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Kang
REAL NAME: Nathaniel Richards KNOWN ALIASES: Blue Man, Victor Timely, Blue Totem, Scarlet Centurion,
Rama-Tut, King of Kings, Master of Men, Lord of the Seven Suns IDENTITY: Secret OCCUPATION: Conqueror CITIZENSHIP: Other-Earth, 31st and 40th centuries PLACE OF BIRTH: Other-Earth, 31st century MARITAL STATUS: Single KNOWN RELATIVES: Nathaniel and Cassandra Richards,
their unnamed son, and matriarch of the Eyriennes (ancestors); Tara
(Huntara), Reed (Mr. Fantastic),
Franklin and Valeria Richards;
various Eyriennes (common ancestry); Victor
von Doom (alleged ancestor); Ramades (son), Marcus Kang I-XXIII
(sons, deceased); Immortus, Iron
Lad, Rama-Tut, Scarlet Centurion and numerous other alternate dimensional
counterparts and their offspring GROUP AFFILIATION: Formerly the Council of Kangs, Cross-Time
Kangs EDUCATION: Unrevealed FIRST APPEARANCE: (As Rama-Tut) Fantastic Four #19 (1963); (as
Kang) Avengers #8 (1964)
HISTORY: Nathaniel Richards was born in the calendar year
3000 of the alternate timeline Other-Earth (a.k.a. Earth-6311). As a youth,
a bully, Morgan, slit his throat and he was hospitalized for a year. Recovering,
he studied science and his ancestor's history tapes of the heroic age of Earth-616
(mainstream Earth), growing into a man of adventure in a time of complacency.
At age 25 he discovered his ancestor's fortress and time machine. Following
encounters with alternate Earth Fantastic Fours seeking to thwart his future
self, which faded from his mind, Richards constructed an immense sphinx-shaped
ship and traveled to Egypt circa 2950 BC. The ship crashed, blinding and stranding
him there, but he subjugated the natives with his technology. As Pharaoh Rama-Tut,
his vision restored, he ruled as a god for a decade, during which he encountered
Samira, Mistress of the Nile, who became his enemy; Amenhotep, whom he transformed
into a vampiric creature; and time-travelers such as Killpower and the Genetix
team. At some point he had a son, Ramades, by a slave. Eventually, a struggle
with the Fantastic Four, which also involved the young En Sabah Nur (later Apocalypse),
the moon god Khonshu, and modern-era heroes Dr. Strange and the Avengers, forced
Rama to flee that time period. En route to the future, a "time storm"
diverted Rama to the modern era and an encounter with a space-lost Dr. Doom.
Damaged by the time storm, Rama-Tut's control module skipped several years into
the future and briefly crashed in Egypt, where he fought fellow time-travelers
Blaquesmith and Cable. Inspired by Doom, he took the armored identity of the
Scarlet Centurion, traveled to another timeline (Earth-689) and duped its Avengers
into neutralizing all their fellow heroes so he could rule; but he was defeated
by the visiting Avengers of Earth-616 and cast outside time.
Richards sought to return to his native time, but temporal disruptions hurled
him into Other-Earth's 40th century. As Kang, he conquered that entire world,
sparing only the tiny kingdom of Carelius due to his interest in the king's
daughter, Ravonna. Kang's life became progressively non-linear, as each foray
in time produced at least one divergent-timestream counterpart; it is extremely
difficult to identify which Kang counterpart was involved with each encounter.
Conquering everything within 100 light years, Kang next attacked his ancestor's
world in the modern age of marvels, but the Avengers forced him to flee. Seeking
a new power base, Kang established himself in 1901 AD as Victor Timely, a brilliant
inventor and industrialist who founded the city of Timely, Wisconsin, became
its first mayor, and transformed it into a technological marvel over the next
century; "Victor" appeared to age and be replaced by his children
(Kang in new guises). The city also housed a portal to his base Chronopolis
where he gathered warriors from various eras to serve as his strike force, the
Anachronauts. Kang's continued efforts saw his Spider-Man robot (Timespinner)
destroyed by the Avengers and Spider-Man, and his conquest of Camelot foiled
by the time-traveling Thing and Human Torch; he also assaulted the Reed and
Sue Richards wedding, unknowingly drawn there by Dr. Doom's Emotion-Charger
device.
Returning to the 40th century, Kang completed his galactic conquest and even
invaded other dimensions; in Kosmos, he gained technology to create his powerful
Growing Men. Kang then brought the Avengers forward in time, intending to subjugate
them or defeat them in front of Ravonna. When both the Avengers and Ravonna
defied him, the furious Kang easily conquered her small kingdom; however, when
he tried to force Ravonna to marry him, he caused unrest in his troops for failing
to follow his own edict of slaying all conquered rulers. Kang's troops, led
by General Baltag, turned on him, but he allied with the Avengers to defeat
them. Impressed that Kang had risked his life for her, Ravonna leapt in the
path of a blast from the defeated Baltag, saving Kang, but apparently dying
in his place. The devastated Kang sought to restore Ravonna; the cosmic Grandmaster
challenged him to a contest of champions, offering him the power of life or
death as the prize. Using the Avengers as pawns, Kang was victorious, but he
chose the power of death, intending to slay the Avengers. Foiled by the Black
Knight (Dane Whitman), Kang had to live with the knowledge that he had squandered
his chance to save Ravonna. Disturbed at having lost and feeling sympathy for
Ravonna, the Grandmaster removed Ravonna from stasis, revived her, and told
her of Kang's betrayal. Moving on, Kang tried to use the Hulk to destroy Bruce
Banner's ancestor to prevent the Avengers from ever forming, but the Hulk foiled
this plot. Kang then sent a robot double of himself to capture the Avengers
during a war with rival time lord Zarrko the Tomorrow Man.
One of Kang's most relentless campaigns was his quest for the Celestial Madonna,
a woman fated to give birth to the most powerful being in the universe. Wanting
to be that being's father, Kang narrowed the Madonna's identity to Agatha Harkness,
Mantis, and the Scarlet Witch, abducting all three. Rama-Tut, actually Kang's
own future self, arrived to help the Avengers thwart his plot.
Mantis was finally revealed as the Madonna, and when Kang could not claim her,
he tried to kill her; but his fatal blast was intercepted by the Swordsman (Jacques
Duquesne), who died instead. Kang and Rama-Tut were then pulled into Limbo by
Immortus, a potential future self of both men, but Kang imprisoned Immortus
and used his technology to create the Legion of the Unliving, a team of reportedly
deceased pawns drawn from past eras. The Avengers defeated the Legion, and Kang
fled. Kang soon returned, allied with a trio of Kangs from different time periods,
and tried to abduct Mantis at her wedding, but Immortus foiled him by substituting
a Space Phantom as his captive.
Kang next made a base in Tombstone, Arizona, circa 1873 AD, intending to use
it as a stepping stone to conquer the modern age. Opposed by cowboy heroes,
as well as time-traveling Avengers, Kang disintegrated when his force field
shorted out in battle with Thor; however, a failsafe device transported Kang's
consciousness to an alternate body, as it had during many other near-death experiences.
Though taking place in rapid succession in the modern era, these last two campaigns
accounted for ten years of Kang's life. Less time-intensive efforts included
seeking the reality-altering power of a Cosmic Cube, facilitating an attempt
by the Inuit (Eskimo) Aningan Kenojuak to reclaim Captain America as the "God
in the Ice" worshipped by his people years ago, conquering an alternate
40th-century Earth, battling the legendary First Line, and participating in
the hero vs. villain war on the virtually omnipotent Beyonder's "Battleworld."
Kang then found his 40th-century base ravaged by rebels loyal to Baltag; to
recover his base, he sought out a Growing Man stored in the modern era and battled
Thor, who banished him to Limbo. There Kang chanced across Immortus' stronghold,
Tenebrae, and learned of his own multitude of divergent counterparts. Unwittingly
manipulated by Immortus, Kang formed the Council of Kangs, choosing a few of
his most capable counterparts as allies, and began eliminating redundant Kangs
from each alternate reality; one of these sought to pair with an alternate Ravonna
and wipe out all other realities, but was eliminated after accidentally killing
his lover. Kang prepared robot duplicates to replace the slain counterparts
to rule the empires of every Kang in existence. At the same time, Kang re-took
his 40th-century base via his Growing Man. After the rest of the counterparts
were eliminated, the "prime" Kang slew the rest of the Council.
Immortus then appeared, explained that he was Kang's future self, and showed
Kang a psyche-globe containing the memories of all of the slain divergent Kangs.
Kang tore the globe from his hands, only to go mad as the minds of all of the
other Kangs merged with his. The last Kang - now every Kang, since he possessed
all of his counterparts' memories - fled into Limbo. To save himself, Kang used
his helmet's temporal circuitry to create an additional divergence/counterpart,
dividing his madness between two Kangs. One made his way to Chronopolis to recuperate,
while the other, still addled, was recruited by the Cross-Time Kangs, a group
of beings who had defeated or slain alternate Kangs and usurped the Kang identity.
That Kang learned of a plot by "Kang-Nebula" (actually a power-hungry
Ravonna) to obtain the "ultimate weapon" within the Time Bubble, a
period of time in Earth-8810 surrounded by an impassable temporal barrier. A
trio of Kangs followed Kang-Nebula into the Time Bubble where they were cast
into the vortex surrounding it and ultimately destroyed, though the divergent
Kang also sent his Growing Man to help foil the demonic Inferno invasion of
Earth.
Taking control of Chronopolis, the "prime" Kang sought revenge on
Mantis in the modern era, joined Dr. Doom during the "Infinity War,"
took over the Cross-Time Kangs, learned an assassin was stalking him, and exposed
his would-be killer as Ravonna, now calling herself the Terminatrix. Intrigued
by her warrior nature, Kang battled her, but sacrificed himself to save her
from an assault by the Avengers. Overcoming her hatred for Kang, Ravonna impersonated
him and took over the Cross-Time Kangs. When Chronopolis was attacked by the
immensely powerful temporal entity Alioth, Ravonna revived Kang, and with the
aid of the Avengers they sacrificed the Cross-Time Kangs, using their energy
to imprison Alioth.
The reunited Kang and Ravonna (who posed as Victor Timely's fiancee Rebecca
Tourmenet for a time) soon ruled Chronopolis side by side; however, Kang, now
almost sixty, grew weary of administrative matters. Missing the days when he
was worshipped in a small land, Kang returned to ancient Egypt circa 2930 BC
as Rama-Tut and smashed his chrono-sphere. As Rama-Tut, he spent ten years benevolently
enjoying his people's adulation. In 2920 BC he encountered the Avengers, who
had been trapped in the past by a time machine that could only travel backwards
in time. Determined not to become Immortus (whose subtle manipulations he despised),
the later Rama-Tut tried to break the cycle by placing himself in suspended
animation, reviving in the modern era to battle his past Kang self during the
Celestial Madonna struggle. Failing to change the course of events and feeling
resigned to his fate, Rama headed for Limbo, but upon glimpsing a chrono-flash
of Immortus bowing to the powerful Time-Keepers, he was infuriated by the idea
of becoming anyone's lap-dog, and vowed to overcome his destiny. Rama-Tut returned
to Chronopolis, resumed his Kang identity and used his rivals to destroy each
other. He then destroyed the mind-transfer failsafe device he had so often used
to cheat death, feeling that it took the risk - and thus the enjoyment - out
of conflict. After a brief battle with the X-Men and an enterprising starship
crew, Kang formed an alliance with Libra (Gustav Brandt), the Kree Supreme Intelligence
and the Avengers against Immortus and the Time-Keepers. Ravonna and the Anachronauts
were apparently slain and Chronopolis was destroyed, but Kang managed to destroy
the Time-Keepers and forcibly diverge himself from Immortus, leaving his future
uncharted.
Renewed by this victory, Kang engineered a series of successors, each of whom
he named Marcus. These infants were sent back in time and trained to be warriors
worthy of inheriting Kang's empire. Following a failed effort to conquer the
realm Otherworld, Kang, alongside Marcus XXIII (outfitted as the Scarlet Centurion),
used Damocles Base, his massive armada, and alliances with various criminal
forces (including rogue Atlanteans and Deviants) to conquer Earth; but the Avengers
led a rebellion that ultimately defeated and imprisoned Kang. Marcus freed Kang
in hopes of restoring their dominion, but Kang knew that Marcus had held back
during the war more than once because of his attraction to Avengers member Warbird.
Unable to forgive this betrayal, Kang slew Marcus. Disheartened, Kang told his
computer to postpone development of Marcus XXIV.
Regaining his focus, Kang plotted against Iron
Lad, his younger self created by his meddling in his own
past, and his allies in the Young
Avengers. He showed Iron Lad that they were the same people
and what Iron Lad would become. Iron was devastated to know
that he would become Kang. Using armor that Kang gave him
Iron Lad traveled into the past to get the help of the Avengers.
Unfortunately the Avengers had already be disbanded when he
arrived. Ultimately Iron Lad teamed with other individuals
and managed to kill Kang.
NOTE: Differences between the history of
Other-Earth and Earth-616, as well as differing calendars
in different realms, and damage to records during periods
of massive warfare, have led to some inconsistency in the
dating of the time periods of both Kang and Ravonna.
HEIGHT: 6 ft. 3 in. WEIGHT: 230 lbs. EYES: Brown HAIR: Brown
SUPERHUMAN POWERS: Kang ages at a slightly slower rate than
modern humanity.
ABILITIES: Kang is an expert in travel through and manipulation
of time, and has mastered his future's advanced technology. He is an expert
strategist, a veteran of armed and unarmed combat, and has an indomitable will
to succeed through struggle.
PARAPHERNALIA: Kang's full-body armor (composed of an unidentified
future metal) enables him to lift 5 tons; it can project a force field around
him that is extendable up to twenty feet and can shield him from even a direct
nuclear strike. The suit has its own self-contained atmosphere, food supply
and waste disposal system. Its weapons include anti-graviton particle projectors
in his gauntlets; concussive force blasters; circuitry accessing his ship's
time machine, allowing him an "automatic recall" of a few seconds;
and various other weapons. Kang formerly used technology, which transferred
his mind into an alternate body upon the point of death.
Kang typically carries various weapons, such as an anti-matter defense screen
generator, a "vibration-ray" projector, an electromagnetic field-amplifier,
neutrino-ray warheaded missile launcher (hand-gun size), electrical paralysis
generator, nerve gas sprayer, and a molecular expander. Kang commands a vast
armada of warriors from across the galaxy of his future era. He uses numerous
robots, most notably his Growing Man stimuloids, packed with the “Growth
Pollen of the world Kosmos,” which causes them to grow in size and strength
by absorbing kinetic energy.
Kang's primary base in 40th-century Other-Earth is the Center, but he also
maintains a secret dwelling in the realm known only as Purgatory,
as well as strongholds in various alternate realties; his former
base Chronopolis, powered by the Heart of Forever, served as a
crossroads into virtually every era in human history, but lay
just out of phase with the timestream and was therefore undetectable.
Its palace and inhabitants were unaffected by temporal divergence
or the passage of time. Kang formerly employed a 20' long space-worthy
vehicle housing his time machine, which could reach all eras of
all timelines by accessing the transtemporal realm of Limbo. Kang
has used a number of other vessels, such as his Sphinx ship and
Damocles Base, an immense sword-shaped orbiting headquarters.