Moff/Legends

"The Regional Governors now have direct control over their territories."

- Wilhuff Tarkin

A Moff was a sector governor rank in the Sith Empire, Galactic Republic in its last days, and under the Galactic Empire. Under the Fel Empire and Darth Krayt's Galactic Empire, the title was also a worn by the topmost officials of institutions such as the Navy, Army and Intelligence.

Origins
The name Moff originates from the small Pre-Republic space empires from whence the Galactic Republic emerged; the title was given to Warlords of those empires who decided to join the Republic peacefully instead of fighting.

As governors, those Warlords ruled de jure their territories, known collectively as the Allied Regions. Eventually these were diminished to Republic sectors, and the titles Moffs and Grand Moffs were diminished to purely ceremonial.

For some reason, the Sith Empire also had the title of Moffs and Grand Moffs. Its first Grand Moff was Odile Vaiken, after the Great Hyperspace War.

The Ruusan Reformations swept this custom away from the Republic.

Re-establishment
The position was resurrected in the last years of the Clone Wars when the Sector Governance Decree was promulgated by Supreme Chancellor Palpatine using his emergency powers, establishing both planetary as well as regional governors throughout the galaxy.

Though they were also referred to by the more generic style of Sector Governor, the title of Moff was specifically chosen by Palpatine as a tribute to the satraps of those ancient small space empires; the decree thus pointed the way toward Palpatine's subsequent assumption of Imperial power, which was explicitly presented as a revival of the glories and grandeur of ancient monarchies like Atrisia. Each Moff reported to an Imperial Advisor, sending copies of his reports both to the Advisor and directly to Palpatine.



The initial Sector Governance Decree, however, was issued under the Republic, and caused immediate alarm in the Galactic Senate, serving as the major catalyst for the Petition of 2000. Palpatine simply used this show of Senatorial opposition as a means to identify and remove his most dangerous opponents in the political elite, but the Senate's short-lived defiance, along with the magnitude of the tasks involved in ending the Clone Wars and initiating the Great Jedi Purge, may nonetheless have contributed to the delay in the appointment of the first Moffs, who did not take up office until several weeks after the Declaration of the New Order and the establishment of the Galactic Empire.

In the Galactic Empire
The concept of assigning Moffs to sectors obviously related to the ancient division of the Republic into a thousand sectors, each with a Senator and a local congress; but the first Moffs seem to have been appointed to control rather larger territories than those for which the Senators were answerable: for instance, the Moff of Sector 3 was headquartered on Bimmisaari in Halla Sector, but his territory extended as far as Kashyyyk in Mytaranor Sector: these vast volumes of space may have corresponded to the theatres of operations of the twenty Sector Armies within the Grand Army of the Republic. It appears that at this time, the newly reformed Imperial Fleet was also placed under the authority of a Moff, one of the few senior officials to whom the command program of the dreadnought Eye of Palpatine was answerable.

By the time that the Senate was dissolved in 0 BBY, Moffs had been assigned to most of the thousand historic sectors of known space, tightening the Empire's grip on the galaxy. However, a number of further modifications had been made to the system, most notably the creation of a cadre of higher-ranking Grand Moffs, governors-general of a new class of Priority Sectors, also known as Oversectors. Proposed by Moff Wilhuff Tarkin of Sesswenna Sector, these were areas of the galaxy in which Rebel activity and unrest were proving more than the local Moff could handle, and within which the apparatus of control was strengthened by the diversion of vastly increased military, paramilitary and judicial resources. The best-known Priority Sectors were vast reaches of space, rather similar to the large sectors of early Imperial Moffs, in which a number of existing sectors with their local Moffs were now subordinated to a new Oversector command: Imperial Center Oversector incorporated most of the Core, while Tarkin's own Oversector Outer essentially incorporated the whole of the former Outland Regions, and the Bright Jewel Oversector embraced another vast tract of the Rim.



However, not all Oversectors were created in this way. Sometimes, a Moff was simply promoted to Grand Moff and given additional resources to deal with the threats within his existing sector, and sometimes, a rash of troublesome areas across several adjacent sectors were removed from their Moffs' control and grouped in a new Priority Sector under a new Grand Moff. Occasionally, a single existing sector might be converted into an Oversector and subdivided into new sectors, as with the planned transformation of the Tapani Sector that was interrupted by the Battle of Endor.

As well as the stratification introduced by the creation of Grand Moffs, further complexity was added to the organization of regional governors by the appointment of Moffs to control areas smaller than the historic sectors of the Old Republic: fortress worlds like Prakith had their own Moffs, and on Imperial Center, even ministries of the planetary administration were incorporated as sectors in their own right, such as Planetary Security, commanded by Moff Kadir.

Following the Battle of Endor, few individual Moffs or Grand Moffs were sufficiently powerful to serve as major players in the civil war for control of the Empire. Control of the single most powerful Sector Fleet, that of the Quelii Oversector, was seized by its Navy commander, Admiral Zsinj. Meanwhile, Tarkin's successor, Grand Moff Ardus Kaine, held aloof from the conflict and concentrated on securing his control of his stronghold territory on the Outer Rim. The first major move by the Moffs was the belated formation of a coalition of Priority Sector governors led by Grand Moff Hissa, calling themselves the Central Committee of Grand Moffs; while they controlled the combined might of several Oversectors, they were conscious that to successfully win over other areas of the Empire, they required leadership and legitimacy outside of their own ranks.

Nevertheless, as the power of the central authorities diminished, the Moffs did gradually assume more prominence and more capacity for collective action. Late in 8 ABY, a number of Moffs joined the remnants of the Imperial Ruling Council in endorsing Grand Admiral Thrawn as the new commander-in-chief of the Starfleet, and in 10 ABY, the Moffs and Grand Moffs collectively demanded the right to join the Ruling Council in electing a new Emperor. By 12 ABY, following the final implosion of what remained of the Ruling Council, a Council of Moffs had emerged as the primary executive power in what remained of the Empire.

Remnant and reorganization


Against this background, a number of individual Moffs declared their independence, beginning soon after Endor with events like the secession of Grand Moff Kaine, and Leonia Tavira's seizure of her husband's powers on Eiattu. Some were simply cut off from potential allies by Rebel advances, while some no doubt saw themselves as heroic saviors of their beloved subjects amid a general collapse of Galactic civilization. Others were loyal Imperials unwilling to become embroiled in the running conflict between the senior commanders and courtiers who claimed to lead the New Order, and in counterpoint, the Admirals and Advisors competing for control of the Empire were themselves unwilling to alienate the Moffs—or reveal the weak foundations of their own authority—by asking too much of them. Nevertheless, it cannot be denied that personal ambition played a part in the fragmentation of the Empire. Men like governor Foga Brill on Prakith in the Deep Core and Moff Getelles of Antemeridian Sector on the Outer Rim were not be able to conquer the galaxy, but they remained entrenched for many years behind the guns of Sector Fleets and the defenses of fortress worlds, as the lords of local despots. While most of these men maintained the fiction that they were merely local viceroys of a nebulous Imperial regime, and some even attempted to keep their sectors ignorant of the general collapse of the New Order, many indulged in displays of shameless self-aggrandizement, adopting grandiloquent new titles such as High Moff, and most probably saw that in practice, their power depended on rewarding their beholden followers: Getelles, for instance, promoted his loyal Sector Fleet commander to Grand Admiral, while Foga Brill consolidated his grip on Prakith by building a new system of patronage, clientage and control from the ruins of his planet's economy.

Over the years after Endor, the number of Moffs steadily declined, as the Empire was reduced by New Republic advances and driven by internal conflicts. At the time of Endor, there were significantly more than a thousand Moffs, but barely three or four hundred can have remained five years later and in spite of brief periods of resurgence, by 19 ABY the area of territory in what remained of unified Imperial Space was reduced to a mere eight sectors, while the last of the rogue Moffs were being steadily conquered and deposed by the New Republic.

In this situation, Admiral Gilad Pellaeon was able to persuade the remaining Moffs that the survival of the New Order in the fragment of territory that remained to them was best secured by peace with the now-dominant Rebels, and subsequently, the eight remaining Moffs, along with the Supreme Commander, became the leaders of the Imperial Remnant. By now, the Moffs were the Empire; the central authorities and the paramilitary apparatus of COMPNOR and Imperial Intelligence had essentially disappeared, leaving only a strategic military command charged primarily with frontier defense; what remained of the Empire was thus a federation of autonomous sectors, in which the Moffs controlled their own star systems with minimal outside interference; and such a situation was obviously highly amenable to the Moffs themselves.

In spite of devastating attacks on Bastion and Muunilinst, the Moffs of the Remnant survived the Yuuzhan Vong invasion with their power largely intact, and the Imperial military played a significant role in the eventual defeat of the invaders. In the last phases of the war and the first years of the peace, the Moffs laid claim to many of the "liberated" star systems in former New Republic space.



Apart from these hints at the expansion of their territory, there is little available evidence to show how the Moffs were affected by the attempts to integrate Imperial Space into the new Galactic Alliance. At some point after 40 ABY, however a new Galactic Emperor was appointed, and under the Fel dynasty, the Moffs retained their role as the leaders of a resurgent and independent Empire&mdash;a position they retained at the time of the Sith-Imperial War in 127-130 ABY.

By this time, however, it appears that the title of Moff had become at least partially separated from the office of regional governor, and if the leading Moffs of this era controlled any sort of "sectors", these would seem to have been major components of the Imperial state, rather than territorial provinces. The High Moff was the Grand Admiral in charge of the military, and the Council also included the Director of Imperial Intelligence and the heads of the Imperial Mission, Imperial Navy, Imperial Army and the Imperial Diplomatic Corps. These six formed a quorum of the Council&mdash;indeed, the six may have been the entire compliment of the Moff Council at this time. All in all, the situation may have been closest to that which prevailed in the years immediately after the Clone Wars, when a handful of Moffs had controlled vast sectors.

Also of note is the fact that one of the Moffs at this time, Fehlaaur, was an alien, albeit a near-Human Chiss, a member of one of the species most closely associated with the New Order over the decades.

Role and powers
Under the Sector Governance Decree, each Moff was armed with little more than a broad mandate to monitor sector government, and a force of stormtroopers that was sufficient to secure their residence, maintain control in the surrounding streets, and provide protection to a few administrative personnel on detached duty. This was enough to provoke the Petition of Two Thousand and precipitate the revolution that overthrew the Old Republic.



By the time the re-named Imperial Senate was swept away nineteen years later, the machinery of power that the Moffs directed had increased almost beyond recognition. Within the civil chain of command, they became the formal superiors of all Planetary Governors, while the paramilitary apparatus of COMPNOR and the intelligence networks amalgamated as Imperial Intelligence were both supposed to be channeled through the Moff's office at sector level. Most imposingly of all, they held authority over the immense military resources of a Sector Group: as regional governor, every Moff had ultimate authority over the deployment of all military forces within his sector, but the additional naval and military dignities of High Admiral and Surface Marshal of the sector were normally also held by the Moff himself, and only rarely delegated to subordinates.

According to sources produced by the Rebel Alliance, the Navy forces in a typical sector included twenty-four Star Destroyers, 1,600 other warships, and 800 support ships, while the field forces of a typical Sector Army numbered 774,576 front-line troops, and a little over 400,000 support personnel, to say nothing of the dozens or hundreds of planetary garrisons—usually small Stormtrooper brigades commanded by Major Generals. However, in many sectors, the actual deployments were much smaller: in Minos Cluster, the Sector Group comprised a single aging Victory-class Star Destroyer and a few small capital ships, while in the Tapani Sector, on the eve of its planned transformation into an Oversector, the primary Army presence consisted of a single Battlegroup based at the Tallaan shipyards. Nevertheless, in terms of both manpower and firepower, the strength of the Imperial Service was unprecedented across the galaxy: it was a rare Moff who found himself outnumbered or outgunned by any organized enemy force that he might face.



In reality, there were little more than vague ideals about what a Moff was expected to with so many resources: they were expected to maintain order, prevent corruption, enforce the law, and not otherwise interfere with the operation of the local bureaucracy or sector government. The most important enhancement of their powers came likely came through the removal of the Senate and the associated administrative bureaucracy, eliminated many of the procedural channels and public political platforms that had once been the means of challenging or circumventing their authority.

The vagueness of their defined powers lead to infringements of civil liberty and tyranny; Moffs may have, in the name of restoring order, had their soldiers fire on peaceful demonstration, or bombard a planet into submission for purely political defiance.

By 130 ABY, the role of the Moffs evolved. The title was held by the governors of Imperial sectors, such as Nieve Gromia of the Arkanis sector, as well as the heads of Imperial institutions such as the Navy, Army Intelligence, Diplomatic Corps and Mission.

Insignia


The first Moffs, appointed in 19 BBY, wore Imperial military uniforms with four code cylinders, and rank badges carrying five blue tabs above a varying combination of red and two gold: Wilhuff Tarkin had three red and two gold pips, while Marcellin Wessel wore one red and four gold. Later Moffs usually retained four code cylinders, but various Moffs are seen with a variety of different patterns of pips on their badges. Although the uniform and insignia of Moffs varied, Grand Moffs typically wore six red squares above three blue and three gold, while others wore six red squares over six blue, similar to an Admiral.

Moffs could also wear civilian robes, as they did for meetings of the Moff Council. Ephin Saretti, Moff of Braxant Sector after the Peace of Bastion, wore a uniform without military insignia to stress the fact that his office as regional governor was fundamentally a civilian one.

By 130 ABY, Moffs typically wore the modified version of the Imperial uniform then in use, with a rank plaque placed centrally beneath the Imperial insignia at the throat of the tunic, and additional rows of tabs on either side of the collar. Konrad Rus, head of the Imperial Mission, wore a distinctive white uniform with gold wings.

Behind the scenes

 * The concept of the Imperial Moff is often said to be based on the historic Gauleiter of Nazi Germany, although it is possible to infer inspiration from a number of different historical and fictional models. It's perhaps worth to mention that "Mof" is an offensive Dutch word for a German (equivalent of "Kraut"). During World War II it was a popular name in Holland and Belgium for the Nazi authority.


 * In some of the earliest drafts of what would become Episode IV, the minor character of the "Grande Mouff Tarkin" was a religious leader on the desert world of Aquilae rather than a military officer or governor, and at this stage he was also part of the resistance organization that would become the heroic Rebellion in the finished film. This original reference, part of a background owing much to the Arab world depicted in Lawrence of Arabia, hints that the title of Grand Moff may have originally been inspired by the real-world clerical position of Grand Mufti, although by the time of the finished film, it had evidently become dissociated in George Lucas's imagination from the context in which he originally coined it.


 * The title of Grand Mufti (Arabic: مفتي عام) refers to the highest official of religious law in a Sunni Muslim country.


 * Some fans have suggested instead that Moff is an acronym for "Military OFFicer," or that it is an import from an alien language like the word Jedi, but these suggestions appear to be fanon.


 * Moff Jerjerrod's insignia is widely believed to have been the result of a costume-department mistake during the filming of Return of the Jedi, but there appears to be no reliable source for this story, and it may have originated as nothing more than a fan theory to explain a perceived problem.
 * In early drafts of RotJ, Vader saluted Jerjerrod, who was a Grand Moff. Although the event was dropped, it is not known whether the hierarchy order is canon, and a Grand Moff was still superior to the Emperor's Shadow Hand, Darth Vader.

Appearances
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 * Star Wars: The Old Republic
 * The Rise and Fall of Darth Vader
 * Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith
 * Republic HoloNet News Special Inaugural Edition 16:5:24
 * Dark Lord: The Rise of Darth Vader
 * The Last of the Jedi: A Tangled Web
 * The Last of the Jedi: Secret Weapon
 * The Last of the Jedi: Against the Empire {{Mo}}
 * In His Image {{Mo}}
 * Star Wars: Empire: Betrayal
 * Star Wars: Empire at War
 * Star Wars: Empire: Darklighter
 * Interlude at Darkknell {{Mo}}
 * Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope novelization {{1st}}
 * Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope
 * Star Wars 2: Six Against the Galaxy
 * Star Wars: Rebellion
 * Star Wars: Rogue Squadron
 * Walking the Path That's Given {{Mo}}
 * Star Wars: Dark Forces
 * Star Wars Galaxies: An Empire Divided
 * Splinter of the Mind's Eye
 * Star Wars 86: The Alderaan Factor
 * Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back
 * Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi
 * Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi junior novelization
 * Three Against the Galaxy
 * The Glove of Darth Vader
 * The Lost City of the Jedi
 * Zorba the Hutt's Revenge
 * Mission from Mount Yoda
 * Queen of the Empire
 * Prophets of the Dark Side
 * X-wing Rogue Squadron: The Warrior Princess
 * X-wing Rogue Squadron: Masquerade
 * X-wing Rogue Squadron: Mandatory Retirement
 * Fists of Ion
 * X-wing: Wedge's Gamble
 * X-wing: The Krytos Trap
 * X-wing: The Bacta War
 * X-wing: Iron Fist
 * Star Wars: Galactic Battlegrounds
 * I, Jedi
 * Tyrant's Test
 * Specter of the Past
 * Vision of the Future
 * Star Wars: Union
 * Star Wars: Chewbacca
 * Dark Tide II: Ruin
 * Agents of Chaos I: Hero's Trial
 * Force Heretic I: Remnant
 * Revelation
 * Invincible
 * Omen
 * Abyss
 * Backlash
 * Star Wars: Legacy 1: Broken, Part 1
 * Star Wars: Legacy 4: Noob
 * Star Wars: Legacy 5: Broken, Part 4
 * Star Wars: Legacy 37: Tatooine, Part 1
 * Star Wars: Legacy 38: Tatooine, Part 2
 * Star Wars: Legacy 40: Tatooine, Part 4
 * Star Wars: Legacy 43: Monster, Part 1
 * Star Wars: Legacy 48: Extremes, Part 1
 * Star Wars: Legacy—War 1

Non-canonical appearances
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 * LEGO Star Wars: The Complete Saga
 * LEGO Star Wars II: The Original Trilogy

Notes and references
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