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Taung
Designation

Sentient[1]

Classification

Humanoid[1]

Homeworld
Language

Archaic[2] Mando'a[1]

Height of average adult

2 meters[1]

Average mass

95 kilograms[1]

Skin color

Gray[3]

Eye color

Yellow[1]

Average lifespan

85 years[1]

Famous members
"Taung sa rang broka Mando'ade ka'rta!"
«The ash of the Taung beats strong within the Mandalorians' heart!»
―Excerpt from the traditional Mandalorian Dha Werda Verda chant[8][src]

The Taung were an ancient species of Humanoid simians. Indigenous to the galactic Core World of Coruscant, the two-meter-tall, gray-skinned Taungs were warriors from youth, and viewed battle as a source of honor both for the individual and their gods. Famous for their struggles against the Human Battalions of Zhell—prehistoric Coruscant's other major power—the Taung waged war against their enemies for hundreds of years. When a powerful volcano erupted and devastated the Zhell, spewing ash into the sky with such density it blocked out the light of Coruscant's sun, the Taung labeled themselves the "Warriors of the Shadow", or Dha Werda Verda in their language. Despite their loss, the Zhell eventually managed to drive the Taung from Coruscant, and the defeated Taung fled to the planet Roon, located in the Outer Rim. There they remained for millennia, until legendary Mandalore the First led the Taung to conquer a new world which they named Mandalore in honor of their leader, and the Taung subsequently recast themselves as the Mandalorians or Mando'ade—"Sons and Daughters of Mandalore".

As the newly entitled Mandalorians, the Taung set out to conquer the worlds around their new home, their nomadic nature and worship of war driving them crusading outward as they increased their territory. Under the rule of Mandalore the Indomitable, another Taung warlord following in the leadership tradition established by Mandalore the First, the Taung began to take in beings of other species into their culture, transforming what it meant to be Mandalorian forever after. This willing acceptance of other beings peaked during the Mandalorian Wars, when Mandalore the Ultimate led the Mandalorians on a campaign against the military forces of the Galactic Republic. Though initially victorious, the intervention of the Jedi Knight Revan and his loyal Jedi followers turned the tide of the war against the Mandalorians, culminating with the devastation of the planet Malachor V. The Taung race had suffered heavy losses during the war, and by its end, were generally believed to have drifted into extinction, while leaving their legacy through the Mandalorian culture they had passed on.

Biology and appearance[]

A Humanoid species, the Taung were a bipedal[1] race of sentient simians. Gray-skinned[3] and yellow-eyed, Taungs were typically tall and strong. On average, Taungs reached a height of two meters, and weighed around ninety-five kilograms. Physically, Taungs were extremely resilient, and could endure hardships many other species were unable to. Their five fingers were tipped with sharp claws, and bony ridges adorned the top of their skulls. Taung lifespans were known to reach and occasionally exceed eighty-five years. Considered children until the age of six, Taung attained adulthood when they turned thirteen, passed through middle age between the years of forty-six and sixty-four, and were viewed as elderly beyond the age of sixty-five. Galactic historical records document no known instances of Taungs with a sensitivity to the Force.[1]

Society and culture[]

File:Taung.jpg

Taung facial structure resembles their armored helmets

Taung society was nomadic and clan-based. Veterans of successful campaigns were honored, and looked upon with reverence. These battle-tested elders became chieftains, de facto leaders of their clan and community; higher authority came only from the[1] Mand'alor, a title that meant "Sole Ruler" in the Taung language,[2] and a role that embodied a single leader of all the warrior clans.[3] These aspects continued on throughout later Mandalorian culture long after the Taung themselves had passed from the galaxy.[2] Pragmatism and ruthlessness were common traits among the Taung, matched only by their loyalty to their clan kinsmen. Their practical nature was reflected in their naming practices, typically choosing names that corresponded to traits they deemed desirable. Common names included such examples as Atin, Kot, and Tor—meaning "persistent", "strength", and "justice", respectively.[1] The Taung spoke an archaic form[2] of what later became the Mandalorian language of Mando'a.[1]

The civilization of the Taung was one steeped in war, and the Taung were warriors above all else. Their combat-centered nature[1] gave rise to a religious warrior society governed by elaborate laws that evolved into the Canons of Honor. Early in their history, the Taungs waged war as a means of ritual worship to their god[3] Kad Ha'rangir—a destroyer god they believed to personify change and growth. The Taung sought the favor of Kad Ha'rangir as they denied the temptations of Arasuum, the sloth-god who was an avatar of idleness and stagnation.[9] But after the Taung had recast themselves as the Mandalorians,[3] and Mandalore the Indomitable had risen to lead them, the act of war itself became the center of Mandalorian worship, and to wage war was seen to be divine.[9]

Despite their violent, warring nature, the Taung were far from primitive, and maintained a high priority of procuring the latest in technological advancement whenever possible, often through the plundering of a defeated foe. The tradition of Mandalorian armor began with the culture's Taung founders,[3] and their unique helmets and war masks were forged in the image of the Taungs' face, including slanted outer angles and a pointed chin.[1] Unlike later iterations, the armor of the Taung was sparse in its armament due to their belief that it was unarmed combat that brought the highest honor.[3] Taung children were trained in martial skills from a young age, and tested themselves repeated in numerous physical and mental challenges prior to achieving adulthood. The experience and skills they obtained through their robust upbringing made wandering Taung valuable assets to mercenary companies.[1]

History[]

War for a world[]

File:Last Stand of the Taungs.jpg

The last stand of the Taungs

"When the dawn came the Zhell awakened and saw the Taungs upon the high place and were afraid, for the morning light caught the glint of helms and weapons and created phantom warriors, made of dazzle and distance. But the cleverest of them were not decieved, and saw how few we were. And so they assembled without haste, merry in mockery, and prepared to march. And in the high place we awaited death."
―Basic-translated excerpt from the ninth chapter of the Dha Werda Verda[src]

The Taung evolved on the planet Coruscant,[1] located in the central region of the galaxy known as the Core Worlds. During the pre-Republic era,[4] the Taung inhabited Coruscant alongside the other major power to arise on the prehistoric world, the Zhell. The Zhell—thirteen tribes of Humans who also evolved on ancient Coruscant[10]—and the Taung waged war against each other for hundreds of years, struggling for control of the planet.[1] At some point amidst their warring, a volcanic eruption brought devastation upon the Battalions of Zhell, when it smothered their city with thick ash and nearly destroyed the early Human race. The enormous plume of released ash and smoke was so dense and wide-spread across the sky, that it blocked out the light from Coruscant's sun, leaving the land beneath in darkness for two years. The Taung leaped at the advantage nature had provided, and in the aftermath of the eruption, subjugated their age-old enemy. The Taung viewed the smoke and shadow as an emblem of their destiny, and it was then that they adopted the name Dha Werda Verda for themselves, a title that meant "Warriors of the Shadow" in the Taung language.[10]

However, the Taungs' victory over the Zhell was doomed to be a fleeting one. Over time, the Zhell eventually managed to win back control of Coruscant[10] and drive the Taung from their shared homeworld.[1] Though an offshoot sect of priestly female Taung fled Coruscant for the galaxy's Unknown Regions in pursuit of atonement through introspective meditation,[11] the majority of the Taung were forced to flee to the planet Roon in the Outer Rim, there the Taung remained until the legendary leader, Mandalore the First, led his people to seek a new world.[1] The Taung found another planet in the Outer Rim—a world of multiple ecosystems, uninhabited by intelligent life, and dominated only by a race of non-sentient creatures of colossal size known as mythosaurs—and claimed this new planet as their own.[4]

Mandalorian rebirth[]

Main article: Mandalorian
File:Mandalorian on dxun.jpg

A Taung warrior

"Dha Werda Verda a'den tratu! Manda'yaim kandosii adu!"
«We are the rage of the Warriors of the Shadow! The first noble sons of Mandalore!»
―Excerpt from the traditional Mandalorian Dha Werda Verda chant[8][src]

In honor of their leader, Mandalore the First, the Taungs named the newly conquered world Manda'yaim,[4] or "home of the Mand'alor,[12] which was later transliterated simply as Mandalore in the language of Galactic Basic Standard. Similarly, the Taungs recast themselves as the Mandalorians,[1] or Mando'ade: "sons and daughters of Mandalore".[13] The newly branded Mandalorians set to taming their new world, and in the process slaughtered the enormous mythosaurs, leaving only their skeletons behind.[4] The planet Mandalore became the home of fierce clans of masked Taung warriors led by a single warlord who always adopted the name Mand'alor,[10] meaning "sole ruler" in their language,[12] after Mandalore the First.[10] Over time, however, a single world proved not to be enough for the Mandalorian Taung, and they set out to conquer other planets and battle new foes.[4]

The Mandalorians warred with the insectoid Nevoota species, a conflict which saw the demise of the Nevoota and the deification of war itself by the early Mandalorians. With this new religious shift, the Taungs' conquests evolved into holy crusades, and they took on the additional, informal descriptor of "Mandalorian Crusaders". Their new outlook led the Crusaders to later annihilate several other species in their entirety, including the Fenelar, Kuarans, Tlönians, and the Basiliskans—obtaining their infamous Basilisk war droid mounts from the later. The Taung only truly met their match with the inhabitants of the planet neighboring their new homeworld of Mandalore, Mandallia. The native Mandallian Giants were large in stature and ferocious in combat, repelling the Taungs' offensive in such a manner that the Mandallians earned the respect of their would-be conquerors, and were granted the opportunity to fight beside them as fellow Mandalorians. Yet, the Mandallians were only the first non-Taung taken into the Mandalorian fold, and as the Mandalorians continued to strike at other worlds,[3] individuals that impressed the warriors were often accepted into the culture,[2] including the likes of the Zeltron scientist Antos Wyrick and numerous other Iskalloni slaves, who joined after the Crusaders' invasion of Iskadrell.[14] This willing acceptance of beings from other species forever changed what it meant to be a Mandalorian, moving the word from simply another name for the Taung,[3] to an encompassing term for a single shared culture uniting many different beings.[2]

Old Sith Wars and decline[]

The Mandalorians, Taung and otherwise, were drawn into a whole new war when the latest in the tradition of the Mand'alor, a Taung warrior by the sobriquet Mandalore the Indomitable, challenged the fallen Jedi Ulic Qel-Droma. The former Jedi Knight bested Mandalore the Indomitable in single combat on the planet Kerest, latest in the Indomitable's conquests, and from that point the Mand'alor swore the loyalty of he and his followers to Qel-Droma and by extension, his Sith Master, Exar Kun. The Mandalorians waged war against the Galactic Republic on behalf of the Sith, even striking against their former homeworld of Coruscant, but when they had been tasked with taking the planet Onderon late in the campaign, Mandalore the Indomitable was slain within the jungles of Onderon's moon, Dxun. Another Taung took up his ceremonial mask and became the new Mand'alor,[6] proclaiming himself Mandalore the Ultimate. The new Mand'alor—spurred on by elements of the Sith Empire in hiding[15]—encouraged the Taung belief that the "Last Great Battle" was fast approaching, and under his leadership, the acceptance of non-Taung into the Mandalorian culture was at an all-time high as he prepared for full-scale war against the Galactic Republic.[3]

File:Mandalorians - TEA.jpg

Mandalore the Indomitable leads his Taung warriors into battle atop Basilisk war droids.

Under their Taung leader,[6] Mandalore the Ultimate, the Mandalorians expanded their sector of space as they proceeded to conquer world after world until the Republic finally moved to engage the rising Mandalorian threat in what became known as the Mandalorian Wars,[4] one of several conflicts that were later grouped under the unofficial compilation, the "Old Sith Wars".[3] However, it was only with the intervention of a group of Jedi lead by the Jedi Knight Revan, that the Republic was truly able to turn the tide against the Mandalorians.[4] Revan fought and killed Mandalore the Ultimate at Malachor V, bringing an end to the Mandalorian Wars not long after.[15] The Mandalorian Wars had been one of the bloodiest conflicts in the history of the Republic,[16] and the casualties among the Taung species had been severe. By the war's end, most believed that the Taung were extinct,[3] though at least one—an unsubstantiated claimant to the title of Mand'alor—survived for several years after the war's end.[5]

Legacy[]

"Leeber soong whar tung tach picta / Manner manner migta richta / Schelecht varn toom-soing pa ho-grunten / Gersh ve dala funken mimpa / Droit! / To Gropen wettkampf Zunken!"
―Excerpt from the Ancient Basic Dha Werda Verda poem[src]
File:Mandalorian wedding.jpg

The Mandalorian culture came to embrace beings from all species, including numerous humans.

Long after the Taungs departure from the galaxy, their impact remained.[3] In 15 BBY,[17] the Human merchant Mungo Baobab discovered the fabled Roonstones on the planet Roon.[18] Encoded in one of the Roonstones was an ancient recording of the poem Dha Werda Verda, detailing the Taungs' struggle against the Zhell on prehistoric Coruscant in an archaic form of Basic.[19] Another iteration of the Dha Werda Verda, a thunderous battle chant in Mando'a, was passed through Mandalorian culture for ages, and even adapted by Mand'alor Jango Fett for clone trainees in the Grand Army of the Republic prior to the start of the Clone Wars.[13]

The Taungs' most lasting contribution to the history of the galaxy was the Mandalorian culture itself, which outlived its founders by more than four thousand years.[20] Though anthropologists would later be divided over whether it was indeed the Taung who were the first Mandalorians,[2] quarreling over the similarities between the Mandalorian language and the remaining Taung texts[3] the Mandalorians followed in the example of the Taung[1] as nomadic warriors for much of their history, though they became a much more diversified group of beings from countless species and walks of life, all united by the common culture.[2]

Far from the warrior culture of the Mandalorians, the sisterhood of priestly Taung that elected to flee ancient Coruscant for the Unknown Regions after their defeat at the hands of the Zhell, had a profound impact on the foundation of a different group altogether: the Sorcerers of Rhand. These female Taung, who believed in seeking atonement through meditation and introspection, joined the Knell of Muspilli death cult, and the fanatical Kanzer Exiles to inspire the teachings of the Sorcerers of Rhand, when over thousands of years, the three unique philosophies and belief systems merged.[11]

Behind the scenes[]

The Taung first appeared in Star Wars canon in the Tales of the Jedi: The Sith War comic book series, though at the time, they were known only as the Mandalorian species. The liner notes for the Shadows of the Empire soundtrack first provided the "Taung" name, and it was the Star Wars Insider article, The History of the Mandalorians, that established that the grey-skinned beings from the Tales of the Jedi comics were the Taung race. The History of the Mandalorians further elaborated on the Taung as the precursors of the Mandalorian culture, and the Galaxy at War sourcebook provided biological and cultural information on the Taung species.

Appearances[]

  • Tales of the Jedi: The Sith War (First appearance as Mandalorian species)
  • Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic 8: Flashpoint, Part 2
  • Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic 15: Days of Fear, Part 3 Template:Co
  • Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic 19: Daze of Hate, Part 1 Template:Hologram
  • Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic 20: Daze of Hate, Part 2
  • Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic 21: Daze of Hate, Part 3
  • Star Wars: The Old Republic (Mentioned only)
  • Template:Hnn (Mentioned only)
  • Template:Hnn (Mentioned only)
  • Republic Commando: Triple Zero (Mentioned only)

Sources[]

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Notes and references[]

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In other languages
  1. 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 1.12 1.13 1.14 1.15 1.16 1.17 1.18 1.19 1.20 1.21 1.22 Galaxy at War
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 Template:InsiderCite
  3. 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 3.11 3.12 3.13 Template:InsiderCite
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 The Essential Atlas
  5. 5.0 5.1 Knights of the Old Republic Campaign Guide
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Tales of the Jedi: The Sith War 6: Dark Lord
  7. The Essential Guide to Warfare
  8. 8.0 8.1 Officially, the Mandalorian iteration of the Dha Werda Verda is the one featured in the Rage of the Shadow Warriors track from the Star Wars: Republic Commando soundtrack and sung by the Republic's clone troopers. The Republic Commando: Triple Zero novel, however, states that the words "Coruscant" (Coruscanta) and "Jedi" (Jetiise) were substitutions to the in-universe original Mandalorian chant, implemented by Jango Fett when adapting several traditional Mandalorian songs for clone trainees, with the implication that the original words had instead been "Mandalore" and "Mandalorians". The novel also reveals the Mando'a translations for these words to be Manda'yaim and Mando'ade, respectively.
  9. 9.0 9.1 The Essential Guide to Warfare
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 The Complete Star Wars Encyclopedia
  11. 11.0 11.1 The Unknown Regions
  12. 12.0 12.1 Mando'a dictionary
  13. 13.0 13.1 Republic Commando: Triple Zero
  14. Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic 48: Demon, Part 2
  15. 15.0 15.1 Star Wars: The Old Republic: Revan
  16. Timeline 9: The Mandalorian Wars
  17. Template:PolyhedronCite
  18. Star Wars: Droids
  19. Shadows of the Empire soundtrack's liner notes
  20. Chronicles of the Old Republic lists the end of the Mandalorian Wars—the relative point of Taung extinction put forward by The History of the Mandalorians—as 3,960 BBY. The latest chronological appearance of the Mandalorians is Star Wars: Legacy 41: Rogue's End, which takes place in 137 ABY.
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