Goa'uldy (also pronounced guauldy , English Goa'uld ) is a fictional parasitic alien species, known from the science fiction television series Stargate: SG-1 . Created by screenwriters Dean Devlin and Roland Emmerich for the 1994 film Stargate . The name of the alien race "goa'uld" appeared in the pilot episode " Children of the Gods " (1997). In the next series, the race is presented as leading a parasitic lifestyle and dominating the Milky Way galaxy .
| Goa'uldy | |
|---|---|
| Universe | Star Gates |
| Creator | Roland Emmerich Dean Devlin |
| First appearance | Stargate |
| Race type | Goa'uldy |
| Home planet | P3X-888 |
| Government | An unstable union of feudal System Masters |
The self-name "goa'uld" is translated from the Goa'uld language as "god" [1] . The appearance of the Goa'ulds resembles a snake , but these creatures are intellectually highly organized and are able to penetrate the bodies of other intelligent creatures or large animals, gaining control of the captured organism. Humans are considered the species best suited as the host (carrier) of the Goa'uld, and the term “ symbiote ” is often used to refer to the parasite. The Goa'ulds control huge armies, consisting of "jaffa" - the descendants of the resettled people, turned into slaves and carrying the parasite larvae. The symbols of their “gods” are worn on the forehead of Jaffa, and those who are recruited into the Goa'uld’s troops wear masks resembling the earthly image of the corresponding deity. The Goa'ulds once ruled the Tau'Ri (Earth) and therefore usually bore the names of the characters of the earthly polytheistic pantheons, primarily ancient Egyptian .
Content
Language
The Goa'uld language is an ancient Egyptian version developed for the original film by Egyptologist Stuart Tyson Smith. The creators of the series significantly developed it by developing syntax and grammar. Sentences are constructed in the following order: subject - verb - predicate . In the language of the Goa'ulds there are no third-person pronouns, no division by tenses [2] . The Goa'uld language came from the language of the Unas, which was studied in detail by Daniel Jackson in the episode 4 × 08 “First”. The language of unas is rather primitive, it is characterized by monosillabism , verbs do not have time, all the second person plural pronouns [2] .
Famous Goa'ulds
- Amaterasu - Woman Goa'uld, one of the System Lords. I asked SG-1 for help in confronting the Ba'al forces.
- Amonet - Woman Goa'uld, wife of Apophis, who seized the body of Daniel Jackson's wife, Share, as a carrier.
- Anubis is the Goa'uld Man, an ancient and unimaginably cruel goa'uld. He killed his overlord, driving him crazy and eating him in front of other Goa'ulds.
- Apophis - Goa'uld Man, one of the main antagonists of the SG-1 squad. The second most powerful goa'uld after Ra.
- Ba'al is the Goa'uld Man, one of the System Lords. He enjoyed the patronage of Anubis. Practiced self-cloning.
- Bastet - Woman Goa'uld, one of the System Lords.
- Morrigan - Woman Goa'uld, one of the System Lords. The symbol of Morrigan is the raven. Supported Anubis.
- Zipacna
- Isis
- Ishkur
- Kali
- Marduk is the Goa'uld Man, one of the System Lords. Possessed one of six Eyes of Tiamat.
- Moloch is the Goa'uld Man, one of the System Lords. He did not accept women in the ranks of the Jeff warriors.
- Olokun is the Goa'uld Man, one of the System Lords. Supported by Anubis.
- Osiris
- Ra
- Sebek
- Set
- Sokar is the Goa'uld Man, one of the System Lords. It had the largest space fleet among the goow'lds.
- That
- Hator
- Heru-ur
- Chronos
- Yu
Notes
- ↑ SD Rogers. Goa'uld // The Dictionary of Made-Up Languages . - Adams Media, 2011 .-- 34 p. Archived November 10, 2017 on Wayback Machine
- ↑ 1 2 T. Conley, S. Cain. Stargate // Encyclopedia of fictional and fantastic languages . - Greenwood Publishing Group, 2006. - P. 177—178. - 236 p.
Literature
- P. Kneis. The Goa'uld inside // The Emancipation of the Soul: Memes of Destiny in American Mythological Television . - Peter Lang, 2010 .-- P. 88-89. - 153 p.
- J. Perlich, D. Whitt. Sith, slayers, stargates & cyborgs: modern mythology in the new millennium . - Peter Lang, 2008 .-- 218 p.
- SD Rogers. Goa'uld // The Dictionary of Made-Up Languages . - Adams Media, 2011 .-- 34 p. Archived November 10, 2017 on Wayback Machine