The Covenant | Halo - YouTube

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On September 3rd, 2524, a civilian freighter on route to the distant colony of Madrigal
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disappeared and was presumed destroyed.
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At first, this was thought to be the work of Insurrectionists, but in the following
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days and months, United Nations Space Command would discover that this had been the act
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of a formidable and technologically advanced alien power.
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When the first contact protocols were enacted, the response was a single phrase.
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“Your destruction is the will of the Gods, and we are their instrument”.
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This was humanity’s formal introduction to the Covenant.
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Within the first few months of what would become a truly cataclysmic war, it became
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apparent that the Covenant were not a single race but rather an alliance of many different
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alien species united under a single hegemonic culture.
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Each species was in turn integrated into a tiered caste system, which, while ostensibly
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divided between religious, warrior and worker castes seemed in practice to be divided along
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racial lines with certain species regarded as superior to others.
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The two ruling species of this hierarchy were the San'Shyuum and the Sangheili.
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These were the founding members of the Covenant and the only races allowed to serve in the
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highest echelon of its government, known as the High Council.
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The Council included hundreds of representatives from both species, but the San'Shyuum’s
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status as the representatives of the Covenant faith allowed them exert a disproportionate
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amount of influence, in effect making them the Covenant’s ruling caste.
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Accordingly, the three Hierarchs who presided over the High Council and served as the Covenant’s
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supreme religious and political authority were appointed exclusively from the San'Shyuum.
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Hierarchs typically achieved this position through political machinations, exercising
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power behind the scenes and manipulating the council for their own benefit.
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Officially however, the Hierarchs were said to have received the blessing of The Oracle,
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an ancient artificial intelligence housed in a supremely powerful Dreadnaught, both
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the relics of a long extinct Forerunner species and now worshipped as evidence of the divine
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by the Covenant.
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The appointment of new Hierarchs coincided with the beginning of a new Age, the method
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by which the Covenant organized their history.
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Each age was assigned one of seven titles corresponding to the prevailing themes of
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the era; Abandonment, Conflict, Reconciliation, Discovery, Conversion, Doubt or Reclamation.
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These ages did not necessarily follow any particular order nor were they equal in quantity.
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As part of this ceremony, the Hierarchs themselves also selected a new regal name befitting of
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their status such as “High Prophet of Truth”, “High Prophet of Tolerance”, or “High
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Prophet of the Glorious Journey”, among many others.
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While the Hierarchs and by extension the rest of the San'Shyuum race wielded almost complete
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control over religious and political affairs, it was the Sangheili who served as the Covenant’s
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military leaders.
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Their martial skill made them the backbone of the armed forces for almost the entirety
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of its existence and they were the only species permitted to build and operate warships within
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the Covenant.
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At its height, the Covenant fleet operated tens of thousands of warships each carrying
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squadrons of fighters, auxiliary craft, and components of the Covenant Army.
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These were split between several thousand fleets each consisting of roughly a hundred
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warships, although larger armadas where known to exist.
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Covenant strategy was based around their technological supremacy, in particular heavy plasma weaponry.
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Standard doctrine upon encountering a hostile world was to bombard its surface from orbit,
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a process known informally as glassing.
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Glassing a planet typically left it uninhabitable with top soil, bodies of water and local ecology
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all burned away or converted into lechatelierite, a mineral similar in appearance to glass,
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which gave the process its name.
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Such an act was considered holy by the Covenant and a Minor Prophet stationed aboard a participating
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warship was required to conduct a specific ritual before the process could commence.
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Upon completion, a shard of lechatelierite was retrieved and placed in the Sanctum of
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Hierarchs which served as a morbid reminder of all the worlds destroyed at their command.
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In some instances, such as when the presence of holy artifacts were detected on a hostile
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world or other unique circumstances, orbital bombardment was forbidden.
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In these cases, Covenant ships would operate within the planet’s atmosphere to increase
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the accuracy of their weaponry and support the deployment of ground forces.
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These consisted of not only the Sangheili but the remainder of the Covenant’s member
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races, placed in everything from upper-leadership roles to cannon fodder depending on that species
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place within the hierarchy.
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Directly below the Sangheili were the Jiralhanae, a primitive but brutal species known for their
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natural resilience and fierce temperament that made them effective warriors.
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The newest species to enter into the Covenant, the Jiralhanae made impressive strides within
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the hierarchy and this upstart race began to quickly rival the Sangheili, leading to
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tensions between the two.
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Other major species within the Covenant included the Lekgolo, small worm like creatures capable
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of joining together in complex assemblages or incorporate themselves into machinery.
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The Yanme'e, a flying insectoid race whose hive-minded nature allowed them to integrate
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into specific roles within the Covenant with great efficiency and the Kig-Yar, an avian
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species whose excellent eyesight and hearing made them natural marksmen and scouts.
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The lowest racial caste within the Covenant was held by the Unggoy.
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A primitive species when first encountered, they were quickly conquered and existed as
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little more than a slave race, used to perform manual labor or to serve in unprotected frontal
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assaults during wartime.
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While the threat of force was enough to keep the Unggoy in servitude, it was the Covenant
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religion that integrated the higher races into a cohesive empire.
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This faith was based solely on the worship and reverence of an ancient Forerunner race.
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It was believed these Forerunners had ascended into divinity through the activation of seven
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great Sacred Rings.
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The very fabric of the Covenant was built upon the pursuit of the activation of these
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rings, so that the races of the Covenant might be propelled to the Divine Beyond and join
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the Forerunners in godhood.
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This was known as the Great Journey, a singular vision that manifested itself in every facet
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of Covenant society.
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The ultimate expression of the Great Journey and the Covenant faith was High Charity, an
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enormous mobile planetoid that served as the capital of the Covenant.
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This was a vast, holy city that every Covenant citizen was encouraged to make a pilgrimage
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to at least once in their life, even if most could only hope to afford such a visit.
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At its core lay the Forerunner Dreadnought, the heart of the Covenant and the impetus
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for its very creation.
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The dreadnaught was first uncovered on the homeworld of the San'Shyuum and precipitated
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a religious civil war between Reformists, who sought to enter the ship and uncover its
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secrets and Stoics, who decreed such an act to be blasphemous.
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The war ended with the successful reactivation of the dreadnaught by a small contingent of
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Reformists who abandoned their homeworld to seek out other Forerunner artifacts across
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the galaxy.
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Centuries later this journey brought them into conflict with the Sangheili, who like
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the Stoics before, considered the study of Forerunner relics to be an unforgivable desecration.
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With the Sangheili already in possession of a wealth of holy artifacts, conflict between
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the two races was inevitable.
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The war threatened the survival of both sides and in their desperation the Sangheili abandoned
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their most sacred beliefs, reverse engineering Forerunner artifacts in the hopes of gaining
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any advantage over the San'Shyuum.
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It was the Forerunner dreadnought that proved to be the deciding factor however and one
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that could not be overcome.
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Eventually, a mutual respect formed between the two races and having come to regard the
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San'Shyuum as worthy opponents, to whom surrender could be seen as honorable, the Sangheili
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capitulated.
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In time, the Sangheili were moved by the promise of the Great Journey and together with their
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former enemies, they signed the Writ of Union.
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An oath of service binding the Sangheili to the protection of the San'Shyuum who in turn
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would guide both races forward towards ascension.
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This new alliance quickly expanded across the galaxy, incorporating client races through
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either the dream of the Great Journey or strength of arms.
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This expansion was not always harmonious.
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A series of brief but brutal rebellions were crushed by the Covenant military.
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The greatest and final test the Covenant would endure was a war against humanity, whose very
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existence was declared by the San'Shyuum to be an affront to the gods.
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The Covenant embarked on a holy crusade of an unprecedented scale.
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The United Nations Space Command fought tenaciously, but the technological superiority of the Covenant
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fleet made most space-based engagements cruely one sided.
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Only during planetary campaigns, with the Covenant’s most formidable advantages neutralized,
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was the UNSC able to mount an effective defense.
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Over twenty seven years the Covenant advanced into the heart of human territory, glassing
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hundreds of human worlds in a frenzied, genocidal campaign.
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Despite the UNSC’s tremendous losses, the war had placed a logistical burden on the
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Covenant’s military and one that was increasingly difficult to maintain.
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Mounting losses also spurred increased division within the Covenant itself.
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Humanity had earned the respect of the Sangheili and many began to wonder why such a species
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deserved extinction rather than be offered a place in the Covenant as so many had before.
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In response, the San'Shyuum began to increasingly rely on the blindly obedient Jiralhanae which
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only inflamed their long rivalry with the Sangheili.
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When the UNSC successfully assassinated one of the Hierarchs, the Sangheili were declared
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to have failed in their obligations as sworn in the Writ of Union and were officially replaced
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within the Covenant’s military apparatus.
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This unprecedented act was seen by the Sangheili as a violation of the Covenant’s core principals
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and the situation soon escalated into a full scale civil war.
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It was the discovery of the San'Shyuum’s greatest secret that truly broke the Covenant
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however; the crusade against humanity had been built on a lie, one made to keep to the
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Prophets in power.
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Rather than defiling the ruins of the Forerunners, the highest echelons of the Covenant had learned
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that humanity had some strange and direct connection with the Forerunners themselves.
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This discovery proved it was possible to be left behind when the Great Journey occured,
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a mortal blow to the Covenant’s faith.
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Greater still was the revelation of the Seven Sacred Rings true purpose.
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Rather then being the means of ascension, they were cosmically powerful weapons intended
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to stop the spread of a highly virulent parasite known as the Flood.
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When activated, the Rings would destroy all life in the galaxy, eliminating the Flood’s
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supply of biomass.
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The fighting between the Covenant and Humanity had already allowed the Flood to re-emerge
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across the galaxy and High Charity itself was attacked and overrun.
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This threat failed to sway the most fanatic elements of the Covenant and only an alliance
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between the UNSC and Sangheili separatists prevented the activation of the rings while
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simultaneously destroying the last of the Flood.
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The war between the Jiralhanae and Sangheili, the death of the High Prophets and the exposure
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of the lie that was the Great Journey marked the end of the Covenant.
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The destruction of High Charity eliminated much of their leadership and the rise of various
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splinter groups, collectively known as the Covenant Remnants, shattered what remained
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of their empire.
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Yet above all, it was the determination of the human race that not only broke the might
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of the Covenant but saved the galaxy from extermination by the order of its corrupt
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and deceptive Hierarchs.
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During the final moments of the Covenant, when the Prophet of Truth stood on the precipice
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of activating the Sacred Rings, he broadcasted a phrase that has lingered in infamy.
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“There are those who said this day would never come.
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What have they to say now?”
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With his dream undone, the Covenant destroyed and the UNSC poised to dominate the galaxy,
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these words have been given an entirely new meaning.
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The Templin Institute investigates alternate worlds and realities.
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