Crest of the Stars | |
Seikai no Monshō I "Teikoku no Ōjo" Japanese book cover |
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星界の紋章 (Seikai no Monshō) |
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Genre | Space opera, Military science fiction |
Novel | |
Written by | Hiroyuki Morioka |
Published by | Hayakawa Publishing |
English publisher | Tokyopop HarperCollins Canada Madman Entertainment |
Original run | April 1996 – ongoing |
Volumes | 3 |
TV anime | |
Directed by | Yasuchika Nagaoka |
Written by | Aya Yoshinaga |
Music by | Katsuhisa Hattori |
Studio | Sunrise |
Licensed by | Madman Entertainment Bandai Entertainment |
Network | WOWOW |
Original run | January 2, 1999 – March 27, 1999 |
Episodes | 13 |
Anime film | |
Directed by | Yasuchika Nagaoka |
Produced by | Korefumi Seki Masaki Kaifu Mikihiro Iwata Tsutomu Sugita |
Music by | Katsuhisa Hattori |
Studio | Bandai Visual Sunrise |
Released | April 7, 2000 |
Runtime | 90 minutes |
Related | |
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Crest of the Stars (星界の紋章 Seikai no Monshō ) is a three-volume[1] space opera science fiction novel written by Hiroyuki Morioka with cover illustrations by Toshihiro Ono. Beginning in 1999, the novels were adapted into anime series, the first of which ran for 13 episodes on WOWOW. The initial novel was followed by a second, ongoing novels series, Banner of the Stars (currently 4 volumes, aka Seikai no Senki), which was adapted into three sequel series to the anime—Banner of the Stars (13 episodes, aka Seikai no Senki), Banner of the Stars II (10 episodes, aka Seikai no Senki II) and both adapting the second novel, two recap movies—Crest of the Stars Special Edition and Banner of the Stars Special Edition, and an OVA Crest of the Stars Lost Chapter (aka Seikai no Danshō). The fourth anime series, adapting the third novel, Banner of the Stars III (aka Seikai no Senki III) is an OVA released in Japan in 2005.
Contents |
Crest of the Stars and Banner of the Stars (series I and II) follow Jinto Lynn, a young count whose world is taken over by the space-dwelling race of the Abh. When Jinto was a young boy, his father, Rock Lynn, under threat of invasion, handed over their world, Martine, to the Abh in exchange for a position within Abh society. Young Jinto is sent off to school to learn the ways of Abh nobility and the story of Crest of the Stars picks up as he meets the young Abh princess, Lafiel as they are about to travel to military school for Jinto's further training.
However, in the midst of their travels, Lafiel and Jinto (along with the Abh ship Gothlauth, aka Gosroth) find themselves at the very beginnings of a war between the Abh Empire and the Four Nations Alliance of humankind—an anti-Abh alliance of the democratic nations of the United Mankind, the Federation of Hania, the Republic of Greater Alcont, and the People's Sovereign Union of Planets.
The series—both the anime and novels—are particularly notable for the fact that Morioka created for them an entire language, Baronh (and an accompanying alphabet, Ath), which the Abh speak, read, and write. Almost all written text in the anime is in Baronh, with occasional text in other (invented) languages; at least one planet is shown to have adopted Ath to write their own language (although this is not a plot point, and easily missed).
Despite being commonly dubbed as a trilogy, the work is actually a three-volume novel[1]. The novel is composed of the following volumes, which were translated and released in English by Tokyopop in 2006 and 2007:
Tokyopop also released a manga adaptation of the novel by Aya Yoshinaga. The manga was illustrated by Toshihiro Ono and Aya Yoshinaga. Hiroyuki Morioka is also credited on the cover as the original creator.
Much like the anime series, it covers all three volumes. Dubbed the first part of the Seikai Trilogy, since two other companion manga were also released, adapting Banner of the Stars and Banner of the Stars II:
Crest of the Stars was released in Japan in 1999 and in the United States by Bandai in 2001. At the end of 2002, TechTV announced that Crest of the Stars was to be one of the initial titles as part of their new Anime Unleashed programming and began broadcast at the end of 2002 and through 2003.
# | Title | Original air date[2] |
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01 | "Invasion" "Shinryaku" (侵略) |
January 2, 1999 |
02 | "Kin of the Stars" "Hoshi Tachino Kenzoku" (星たちの眷族) |
January 9, 1999 |
03 | "Daughter of Love" "Ai no Musume" (愛の娘) |
January 16, 1999 |
04 | "Surprise Attack" "Kishū" (奇襲) |
January 23, 1999 |
05 | "The Battle of Gosroth" "Gousurosu no Tatakai" (ゴースロスの戦い) |
January 30, 1999 |
06 | "Mysterious Conspiracy" "Fukakai na Inbou" (不可解な陰謀) |
February 6, 1999 |
07 | "Fortunate Revolt" "Shiawase na Hangyaku" (幸せな反逆) |
February 13, 1999 |
08 | "The Style of the Abh" "Aavu no Ryūgi" (アーヴの流儀) |
February 20, 1999 |
09 | "To the Battlefield" "Senjou He" (戦場へ) |
February 27, 1999 |
10 | "Escape: Just the Two of Us" "Futari Dakeno Toubou" (二人だけの逃亡) |
March 6, 1999 |
11 | "Sufugnoff Gateway Battle" "Sufagunoufu Mon Oki Kaisen" (スファグノーフ門沖海戦) |
March 13, 1999 |
12 | "Lady of Chaos" "Waku Ran no Shukujo" (惑乱の淑女) |
March 20, 1999 |
13 | "Trouble Soaring Through Heaven" "Ten Kake Ru Meiwaku" (天翔ける迷惑) |
March 27, 1999 |
Roughly a year after the Anime finished airing, at the end of May 2000 Bandai Visual released a video game adaptation for the Playstation. It features a story inspired by both the Crest of the Stars and the Banner of the Stars novels, incorporating some of their characters. The game consists of 67 different space battles, with a story split in two paths and three possible endings each.