Mazianni
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Mazianni is a term used in C. J. Cherryh's science fiction Alliance-Union universe. It refers to the military starships and their crews who remain loyal to their commander, the charismatic, ambitious Conrad Mazian, when he renounces his allegiance to Earth.
[edit] History
The ships began their existence as the Earth Company Fleet, 50 strong, built and sent out to enforce Earth's control of its star stations. In the long Company War between Earth and the breakaway Union, that number had been whittled down to 15 patchwork ships with waning loyalty to an increasingly indifferent Earth by the beginning of the novel Downbelow Station.
Losing a war of attrition, Mazian devises a subtle, dangerous plan to establish a firebreak between Union and Earth. Implementing his strategy costs five of his ships. When he launches the Fleet for the last critical attack, he is forced to abort when he receives a message from a high Earth Company official, announcing peace negotiations and ordering him to stand down. The Fleet retreats to Pell, less one more ship.
At this point, Mazian makes the fateful decision to rebel and attempt to take over Earth itself. Downbelow Station ends with his (implied) failure, and the defection of one of his most senior captains, Signy Mallory, and her ship Norway to the newborn Merchanter's Alliance, based at Pell. The remaining ships, outlawed by all three major powers, return to guerrilla warfare: hit-and-run raids and preying on merchant ships for replacement personnel and equipment.
At least three subsequent merchanter novels mention the Mazianni. In Rimrunners, Keu's India is trapped while trying to refuel at the Thule star system and is either captured or (more likely) destroyed by Norway. At the end of Merchanter's Luck, Tom Edger's Australia is forced to evacuate a little-used station by Norway, supported by the armed superfreighters Finity's End and Dublin Again. Tripoint however discloses a more promising fate for the renegade Fleet: a distant, habitable planet has been discovered and a new colony is being secretly built there.
[edit] Ships
The ships of the Mazianni, like their counterparts in the Union military, can be likened to a combination of current-day battleships and aircraft carriers. They are well armed and can fight on their own, but also carry "rider ships" to augment their firepower. The latter are short-range, intrasystem vessels, incapable of interstellar flight on their own. In Downbelow Station, Norway has four of them. Also notable is their immense acceleration advantage over merchanters and other non-military ships.
[edit] Crews
It is likely (though not explicitly stated) that some of the crew date back to the original launch of the Fleet, made possible by time dilation and "rejuv" (rejuvenation), a medical treatment that extends life. (In Rimrunners, a Loki crewman claims to have served on a ship that actually predates the Earth Company Fleet.) Others are recruited, voluntarily or not, from "merchanters" (interstellar traders) and "insystemers" (spaceships incapable of interstellar flight). Signy Mallory is an example of the former, Bet Yeager (from Rimrunners) the latter. Lastly, there are survivors of lost Fleet ships. For example, Norway has crew from Brazil, Italia, Wasp and the jinxed Miriam B.
The crew includes space marines equipped with armed and armored suits, similar to those in Heinlein's Starship Troopers. Rimrunners describes them and their capabilities in some detail.
Science Fiction Novels: Gate of Ivrel (1976) • Brothers of Earth (1976) • Hunter of Worlds (1977) • The Faded Sun: Kesrith (1978) • The Faded Sun: Shon'jir (1978) • Well of Shiuan (1978) • The Faded Sun: Kutath (1979) • Fires of Azeroth (1979) • Hestia (1979) • Serpent's Reach (1980) • Wave Without a Shore (1981) • Downbelow Station (1981) • The Pride of Chanur (1981) • Merchanter's Luck (1982) • Port Eternity (1982) • Forty Thousand in Gehenna (1983) • Chanur's Venture (1984) • Voyager in Night (1984) • Angel With the Sword (1985) • Cuckoo's Egg (1985) • The Kif Strike Back (1985) • Chanur's Homecoming (1986) • Cyteen (1988) • Exile's Gate (1988) • Rimrunners (1989) • Heavy Time (1991) • Chanur's Legacy (1992) • Hellburner (1992) • Foreigner (1994) • Tripoint (1994) • Invader (1995) • Rider at the Gate (1995) • Cloud's Rider (1996) • Inheritor (1996) • Finity's End (1997) • Precursor (1999) • Defender (2001) • Hammerfall (2001) • Explorer (2003) • Forge of Heaven (2004) • Destroyer (2005) • Pretender (2006) • Deliverer (2007)
Fantasy Novels: The Dreamstone (1983) • The Tree of Swords and Jewels (1983) • The Gates of Hell (1986) • Kings in Hell (1987) • Legions of Hell (1987) • The Paladin (1988) • Rusalka (1989) • Chernevog (1990) • Yvgenie (1991) • The Goblin Mirror (1992) • Faery in Shadow (1993) • Fortress in the Eye of Time (1995) • Lois & Clark: A Superman Novel (1996) • Fortress of Eagles (1998) • Fortress of Owls (1999) • Fortress of Dragons (2000) • Fortress of Ice (2006)
Short Story Collections: Sunfall (1981) • Visible Light (1986) • Glass and Amber (1987) • The Collected Short Fiction of C. J. Cherryh (2004)