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In The Undiscovered Country, the Klingons view Shakespeare as one of their own and the Earth versions as adaptations. How on Earth could that be? Shakespeare was certainly human as forehead ridges would have been noticed even in that period of history.

Is this some cosmic coincidence with similar works by two different writers or did the Klingons like the work so much they retconned him as one of their writers?

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    Shouldnt that be: "How on Qo'Nos could that be?" or possibly - given the story "How on Praxis could that be?" Commented Apr 3, 2014 at 14:53
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    Has it crossed your mind that the Klingon in question was joking? That is, the Klingon knew perfectly well that Shakespeare was human, and saying he was originally Klingon is a metaphorical way of expressing how much the Klingons admire him. Commented Apr 3, 2014 at 14:54
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    Is it also possible that Klingons visited Earth incognito around 1560 and left an English version of their favourite playwright there for an enterprising you Will Shakespeare to copy and pass of as his own? Commented Apr 3, 2014 at 18:25
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    Some Klingons looked remarkably human, that might be related. scifi.stackexchange.com/q/20579/8981 Commented Apr 3, 2014 at 19:36
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    @Damon actually, it is his grandfather: en.memory-alpha.org/wiki/Worf_%28Colonel%29
    – Davidmh
    Commented Apr 5, 2014 at 13:34

3 Answers 3

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Probably the latter. Star Trek seems to like this joke; Chekov claimed many things as "invented in Russia," Spock attributes Sherlock Holmes quotes and Richard Nixon quotes to ancient Vulcans (though the Sherlock thing could be real, I suppose, since Spock is also half human), Quark claims the phrase "discretion is the better part of valor" as a Ferengi proverb, and Khan says "Revenge is a dish best served cold" is a Klingon saying. I think it was just one point on the line of a running gag. (a running gagh?)

Interestingly, the line became a problem in the shooting of The Undiscovered Country, as Mark Okrand (who invented the Klingon language) recounts:

There is one line of Shakespeare that is spoken in Klingon in the film, though it wasn’t part of the original script. That line is “To be or not to be.” When the film’s director, Nick Meyer, asked me to create a Klingon version of that, I said “okay,” but I thought “oh, no.” The problem was that there is no verb in Klingon that means “to be,” and I make a big deal about that in the book. I thought a bit and asked Nick if the line could mean “to live or not to live.” [But Christopher Plummer didn't like it, so] I thought some more, and suggested that taH replace yIn: taH pagh taHbe’. [...] The syllable taH, up until that moment, had been a suffix meaning “to continue doing” whatever the verb it was attached to was, so “eat” plus taH meant “to continue eating.” I sort of gave it a promotion to full verb status, but keeping the same meaning. So a new word meaning “to go on, to continue, to endure,” was created: “To continue or not to continue, to go on or not to go on.”

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    Yes, that seems right. Thanks for the informative answer!
    – Valten1992
    Commented Apr 3, 2014 at 15:00
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    I always assumed that quotes above were universal translator bugs. When translated there were similar meaning earth expressions that meant the same thing. Commented Apr 3, 2014 at 16:40
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    I think that would be a great in-universe justification for it, sixtyfootersdude. Though it does sound like something the Klingons would do, stealing a violent playwright from a race of ptaQs who don't deserve him. :-) Same with Ferengi. "They think they know cowardice? They've never even seen cowardice!" Commented Apr 3, 2014 at 17:51
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    @WolfieInu I would not think less of you. Over 18 months on, I find myself groaning quite a bit at that pun, but I regret nothing. :-) Commented Nov 18, 2015 at 6:15
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    Good point about Chekov, he notably changed British astronomer John Burke to Ivan Burkov. Commented Mar 1, 2018 at 20:24
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A wikipedia article claims that in the audio commentary on Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country, Special Collectors Edition, the director N. Meyer claims the idea for having the Klingons claim Shakespeare as their own was based on Nazi Germany's attempt to claim the Bard as German before World War II.

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The wikipedia page on The Klingon Hamlet has this to say:

The introduction also claims that the notion that Shakespeare was a human poet living in the late 16th century was invented after the United Federation of Planets instigated a large propaganda campaign in order to rally the human population against Klingons, "hoping by this falsification of history to discredit the achievements of Klingon culture".
— Introduction, The Klingon Hamlet: Star Trek All Series, Simon and Schuster, 2012.

Which strongly implies, at least in fiction (and if this is considered canon), that at least the Klingon's believe that William Shakespeare (or to use his Klingon name 'Wil'yam Sheq'spir') was Klingon - and thus that the human version did not exist in the Star Trek timeline.

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