Kaitain (Dune)
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Kaitain is the second capital planet of the Padishah Emperors of the Known Universe and the seat of the Imperial House Corrino in the Dune universe created by Frank Herbert.
Originally, Salusa Secundus was the capital world of the Empire, but an attack from a renegade Great House of the Landsraad rendered the planet essentially uninhabitable. The Imperial House Corrino exterminated the guilty House, erased their name from all historical records and relocated the Imperial throne to the planet Kaitain. The name of the attacking House remained unknown by the time of Dune.
In Dune: House Atreides it is noted that Kaitain has four moons.
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[edit] The Luxury of Kaitain
According to Dune: House Atreides, Padishah Emperor Hassik Corrino III reestablished the Imperium's seat of government on Kaitain and sought to rebuild the capital to new heights of grandeur:
Following the nuclear holocaust on Salusa Secundus ... everyone had been anxious to establish an optimistic new order. Hassik III had wanted to show that even after the near obliteration of House Corrino, the Imperium and its business would continue at a more exalted level than ever before.
On Planetologist Pardot Kynes' visit for an audience with Emperor Elrood IX, he noted:
On the Imperial planet Kaitain, immense buildings kissed the sky. Magnificent sculptures and opulent tiered fountains lined the crystal-paved boulevards like a dream. A person could stare for hours ... Kaitain was exquisitely planned and produced, with tree-lined boulevards, splendid architecture, well-watered gardens, flower barricades . . . and so much more ... Official Imperial reports claimed it was always warm, the climate forever temperate. Storms were unknown. No clouds marred the skies ... when the ornate Guild escort craft descended, [Kynes] had noted the flotilla of weather satellites, climate-bending technology that — through brute force — kept Kaitain a peaceful and serene place.
[edit] Corrinth
The lavish capital city of Kaitain is named Corrinth.
In Dune: House Harkonnen, Abulurd Harkonnen noted how the extravagant beauty of the city differed from his homeworlds of Giedi Prime and Lankiveil:
The towering government buildings of Corrinth ... rose around Abulurd Harkonnen like a drug-induced fantasy. In his wildest dreams he had never visualized so many soaring edifices, jeweled inlays, and polished slabs of precious stone ... Colorful chime kites were tethered to the tall buildings, writhing on breezes in the perpetually blue skies. Prismatic ribbons drifted across the sky and shed rainbows on the flagstones below. Kaitain was obviously more concerned with form than substance.
According to Dune: House Corrino:
Hassik III ... had taxed his subjects nearly into bankruptcy in order to rebuild a governmental infrastructure. Members of the Landsraad, vowing not to be outdone by House Corrino, had built their own monuments in the growing city. Within a generation, unremarkable Kaitain had become an awesome spectacle of Imperial architecture, museums, and bureaucratic self-indulgence.
Corrinth is the location of many important structures:
[edit] Imperial Necropolis
According to Dune: House Corrino, the underground catacombs of the Imperial Necropolis "covered as much area as the magnificent Palace itself. Generations of fallen Corrinos inhabited the city of the dead, those who had succumbed to treachery or accidents; a few had even died of natural causes." It was noted:
After moving the Imperial capital from ruined Salusa Secundus, Emperor Hassik III had been the first to be entombed beneath the megalithic building. Over the ensuing millennia, numerous Corrino emperors, concubines, and bastard children were also buried here. Some had been cremated and their ashes displayed in urns, while the bones of others were ground up to make porcelain funereal pieces. A few rulers were encased in transparent sarcophagi, sealed within nullentropy fields so that their bodies would never decay, even if their meager accomplishments were obscured by the fog of passing time ... As the need for burials continued century after century, the necropolis had been dug deeper, with more crypts hollowed out. In the lowest and most recent subterranean levels, Shaddam actually recognized some of the names of his ancestors.
Also in the necropolis was the walled-up vault of Emperor Shaddam IV's grandfather, Fondil III, known as "the Hunter."
The pitted iron door was flanked by the stuffed carcasses of two ferocious predators the man had killed: a spiny ecadroghe from the high plateaus of Ecaz and a tufted saber-bear from III Delta Kaising. Fondil, however, had taken his epithet from hunting men, ferreting out enemies and destroying them. His big-game adventures had been a mere diversion.
In Dune: House Corrino it was revealed that the remains of Shaddam's father Elrood IX were interred in the Imperial Necropolis:
[Shaddam] finally led Fenring to where the sealed ashes of Elrood IX waited in a relatively small alcove, adorned with shimmering diamondplaz, ornate scrollwork, and fine gems — a sufficient display of Shaddam’s grief at the loss of his "beloved father" ... Disrespectfully, Shaddam leaned against the resting place of his father’s ashes. The old man had been cremated to foil any Suk physician's attempts to determine the true cause of death.
Additionally, Shaddam's elder brother Crown Prince Fafnir was laid to rest among "coffins and chambers for children and siblings," his tomb marked by an "idealized statue" of him.
The mummy of the "long-forgotten" ruler called Mandias the Terrible, known as "the Emperor who made worlds tremble," was hidden in the Imperial Necropolis "in a chamber fronted by a fearsome, life-size statue" of Mandias. Shaddam IV noted when looking at Mandias' body: "I am not impressed ... Nobody even remembers him."
Shaddam IV and Count Hasimir Fenring played together in the necropolis as children.
The necropolis was also the home of spiders, rodents and modified scarabs that "managed to survive by eating scraps of long-preserved flesh."
[edit] Imperial Observatory
In Dune: House Atreides, Shaddam IV noted that the Imperial Observatory had been built by Hassik III. Its highest chamber had a "cold, burnished-metal floor" and "a high-powered starscope."
[edit] Imperial Palace
The Imperial Palace of Kaitain was the home of the Padishah Emperor and the center if the Imperial government. It was the literal and figurative location of the Golden Lion Throne, which was both a term used to describe the Corrino Imperium and a physical object.
First described in Dune, the massive Imperial throne was "carved from a single piece of Hagal quartz — blue-green translucency shot through with streaks of yellow fire."
[edit] Imperial Prison
During the events of Dune: House Corrino, Tyros Reffa, the illegitimate son of Padishah Emperor Elrood IX and Lady Shando Balut Vernius, was held in the Imperial Prison after his assassination attempt on his half-brother, Emperor Shaddam IV.
At this time, the Warden of the Imperial Prison on Kaitain was a woman named Nanee McGarr, who had held the position for over 20 years. Ambassador Cammar Pilru of Ix knew of her secret past as a smuggler and escapee from an Ixian prison tunnel, and used this information to arrange for a secret meeting with Tyros Reffa in his cell.
Pilru noted that the prison was surrounded by a labyrinth of canals and waterways lined with thorn hedges. The penal facility was a large structure of gray stone; he entered in a flat-bottom boat though Traitor’s Gate, double doors of iron lattice flanked by the heads of executed prisoners on poles:
Their skulls, still draped in bloody flesh and then coated with a preservation polymer, had been hollowed out and fitted with glowglobes, so that an unsettling ghoulish light shone through the eye sockets, mouths, and nostrils.
According to the boatman, "A lot of famous prisoners enter this way, but not many come back out."
[edit] Ishaq Hall of Magnificent Documents
Designed and built by Padishah Emperor Ishaq XV, the Ishaq Hall of Magnificent Documents was a repository for, among other things, the handwritten personal diaries of past Corrino Emperors. In its time the museum was, according to Dune: House Corrino, "one of the most spectacular constructions in the burgeoning Imperial city." However, by the time of Shaddam IV it had been "swallowed by ever more impressive architecture" and "lost among the extravagant monuments on Kaitain."
[edit] Landsraad Hall of Oratory
The lavish meeting place of the council of noble Houses, the Landsraad, was described in Dune: House Atreides:
...the massive Landsraad Hall of Oratory stood high and imposing, the tallest peak in a mountain range of legislative edifices and government offices surrounding an ellipsoidal commons. The Hall had been erected by contributions from all the Houses, each noble family trying to outdo the others in grandeur. Representatives from CHOAM had helped to procure resources from across the Imperium, and only by special order of a former Emperor — Hassik Corrino III — had the exorbitant Landsraad construction plans been curtailed, so as not to overshadow the Imperial Palace itself.