Mythological references
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- This article lists references to real-world religious references and other mythology in the Original Series and Re-imagined Series, found in dialogue and from ship, place and character names.
The Original Series
Judeo-Christian references
- In "Saga of a Star World", Adama asks God to "take this burden" from him. The burden, of course, is the need to guard the last of humanity after the Twelve Colonies are destroyed. This reference is likely derived from the New Testament where Jesus prays to God before he is arrested and later crucified.
Egyptian references
- Eden - The special effects footage that depicts this city in "Lost Planet of the Gods, Part II" is actually the pyramids of Giza in Egypt.
- Flight gear - In the Original Series, the helmet of the Viper pilot resembles the ceremonial headdress of the Egyptian pharaohs.
- Tomb of the Ninth Lord of Kobol - This place is heavily decorated in hieroglyphs and contains a sarcophagus with a prop of a Pharaoh's mummy.
Islamic references
- Iblis - This character's name is derived from "Diabolis" by the writers, but is coincidentally the name of a fallen servant of Allah.
The Re-imagined Series
Judeo-Christian references
- The Cylons of the Re-imagined Series are monotheistic, and worship a being they name simply as "God." The Cylons speak of commandments, inferring a parallelism between their deity and the central deity of the Abrahamic religions. They also denounce all other deities as being false.
- The title of the episode "Valley of Darkness" is from Psalms 23:4.
Greek references
- Atlantia - The name of a hamadryad, a form of nymph and namesake of a battlestar lost in Fall of the Twelve Colonies. Could also be a reference to the lengend of Atlantis, written by Plato.
- Charon - The ferryman who guides the dead safely down the River Styx. Name is a close reference to Sharon. In seasons 2 and 3, Sharon guided Galactica through the void of space.
- Chiron - A ship in the Fleet. In Greek mythology, Chiron is a centaur, or half-horse, half-human being.
- Delphi - A city on Caprica. On real-world Earth an ancient Greek city, which was home to a famous orcale dedicated to Apollo.
- Epheme - A ship in the Fleet. May be named for a minor character in Greek mythology who was nurse to the Muses.
- Pegasus - A legendary flying horse and namesake of Admiral Helena Cain's Mercury class battlestar.
- Persephone - A ship in the Fleet. Named after the queen of the underworld; daughter of Demeter.
- Prometheus - A freighter in Fleet that was a hub of the black market. Named after the titan who stole the fire from the gods to give it to the humans.
- Pythia - An oracle. Pythia was the name for head priestress at the Oracle of Delphi in Greece.
- Scylla - A ship in Admiral Cain's short-lived civilian fleet. In Homer's The Odyssey Scylla is one of two monsters on either side of a narrow strait of water.
- Triton - The namesake of a battlestar lost in the Fall of the Twelve Colonies. Son of Poseidon and messenger of the deep.
- Troy - A mining colony. In mythology, Troy was the site of legendary Trojan War.
- Zephyr - A ship in the Fleet. Named after the Greek god of the west wind Zephyrus. "Zephyr" is also a general name for the west wind.
Roman references
- D'Anna Biers - The assumed name of one of the Number Threes is very close to Diana, the Roman counterpart of Artemis.
- Mars Day - A weekday or holiday named after the Roman god of war.
- Mercury - The lead ship of the Mercury class, named after the Roman god of trade, profit and commerce.
- Plutonium - The namesake of this element, Pluto, is the Roman god of the underworld.
- The Eye of Jupiter - An ancient artifact named after the chief god of Roman mythology; counterpart of Zeus.
- Titania - One of the suggested callsigns for Caprica-Eight in Torn. The term was used to refer to the daughters of the Titans in Ovid's Metamorphoses. Titania is also the name of the queen of the fairies in William Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream and later works by various authors.
Norse references
- Embla Brokk - A ship in the Fleet. The name may be derived from two separate figures of mythology: Embla, the first woman, and Brokk, a dwarf who helped create Draupnir (a magical ring) and Mjollnir (Thor's hammer).
- Ragnar - Ragnar is named in reference to Ragnarok, the apocalyptic battle between the Norse gods at the end of the world.
- Valkyrie - Valkyries are minor Norse deities and shieldmaidens who gathered up warriors to fight at Ragnarok.
Other references
- Enkidu - A ship in the Fleet. Named after the Enkidu of the Sumerian mythological Epic of Gilgamesh.
- Isis - The name Maya gave to Hera Agathon when she was adopted. Named after an Egyptian goddess who was later adopted by the Greeks and Romans.
- Maya - The adoptive mother of Hera Agathon. May be named after the Hindu concept of Maya or the mother of the historical Buddha, Queen Maya.
- The Adama name is probably derived from Adam.
- Kobol - The name of this planet is based on "Kolob", the name of the "star nearest to God" as told in Mormon scripture.
- The Twelve Colonies - The pilot episode of the Original Series, "Saga of a Star World", as well as the Re-imagined Miniseries both show pyramidal buildings on Caprica.
- The Twelve Tribes - Jacob's (aka "Israel") twelve sons fathered the Twelve Tribes of Israel, who wandered the desert for 40 years.
See also
- Religion in the Twelve Colonies (TOS) - Information on how many Egyptian and LDS church references are used in the Original Series.
- Religion in the Twelve Colonies (RDM) - Information on how the Olympic pantheon is used in the Re-imagined Series.
- Language in the Twelve Colonies#Names - Information on mostly non-religious and non-mythological ancient influences on character names in the Re-imagined Series.