the ship reached warp eight. Nevertheless, Kor claimed responsibility for formulating their combined escape and returned to Klingon space, no worse for the wear. 

Kor's ship, the Klothos, was one of the first Klingon vessels equipped with a cloaking device. Kor was said to have spent three days in the engine room taking it apart and studying it before their first mission. This proved critical when he later commanded one of the two Klingon divisions aboard the Klothos, along with Kang, in an attack against the Federation outpost at Caleb IV. During the attack, Kor successfully tricked his opponent by launching first a small initial attack, and then striking with the bulk of his forces when the Federation began repair efforts. 

Conflicts with Romulans
Kor was involved in several combative entanglements with the Romulan Star Empire. In 2271, Kor led the Klingon Empire to a glorious victory over the Romulans, at the legendary Battle of Klach D'kel Brakt. Kor liked recreating the battle so much that he called it up each time he went to the holodeck. On one occasion before he went on his quest to kill The Albino, he was playing this battle in the holosuite and he got so drunk with Breshtanti ale that Odo had to put him in a holding cell to sleep it off. Worf once recalled a story he had heard about Kor during his own childhood, which described Kor's "attack on Romulus." 

Later career
Kor, with fellow warriors Koloth and Kang, held the Korma Pass against T'nag's army in a glorious battle in a trinary star system, where they forced the enemy to fight with the blinding light of three suns in their eyes. The battle ended with the mountainside covered with so many dead that there was not a square meter of ground to be seen. They together feasted on T'nag's heart, in celebration of their victory. 

Kor became a close friend to Curzon Dax, the Federation ambassador to Qo'noS, in 2289. In one of their escapades, Kor and Dax broke into the duke's harem on Renavi. In 2370, when Kor and Jadzia Dax, Curzon's successor, were reunited, Dax knew Kor well enough to recall that he had a scorcher burn on his fourteenth rib, and that his left QiVon ached every time his ship hit warp eight. 

During the late 2280s, a band of depredators, led by the Albino, began raiding Klingon colonies. Three Klingon warships, led by Kor, Koloth, and Kang, were sent out to stop him. Their mission was successful, as they captured most of the depredators. However, the Albino was able to escape. In the Albino's last message to the Klingons, he promised to take his revenge on the firstborn of each of the three captains. Within the space of a few years, he kept his word and managed to infect the warriors' three innocent children with a genetic virus that eventually killed them all. 

The Reckoning
In 2290, Kor, Kang, Koloth, and Curzon Dax pledged a blood oath to avenge the deaths of the Klingons' sons, the offense committed by the Albino. They nearly caught him at Galdonterre, but one of their subspace messages was intercepted and he, once again, was able to escape.

After decades of searching, Kang learned of the whereabouts of the Albino, in 2370, on the planet Secarus IV. Kang traveled to Secarus IV and discovered his compound. The Albino knew immediately of his arrival and invited the trio to a "fair fight" and one last, glorious battle. Kang contacted both Kor and Koloth for a rendezvous on Deep Space 9, in preparation of their final attempt to complete their lifelong quest.

Three months later, Kor, Koloth, and Kang, with the aid of Jadzia Dax, prepared their attack on the Albino's compound, only to discover that it was a trap. Using the element of surprise, they bombarded the compound with tetryon particles, forcing the Albino and his sentries into face-to-face, hand-to-hand combat. Koloth was fatally wounded fighting the Albino's personal guard. Following a fierce duel, Kang was able to slay the Albino (held at bay by Dax) before he died as well. Having fulfilled their blood oath, both Kang and Koloth died glorious and honorable deaths. 

Political career
Kor was a member of the Oversight Council for the Klingon Defense Forces when (future General) Martok attempted to join in 2345. Kor was responsible for striking Martok's name from the officers' list because his family was from the lowlands of Ketha Province, and due to his influence, Martok was barred from even enlisting as a common soldier. Martok remained bitter about this incident for nearly thirty years. 

In the early 2370s, Kor was serving as the Klingon ambassador to. In 2371, a Vulcan expedition found the Shroud of the Sword (of Kahless) among the remains of a Hur'q outpost in the Gamma Quadrant. Using his influence as ambassador, Kor was able to acquire the Shroud from the Vulcans.

Kor, however, had a penchant for drinking and for telling stories. On one drunken occasion in a tavern on Torna IV, Kor held a group spellbound with the story of the ancient cloth and how it was going to lead him to the Sword of Kahless. One member of his audience, Toral, son of Duras, was so intrigued he sent a Lethean named Soto after Kor, aboard Deep Space 9, to steal his memories of the discovery.

In early 2372, Kor, with the assistance of Starfleet officers Lieutenant Commander Jadzia Dax and Lieutenant Commander Worf, launched a quest to find the legendary Sword of Kahless in the Gamma Quadrant, using the data collected by the Vulcans. While unknown to them at the time, they were being trailed by Toral, who intended to steal the Sword and use it to lead the Empire.

Following the successful discovery of the Sword, the enormous symbolism of it became a matter of contention between Worf and Kor. After realizing that the Sword would only serve to further divide the Klingon Empire, rather than reunite it (as the legends foretold), they set the Sword adrift in interstellar space. 

Lost influence
In 2375, Kor, having long been out of favor with Chancellor Gowron and the High Council, and unable to secure his own command, used his remaining influence to persuade Worf to recommission him into the Klingon Defense Forces. With Worf's assistance, Kor was commissioned to serve as the third officer aboard the, while they made a daring cavalry raid into Dominion-held space.

Unfortunately, during this time, Kor was suffering from frequent lapses in memory and concentration, often losing track of where and when he was. At a critical moment, when both Worf and Martok were incapacitated on the bridge while engaging the Cardassian base on Trelka V, Kor suffered such a lapse. Kor believed himself to be once again engaging the Federation outpost at Caleb IV, at the side of his long dead friend, Kang. As a result of his lapse, the Ch'Tang was nearly destroyed, and the captain and first officer of their sister ship, the, were killed. They were able to escape the system only to discover that a fleet of Jem'Hadar fighters was pursuing them.

Kor was subsequently relieved of duty. His standing aboard ship changed from an honored hero of legend to a pitiful disgrace. As it turned out, Martok took no joy in Kor's humiliation. Martok mentioned this to Worf when discussing the duty roster. Both officers then agreed that they would both be speaking to Gowron to find an assignment for Kor.

It was through the experience and bravery of Kor, and six volunteers, that the was able to successfully engage the Jem'Hadar fleet. Realizing that the Jem'Hadar would soon overtake them, Worf had suggested using the Ning'tao to force the enemy out of warp and engage the fleet, intending to lead the attack himself. Before Worf could beam to the doomed ship, however, Kor – secretly informed by Martok's assistant, Darok – stunned him with a hypospray and took command himself. Before leaving, he promised Worf that, when he passed into the halls of the honored dead, he would find Worf's beloved wife, Jadzia Dax, and tell her of Worf's love for her and how he had brought her honor.

Kor died pulling off an amazing feat of tactical brilliance. While on his last mission, he was able to take charge of a Klingon Bird-of-Prey and stall ten Jem'Hadar ships long enough for the remaining Klingon ships to reach the Starfleet reinforcements located in the Kalandra sector. Even General Martok, putting aside the past, toasted the Dahar Master's bravery, noting that Kor had been "a noble warrior to the end."

Personal views
Kor was from a generation of Klingons not known for standing on ceremony, eating when hungry, and fighting when angry. Kor had a somewhat more progressive view when it came to interactions with other species and genders. Having seen the Trill ambassador Curzon Dax as a brother, he saw no difference calling Jadzia Dax a sister, when it was time to fulfill their blood oath. Kor displayed a calm demeanor when interviewing James T. Kirk on Organia, admitting he held a great admiration for the captain and for Starfleet of the 23rd century; Kor recognized many similarities between Humans and Klingons, seeing the killer instinct within Humanity, and likening himself and the captain to tigers. Kor, however, felt that the Klingon social order was important, that nobility was something that Klingons in the early 24th century still held with esteem, and would enforce the status quo of Klingon society by striking the name of common applicants from officer candidate lists. 

Background information
Kor was played by actor John Colicos in all of the character's live-action appearances and was voiced by James Doohan in.

Name
There was originally some question as to the pronunciation of Kor's name, as Kirk actor William Shatner decided the way the moniker was said should be altered. "Bill had some idea that it sounded like 'canine corps' or something like that, so he decided to change it," explained John Colicos. "''I said, 'But if it's going to be pronounced "Koor," then I'm going to be selling Coors beer.' So, there was a bit of palaver about that, but we wound up doing what we did because it was Bill's suggestion." (' #138, pp. 17-18) This pronunciation for Kor's name was listed in the pronunciation guide for "Blood Oath".

In Marc Okrand's tlhIngan Hol language, Kor's name was qor. (The Klingon Dictionary 2nd ed., p. 58)

Introduction
The script for detailed that, upon being introduced in that episode, Kor was "holding himself proud and erect and firm... obviously a man accustomed to command... a warrior."

Having worked with John Colicos before, "Errand of Mercy" Director John Newland selected him to play Kor. ( #130, p. 77) Newland suggested Colicos for the part, immediately after being assigned to direct the installment. Colicos was living in either Toronto or New York at the time. (' #138, p. 17; ) He later recalled, "I got a phone call, 'Would you come out to California to do an episode of Star Trek?' I said, 'Yes, of course.' The script was sent. It arrived about two hours before I went to the airport, so I learned the lines on the plane between chicken sandwiches." (' #138, p. 17) Never having heard the species name "Klingon", Colicos was extremely unsure how to portray the role. After arriving at the Star Trek studios, he immediately went to have Kor's Klingon makeup applied for the first time. The fact that the character was meant to be an ambitious military commander led Colicos – who was given the opportunity to influence his makeup, due to it being such a last-minute job – to suggest drawing influence from Genghis Khan for Kor's appearance. ( #138, p. 17)

Kor was initially to have appeared in ; the writer of that episode, Jerome Bixby, very much wanted to cast John Colicos as the installment's main Klingon character. ( #164) Kor was included by Bixby in the third revised story outline for "Day of the Dove", which he submitted on. The Klingon character was also the subject of a note Bixby sent to Star Trek Producer Gene Roddenberry, along with the newly revised outline. The note read, "Have used the Klingon KOR from 'Errand of Mercy'. The character was strong, the actor wonderful." (These Are the Voyages: TOS Season Three) Colicos was again offered the role and could hardly have been more excited by the prospect of appearing in "Day of the Dove". However, he was unavailable, meanwhile involved in a film being produced in Italy. ( #164) According to Bixby recollecting what Colicos had said, the actor was so frustrated that he couldn't portray Kor in "Day of the Dove" (due to his film commitment) that, when he first read the episode's script, he wept, threw himself at walls, banging his head on a wall, and almost jumped off a balcony, resisting the urge to do so. (Captains' Logs: The Unauthorized Complete Trek Voyages, p. 71;  #164) Ultimately, Kor was written out of the episode's script by Fred Freiberger, with a revised final draft script submitted by him on. The elimination of Kor definitely had some aftereffects. For example, it was implied in the episode that there was already some pre-existing familiarity between Kang, who was created to replace Kor's role in the story, and Captain Kirk. Also, a line of dialogue which needed to be cut was one of the first the Klingon spoke in the script, when he exclaimed, "Kirk! The last time we met – an incident! This time, you will be cut up in your own stew!" (These Are the Voyages: TOS Season Three)

In fact, John Colicos was twice asked to reprise the role of Kor, during the original broadcast run of ; Gene Roddenberry wanted to make the character a recurring one. ( #138, p. 18) In a interview, Colicos admitted, "I always wonder how it all would have materialised had I been more available during the original series."

Reappearances
During the writing of the episode, the writing staffers who worked on struggled with deciding what direction to take the character of Kor in, more than they did with Kang and Koloth. "We weren't sure about him," conceded Ira Steven Behr. "His character was a tougher nut to crack." Peter Allan Fields, who was credited with writing the episode's story and teleplay, based Kor's persona on the Shakespeare character. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion, p. 132)

When John Colicos was needed to play Kor in "Blood Oath", DS9's casting personnel managed to quickly find the actor. (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion, p. 131) Being invited to return as Kor surprised Colicos, though. "When I first read parts of the script I said, 'No, no, no, you're making a travesty of what has become a cult figure, this super marshal warrior.' I had a long talk with Michael Piller and he said I only had the first part of the script and that they were going to do this and that. He said that I was going to become a heroic figure in the end."

One issue that John Colicos had with the script for "Blood Oath", while the DS9 producers were uncertain whether to kill off the entire trio of returning Klingons or allow one to survive, was that he wanted Kor to be kept alive. "I said, 'If one of us is left alive, then I, like Ishmael, have to be left to tell the story.' I said I didn't want to be killed off, otherwise I'd have preferred just to be remembered as the initial Commander Kor that people saw in the original series [...] I really would not have done it. The way the character evolved, I thought that unless I got some opportunity to leave in the public's mind the idea that Kor didn't just turn into a fat, old Falstaffian drunk, but that he had some heroic, redemptive qualities left in him, there was no point in my doing the show. I didn't want to destroy a whole image just for the sake of one appearance." Following much consideration and writing, the DS9 producers decided that Kor was the one who would live. "I don't know whether or not my being the first Klingon on Star Trek," Colicos mused, "influenced them in any way."

Once the "Blood Oath" script had been heavily rewritten, John Colicos was very pleased with the way it wound up depicting Kor. He remarked, "It was fascinating, all of these years later, to come back to Star Trek, and to come back as an almost entirely different character. He'd grown into this almost Falstaffian blimp of a character." Colicos was curious how even his look had changed so drastically in the intervening years. The revised makeup involved in playing the part in "Blood Oath" regularly required Colicos to get up at 4 a.m.

Reception
The way in which John Colicos established Kor in "Errand of Mercy" pleased several production staffers. Fellow Klingon-playing actor Mark Lenard, who appeared as a Klingon captain in, described Colicos as "a very good Klingon." (' #138, p. 35) At one point, Spock actor Leonard Nimoy commented that Colicos' initial portrayal as Kor was "Wonderful. He had that authority." John Newland was likewise impressed with the same performance, saying of Colicos, "[He] gave me everything I wanted." (' #130, p. 77) Writer and editor Robert Greenberger once cited Kor as his favorite Klingon. ( #138, p. 71)

The official promotional material featuring Kor in his introductory appearance was restricted. "There is only one photograph, a head shot of me as Kor that was taken as a publicity still, so there must be many pirated pictures around," Colicos once predicted, in the late 1980s. "I keep getting color photos sent from all different parts of the world, with Bill [Shatner] and myself in a scene. People keep sending them for autographs, so it has become a very identifiable face." (' #138, p. 18) In a poll to determine favorite Klingons voted by readers of ' (a poll which ran between issues 143 and 149 of the magazine, from June 1989 to December of that year), Kor came second to Worf. (Starlog #149) Indeed, many Star Trek fans came to regard John Colicos as the "King of Klingons," with the actor himself noting, "There seems to be a cult following on Commander Kor." Colicos also remembered that, at a 25th Anniversary Star Trek convention at Mason Phillips Square in, he was given a warm welcome by the attendees, of whom there were 14,000. "I was the mystery guest. When they announced my name and I came out I thought I was the President of the United States," Colicos reminisced. "It was unbelievable."

Apocrypha
Kor was mentioned in the novel Dwellers in the Crucible, where his full name was given as "Kor epetai Zareht".

In the short story "Though Hell Should Bar The Way", Kor attacked the USS Enterprise commanded by Robert April. This delayed the Enterprise in getting supplies to Tarsus IV, resulting in the deaths of 4,000 colonists.

In the 1992 comic book "Debt of Honor", Kor worked together with Captain Kirk and Romulan Commander T'Cel to fight a species of hostile insectoid creatures.

Kor was the main antagonist in the Star Trek - Planet of the Apes: The Primate Directive crossover series, where he supplied advanced rifles to Gorilla general Marius.

Kor appears in the short story "The Leader", where his son D'kar tried to kill Kirk in revenge for his father's loss of honor at Organia. In another short story, "The Unhappy Ones", Kor, Koloth, and Kang were sent to Beta Thoridar to settle a dispute between the smooth-headed QuchHa' Klingons and the ridged HemQuch Klingons.

In the novel Treaty's Law, Kirk and Kor worked together to defend a Klingon colony from an alien race called the Narr. Kirk and Kor again worked together in the novel The Tears of the Singers, to investigate a mysterious phenomenon near Taygeta V, which threatened to destroy the planet.

The novel Forged in Fire detailed the friendship of Kor, Koloth, Kang, and Curzon Dax, and the start of their blood feud with the Albino.

In the comic books Errand of War! and Deadly Allies! Kor and Kirk worked together to thwart the Excalbians, who had started a war between the Federation and Klingon Empire as part of their continuing experiments on the nature of good and evil.

In Star Trek: Year Four - The Enterprise Experiment miniseries, Kor attacked a mining outpost on Loren 5 and destroyed Deep Space Station K-22 as part of a plot to take control of Preserver artifacts on Loren 5.

The alternate reality version of Kor appeared, captaining the, in Star Trek: Nero. Therein, he leads the capture of Nero and the Narada, following the ship's collision with the USS Kelvin in 2233. In this version of Kor in the alternate reality, he has not been affected by the augment virus and appears as a normal Klingon. He also appears in Issue 4 of the IDW comic series Star Trek: Countdown to Darkness.

The mirror universe counterpart of Kor featured in the novel The Sorrows of Empire.

Kor appeared in the Star Trek Online expansion Agents of Yesterday. In the mission "Battle of Caleb IV", Kor allies himself with the Na'kuhl and sets a trap for a group of Federation starships, including the player character. The player is able to defeat Kor; however, he gets revenge by destroying his ship.