Hey. You think I didn't see you back there ?
I had a simple post, once. A single one. Not a series this time, I told myself. Just a bit of fun.
But that was before I started my…
COMPULSIVE PROBING - What the nomenclatures of the home systems of the alien species of Mass Effect can lead us to imagine (2/?)
Part 1 - humans and asari - here.
The salarian home system : Pranas
The names of the planets in the salarian home system have a unique nomenclature, unlike anything else in the galaxy - and it is hugely informative about the salarian mindset. Starting from the planet closest to PRANAS then progressing outward, those are :
Saradril
(Sur'Kesh)
Dragel
Halegeuse
Paeto (a planet for our purposes, but in fact an asteroid)
[SPOILERS ???]
And what's striking about those is that they are all named after fairly recent salarian historical figures, specifically those that have something to do with the exploration and exploitation of the individual planet :
Saradril "is named for the Saradril Clan, specifically the salarian dalatrass Saradril Il Sorason Mal Netya Par Tore Nura, who sponsored the first manned mission to the planet."
Dragel "is named for the matrilineal clan that sent the first manned mission to the planet’s surface."
Halegeuse "bears the name of the Halegeuse Corporation, which combined the best efforts of several salarian clans to manufacture the advanced shielding necessary to colonize the planet's moons" in 560 BCE.
and Paeto "is named for the clan of Paeto Il Ginon Mal Eneste Dut Solem Ammar, known to humans as Ammar Solem", who "ran the fateful test that discovered [the] mass-affecting properties" of eezo, first discovered on the Paeto asteroid.
You know what makes those unique ? In every single case, whatever names those planets had before were stricken - replaced. This is implicit for all of them, and explicit in Saradril's entry : "In antiquity, the planet was named for various gods, as well as the astronomer who first classified it as a planet rather than a star. But Nura's political machinations won out and the planet now bears her clan's name on all standard salarian star maps." What's interesting here is that we get a sense of clear historical and cultural transition : 1) various cultures in antiquity give the names of gods to Saradril, much like the humans, the asari, the krogan, the volus, etc.
Then 2) the name of the astronomer who first understood heliocentrism (i.e. that Sur'Kesh wasn't what everything revolved around and that the motion of the wandering stars could be explained if they happened to orbit Pranas) supersedes at least some of those names, which in and of itself suggests that there might have been some positivist, anti-religion pushback going on (the "Pfaugh, nothing but superstitions !" type).
(Noteworthy that it would have been named after the astronomer, and not the astronomer's patron or the astronomer's clan. Though maybe the name might have referred to all three.)
I mean - who does that ? Literally no one on Earth has ever done that. I don't think the USSR did that - and I think if anything on Earth could have renamed the planets for ideological purposes, it's them. But anyway, one of the recurring things in that series we'll find out is, when the planets in a species' home system do not have traditional names (usually the names of gods and goddesses), that means there is some kind of ideology going on. As the astronomer was a scientist, we can guess that ideology was along the lines of Science>Religion, Progress>Tradition, the New>the Old.
That is, until we get to 3) when Dalatrass Saradril made sure (in her lifetime, no less, given that her personal "political machinations won out") to have the planet renamed after her for individual prestige and the everlasting political glory of her clan - indicating that in the early salarian space age, there was so little respect left for either traditions or science that planets and their names were a big buffet - first come, first served. (It's a bit sad, really. It's the salarian equivalent of billionaires naming planets after themselves.)
In fact (with the possible exception of Halegeuse), every single planet was the occasion of a fraught political battle over who should get to name it after themselves. In Dragel's case, "a thriving minority from the Sylar Clan, who sent the first manned mission to orbit the planet, insists to this day that their landing attempt was sabotaged by the Dragels and the planet should bear their name. Relations between the two clans remain tense." Meanwhile, for the hugely significant Paeto asteroid, "For three centuries after [Ammar Solem's] death, rival clans fought for credit for the discovery, but the truth won out after a lengthy academic war."
But why was it so damn important in the salarian mindset ? Well, because to name a planet is a perpetual reminder of much your clan or your corporation was instrumental to the space age and was the best of what salarians had to offer - it's kinda spelled out in Halegeuse's entry : "Halegeuse [the corporation] was bought out centuries ago, but the name endures as a symbol of salarian innovation and cooperation." That the names endures is pretty striking, when we know all the previous names were replaced at the beginning of the salarian space age - especially in a corporate context, one could have expected the corporation which had bought out Halegeuse to rename the planet after themselves !
Which leads me to consider the following possibility : maybe there wasn't a shift away from the ideology of the New (for lack of a better term) between the early modern period of salarian history and the early space age ? Maybe instead the choice to rename the planets was both a self-serving, pragmatic PR move and a sincere acknowledgement that the achievement of the Saradril, Dragel and Paeto clans and the Halegeuse corporation really trumped whatever the planets had been previously named after - that their achievements were the up-to-date New as it related to those planets - achievements of "innovation and cooperation", scientific and technological achievements.
I'll leave you to make up your mind. We're done with the planets of the system.
Wait - what was that [SPOILERS ???] thing back there at the bottom of the list of the planets ?
Oh ! I'm glad you asked, imaginary representation of my readers, created to mask the unresponsive, uncaring void where I howl all of my words !
There is a planet in the Chomos system, in the Phoenix Massing, far away from the salarian home system, where we can learn a bit more about the history of salarian astronomy :
"Trigestis is a gas giant, named for the first salarian astronomer to predict planets' occurrences mathematically rather than through direct observation."
This is a reference to astronomer Urbain Le Verrier, who IRL predicted the existence and position of Neptune using only mathematics in 1846 (based on how Uranus's orbit did not correspond to mathematical predictions, suggesting a source of perturbations) - as Neptune was simply too far from the Sun to be observable from Earth.
Here's the thing though - Halegeuse, the farthest planet from Pranas, is only 3.6 AU from its sun. In the Sol system, Jupiter and Saturn, both perfectly visible from Earth, are at 5.2 AU and 9.6 AU, respectively ; Uranus, dimly visible, is at 19.2 AU ; and Neptune is at 30.1 AU.
What I'm saying is, there are no planets in the Pranas system as we get it in ME3 that are far enough from Sur'Kesh that you'd need mathematics to guess their positions. Therefore, who the hell is Trigestis ?
The answer is : the guy who wrote about Trigestis in ME2 forgot about him by the time he had to write about the planets in the Pranas system in ME3, and goofed.
Now, the fun answers we can headcanon are :
the farther "planets" (plural) Trigestis discovered are just not shown in ME3, but they exist ; for some reason, they are beyond the orbit of the mass relay in Pranas.
or they are not shown because they do not exist anymore, because the salarians did mad scientist bullshit on them.
Anyway, the planet Trigestis has three moons named Sidacha, Norem and Bestia. I think those could be the name(s) of the planets Trigestis discovered, or the names of other famous salarian astronomers. Or both.
Other instances of salarian-named systems
Salarians turn up regularly in the lore as explorers, and even though we see far less salarian worlds and salarians in the games than every other major species in the ME universe, we have an abundance of planets named by salarians. In that sample, Trigestis is the only one to be named after a major historical figure ; every single other name we have is either a word or a phrase in a salarian language, describing some attribute of the planet literally or poetically :
In particular, out of the seven planets of the Faryar system in the Hourglass Nebula (which appears to be a privileged zone of salarian expansion, with Erinle, a major salarian world, in the gateway system), five have explicitly salarian names : Tunfigel ("hard heart", for the planet's high density and gravity), Nephros ("restless sleep", seemingly for its spectacular storms and winds), Alingon ("deceptive", as that seemingly banal planet has a magnetosphere intense enough to interfere with all electronic systems), Wenrum ("white knight", because of its white, highly reflective surface), and Antictra ("fused metal", because of its iron craters constantly battered, melted and fused by nearby asteroids). This suggests to me that the last two planets of the system, Quarem and Daratar, also have meaningful names that come from a salarian language.
Sidebar : Wenrum's description provides an interesting detail in salarian history : the planet takes its name "from a salarian story in the Romantic period of a knight who refused all temptation to riches, carnality, and even flavorful food until justice was served to the poor and oppressed." This reveals that a) salarians had a "Romantic period", whatever that means ; b) that salarians had the equivalent of knights, which makes sense given their feudal system ; c) that a salarian could refuse "carnality", which is surprising for a species with cloacae and no sense of sexual attraction (perhaps he simply refused to reproduce and further his clan's best interests ?) ; and d) that he basically went on strike. The fact this is from a "story" from the "Romantic period" makes it likely Wenrum/the Wenrum is either fictional or fictionalized (one of the characteristics of Romanticism IRL is an exaltation of the Middle Ages and its emblematic figures, such as the knight, ideals contrasting with the corrupt, materialist and alienating late 18th-early 19th centuries).
The other two examples we have of salarian-named planets are Lattesh ("translated from a salarian dialect as 'it's still winter'", named from its unusually cold temperatures which seemingly keep life from appearing), Trigestis's companion in the Chomos system (Phoenix Massing) ; and Osalri ("(Covus salarian - 'fire maiden')", named in light of its being "a boiling hot dwarf planet") in the Imir system, the gateway system of the Eagle Nebula where Korlus can be found. This suggests to me that the other three planets in the system - Korlus, Quodis, and Gregas - also have salarian names we don't know the meaning of, probably in Covus as well.
Moreover, as this is the gateway system of the cluster, it's beyond likely that salarians were the ones to first open, access and explore the Eagle Nebula.
The planets named after salarian words make salarian languages the alien language family we know the most in the OT (in Mass Effect as a whole, the honour goes to the angara language Shelesh, by far).
Next time : the turians !













