Played
by: Marc Alaimo
Full name: unrevealed
Species: Cardassian
Position/occupation: Former prefect of Bajor; rose to head of
Cardassian state, but lost that status when he suffered a mental breakdown
Rank/title: Gul (was Legate in "Indiscretion", but was demoted
back to Gul soon afterwards; kept that rank as head of Cardassia)
Birthplace or childhood home: Cardassia (presumably)
Parents: none mentioned (a deleted line from "The Die is Cast"
mentions his father, Justice Procal)
Spouse: unnamed wife who left him after "Indiscretion"
Children: 7 by his wife, including a son named Mikor (born 2360);
sired at least two half-Bajoran offspring, of which his daughter Tora Ziyal
was one; the other was an infant of unrevealed sex, born in "Covenant"
Love interest(s): Had several Bajoran mistresses during the
Occupation, including Kira Meru and Tora Naprem; also had an affair with
his follower Mika ("Covenant"). In his guise as Anjohl, he became Kai Winn's
lover briefly ("'Til Death Do Us Part").
Friends elsewhere: none mentioned
Hobbies/likes/interests: none mentioned
Dislikes: none mentioned
History:
Dukat was the son of a Cardassian officer who apparently at one time
became overly ambitious, was betrayed and tortured by Garak, and eventually
underwent trial and execution. (Dukat hated Garak for this, while Garak
returned the grudge due to a matter involving some arms merchants.) As
a glinn, Dukat served on a ship called the Kornaire.
When Dukat became prefect (in or before 2346, according to "Wrongs Darker
Than Death or Night"; or in 2360, according to "The Maquis, Part I" --
take your pick), one of his first acts was to reform the labor camps, to
which the Bajoran rebels responded by blowing up a drydock, killing 200
Cardassians; Dukat was "forced" to execute 200 Bajorans at random, as retaliation.
After the end of the Occupation, Dukat went on patrol on a warship,
and for a time was the most frequent spokesperson of the Cardassian government
when dealing with the Federation and Bajor. He was even of assistance to
them at times: for example, he brought the growing problem of the Maquis
to Sisko's attention, and accompanied him on a mission to prevent a Maquis
attack after being rescued from the terrorists by Sisko and his officers
("The Maquis, Parts I and II"). Dukat also cooperated with Sisko when the
Defiant
was hijacked by Tom Riker ("Defiant"). When the military government on
Cardassia was overthrown, Dukat managed to win a position as military advisor
to the civilian government, was promoted to legate, and was instrumental
in helping save the Detepa Council during the Klingon invasion of Cardassia
("The Way of the Warrior").
Not long afterwards, in "Indiscretion", Dukat went on a joint mission
with Major Kira Nerys to discover what had happened to the Ravinok,
a Cardassian prison ship that had been lost during the Occupation. He eventually
revealed to Kira that his Bajoran mistress Tora Naprem had been on the
ship, with their daughter Ziyal. Dukat intended to kill Ziyal, in order
to prevent his political enemies from using her against him; but when he
finally saw her, he changed his mind, and took her home to Cardassia. It
was a risk that resulted in a major setback for Dukat: his mother disowned
him, his wife left him along with their children, and he was demoted, reduced
to commanding the freighter Groumall. However, with Kira's aid,
he captured a Klingon cruiser, and set out as a renegade, sending Ziyal
to DS9 under Kira's protection ("Return to Grace").
About
a year later, Dukat's fortunes took another dramatic turn, when Cardassia
became an ally of the Dominion, and Dukat was placed by them at the head
of his world's government ("In Purgatory's Shadow"/"By Inferno's Light").
What was to him the culmination of his triumph came when Starfleet eventually
retreated from DS9, and he was able to once again take control of the station,
which he insisted on renaming Terok Nor ("Call to Arms"). Dukat ruled jointly
with Weyoun, confident that eventually he could conquer the Alpha Quadrant
with the Dominion's aid and then toss them aside, until Starfleet's forces
returned to retake the station ("Favor the Bold"/"Sacrifice of Angels").
Distracted by a rift with Ziyal, he gradually saw his dreams of victory
vanish. When Ziyal was murdered by Damar during the evacuation, Dukat suffered
a mental breakdown, and was captured by Starfleet.
Dukat was treated by Starfleet counselors, and in "Waltz", when they
had deemed him stable enough to stand arraignment, he was sent to a starbase
along with Sisko (who was to testify). The ship was destroyed, and Dukat
and Sisko wound up stranded together on a planet. Dukat's mental state
deteriorated until finally he escaped in a shuttle, vowing to kill all
Bajorans.
He disappeared for several months (once contacting Kira to regale her
with the information that her mother had been his mistress, in "Wrongs
Darker Than Death or Night"), and spent time studying ancient Bajoran texts,
then returned to Cardassia, claiming to have the key to victory over Sisko
and the Alpha Quadrant. Breaking a Bajoran statue, he became possessed
by the pah-wraith inside, and went to DS9, where the wraith destroyed the
Orb of Contemplation, also killing Jadzia Dax in the process ("Tears of
the Prophets").
Dukat vanished again for a time, and set himself up on Empok Nor as
"Master" of a community of pah-wraith worshippers, believing himself to
be Emissary to the pah-wraiths. However, when a half-Cardassian child was
born, Dukat tried to kill the mother rather than let the truth be known;
and when that failed, he convinced his followers to take poison (to shed
their corporeal existence and become one with the pah-wraiths). Naturally,
his own pill was a fake. Having been exposed by Kira, Dukat beamed away
to an unknown location ("Covenant").
Months
later, in "Penumbra", Dukat returned to Cardassia, and secretly obtained
Damar's help in finding a surgeon to alter his features so that he would
appear Bajoran. He went to DS9, posing as Anjohl, a Bajoran farmer, and
insinuated his way into Kai Winn's confidence, as well as a sexual relationship
("'Til Death Do Us Part"). When he revealed his true purpose (but not his
identity) to Winn, she eventually joined him on the path of the pah-wraiths
("Strange Bedfellows"). Under Dukat's guidance, Winn researched the Text
of the Kosst Amojan to learn how to free the pah-wraiths from the Fire
Caves. He was unmasked to her by Solbor, but although she was horrified
at first, she continued to work with him ("The Changing Face of Evil").
Dukat was blinded by the pah-wraiths when he tried to read the text for
himself; Winn had him put out to beg on the streets ("When It Rains...").
In "What You Leave Behind", with his eyesight restored, Dukat returned
to Winn, and accompanied her into the Fire Caves. During the ritual to
free the pah-wraiths, she poisoned him as a sacrifice; but the wraiths
possessed Dukat's body instead, returning him to his Cardassian appearance.
When Sisko arrived, Dukat taunted him, and in the ensuing struggle was
pushed by Sisko over a cliff into the fires, taking the Text of the Kosst
Amojan with him.
Other facts: His security ID (in "The Maquis, Part I") was ADL-4-0.
Appearances: "Emissary", "Duet", "The Homecoming", "Cardassians",
"Necessary Evil", "The Maquis, Part I", "The Maquis, Part II", "Civil Defense",
"Defiant", "Explorers", "The Way of the Warrior", "Indiscretion", "Return
to Grace", "Apocalypse Rising", "Things Past", "In Purgatory's Shadow",
"By Inferno's Light", "Ties of Blood and Water", "Call to Arms", "A Time
to Stand", "Sons and Daughters", "Behind the Lines", "Favor the Bold",
"Sacrifice of Angels", "Waltz", "Far Beyond the Stars", "Wrongs Darker
Than Death or Night", "Tears of the Prophets", "Covenant", "Penumbra",
"'Til Death Do Us Part", "Strange Bedfellows", "The Changing Face of Evil",
"When It Rains...", "What You Leave Behind"