Difference between revisions of "U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-E"
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With the destruction of the ''[[U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-D]]'' in 2371, the next ship off the ''[[Sovereign class]]'' production line was the U.S.S. ''Enterprise'' NCC-1701-E, to continue that venerable line of vessels.<ref name="LUG25100"/> The ''Enterprise,'' launched in 2372,<ref name="ST08"/> would be only the second ship in this line,<ref name="LUG25100"/><ref name="Decipher4"/> taking its place as the most advanced ship in [[Starfleet]].<ref name="ST08"/> | With the destruction of the ''[[U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-D]]'' in 2371, the next ship off the ''[[Sovereign class]]'' production line was the U.S.S. ''Enterprise'' NCC-1701-E, to continue that venerable line of vessels.<ref name="LUG25100"/> The ''Enterprise,'' launched in 2372,<ref name="ST08"/> would be only the second ship in this line,<ref name="LUG25100"/><ref name="Decipher4"/> taking its place as the most advanced ship in [[Starfleet]].<ref name="ST08"/> | ||
− | Constructed at the [[San Francisco Fleet Yards]] and commissioned on Stardate 49827.5, the ''Enterprise,'' under the command of [[Captain]] [[Picard, Jean-Luc|Jean-Luc Picard]], had substantially the same bridge crew as its immediate predecessor,<ref name="ST08"/> although [[Lieutenant Commander]] [[Worf]] had accepted a transfer to [[Deep Space 9]] prior to the ship's launch.<ref name="DS9473"/> | + | Constructed at the [[San Francisco Fleet Yards]] and commissioned on Stardate 49827.5,<ref group="Notes" name="Commissioning"/> the ''Enterprise,'' under the command of [[Captain]] [[Picard, Jean-Luc|Jean-Luc Picard]], had substantially the same bridge crew as its immediate predecessor,<ref name="ST08"/> although [[Lieutenant Commander]] [[Worf]] had accepted a transfer to [[Deep Space 9]] prior to the ship's launch.<ref name="DS9473"/> |
− | == | + | ==Notes== |
− | According to "[[The Price of Freedom: The United Federation of Planets Sourcebook (LUG-25100)|The Price of Freedom: The United Federation of Planets Sourcebook]]," the ''Enterprise'' was commissioned on Stardate 49027.9; this was contrary to the date given on the ship's commissioning plaque, visible on the bridge set in ''[[Star Trek: First Contact (Film)|Star Trek: First Contact]],'' however, which listed the commissioning date as Stardate 49827.5. The erroneous stardate from "The Price of Freedom," therefore, has been disregarded. | + | <references group="Notes"> |
+ | <ref name="Commissioning">According to "[[The Price of Freedom: The United Federation of Planets Sourcebook (LUG-25100)|The Price of Freedom: The United Federation of Planets Sourcebook]]," the ''Enterprise'' was commissioned on Stardate 49027.9; this was contrary to the date given on the ship's commissioning plaque, visible on the bridge set in ''[[Star Trek: First Contact (Film)|Star Trek: First Contact]],'' however, which listed the commissioning date as Stardate 49827.5. The erroneous stardate from "The Price of Freedom," therefore, has been disregarded.</ref> | ||
+ | </references> | ||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 01:38, 25 September 2014
With the destruction of the U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-D in 2371, the next ship off the Sovereign class production line was the U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-E, to continue that venerable line of vessels.[2] The Enterprise, launched in 2372,[3] would be only the second ship in this line,[2][4] taking its place as the most advanced ship in Starfleet.[3]
Constructed at the San Francisco Fleet Yards and commissioned on Stardate 49827.5,[Notes 1] the Enterprise, under the command of Captain Jean-Luc Picard, had substantially the same bridge crew as its immediate predecessor,[3] although Lieutenant Commander Worf had accepted a transfer to Deep Space 9 prior to the ship's launch.[5]
Notes
- ↑ According to "The Price of Freedom: The United Federation of Planets Sourcebook," the Enterprise was commissioned on Stardate 49027.9; this was contrary to the date given on the ship's commissioning plaque, visible on the bridge set in Star Trek: First Contact, however, which listed the commissioning date as Stardate 49827.5. The erroneous stardate from "The Price of Freedom," therefore, has been disregarded.
References
- ↑ Star Trek: Insurrection. Film. 11 December 1998.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 "The Price of Freedom: The United Federation of Planets Sourcebook." Star Trek: The Next Generation Roleplaying Game, Supplement 25100. Game. February 1999. Last Unicorn Games, Inc.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 Star Trek: First Contact. Film. 22 November 1996.
- ↑ "Starships." Star Trek Roleplaying Game, Book 3. Game. 2003. Decipher, Inc.
- ↑ "The Way of the Warrior." Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, Episodes 473-474. Television. 2 October 1995.