Difference between revisions of "Name origins"
(added some) |
(Plato added) |
||
Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
====GTC ''Orff''==== | ====GTC ''Orff''==== | ||
Carl Orff was a German composer. | Carl Orff was a German composer. | ||
+ | ====GTSC ''Plato''==== | ||
+ | Plato was an Ancient Greek mathematician and philosopher. | ||
+ | |||
====PVC ''Ramses''==== | ====PVC ''Ramses''==== | ||
Ancient Egypt had 11 pharaohs named Ramses. | Ancient Egypt had 11 pharaohs named Ramses. | ||
{{stub}} | {{stub}} |
Revision as of 19:01, 28 June 2010
FreeSpace took names for ships, weapons and even characters from numerous different real-life sources. The origins to these names are listed here. The items are listed alphabetically, disregarding class designations.
Contents
Individual Ships
GTD Aquitaine
Unlike most destroyers whose names come from mythology or are references to ancient civilizations, the Aquitaine has an English name. The Latin word would have been "Aquitania". Aquitania was a region of Gallia(now called France)
GTD Carthage
Carthage was the city completely destroyed by the Romans after three wars. Unlike many other Terran destroyers, this ship has an English name. In Latin, it would have been "Carthago"
GTVA Colossus
The name "Colossus" was a common name, usually used for large statues. The warship, however, was probably named after one statue in particular, the Colossus of Rhodes. The statue represented the God Helios and is one of the Seven Wonders. The first mission in which the Colossus appears, in fact, is named The Sixth Wonder (sm1-08)
GTI Enif Station
Enif is the real name of Epsilon Pegasi
GTD Galatea
Galatea, in Greek mythology, is the name for a statue carved out of ivory.
GTC Orff
Carl Orff was a German composer.
GTSC Plato
Plato was an Ancient Greek mathematician and philosopher.
PVC Ramses
Ancient Egypt had 11 pharaohs named Ramses.