Timeline of Star Trek

(Redirected from World War III (Star Trek))

This article discusses the fictional timeline of the Star Trek franchise. The franchise is primarily set in the future, ranging from the mid-22nd century (Star Trek: Enterprise) to the late 24th century (Star Trek: Picard), with the third season of Star Trek: Discovery jumping forward to the 32nd century. However the franchise has also outlined a fictional future history of Earth prior to this, and, primarily through time travel plots, explored both past and further-future settings.

The chronology is complicated by the presence of divergent timelines within the franchise's narrative, as well as internal contradictions and retcons. The original series generally avoided assigning real-world dates to its futuristic setting, instead using the stardate system. Series from Star Trek: The Next Generation onwards defined their temporal settings in conventional form.

Series, books, and film settings

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This table shows each TV series and movie, its year of release or broadcast, the year it was set in according to the prevailing Okuda chronology (see below), and the stardate range for that year. The designation Enterprise-based series are the series that featured the various incarnations of the starship USS Enterprise. In universe timeline chronological order Star Trek: Enterprise (ENT), Star Trek: The Original Series (TOS), Star Trek: The Animated Series (TAS), Star Trek: The Next Generation (TNG), and all 13 of the Star Trek feature films, including the three newest J. J. Abrams "reboot" films, or "Kelvin Timeline" based on the original series.[citation needed]

Year Stardates Enterprise, Strange New Worlds, The Original Series, The Next Generation, Picard, original timeline films, major events Animated series Novels and comics Deep Space Nine Voyager Discovery Reboot films (Kelvin timeline) Video games
Before the birth of the Universe "Death Wish" (1996)
3.5 billion years ago The Next Generation "All Good Things..." (1994) [primordial Earth]
~2840 BCE Star Trek "All Our Yesterdays" (1969) [primary plotline]
1893 CE The Next Generation "Time's Arrow" (1992) [primary plotline]
1930 Star Trek "The City on the Edge of Forever" (1967) [primary plotline]
1944 Enterprise "Storm Front" (2004) [primary plotline]
1947 "Little Green Men" (1995) [primary plotline]
1957 Enterprise "Carbon Creek" (2002) [primary plotline]
1968 Star Trek "Assignment: Earth" (1968) [primary plotline]
1969 Star Trek "Tomorrow Is Yesterday" (1967) [primary plotline]
1986 The Voyage Home (1986) [primary plotline]
1992–1996 Eugenics Wars (2001–2002) Khan [secondary plotline] "Future's End" (1996) [primary plotline]
2000 "11:59" (1999) [primary plotline]
2004 Enterprise "Carpenter Street" (2003) [primary plotline]
2022 Strange New Worlds "Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow" (2023) [primary plotline]
2024 Picard season 2 (2022) [past timeline] "Past Tense" (1995) [primary plotline]
2032 "One Small Step" (1999) [primary plotline]
2049–2053 World War III
2054–2079 Post-atomic horror
2063 First Contact (1996) [primary plotline]
2151–2152 Enterprise season 1 (2001–2002)
2152–2153 Enterprise season 2 (2002–2003)
2153–2154 Enterprise season 3 (2003–2004)
2154–2155 Enterprise season 41 (2004–2005)
2156–2160 Earth–Romulan War
2161 Enterprise "These Are the Voyages..." (2005) holodeck simulation of the events2
Founding of the United Federation of Planets
2164 2164 (Reboot Stardate) USS Franklin goes missing: Star Trek Beyond (2016)
2233 2233 (Reboot Stardate) Star Trek (2009)3 [prologue]
2233–2258 2233–2258 (Reboot Stardates) Nero comics
2245–2250 The Constitution-class USS Enterprise (NCC-1701) is launched under the command of Captain Robert April and begins its first 5-year mission.
2254 Star Trek "The Cage" (1964)
2256–2257 1207 Klingon-Federation War Discovery season 1 (2017–2018)[1]
2258–2259 2258–2259 (Reboot Stardate) Discovery season 2 (2018–2019) Star Trek (2009)
2259 2259 (Reboot Stardate) Star Trek: Strange New Worlds season 1 (2022) and season 2 (2023) Khan [primary plotline]
2259–2260 2259–2260 (Reboot Stardate) Star Trek Into Darkness (2013)
2263 2263 (Reboot Stardate) Star Trek Beyond (2016)
2265 1000–1499 Star Trek "Where No Man Has Gone Before" (1965)
2266–2267 1500–3299 Star Trek season 1 (1966–1967)
2267–2268 3300–4799 Star Trek season 2 (1967–1968) "Trials and Tribble-ations" (1996) [primary plotline taking place within "The Trouble with Tribbles"]
2268–2269 4800–5999 Star Trek season 3 (1968–1969)
2269–2270 5221–5683 The Animated Series season 1 (1973–1974) Killing Time
2270 6000–6146 The Animated Series season 2 (1974)
2273 7410–7599 The Motion Picture (1979)
2275 Spock's World
2278 7818 USS Bozeman launched: "Cause and Effect" (1992)
2285 8100–8299 The Wrath of Khan (1982)
The Search for Spock (1984)
2286 8300–8399 The Voyage Home (1986)
2287 8400–8499 The Final Frontier (1989)
2293 9500–9999 The Undiscovered Country (1991)
Generations (1994) [prologue]
"Flashback" (1996) [flashback taking place within The Undiscovered Country]
2298–2364 The Lost Era novels
2333–2355 10000–32999 Stargazer novels
2354–2381 31000–58999 New Frontier novels
2364 41000–41999 The Next Generation season 1 (1987–1988)
The Next Generation "All Good Things..." (1994) [past timeline]
2365 42000–42999 The Next Generation season 2 (1988–1989)
2366 43000–43999 The Next Generation season 3 (1989–1990)
2367 44000–44999 The Next Generation season 4 (1990–1991) "Emissary" (1993) [flashback to the Battle of Wolf 359]
2368 45000–45999 The Next Generation season 5 (1991–1992)
2369 46000–46999 The Next Generation season 6 (1992–1993) Deep Space Nine season 1 (1993)
2370 47000–47999 The Next Generation season 7 (1993–1994)
Enterprise "These Are the Voyages..."4 (2005) [main timeline]
Q-Squared Deep Space Nine season 2 (1993–1994)
2371 48000–48999 Generations (1994) Deep Space Nine season 3 (1994–1995) Voyager season 1 (1995)
2372 49000–49999 Deep Space Nine season 4 (1995–1996) Voyager season 2 (1995–1996)
2373 50000–50999 First Contact (1996)

Dominion War

Deep Space Nine season 5 (1996–1997) Voyager season 3 (1996–1997)
2374 51000–51999 Dominion War Deep Space Nine season 6 (1997–1998) Voyager season 4 (1997–1998)
2375 52000–52999 Dominion War

Insurrection (1998)

Deep Space Nine season 7 (1998–1999) Voyager season 5 (1998–1999)
2376 53000–53999 A Stitch in Time Voyager season 6 (1999–2000)
2377–2378 54000–55599 Voyager season 7 (2000–2001)
2378–2379 55600–56399 A Time to... novels
2379 56400–56899 Nemesis (2002)
2380 57000–57999 Lower Decks season 1 (2020)
2381 58000–58999 Lower Decks season 2 (2021), season 3 (2022), and season 4 (2023)
2379–2386 56900–63999 Utopia Planitia Shipyards, Picard season 1 (2020) Titan novels
2383 Prodigy season 1 (2021)
2385 Utopia Planitia Shipyards Destruction, Picard Season 1, Episode 2 (2020)
2387 64000–64999 Star Trek (2009) [flashback] Countdown
2390 "Timeless" (1998) [future timeline]
2395 72000–72999 The Next Generation "All Good Things..." (1994) [future timeline]
2399 76000–76999 Picard season 1 (2020)
2401 78183 Picard season 2 (2022) [main timeline] and season 3 (2023)
2404 "Endgame" (2001) [future timeline]
2409-2411 Star Trek Online (2010)
2450 "The Visitor" (1995) [future timeline]
2554 Enterprise "Azati Prime" (2004) [Battle of Procyon 5]
2875 "Relativity" (1999) [future timeline]
3052 Enterprise "Shockwave" (2002) [future timeline]
3069–3089 The Burn, followed by the collapse of most of the United Federation of Planets
3074 "Living Witness" (1998)
3186 "The Red Angel" (2019)
3188-89 Discovery season 3 (2020)
3190 Discovery season 4 (2021–22)
3191 Discovery season 5 (2024)
43rd century "Calypso" (Short Treks, 2018)

Timeline in order of series air dates

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Star Trek: DiscoveryStar Trek: PicardStar Trek: ProdigyStar Trek: Lower DecksStar Trek: VoyagerStar Trek: Deep Space NineStar Trek NemesisStar Trek: InsurrectionStar Trek: First ContactStar Trek GenerationsStar Trek: The Next GenerationStar Trek BeyondStar Trek Into DarknessStar Trek (2009 film)Star Trek GenerationsStar Trek VI: The Undiscovered CountryStar Trek V: The Final FrontierStar Trek IV: The Voyage HomeStar Trek III: The Search for SpockStar Trek II: The Wrath of KhanStar Trek: The Motion PictureStar Trek: The Animated SeriesStar Trek: The Original SeriesThe Cage (Star Trek: The Original Series)Star Trek: Strange New WorldsStar Trek: DiscoveryStar Trek: Enterprise

Chronology and events

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This timeline is based on the Star Trek Chronology model described below, supplemented by data from the website startrek.com.[2] The Timeline also consists of before, between, and after those events.

Note: Many of these dates are rounded-off approximations, as the dialog from which they are derived often includes qualifiers such as "over," "more than," or "less than."

Overview about the most important events, first contacts and when series/movies of the Star Trek universe take place

Before Common Era

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  • The Big Bang
    • Quinn hides in the big bang to avoid discovery by Q.[3]
  • c. 6 billion years ago
  • c. 4 billion years ago
    • A humanoid civilization seeds the oceans of many planets with genetic material, which would lead to the development of humanoids on many planets.[5]
  • c. 65 to 100 million years ago
  • c. 1 million years ago
    • Sargon's people explore the galaxy and colonize various planets, possibly including Vulcan.[6]
  • c. 600,000 years ago
  • c. 200,000 years ago
    • The Iconian civilization is destroyed.
  • c. 8,000 BCE
    • The Dominion may have been founded in the Gamma Quadrant by the shapeshifting race known as the Changelings around this time, possibly in a different form than is known in the modern timeline.[7]
  • c. 2700 BCE
    • A group of extraterrestrial beings land on Earth and are eventually known as the Greek gods, as established in the episode "Who Mourns for Adonais?".

1st millennium of the Common Era

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  • c. 4th century CE
    • The Vulcan Time of Awakening. In the midst of horrific wars on Vulcan, the philosopher Surak leads his people, teaching them to embrace logic and suppress all emotion.[8] Those who refuse to follow Surak leave the Vulcan system and eventually colonize Romulus. ("Awakening" (ENT), "Balance of Terror" (TOS))
    • The Dominion may have been founded in the Gamma Quadrant by the shapeshifting race known as the Changelings (Founders) around this time.[9]
  • c. 9th century
    • Kahless the Unforgettable unites the Klingons by defeating the tyrant Molor in battle, and provides his people with teachings based on a philosophy of honor.[10]

Pre-20th century

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20th century

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21st century

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  • 2002
  • 2004
  • 2009
    • The first successful Earth-Saturn probe takes place.[2][17]
  • 2012
    • The world's first self-sustaining civic environment, Millennium Gate, which became the model for the first habitat on Mars, completed in Portage Creek, Indiana ("11:59" (VOY)).
  • 2018
    • Sleeper ships are made obsolete.[18]
  • 2022
  • 2024
  • 2026
    • World War III begins on Earth. Colonel Phillip Green and a group of eco-terrorists commit genocide that claimed the lives of thirty-seven million people. (ENT "In A Mirror Darkly, Part Two") (In TOS, WWIII took place in the 1990s and is established as an alternate name for the Eugenics Wars[14] while DS9's "Doctor Bashir, I Presume?" had the Eugenics Wars in the 22nd century. SNW's "Strange New World" retcons the Eugenics Wars to the 21st century, but prior to the outbreak of WWIII.)
  • 2032
  • 2037
    • The spaceship Charybdis makes an attempt to leave the solar system.[20]
  • 2047
    • The Hermosa quake strikes the region of southern California surrounding Los Angeles. The land sinks under two hundred meters of water. In the ensuing centuries, the region recovers, having transformed into one of the world's largest coral reefs. These reefs become home to thousands of different marine species.[clarification needed]
  • 2053
    • World War III ends and Earth is left devastated, mostly because of nuclear warfare. Most of the major cities are left in ruins with few remaining governments and the death total reaching 600 million. Scientific advancement continues, however.[21] (In TOS, WWIII took place in the 1990s and is established as an alternate name for the Eugenics Wars[14] while DS9's "Doctor Bashir, I Presume?" had the Eugenics Wars in the 22nd century. SNW's "Strange New World" retcons the Eugenics Wars to the 21st century, but prior to the outbreak of WWIII.)
  • 2062
    • Oldtown San Francisco is struck by an enormous earthquake, the Greater Quake, and it takes 20 years for the city to be restored.
  • 2063
  • c. 2065
  • 2067
    • The uncrewed interstellar warp probe Friendship 1 is launched.[23]
  • 2069
    • The colony ship SS Conestoga is launched. It would found the Terra Nova colony.[24]
  • 2079
    • Earth begins to recover from its nuclear war.[25] The recovery is aided and partially organized by a newly established political entity called the European Hegemony.[2]
  • 2088

22nd century

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  • 2103
    • Earth colonizes Mars.
  • 2112
  • 2119
    • Zefram Cochrane, who now is residing on Alpha Centauri, sets off for parts unknown and disappears. Some had thought he was testing a new engine. After an exhaustive search, it is believed that Cochrane has died. He becomes one of the most famous missing people in history.[27]
  • 2129
  • 2130
    • The United Nations establishes Starfleet Command with San Francisco as its headquarters.
  • 2142
    • Warp 2 barrier broken by Commander Robinson in NX Alpha and Warp 2.5 achieved by Commander Archer in NX Beta.
  • 2145
    • Warp 3 broken by Commander Duvall in NX Delta.
  • 2149
    • The USS Enterprise (NX-01), the first Warp 5-capable ship built by humans, begins construction in upstate New York.
  • 2150
    • Keel laid for Enterprise (NX-01).
  • 2151–2155
  • 2151
  • 2155
    • Captain Jonathan Archer rediscovers Surak's lost writings, thwarting the Romulans' infiltration of Vulcan's government. ("Kir'Shara" (ENT))
    • The Klingon species becomes infected by a genetically engineered virus. The cure, using human antibodies, causes the Klingons to lose their cranial ridges and become slightly less aggressive. ("Divergence" (ENT))
    • The USS Defiant, a Constitution-class vessel from the Prime Universe in 2268, travels back in time and also emerges in the Mirror Universe following its interaction with an anomaly. The abandoned Defiant is found by the Tholians. The Terran Empire learns of the ship's existence and subsequently captures it for their own use. ("In a Mirror, Darkly" (ENT))
  • 2156–2160
    • The Earth–Romulan War is fought between United Earth and its allies, and the Romulan Star Empire. The war ends with the Battle of Cheron, a humiliating defeat to the Romulans, to such a degree that the Empire still considers the battle an embarrassment over 200 years later. The Romulan Neutral Zone is established.[2] Because all communications with Romulans were conducted only by audio, no non-Vulcan species learn that Romulans are an offshoot of Vulcans. ("Balance of Terror" (TOS))
  • 2161
  • 2165
    • Sarek, Federation diplomat and father of Spock, is born on Vulcan.[31]
  • 2184
    • Jonathan Archer is elected as the first United Federation of Planets President.
  • 2192
    • Jonathan Archer steps down as UFP President after 8 years.
  • 2195
    • Robert April is born.
  • 2160s to 2196
    • The Daedalus-class starship is active.[32]

23rd century

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  • 2222
  • 2226
  • 2227
  • 2230
  • 2232
  • 2233
  • 2233 (alternate timeline): Prologue scene of Star Trek.
    • Ambassador Spock and the Romulan mining ship Narada, commanded by Nero, emerge from a black hole created by Spock's detonation of red matter in 2387 and arrive in the past. Nero's arrival and subsequent attack on the USS Kelvin creates the Kelvin Timeline.
    • James T. Kirk is born aboard a shuttlecraft from the USS Kelvin.
    • James T. Kirk's father, George Kirk, is killed.
  • 2238
  • 2241 (alternate timeline)
  • 2245–2250
    • The USS Enterprise, a Constitution class vessel, is launched under the command of Robert April, on a five-year mission of exploration.[2] In the alternate time line created by Nero's attack on the USS Kelvin, the Enterprise is still under construction in 2255 and is not launched on its maiden voyage until 2258.
  • 2245
    • Pavel Chekov is born to Russian parents.[38] In the alternate timeline created by Nero's attack on the USS Kelvin, Chekov is only eight years younger than James T. Kirk, implying a birthdate of 2241.[39]
  • 2250
  • 2254
  • 2256-2257
  • 2257-2258
    • The events of Star Trek: Discovery season 2 take place. The USS Discovery and USS Enterprise (NCC-1701) engage in a pitched battle to neutralise the rogue AI Control. The battle is a success, but the Enterprise falsely reports that the Discovery was lost with all hands, to conceal the fact that it traveled 930 years into the future in order to prevent Control from reasserting itself. The Enterprise subsequently undergoes repairs and departs for Edrin II 4 months later.
  • 2258 (alternate timeline)
  • The events of Star Trek: Bridge Crew take place. The USS Aegis is searching for a new homeworld for the Vulcans after the destruction of their planet. The ship heads for a region of space called 'The Trench', which is being occupied by Klingons.
  • The events of Star Trek (2013 video game) take place. Captain Kirk, Spock, and the crew of the USS Enterprise encounter a powerful alien race known as the Gorn.
  • 2259 (alternate timeline)
    • Some time prior to this point in the Kelvin timeline, the Federation black ops unit Section 31 revives Khan Noonien Singh from suspended animation on the Botany Bay, forcing him to undergo plastic surgery and work as a Section 31 agent under the identity of "John Harrison".
    • The events of Star Trek Into Darkness take place. Khan is returned to suspended animation on Earth as punishment for acts of terrorism.
  • 2259
  • 2260 (alternate timeline)
    • The Enterprise is launched on a historic five-year mission.
  • 2263 (alternate timeline)
    • Space Station Yorktown is established by Commodore Paris.
    • The events of Star Trek Beyond take place. The USS Enterprise is destroyed; USS Enterprise-A is commissioned at Starbase Yorktown as its replacement.
    • Ambassador Spock from the Prime Universe dies in the Kelvin Universe.
  • 2261–2264
  • 2263
  • 2265–2270
    • Following the promotion of Christopher Pike, Captain James T. Kirk is assigned command of the Enterprise on a historic five-year mission.[2] (In the originally canonical Star Trek Spaceflight Chronology this was 2207 to 2212; Star Trek: Strange New Worlds contradicts this somewhat by dating Pike's accident to approximately 2268 or 2269 (per dialogue in the episode "Strange New World" stating the accident occurs 10 years in the future), but the TOS episode "The Menagerie" takes place during the first season, approximately a year into Kirk's mission rather than close to its end.)
  • 2265
  • 2266–2269
  • 2266
    • When the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701) engages a Romulan Bird-of-Prey in combat, the secret that Romulans are the same species as Vulcans is finally revealed. ("Balance of Terror" (TOS))
    • The Enterprise crew revive Khan Noonien Singh and 72 surviving Augments from suspended animation on the Botany Bay. After stopping the Augments from taking control of the Enterprise, Captain Kirk exiles them to the planet Ceti Alpha V. ("Space Seed" (TOS))
  • 2267
    • Kirk discovers that Zefram Cochrane was abducted to a distant planetoid by an energy being that granted him immortality. ("Metamorphosis" (TOS))
  • 2268
    • USS Defiant disappears from the Prime Universe, reemerging in the Mirror Universe of 2155. ("The Tholian Web" (TOS))
  • 2269-2270
    • The events of Star Trek: The Animated Series take place. (There is no on-screen confirmation of this, but anecdotally TAS is believed to take place towards the end of the mission.)
    • During some period between 2269 and 2273, the Klingons regain their cranial ridges.
  • 2270
    • USS Enterprise returns from its five-year mission under the command of Captain James T. Kirk and enters major refit while Kirk is promoted to Admiral at Starfleet Command. Captain Will Decker is assigned command of the vessel.
  • 2273
    • The events of Star Trek: The Motion Picture.
      • Voyager 6 returns to Earth, having been massively enhanced by alien technology to become an entity calling itself "V'ger".
      • Kirk takes over command of the Enterprise from Decker, who subsequently merges with V'ger and ascends to a higher plane of existence.
  • 2273-2278
  • 2279
    • Around this time the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701) is retired from active duty and assigned as a training vessel in orbit of Earth.[2] At some point during this period, Spock is promoted to captain and assigned command of the vessel.
  • 2284
    • The USS Excelsior (NX-2000), the first ship equipped with transwarp drive, is built in San Francisco Fleet Yards and was later docked at Earth Spacedock. Unfortunately, the ship was still unfinished due to many specifications and was completed in upstate New York before its commissioning as USS Excelsior (NCC-2000).
  • 2285
  • 2286
  • 2287
  • 2293

24th century

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  • 2305
  • 2311
  • 2319
  • 2320
  • 2324
  • 2327
  • 2329
    • Chakotay is born on a Federation colony near Cardassian space in the demilitarized zone
  • 2332
  • 2333
    • Jean-Luc Picard becomes captain of the USS Stargazer.[2]
  • 2335
  • 2336
  • 2337
    • Tasha Yar is born in a failed Federation colony on Turkana IV.[2]
  • 2340
    • Worf, son of Mogh, is born on the Klingon homeworld, Qo'noS.[2][44]
  • 2341
  • 2343
  • 2344
    • The Enterprise-C, under the command of Captain Rachel Garrett, is destroyed defending a Klingon settlement on Narendra III under attack from Romulans.[2][47]
    • Due to the Enterprise-C's sacrifice, a new era of more open communication begins between the Federation and the Klingon Empire, leading to a formalized alliance.
  • 2345
    • Sela (half-Romulan/half-Human), daughter of Natasha Yar (alternate reality from "Yesterday's Enterprise"), is born.
  • 2346
    • Worf's parents are killed by Romulans in the Khitomer massacre. Worf (age 6) is adopted by human parents.[2][48]
  • 2349
  • 2355
    • Magnus, Erin, and Annika Hansen are assimilated by the Borg while on a research mission in the Delta quadrant.
    • The USS Stargazer is attacked by an unknown vessel (later discovered to be Ferengi in origin) in the Maxia Zeta system. Jean-Luc Picard wins the confrontation by devising a tactic which becomes known as the Picard Manoeuvre. However, due to damage suffered during the battle, the crew are forced to abandon ship. The Stargazer is later recovered in 2364.
  • 2357
  • 2363
    • USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-D), the third Galaxy-class starship (following the Galaxy and Yamato) is launched from the Utopia Planitia shipyards in Mars orbit (under the command of Jean-Luc Picard), and becomes the Federation's new flagship.
  • 2364–2370
  • 2364
  • 2365
    • Q forces the Enterprise-D to make first contact with the Borg. ("Q Who" (TNG))
  • 2367
    • The Borg assimilate Captain Jean-Luc Picard and fight the Battle of Wolf 359 against a Starfleet task force 7.7 light years from Earth. The battle results in the loss of 39 Starfleet vessels and over 11,000 lives ("The Best of Both Worlds" (TNG)). Benjamin Sisko aboard the USS Saratoga is a participant in the battle and is one of the few survivors alongside his son Jake Sisko ("Emissary" (DS9)). With the task force lost, the Borg continue to Earth. Picard is rescued and the Borg cube is destroyed via the actions of the crew of the Enterprise-D.
  • 2368
  • 2369–2375
  • 2369
    • Terok Nor, a Cardassian space station orbiting Bajor, is taken over by Starfleet following the end of hostilities between Bajor and Cardassia. It is redesignated Deep Space Nine and placed under the command of Commander (later Captain) Benjamin Sisko. Soon after, the discovery of a stable wormhole between the Alpha and Gamma quadrants leads to DS9 being relocated near the wormhole's location in order to facilitate trade, exploration and defense.
  • 2370
    • The events of Star Trek: Enterprise episode "These Are the Voyages..." take place. (this is due to the story being depicted as a holodeck recreation concurrent with the events of the TNG episode The Pegasus).
    • The USS Defiant (NX-74205), a mothballed prototype originally designed to fight the Borg, is commissioned into active service and is assigned to Benjamin Sisko to help protect DS9. Due to the Defiant being over-powered and over-gunned for its size, several flaws in the ship's design require attention before it reaches a fully operational status. The Defiant is officially classed as an escort vessel; however, unofficially it is considered a warship built purely for combat.
  • 2371
    • The "present-day" events of Star Trek Generations. The USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-D)'s stardrive section is destroyed by a warp core breach; the saucer section containing the crew makes a forced landing on Veridian III. The ship is subsequently declared a total loss. James T. Kirk reappears from the temporal continuum in which he had been since his disappearance in 2293. Kirk is killed on Veridian III.
  • 2371–2378
    • The events of Star Trek: Voyager.
    • "Caretaker": the USS Voyager, under the command of Capt. Kathryn Janeway is stranded deep in the Delta Quadrant and faces a 75-year-long voyage back to Federation space. Janeway merges her crew with survivors of a vessel staffed by members of an organization called the Maquis that at this time are de facto enemies of the Federation.
  • 2372
  • 2373
    • The events of Star Trek: First Contact. The Battle of Sector 001 occurs with a Starfleet task force engaging in a running battle with a Borg cube en route to Earth. The USS Defiant (NX-74205) from DS9 is severely damaged but not destroyed, with the crew evacuating to the Enterprise. The USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-E) follows a Borg sphere through a temporal rift and events shift at that point to 2063.
    • Still unaware that the USS Voyager is stuck in the Delta Quadrant, Starfleet officially declares the ship lost with all hands.
  • 2373–2375
    • Tensions between the Alpha and Gamma quadrants erupt into open warfare, igniting the Dominion War fully, with DS9 at its epicenter.
  • 2374
    • Annika Hansen (who now identifies herself by the Borg designation Seven of Nine) is liberated from the Borg collective by the USS Voyager crew. ("Scorpion, Part II" (VOY))
    • Using an abandoned sensor array network, the USS Voyager detects a Federation vessel, the USS Prometheus, on the edge of the Alpha Quadrant and transmits The Doctor to the ship. After freeing the ship from the Romulans with help from the Prometheus EMH, Voyager officially re-establishes contact with Starfleet.
  • 2375
    • The USS Defiant (NX-74205) is destroyed. Several weeks later, DS9 receives a replacement Defiant Class vessel, the USS São Paulo. Captain Sisko is granted special permission by Starfleet to rename the vessel Defiant.
    • After devastating losses on both sides, the Federation, alongside the Romulan and Klingon Empire, make a final push against the Dominion, resulting in the Battle of Cardassia. The Dominion subsequently surrenders to the Federation.
    • The events of Star Trek: Insurrection.[49] Dialogue in this film and in the DS9 finale "What You Leave Behind" place the chronology of this film as during that episode, after the final battle of the war but before the treaty signing ceremony. Most notable in the film is Worf's ability to leave the station to join the Enterprise, as well as a line about Federation diplomats being involved in Dominion negotiations, and the Federation's willingness to work with the Son'a, who are established as a Dominion ally during the war.
  • 2378
    • With the help of Admiral Janeway from an alternate timeline in which the ship's return is delayed many years with tragic results, the USS Voyager returns to the Alpha Quadrant. ("Endgame"). Tom Paris' and B'Elanna Torres's daughter is born. At some point after returning home (and prior to the events of Star Trek: Nemesis), Janeway is promoted to Vice Admiral in the main timeline.
  • 2379
    • The events of Star Trek: Nemesis, resulting in the death of Lieutenant Commander Data.[50]
    • Discovery of previously unknown Android named "B-4", a prototype android similar in design to Lt. Commander Data but with a notably less advanced positronic network.
  • 2380-2381
  • 2383
  • 2385, First Contact Day
    • The events of Star Trek: Short Treks episode "Children of Mars" take place. The Utopia Planitia Fleetyards on Mars are sabotaged and subsequently destroyed by rogue synthetics in a surprise attack. The battle results in the loss of 92,143 lives, the planet itself being considered destroyed, its stratosphereignited, and the destruction of the rescue armada to evacuate Romulus. In the aftermath of the attack, the Federation, unable to determine how or why the synths went rogue, bans the creation of synthetic liveforms
  • 2386
    • Lieutenant Icheb is captured and stripped for his Borg parts by Bjayzl, and subsequently euthanized by Seven of Nine.
  • 2387
    • A star in the Romulan Empire goes supernova. Ambassador Spock attempts to counter the resulting shockwave using Red Matter, but is unable to save the planet Romulus from destruction. Spock and the Romulan mining ship Narada, commanded by Nero, are dragged into a black hole created by the Red Matter detonation and arrive in the past. Nero's arrival in 2233 and subsequent attack on the USS Kelvin creates the Kelvin Timeline. (Star Trek (2009))
  • 2394
  • 2395
  • 2399

25th century

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  • 2401-2402
  • 2402
    • USS Titan (NCC-80102-A) is renamed USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-G) under the command of Captain Seven of Nine.
  • 2404

26th century

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  • c. 2540–2550
    • The Starship Enterprise-J (presumably NCC 1701-J) is commissioned and takes part in the Battle of Procyon V against the Sphere Builders as shown in Enterprise episode "Azati Prime". As the events of the episode “Zero Hour” result in the destruction of the spheres and the dissipation of the altered space, it is likely this battle occurs only in an alternate timeline.

27th century

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  • Temporal Cold War (with agents from the 31st century); first established in the pilot episode of Star Trek: Enterprise and recurring until the series' fourth season premiere, it is a struggle between those who would alter history to suit their own ends and those who would preserve the integrity of the original timeline.
  • With the distance between them having expanded over the centuries and making travel increasingly difficult, the last crossing between the Prime and Mirror Universes occurs at some point during this century.

29th century

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  • The Aeon-type timeship is in active service during this century ("Future's End"), as is the Wells-class timeship Relativity ("Relativity").

30th century

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  • Around the year 2958, supplies of Dilithium in the Milky Way started to dry up, marking the beginning of an energy crisis. The United Federation of Planets began development and trials of alternatives to warp drive, though none proved to be reliable.
  • The Federation spends much of this century engaged in a temporal war with the objective of upholding the Temporal Accords to ensure the timeline remains unaltered.

31st century

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  • 3069
    • A cataclysmic galaxy-wide event referred to as "The Burn" occurs. Nearly all dilithium in the galaxy suddenly goes inert, causing a massive loss of life and the destruction of every ship and facility with an active warp core. In the aftermath, the remaining dilithium became an ever more scarce resource. With few ships and warp travel severely impeded, no explanation for what happened and the uncertainty if it will happen again, the United Federation of Planets, Starfleet Command, and the United Earth, effectively collapse.
  • 3074
  • 3089
    • The Federation, Starfleet Command and United Earth leave planet Earth for a new headquarters location. Around the same time, the United Earth government withdraws Earth from the Federation, becoming fully self-sufficient and isolating multiple planets from the rest of the galaxy.
  • Episodes with time traveler Daniels from Enterprise: "Cold Front", "Shockwave", "Azati Prime"

32nd and 33rd centuries

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  • 3186
    • This is the year Gabrielle Burnham arrived in after using the Red Angel suit to escape a Klingon attack on her home. (Discovery S2 E10)
  • 3188-3191, ca. 3225

34th century

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  • 3374
    • According to Obrist, if the Krenim weapon ship continued to alter time to this point, full restoration of the Krenim Imperium would not have been achieved.

Far future

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  • 60-70 trillion years
    • The Universe will Collapse.

History of the chronology (historiography)

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Several efforts have been made to develop a chronology[53] for the events depicted by the Star Trek television series and its spin-offs. This matter has been complicated by the continued additions to the Star Trek canon, the existence of time travel and multiple concurrent timelines, and the scarcity of Gregorian calendar dates given in the show (stardates instead being used).

Original series

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Not many references set the original series in an exact time frame, and those that exist are largely contradictory. In the episode "Tomorrow Is Yesterday", a 1960s military officer says that he's going to lock Captain Kirk up "for two hundred years", to which Kirk replies, with wry amusement: "That ought to be just about right." Likewise, in the episode "Space Seed", it is said that the 1996 warlord Khan Noonian Singh is from "two centuries" ago. Both these references place the show in the 22nd century. However, in the episode "Miri", it is said that 1960 was around 300 years ago, pushing the show into the 23rd century. Finally, the episode "The Squire of Gothos" implied that the light cone of 19th century Earth has expanded to 900 light years of radius, which seems to set the show in the 28th century, since light would take nine centuries to traverse that distance.

According to notes in The Making of Star Trek, the show is set in the 23rd century, and the Enterprise was supposed to be around 40 years old. Roddenberry says in this book that the stardate system was invented to avoid pinning down the show precisely in time frame.[54] Roddenberry's original pitch for the series dated it "'somewhere in the future. It could be 1995, or maybe even 2995".[55]

Early chronologies

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The Star Trek Spaceflight Chronology and FASA, a publisher of the first licensed Star Trek role-playing game, chose to take the "Space Seed figure", adding a few years to make sure the events of the Original Series were in the 23rd century. This dating system is followed by other spin-off works in the 1980s, including Mr. Scott's Guide to the Enterprise. This timeline system gives the following dates[56][57]

The Star Fleet Battles game was published in 1979, with a license only covering the original series. It has since diverged into an entirely separate fictional universe, new additions to which continue to be published. It does not tie into the Gregorian calendar, instead using a "Year 1" of the invention of Warp on Earth. Its version of the original series backstory is:

  • Y1 – Warp drive is developed on Earth.
  • Y4 – Federation is formed by Earth, Vulcan, Andoria, Alpha Centauri.
  • Y40-Y46 – Earth–Romulan War.
  • Y71 – Starfleet is formed.
  • Y126 – The Constitution-class is launched (an upgrade from the Republic-class).
  • Y154–159 – The events of the Original Series.

See Star Fleet Universe timeline.

TNG era and Okuda

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Press materials for The Next Generation suggested it was set in the 24th century, seventy-eight years after the existing Star Trek, although the exact time frame had not yet been set in stone. The pilot had dialogue stating Data was part of the Starfleet "class of '78".[58] The pilot episode, "Encounter at Farpoint", also has a cameo appearance by Leonard "Bones" McCoy, who is said to be 137.

In the last episode of the first season, the year is firmly established by Data as 2364.[58] This marked the first time an explicit future calendar date had been attached to a Star Trek storyline, and allowed fans and writers to extrapolate further dates. For example, the established date implies McCoy was born around 2227, ruling out the Spaceflight Chronology-derived dating of the original series to the early 23rd century (though the dating had already been effectively overruled by Star Trek IV, which primarily takes place in 1986, where Kirk tells Gillian Taylor that he is from the late 23rd century, though he does not give an exact date).

A Star Trek Chronology was published in 1993, written by production staff members Denise Okuda and Michael Okuda.[59] A second edition was issued in 1996.[2] Okuda originally drew up a timeline for internal use by writers, based on his own research and assumptions provided by Richard Arnold. The dates in the Chronology are consistent with the earlier Star Trek: The Next Generation Technical Manual.[46]

It gives the following dates:

  • Zephram Cochrane invents warp drive around 2061 (so that the SS Valiant can be constructed and go missing two hundred years before "Where No Man Has Gone Before", dated to 2265; the first edition gives 2061; the second edition moves this to 2063 per Star Trek: First Contact).
  • The Romulan War takes place in the 2150s (about a hundred years before "Balance of Terror").
  • The Federation is formed in 2161, after the Romulan War, on the basis that "Balance of Terror" says that it was an Earth-Romulan war, not a Federation-Romulan War.
  • The first Constitution-class starship is launched in 2244, followed by the Enterprise in 2245.
  • Kirk's five-year mission lasts from 2264 to 2269, based on the assumption that the original series is set exactly 300 years after its original broadcast.
    • Aired live-action Star Trek episodes are dated from 2266 to 2269. The chronology does not include the events of Star Trek: The Animated Series. This is in keeping also with Gene Roddenberry's concept (discussed in The Making of Star Trek by Roddenberry and Stephen Whitfield) that Star Trek's first season takes place after the mission has been under way for some time.
    • An episode of Voyager, "Q2", aired after the Chronology was published, established that Kirk's five-year mission actually ended in 2270.
  • The events of Star Trek: The Motion Picture take place in 2271 (Kirk has been Chief of Starfleet Operations for 2+12 years, according to dialog from Kirk and Decker).
    • The "Q2" dating for Kirk's five-year mission, moves the first film to c. 2273.
  • Numerous sources, including the Chronology, postulate a second five-year mission under now-Admiral Kirk's command, begun soon after the events of the first movie; in part this is to take into account the unproduced revival series Star Trek: Phase II.
  • The events of Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan and Star Trek III: The Search for Spock take place in 2285.
    • The Wrath of Khan is a sequel to the episode "Space Seed", which Okuda dates to 2267. In Okuda's timeline there is a gap of eighteen years rather than the fifteen years established in dialog. The film was released in 1982, fifteen years after the episode's broadcast in 1967. The film begins on Kirk's birthday, which is semi-canonically established as March 22, the same as William Shatner's.
  • The events of Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home take place in 2286.
    • This places Star Trek III in late 2285, as Kirk states in his log that the Enterprise crew has been on Vulcan for "three months" since bringing Spock home.
  • The events of Star Trek V: The Final Frontier apparently take place soon after the events of the fourth film, as evidenced by Scotty's complaints about repairing the ship after its shakedown cruise, which was depicted at the end of Star Trek IV. Star Trek V would then take place in early 2287.
  • The events of Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country take place in 2293, based on McCoy's statement that he had served on the Enterprise for 27 years, and his absence in "Where No Man Has Gone Before".
  • The Kirk-era part of Star Trek Generations is set 78 years before 2371 (established by way of an on-screen caption), thus is set in 2293 and soon after Star Trek VI.

The gap between the 1986 film Star Trek IV: the Voyage Home (2286) and the 1987 first season of The Next Generation (2364) is 78 years by this timeline, matching early press materials.

A gap of 10 years passed between the broadcast of the last episode of Star Trek: The Original Series and the release of The Motion Picture. The film skirted around the fact the actors had aged, supposing that only 2+12 years had passed since the events of the TV show. For Star Trek II, it was decided to acknowledge the reality of the aging actors, both by setting the film some 15 years after "Space Seed", and by having Kirk worry about getting old.[60]

Within The Next Generation era, episodes and films are easier to date. Stardates correspond exactly with seasons, with the first two digits of the stardate representing the season number. Okuda assumes the start of a season is January 1 and the end of the season is December 31.[2] The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, and Voyager television series, as well as the movies, have roughly followed "real time", and are set around 377 years after their release.

Since the Chronology was published, it has been generally adhered-to by the producers of the show. The film Star Trek: First Contact and prequel series Star Trek: Enterprise both revisit the early era. In First Contact, Zephram Cochrane is confirmed as having invented warp drive on Earth, but the date is moved forward slightly to 2063, and it is revealed that Earth's official first contact with an alien species, the Vulcans, took place immediately afterwards as a result of this.

The dating of the final season of Star Trek: Voyager has presented controversy. The standard assumption about stardates, as well as the regular correspondence between seasons and in-universe years, would place the entire season in the year 2377; the season begins with stardate 54014.4 and ends with 54973.4. However, the episode "Homestead" features a celebration of the 315th anniversary of Zefram Cochrane's first contact with the Vulcans, which would set the episode on April 5, 2378. The fansite Memory Alpha thus places the final eight episodes of the season ("Human Error" through "Endgame") in 2378, with other sources following suit.

Enterprise is set in the 2150s, and ties into the Cochrane backstory. The show uses the Gregorian calendar instead of Stardates, making tracking the dating easier. Its pilot, "Broken Bow", depicts first contact with the Klingons occurring much earlier than the Okuda chronology anticipated (it suggested a date of 2218, based on a line in "Day of the Dove", noting that dialog in "First Contact" makes this problematic – though the actual line in the episode referred to hostilities between the two, and in Enterprise, Human-Klingon relations, while by no means friendly, clearly do not rise to the de facto state of war shown in TOS). It shows the opening of the Romulan war and the start of a coalition between Earth, Vulcan, Andor, and Tellar in the 2150s. The date of the founding year of the Federation, 2161, was revealed in the fifth-season TNG episode "The Outcast," based on an early draft of the Okuda timeline. The final episode of Enterprise, "These Are the Voyages...", is consistent with the establishment of 2161 as the founding year for the Federation.

No version of the Chronology or the Encyclopedia has been published since 1999. A 2006 book by Jeff Ayers contains a timeline which attempts to date all of the many Star Trek novels.[61] This timeline has The Motion Picture in 2273, to account for the two-and-a-half-year gap between the end-date of 2270 established in "Q2" and the events of the movie. The official website, StarTrek.com, still gives the date of that movie as 2271.[62]

Eugenics Wars and World War III

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When the original series of Star Trek was produced, the 1990s were several decades away, and so various elements of the backstory to Star Trek are set in that era, particularly the Eugenics Wars. The references to the Eugenics Wars and to a nuclear war in the 21st century are somewhat contradictory.

The episode "Space Seed" establishes the Eugenics Wars, and has them lasting from 1992 to 1996. The Eugenics Wars are described as a global conflict in which the progeny of a human genetic engineering project, most notably Khan Noonien Singh, established themselves as supermen and attempted world domination. Spock calls them "the last of your so-called World Wars", and McCoy identifies this with the Eugenics Wars.

In the episode "Bread and Circuses", Spock gives a death toll for World War III of 37 million. The episode "The Savage Curtain" features a Colonel Phillip Green, who led a genocidal war in the 21st century. The TNG episode "Encounter at Farpoint" further establishes a "post-atomic horror" on Earth in 2079. However, the movie Star Trek: First Contact put the contact between Vulcans and humans at April 5, 2063.

The Star Trek Concordance identifies the "Bread and Circuses" figure as the death toll for a nuclear World War III, in the mid-21st century. Star Trek: First Contact firmly establishes World War III ended, after a nuclear exchange, in 2053, but with a body count of 600 million. The figure of Colonel Green is elaborated on in Star Trek: Enterprise. First Contact also deliberately describes the warring parties in World War III as "factions", not nations per se.

The Voyager episode "Future's End" saw the Voyager crew time-travel to Los Angeles in 1996, which, as the Encyclopedia notes, seems entirely unaffected by the Eugenics Wars, which ended that year. The episode acknowledges the issue only by featuring a model of Khan's DY-100-class ship on a 1996 desk.[63] Khan's spaceship is another anomaly for the timeline, which has a variety of long-lost spaceships being launched between 1980 and 2100, with inconsistent levels of technology (caused by the increasing real lifetime and also decreased optimism about the pace of space exploration).

A reference in the Deep Space Nine episode "Doctor Bashir, I Presume?" suggests that the Eugenic Wars instead took place in the 22nd century. According to writer Ronald D. Moore, this was not an attempt at a retcon, but a mistake – when writing the episode, he recalled the already questionable "two centuries ago" line from "Space Seed" and forgot that DS9 takes place over 100 years later.[64]

Season 4 of Star Trek: Enterprise involves a trilogy of episodes ("Borderland", "Cold Station 12", and "The Augments") related to scientist Doctor Arik Soong, ancestor of Doctor Noonien Soong, and his genetic augmentations of Humans. Numerous historical details of the devastating Eugenics Wars are discussed: the death of 35–37 million people; how Earth's governments could not decide on the fate of the 1,800 genetically enhanced embryos; and how Soong had infiltrated the complex and stolen and raised 19 embryos himself. Soong maintained that he himself and humanity in general had learned the lessons of the Eugenics Wars and should not continue to hide behind those events when there was progress to be made now that the technology had matured and was much more practicable. (The actions of his "children" convince him otherwise, and at the end of "The Augments" Soong declares his interest in cybernetics, beginning the work which would one day bring about Data.)

Greg Cox's two-book series The Eugenics Wars: The Rise and Fall of Khan Noonien Singh develops the idea of the Eugenics Wars in the context of real-life history by representing it as a secret history, and that the truth behind the various civil wars and conflicts in the 1990s was not generally known; Los Angeles, whose appearance in "Future's End" helped bring the war's existence into question, is portrayed as an EW "battlefront", the Rodney King riots being one such calamity.

The series Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, which first aired in spring 2022, complicates the timeline further by retconning certain dating aspects by explicitly dating the Eugenics Wars to the first half of the 21st century (for example, the episode "Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow" features a young Khan Noonien-Singh, long before his insurrection, and is set in the 2020s), following a second American Civil War and leading up to the full-scale World War III nuclear conflict described in earlier films and episodes. This differs from "Space Seed" asserting that not only did the Eugenics Wars take place in the mid-1990s but dialogue indicates that they were either concurrent with or simply were World War III.

Cochrane

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In the episode "Metamorphosis", it is stated that Zefram Cochrane of Alpha Centauri, the discoverer of the space warp, disappeared 150 years ago, at the age of 87. Based on the 2207 to 2212[57] date originally given this would have put Cochrane's disappearance between 2057 and 2062 and his birth between 1970 and 1975. However, Okuda's date of 2267 for that episode, puts Cochrane's disappearance in 2117 and birth in 2030. 1980s spin-off material such as the Star Trek Spaceflight Chronology posit that Cochrane was from Alpha Centauri originally, and that a sub-warp ship the UNSS Icarus arrived at Alpha Centauri in 2048 to find he had discovered the theory behind warp drive. The Icarus then relayed its findings back to Earth. The first prototype warp ship was launched in 2055.

The Star Trek Chronology does not hold with this theory, and asserts that Cochrane was an Earth native, who moved to Alpha Centauri later in life. (Even in "Metamorphosis", before Cochrane identifies himself to the landing party, Dr. McCoy had taken a tricorder scan and determined him to be human.) The first edition Chronology notes that Cochrane's invention of warp drive must have been at least 200 years before "Where No Man Has Gone Before", and suggests a date of 2061, noting that Cochrane would be 31 that year.

The film Star Trek: First Contact prominently features Cochrane's first successful warp flight. The film is set in 2063, two years after the Chronology suggestions, and therefore by the timeline Cochrane is 33. The actor who played Cochrane in that movie, James Cromwell, was 56 at the time of the film's release. The Encyclopedia notes the age issue, and claims that the Cromwell Cochrane had suffered from radiation poisoning, causing his aged appearance. Enterprise pins down Cochrane's disappearance to 2119, making Cochrane instead 31 at the time of First Contact.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Except for the series finale – "These Are the Voyages..."
  2. ^ The events of "These are the voyages..." are displayed as a holodeck simulation. Episode itself takes place in 2370 (stardate 47457.1)
  3. ^ The film begins in the main timeline only to set up the alternate timeline.
  4. ^ Stardate 47457.1, parallel with The Next Generation episode "Pegasus"

References

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  1. ^ Orquiola, John (June 17, 2023). "Strange New Worlds Finally Gives Star Trek Discovery's Klingon War A Sequel". Screen Rant. Archived from the original on November 13, 2023. Retrieved November 13, 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Okuda, Mike; Okuda, Denise (1996). Star Trek Chronology: The History of the Future. Pocket Books. ISBN 0-671-53610-9.
  3. ^ Death Wish (Star Trek: Voyager)
  4. ^ The Guardian notes in the episode "The City on the Edge of Forever" that it has existed "since before your sun burned hot in space".
  5. ^ This event is the key plot point of "The Chase".
  6. ^ Established in the episode "Return to Tomorrow".
  7. ^ Weyoun states that the Dominion is approximately 10,000 years old in the seventh season episode "The Dogs of War".
  8. ^ The seventh-season TNG episode "Gambit" says this was around 2,000 years before.
  9. ^ Weyoun says the Dominion is 2,000 years old in the fourth-season DS9 episode "To the Death". Possibly this was a time of change or reform for the Dominion, transforming it from a previous incarnation into the version seen in the series.
  10. ^ The sixth-season TNG episode "Rightful Heir" said this event was 1,500 years ago)
  11. ^ 800 years before the third-season DS9 episode "Explorers"
  12. ^ The Chronology dates this by the culture seen in the episode which features the transplant, The Paradise Syndrome
  13. ^ Gul Dukat says this happens five centuries before the third-season DS9 episode Defiant
  14. ^ a b c d Dates are given in dialogue in "Space Seed"
  15. ^ The Chronology speculates on the year, noting that Star Trek: The Motion Picture does not give an exact figure. However the movie itself does state that Voyager 6 "was launched more than three hundred years ago."
  16. ^ The Chronology speculates on the year, noting the episode "The Changeling" does not give an exact figure. However, the episode does have Kirk ask "Wasn't there a probe called Nomad launched in the early 2000s?"
  17. ^ The Chronology speculates on the year, noting the episode "Tomorrow Is Yesterday" does not give an exact year.
  18. ^ According to the episode "Space Seed". The year is clearly specified by Lt McGivers, ship's historian.
  19. ^ Established in the episode "One Small Step".
  20. ^ The year is stated in "The Royale"
  21. ^ The war ends 10 years before Star Trek: First Contact, set in 2063.
  22. ^ The Chronology dates this exactly 200 years before the episode "Where No Man Has Gone Before".
  23. ^ Established in the episode "Friendship One".
  24. ^ Established the episode "Terra Nova"
  25. ^ "Encounter at Farpoint" features a Q-induced flashback to this era.
  26. ^ a b From a computer screen in "In a Mirror, Darkly"
  27. ^ About 150 years before "Metamorphosis" (dated by Okuda as 2267), which is shown by Enterprise to be an approximation.
  28. ^ "Star Trek: Enterprise: Episodes by Season". Archived from the original on November 11, 2006. Retrieved December 31, 2006.
  29. ^ The TNG episode Conundrum refers to this date, based on an early draft of the Chronology, which had proposed 2161. "These Are the Voyages..." depicts the founding ceremony and officially states the founding members.
  30. ^ Although the season three Enterprise episode "Zero Hour" indicates the date as 2159
  31. ^ Sarek gives his age as 102.437 in "Journey to Babel".
  32. ^ In the episode "Power Play", Data gives the year 2196 as the retirement date of the Daedalus-class starships, which had been active 200 years before the episode, in the 2160s.
  33. ^ The episode "Relics" establishes that Scotty was born 147 years before 2369.
  34. ^ Star Trek: Discovery S01E04
  35. ^ McCoy is 137 years old in "Encounter at Farpoint", set in 2364.
  36. ^ The Chronology dates this based on a line from an early draft script from "Journey to Babel"
  37. ^ Kirk is said to be 34 in "The Deadly Years, which Okuda dates to 2267.
  38. ^ Chekov is 22 in the episode "Who Mourns for Adonais?".
  39. ^ In Star Trek Chekov states that he is 17 – Kirk is 25.
  40. ^ Thirteen years before the events of "The Menagerie", according to dialogue.
  41. ^ a b c d A biography shown in "Conundrum" establishes the birth-year and birth-place.
  42. ^ This incident, the last contact between the Romulans and the Federation is said to be 53 years before "The Neutral Zone"
  43. ^ Knobeloch, Payton. "'Star Trek' Monument Unveiling Rescheduled For October". News - Indiana Public Media. Retrieved 2020-05-22.
  44. ^ The Chronology derives this figure from working backwards from the Khitomer massacre of 2346.
  45. ^ Bashir celebrates his 30th birthday in "Distant Voices"
  46. ^ a b c Okuda, Michael; Sternbach, Rick (1991). Star Trek: The Next Generation Technical Manual. Pocket Books. ISBN 0-671-70427-3.
  47. ^ This is said to occur twenty-two years before "Yesterday's Enterprise" (2366)
  48. ^ The Chronology derives this figure by subtracting 20 years from 2366 ("Sins of the Father"). The Chronology notes an inconsistency, as the episode "Birthright", which it sets in 2369, gives a figure of 2344.
  49. ^ "Biography: Anij". startrek.com. Archived from the original on 2010-03-23. Retrieved 2006-12-05.
  50. ^ "Biography: Data". startrek.com. Archived from the original on 2010-07-10. Retrieved 2006-12-05.
  51. ^ Winters, Brad [@BradinLA] (28 September 2022). "Actually… this will be the first episode to take place in 2381. All of seasons 1, 2, and 1st half of 3 are in 2380. Theres a fancy formula that I don't understand but @drerinmac does, and that's what matters" (Tweet). Retrieved 30 September 2022 – via Twitter.
  52. ^ Year For Setting Of Star Trek Picard Show Established, Storyline Teased By EP
  53. ^ "And now we present the complete Star Trek Canon in chronological order! ENJOY!!!". The Star Trek Chronology Project. 2009-09-19.
  54. ^ Whitfield, Stephen E & Roddenberry, Gene (1968). The Making of Star Trek. Ballatine Books.
  55. ^ Asherman, Allan (1987). The Star Trek Compendium. Titan Books. ISBN 0-907610-99-4.
  56. ^ a b c d e f g h Goldstein, Stanley and Fred (1980). Star Trek Spaceflight Chronology. Pocket Books. ISBN 0-671-79089-7.
  57. ^ a b c d e Johnson, Shane (1987). Mr Scott's Guide to the Enterprise. Titan Books. ISBN 1-85286-028-6.
  58. ^ a b Nemeck, Larry (2003). Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion. Pocket Books. ISBN 0-7434-5798-6.
  59. ^ Okuda, Mike; Okuda, Denise (1993). Star Trek Chronology: The History of the Future. Pocket Books. ISBN 0-671-79611-9.
  60. ^ Terry Lee Rioux (2005). From Sawdust to Stardust. Pocket Books. ISBN 978-0-7434-5762-0.
  61. ^ Ayers, Jeff (2006). Voyages of the Imagination: The Star Trek Fiction Companion. Pocket Books. ISBN 1-4165-0349-8.
  62. ^ Ayers, Jeff. "Star Trek: The Motion Picture: Synopsis". startrek.com. Archived from the original on 2009-01-31. Retrieved 2006-12-04.
  63. ^ Okuda, Mike; Okuda, Denise; Mirek, Debbie (1999). The Star Trek Encyclopedia. Pocket Books. ISBN 0-671-53609-5.
  64. ^ Ronald D. Moore (1997-03-03). "Answers". Archived from the original on 2009-08-03. Retrieved 2006-12-31.
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