Difference between revisions of "Philip Marik"
m |
m |
||
Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
| affiliation = [[House Marik]] | | affiliation = [[House Marik]] | ||
| profession = [[Captain-General]] of the [[Free Worlds League]] | | profession = [[Captain-General]] of the [[Free Worlds League]] | ||
− | | parents = | + | | parents = [[Terrence Marik (24th c.)|Terrence Marik]] (father) |
− | | siblings = | + | | siblings = [[George Marik]] |
| spouse = | | spouse = | ||
− | | children = | + | | children = |
}} | }} | ||
'''Philip Marik''' (b. [[2291]] — d. [[2343]]) served as the fifth [[Captain-General]] of the [[Free Worlds League]]. He was the eldest son of [[Terrence Marik (24th c.)|Terrence Marik]].<ref>''House Marik (The Free Worlds League)'', Family Tree</ref><ref name=CGIH>''Handbook: House Marik'', p. 83, "Captain-Generals in History"</ref> | '''Philip Marik''' (b. [[2291]] — d. [[2343]]) served as the fifth [[Captain-General]] of the [[Free Worlds League]]. He was the eldest son of [[Terrence Marik (24th c.)|Terrence Marik]].<ref>''House Marik (The Free Worlds League)'', Family Tree</ref><ref name=CGIH>''Handbook: House Marik'', p. 83, "Captain-Generals in History"</ref> |
Revision as of 13:14, 23 July 2018
This Article looks to be a Stub This article is a stub (i.e., in need of additional material). You can help us by expanding it. Please remove this tag when that effort is complete. |
Philip Marik | |
---|---|
Personal | |
Born | 2291 |
Died | 2343 |
Affiliation | House Marik |
Profile | |
Profession | Captain-General of the Free Worlds League |
Family | |
Parents | Terrence Marik (father) |
Siblings | George Marik |
Philip Marik (b. 2291 — d. 2343) served as the fifth Captain-General of the Free Worlds League. He was the eldest son of Terrence Marik.[1][2]
Philip was noted as an intense leader of House Marik. Internal strife led Parliament to appoint a Captain-General in 2336 and again in 2341. As Captain-General, Philip preferred to avoid spilling the blood of his countrymen, so he turned to negotiation instead. His "big-stick" approach kept violence to a minimum.[2]