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This article is about the research project. You may be looking for Wookieepedia's Project Stardust page.

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"This station is now the ultimate power in the universe!"
Conan Antonio Motti[11]

Project Stardust,[12] also known internally as the Death Star project[13] or the Ultimate Weapon project[14] while being publicly known as the Energy Initiative[15] was the Project that saw the construction of the first Death Star. In 21 BBY, the Galactic Republic began secret construction on the Death Star on Geonosis, by order of Supreme Chancellor Sheev Palpatine. After the Clone Wars ended and the Republic was reorganized into the first Galactic Empire, they moved the almost completed Death Star into Scarif to finish the final adjustments and begin operations.

Description[]

Project Stardust was the codename for the Galactic Empire's effort to create the superweapon known as the Death Star.[2] Although the project would not yield a completed weapon until the year 1 BBY,[16][11] the original efforts began during the Clone Wars when the then Galactic Republic acquired designs for the battle station from the Confederacy of Independent Systems.[1]

Ultimately, Project Stardust saw the creation of a superweapon capable of destroying entire planets. Although the first Death Star would be destroyed by the Alliance to Restore the Republic during the Battle of Yavin,[11] the Empire developed a second Death Star that would also be destroyed at the Battle of Endor.[17]

The name "Project Stardust" was a result of a key scientist, Doctor Galen Walton Erso, who called his daughter Jyn "stardust."[5] Erso—who had been led to believe he was working as part of an energy program known as Project Celestial Power[2]—would desert Project Stardust and the Empire completely so as to not see the superweapon completed, but was eventually hunted down and forced to return to Project Stardust.[5]

Publicly, Project Stardust was known as the Imperial Energy Initiative,[15] with the guise of creating an unlimited energy supply being used to test and weaponize kyber crystals.[2]

History[]

Under the Republic[]

UltimateWeaponPlans-AOTC

Count Dooku holds the plans for the ultimate weapon given to him by Poggle the Lesser.

During the First Battle of Geonosis, Sith Lord Darth Tyranus was given the Death Star plans by the Geonosian leader Poggle the Lesser, designed by his weaponsmiths. He took the plans with him to Coruscant to give them to his Master Darth Sidious who was publicly known as the Supreme Chancellor Sheev Palpatine of the Galactic Republic.[1]

During the Clone Wars, Chancellor Palpatine set up the Death Star project secretly under the Republic, and only a handful of individuals knew about it. Members of both the Republic Special Weapons Group and the Strategic Advisory Cell were responsible for the project's advancement. Commander Orson Callan Krennic, a member of both organizations, was particularly determined to develop the superweapon to bring peace to the galaxy.[2]

Jedi General Aayla Secura came close to discovering the plans when she infilitrated the Secret Research Facility on an unmapped moon but was stopped by Dark Acolyte Asajj Ventress who engaged Secura in a lightsaber duel and took back the plans.[9]

Later during the Clone Wars, Sidious acquired a massive kyber crystal from the planet Utapau that he wanted to use for Project Stardust. The kyber crystal was, however, destroyed by Jedi Generals Obi-Wan Kenobi and Anakin Skywalker, which necessitated the world's occupation so the hunt for similar crystals could continue.[18]

During the Imperial Era[]

After the end of the Clone Wars, the fall of the Republic, the destruction of the Jedi Order, and the rise of the first Galactic Empire, now-Galactic Emperor Palpatine continued Project Stardust. Construction began on Geonosis, although after three months of work, the Geonosians betrayed the Empire and began destroying what they built.[2] However, the Empire relentlessly continued to funnel resources into ensuring Project Stardust's completion.[10] In 18 BBY,[19] the research conducted for Project Necromancer by the Imperial cloning program was lost and its facility, Tantiss Base, was severely damaged while Chief Scientist Doctor Royce Hemlock and several stormtroopers of the Advanced Science Division died during an attack led by Clone Force 99. Believing Hemlock's failings had costed them enough, Krennic's rival Governor Wilhuff Tarkin ordered Captain Bragg to shutter Tantiss Base indefinitely and redistribute all funding and remaining assets to Project Stardust.[20]

The key scientist to Project Stardust was a pacificist named Galen Walton Erso, who was led to believe his work was part of a program named Project Celestial Power. In learning the truth, Erso and his family would flee Coruscant[2] in 17 BBY.[16] With the work stalled in Erso's absence, Krennic finally tracked Erso down[5] in 13 BBY[16] and forced him back to working on the Death Star, killing his wife Lyra Erso during the struggle. Meanwhile, his daughter Jyn Erso escaped.[5]

The Empire used prison labor to produce construction elements of the project. At a prison complex on Narkina 5, prisoners worked twelve-hour shifts building components[21] used in the superlaser.[22] By 5 BBY,[23] a large portion of station was constructed.[22] In 5 BBY, Krennic led a secret conference at the Maltheen Divide where Imperial experts planned a takeover of the planet Ghorman, needing its vast natural resources, specifically the mineral kalkite, in order to proceed with construction. The Empire's campaign of suppression on the planet culminated with the Ghorman Massacre in 2 BBY, where Imperial forces elaborately set up conditions to allow its forces to open fire on a crowd of demonstrators opposing the Imperial tyranny. The Empire then quickly began using its mining equipment to strip the planet.[24]

During the final stages of the Lothal campaign, Krennic, now Director of the Imperial Weapons Division, persuaded the Imperial Security Bureau to divert the funding of Grand Admiral Thrawn's TIE/d "Defender" Multi-Role Starfighter program to Project Stardust until it was complete following the destruction of the Imperial Armory Complex on Lothal in 1 BBY.[25]

The truth[]

The same year, ISB Attendant Lonni Jung, secretly an agent of an undercover rebel network, accessed classified files and learned that the Energy Initiative was a front for the production of a secret weapon. Jung also learned that the Imperial oppression on Ghorman, a comparable crackdown on Jedha, and the presence on Scarif were all connected to the project, as was the engineer Galen Erso. Knowing his actions would be discovered and that his time undercover was at an end, Jung met with the rebel leader Luthen Rael to pass along the information. Rael decided to kill Jung rather than attempt to escape with him and quickly relayed the information to his assistant Kleya Marki. Although Rael would be captured by the ISB,[7] leading to Marki ensuring Rael's death at the Lina Soh Hospital rather than allow him to be questioned,[26] Marki would be extracted by rebel agents at a safehouse and later deliver the information to Alliance headquarters on Yavin 4.[27]

Complete the Mission SWL

Jyn Erso stole the datacard containing Project Stardust from the Imperial vault on Scarif.

Shortly before the Battle of Yavin, the Rebel Alliance stole the Death Star plans, with the efforts of Rogue One. The plans were themselves codenamed Stardust, allowing Jyn Erso, who was recently recruited by the Rebel Alliance, to recognize and transmit them to the Alliance Fleet before she died. After the Battle of Scarif, the plans were sent to Princess Leia Organa aboard the Tantive IV.[5] As the plans went to Tatooine inside the astromech droid R2-D2, they made it to the moon Yavin 4, where the rebels discovered a weakness in the form of an exhaust port, leading her older twin brother Jedi Lieutenant Luke Skywalker to bring an end to Project Stardust when he destroyed the Death Star and killed Governor Tarkin and most of the Empire’s elite forces.[11]

Legacy[]

The First Order's Starkiller Base was inspired by and designed after the results of Project Stardust.[28][29]

Behind the scenes[]

Project Stardust first appeared, albeit unidentified, in the 2002 film Star Wars: Episode II Attack of the Clones.[1] The project was later identified in the one-shot issue Darth Vader Annual 2, written by Chuck Wendig and published by Marvel Comics in 2018.[12]

Appearances[]

This in-universe list is incomplete. You can help Wookieepedia by expanding it.

Sources[]

Notes and references[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 Star Wars: Episode II Attack of the Clones
  2. 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 2.11 2.12 2.13 Catalyst: A Rogue One Novel
  3. 3.0 3.1 Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Tarkin
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 Rogue One: A Star Wars Story
  6. Andor Season 2 Declassified: World Building | Contains Spoilers Eps 4-6 on the official Star Wars YouTube channel (backup link)
  7. 7.0 7.1 Andor — "Make It Stop"
  8. Andor — "Nobody's Listening!"
  9. 9.0 9.1 "Tales of Villainy: Give & Take" — Star Wars Adventures (2020) 12
  10. 10.0 10.1 Star Wars: Rogue One: The Ultimate Visual Guide
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope
  12. 12.0 12.1 Darth Vader Annual 2
  13. Director Orson Krennic in the Databank (backup link)
  14. Dawn of Rebellion
  15. 15.0 15.1 Andor — "One Year Later"
  16. 16.0 16.1 16.2 Star Wars: Timelines
  17. Star Wars: Episode V The Empire Strikes Back
  18. Star Wars Helmet Collection: Utapau Clone Trooper Highlights of the Saga: Escape from Utapau
  19. Per the reasoning here, Season 2 of Star Wars: The Bad Batch takes place around 18 BBY. The tally marks made by Omega in The Bad Batch Season 3's first episode, "Confined," indicate the episode must take place at least twenty-one standard days following her capture as depicted in the Season 2 episode "Plan 99." According to StarWars.com "Confined" Trivia Guide | Star Wars The Bad Batch on StarWars.com (backup link), Omega spends about 164 further days in captivity by the end of "Confined." As such, the events of Season 3 must begin around 18 BBY.
  20. Star Wars: The Bad Batch — "The Cavalry Has Arrived"
  21. Andor — "Narkina 5"
  22. 22.0 22.1 Andor — "Rix Road"
  23. "Rix Road" takes place immediately after "Daughter of Ferrix," "A Certain Point of View" in Star Wars Insider 220 places "Daughter of Ferrix" five years before Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope, which corresponds to 5 BBY per Star Wars: Timelines.
  24. Andor — "Who Are You?"
  25. Star Wars Rebels — "Jedi Night"
  26. Andor — "Who Else Knows?"
  27. Andor — "Jedha, Kyber, Erso"
  28. Star Wars: Episode VII The Force Awakens
  29. Star Wars: Complete Locations
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