Ba'alBa'al
{{canon}}
{{Infobox Character
|name=Ba'al
|image=250px">
250px
|race=Goa'uld
|gender=Agender (Male Personality)
|died=
1939 (After time travelling from 2008, real Ba'al killed)2008 (last clone symbiote killed)|rank=
System LordSupreme Commander|allegiances=
HimselfGoa'uld EmpireTau'ri (when beneficial)The TrustAnubis (briefly)|home planet=
|appearances=
Stargate SG-1 <small>(12 episodes)</small><br>
Stargate: Atlantis {{m}}
<br>
Stargate: Continuum
|actor=
Cliff Simon
}}
{{Quote|Ba'al? As in bocce?|
Jack O'Neill to Ba'al|Abyss}}
Ba'al was a
Goa'uld, and one of the last
System Lords. Once an
underlord in the
Second Goa'uld Dynasty, Ba'al left
Ra's service and rose to a position of power among the System Lords in his own right. After the fall of the Goa'uld at the hands of the
Jaffa Rebellion, Ba'al was the only known surviving System Lord and became determined to rebuild his power base. He succeeded somewhat with his clones, but over time they were all killed, with the last being
Extraction Ceremony|extracted by the
Tok'ra. The real Ba'al was finally killed by
Colonel Cameron Mitchell, who set an ambush for him when he tried to alter history. Mitchell shot Ba'al in the head, killing him, and with the deaths of all his clones, Ba'al was gone for good, although the host of one of his clones survived.
Biography
Second Goa'uld Dynasty
First seen during the Second Goa'uld Dynasty, Ba'al was originally one of Ra's prominent underlords in service to him on
Earth where he was thought to be the son of
El—who was, in actuality, Ra—by the Canaanites. It was in this role that he oversaw many cultures' development of an agricultural system, the
Canaanites and
Phoenicians among them. Ba'al's influence spread throughout these cultures so much that he was known over the entire Mediterranean basin and, eventually, most of the
planet.
He was rarely seen to be a kind overseer, however, and indeed whenever his people failed to meet his strict food production quotas he very often issued orders for the mass sacrifice of
Human lives. Though these measures led to overall prosperity for both the Goa'uld and the people, it came at the expense of many people and so it perhaps came as no surprise that Ba'al was one of the first Goa'uld to encounter rebellion among his people, though it was to a much smaller scale than Ra's later comeuppance. A few smaller villages abandoned worshipping him and so, for their pride, Ba'al struck them down.
It was during the time that the Goa'uld ruled
Earth that he was sent to
Kinahhi (planet)|Kinahhi—under the name
Re'ammin the Thunderer—to kill its ruler,
King Yahm, when he fell from the favor of the Goa'uld. He cast Yahm's body into the oceans on the planet and erected a floating city,
Tsapan, on the site of his death; this marked the beginning of the
Kinahhi (people)|Kinahhi people's enslavement to the Goa'uld. However, the people of the planet eventually rose up against Re'ammin, using his own technology against him, and forcing him to flee the planet. During this time, Ba'al was able to use his gravity technology to create
black holes while using an anti-gravity device of
Ancient design as a shield so that he wouldn't be affected by them. After he was overthrown on Kinahhi, he took the power source of his shield with him but left the rest of the technology behind, fleeing to
Asdad|his fortress world. He was forbidden from returning to Kinahhi by the other System Lords as they feared what he could do with the shield and anti-gravity technology at his disposal and so he placed the shield's power source in a shrine on his fortress world and while he continued experimenting with gravity technology, it was on a much smaller scale. At some time after this, while the Goa'uld still ruled Earth, Ba'al was temporarily killed by
Mot then resurrected through a
sarcophagus by his 'sister',
Anat. {{Cite|SG1|A Matter of Honor|The Cost of Honor}}
thumb|left|Ba'al's [[Jaffa mark|symbol">

thumb|left|Ba'al's [[Jaffa mark|symbol.]]
After the fall of the Second Goa'uld Dynasty, Ba'al was one of the first to foresee that the
Tau'ri would one day rebel and so left the planet for the stars, earning him the wrath of his former master Ra, and causing him to be kicked out of the Sun God's inner circle. Despite this setback, Ba'al managed to maintain control of several
Jaffa who had been loyal to Ra and so was able to carve out a small niche for himself within the ranks of the
System Lords. Though not entirely loyal to Ba'al, these Jaffa served him out of fear of his wrath for, even though they knew that Ra's wrath on them would be terrible if he managed to defeat Ba'al, Ba'al presented a more immediate threat to them. In addition to this, Ba'al did not hesitate to make examples out of any who betrayed him to their former lord.
Following the
Tau'ri Rebellion, Ra's attention was drawn to Ba'al whom he was able to defeat repeatedly until, in desperation, Ba'al turned to
Sokar—ironically fulfilling that Tau'ri's belief that he was indeed Ba'alzebub, the agent of Satan. Having been well aware of Sokar's enmity towards Ra, Ba'al offered him a contingent of his Jaffa—several having in fact been servant of Ra himself at one point—to contend with Ra on the field of battle. Although Sokar's forces were more than sufficient to deal with Ra on their own, Ra's former forces provided a unique insight into the workings over their former lord's tactics and so proved extremely valuable to Sokar. In exchange for this help, Sokar took Ba'al under his wing for a time, aiding him in his struggle to survive against their mutual enemy.
This alliance stood for generations during which time Ba'al took advantage of Sokar's help, using both his own and his new "master's" forces to carve out a significant kingdom among the planets of the
Milky Way galaxy. Because many such gains were made with the help of Sokar's Jaffa, Sokar considered the territory to be his though he rarely pressed this issue and simply left Ba'al be, concentrating on his own war with Ra. Ba'al continued to pay tribute and give respect to Sokar for the course of his "servitude", as well as providing a buffer against Ra's forces with his ever-growing territory allowing Sokar to concentrate along a narrower frontier.
Ba'al could not hide his true intentions forever, though, gradually subverting the Jaffa that Sokar left him to the point that he commanded their true loyalty. He eventually became content that he would be able to contend with the forces of Ra without Sokar's aid, Ba'al broke off his servitude to Sokar and declared himself the sovereign ruler of his sector of space. Sokar immediately tried to recall his Jaffa from Ba'al's service but was met with no answer and so sent two of his fleets to reclaim the territory which he believed Ba'al had stolen from him. Having learned of his attack, Ba'al made a daring gambit; when Sokar's fleets arrived in two of the systems controlled by Ba'al, they were met with only two
ha'tak's each. As Sokar's fleets closed in to attack the ships, Ba'al unleashed his plan and used the ha'tak's to cause the systems stars to go supernova, destroying everything nearby including themselves and the sixty million inhabitants on the worlds.
Quickly deciding that the price of a war with Ba'al was too high to pay, Sokar and Ba'al agreed to a peace treaty so that they could focus on their prime opponent, Ra. For centuries after this the truce remained, both of the Goa'uld fighting against Ra rather than amongst each other. Though the war rained heavily on Ba'al, he managed to get himself into a position of power and eventually became a
System Lord in his own right. Ba'al's war with Ra drew on until it reached a point where the attrition rate became unbearable for both, and so the two agreed to a cease fire, though they still remained enemies at heart. Despite this, the two System Lords continued to inflict covert raids on the other, as well as attacking each other through politics rather than force.
These actions continued for more than a thousand years until, in what was apparently a freak accident, Ra was no more. Unknown to the System Lords at the time, Ra was killed by Colonel Jack O'Neill and Doctor Daniel Jackson who had used
Transportation rings to send an enhanced nuclear warhead on board his ship after a rebellion on Abydos. Though the Goa'uld did not know the truth behind the sudden death, Ba'al was quick to swoop in and claim much of Ra's disarrayed territory before
Apophis was able to take control of the majority of it. He used this new territory to parlay his way into a preeminent position among the System Lords, gaining even more power than he had previously.
2002
thumb|right|200px|Lord Ba'al was on the [[High Council of System Lords">

thumb|right|200px|Lord Ba'al was on the [[High Council of System Lords.]]
When the System Lords held a conference following the deaths of
Apophis and
Cronus, Ba'al seemed to function as first among equals, conducting the meeting. When
Osiris appeared on behalf of
Anubis to petition the System Lords to accept him back—on the condition that Anubis would, in turn, destroy the
Tau'ri—Ba'al was one of those who voted to restore him to the state of System Lord. What most of the other System Lords did not know was that this was simply a ploy to learn more information about his potential foe. However, this very act earned Ba'al the ire of
Yu, an enmity which had previously only manifested in minor tension, which resulted in open hostilities. {{Cite|SG1|Summit|Last Stand}}
thumb|left|O'Neill trapped in Ba'al's gravity torture chamber.">

thumb|left|O'Neill trapped in Ba'al's gravity torture chamber.
The
Tok'ra had at least one operative,
Kanan, in Ba'al's service though, when Kanan was discovered as a spy, his
host was damaged so badly that he had to seek another. When Kanan's
symbiote was implanted in
Jack O'Neill, he went back to
Asdad|Ba'al's outpost in order to save Ba'al's
lo'taur Shallan, who he had become involved with. Ba'al's Jaffa were able to capture O'Neill before he was able to finish his mission, however, though Kanan left him so that Ba'al could not retrieve the information of the Tok'ra from him. Ba'al tortured O'Neill endlessly, killing him many times and bringing him back to life in order to gain the information that Kanan had left in his mind. However, when
SG-1 informed
Yu that Ba'al had been conducting weapons research on the planet, he sent a fleet which destroyed the facility and thus freed O'Neill. {{Cite|SG1|Abyss}}
2003
Unknown to Ba'al, his "loyal"
Underlord Mot was plotting against him, having seized control of
P4S-237 one hundred years previously, after Ba'al abandoned it, believing that its
Naquadah mines had run dry. Mot planned to use the situation to gain favor with
Anubis and power as Ba'al had fallen out of Anubis' favor with his defeats by Lord
Yu. With the help of the villagers,
SG-1 defeated Mot and killed him, saving Ba'al from his plans, unknown to Ba'al himself. {{Cite|SG1|Prophecy}}
Anubis subsequently failed in his attempts to destroy the
Tau'ri and moved against the other
System Lords, demonstrating an impressively powerful fleet which only the combined fleet of the System Lords could hope to take on. Though
Yu was originally given the position to lead
United Alliance of System Lords forces, his growing senility left him unable to do so and so
Teal'c and
Oshu convinced Ba'al to assume control of the fleet and lead the war against Anubis. With Anubis in the atmosphere of
Langara causing his
shield to be weakened, he attacked and destroyed
Anubis' mothership but Anubis escaped in his
Anubis' escape pod|escape pod. {{Cite|SG1|Homecoming}}
A short time later, he conquered the planet
Erebus and his
Jaffa captured
Bra'tac and
Rya'c. The camp was freed by
SG-1 and
Rak'nor. {{cite|SG1|Orpheus}}
2004
thumb|Ba'al's Kulls being neutralized by one shot of the disruptors.">

thumb|Ba'al's Kulls being neutralized by one shot of the disruptors.
After the fall of Anubis, Ba'al took over most of Anubis' former holdings, including the
Kull warriors and
Asgard Asgard transporter|beaming and
hologram technology, so that he could wage war on the other
System Lords in order to become the most powerful of them. This led the other
Goa'uld into a failed attempt to negotiate with the
Tau'ri for their support against Ba'al. {{Cite|SG1|New Order, Part 1|New Order, Part 2}}
When
SG-1 was trapped in
Anubis' base on
P2X-887, he used the opportunity and lied to
Brigadier General Jack O'Neill and claimed to have captured them. He offered a trade, SG-1 for
Camulus. O'Neill eventually agreed and Camulus was turned over to him with his supposedly rigged
ZPM to assassinate Ba'al. This failed as O'Neill gave Camulus a dead ZPM and it was later stated that Ba'al killed Camulus. {{cite|SG1|Zero Hour|Prometheus Unbound}}
Following
Moloc's death on
Hak'tyl ll, Ba'al claimed his
Moloc's domain|domain and forces as his own. {{Cite|SG1|Sacrifices}}
2005
Ba'al quickly began to conquer the other
System Lords using Anubis' forces and, within a year the System Lords had been reduced to three others, all unable to fight him. However, at some point
Anubis managed to return and secretly re-take control of his forces from Ba'al. Ba'al was forced to serve under Anubis, much to his displeasure. At this point, Ba'al began to style himself
Supreme Commander of the
Goa'uld Empire. Secretly, however, he was serving Anubis. As a result of his advance, many System Lords retreated to planets they had once ruled but abandoned to use as strongholds and hideouts. Among these was
Ares who tried to retake
Arkhan's world but was killed by
Brigadier General Jack O'Neill who destroyed his
Ares' Ha'tak|Ha'tak with the
Time Jumper, presumably leading to Ba'al absorbing Ares' territory too. {{cite|SG1|It's Good to Be King}}
thumb|left|200px|Ba'al escapes just in time.">

thumb|left|200px|Ba'al escapes just in time.
Ba'al's advance against the other
System Lords was stopped only by the long-anticipated invasion of the
Replicators into the
Milky Way galaxy. The Replicator armadas led by
Replicator Carter quickly overwhelmed and destroyed the Goa'uld System Lords, and Ba'al found himself fighting a losing battle against the invaders. When knowledge of an
Ancient Dakara superweapon|superweapon capable of destroying all life in the galaxy was discovered on
Dakara, Ba'al secretly assisted Replicator Carter's original human self,
Lt. Colonel Samantha Carter and Sam's father,
Jacob Carter, in modifying the weapon, along with the
Dial Home Device associated with Dakara's
Stargate, destroying all Replicators in the galaxy. Ba'al then moved in to take back Dakara when Rebel Jaffa stormed his ship, forcing him to beam away. This effectively lead to the end of the
Goa'uld Empire as one of their "gods" fleeing proved to all Jaffa that the Goa'uld weren't the gods they claimed to be.
Even with the Replicators destroyed, Anubis still intended to claim the superweapon for himself and use it to destroy all life in the galaxy. Anubis allowed Ba'al to live so that he may bear witness to the end of all galactic life. When Anubis' plan was foiled by
Dr. Daniel Jackson and
Oma Desala, Ba'al was left as the only known surviving System Lord—the others having been killed by the Replicators and Anubis being contained by Oma Desala. {{cite|SG1|Reckoning, Part 1|Reckoning, Part 2|Threads}}
{{Quote|Over six hundred channels and nothing to watch.|Ba'al to his clones|Ex Deus Machina}}
{{Main|Ba'al clone (Ex Deus Machina)}}
thumb|right|200px|Ba'al and his clones.">

thumb|right|200px|Ba'al and his clones.
With his power base gone following the destruction of the
System Lords and the rebellion of the
Jaffa, Ba'al needed a place to hide. Fleeing to
Earth, Ba'al set himself up as a business man and took control of
The Trust, at the same time using
Asgard cloning technology to make a series of clones of himself. He also planted a
Naquadah bomb in a building in
Seattle and threatened to blow it if
Stargate Command and the Jaffa tried to kill him. They attacked anyway and the building was beamed into space and
Ba'al clone (Ex Deus Machina)|one of these clones was caught and executed by
Gerak and his Jaffa, the real Ba'al and an indeterminate amount of clones escaped, allowing them to institute a series of plans to regain their power base. {{Cite|SG1|Ex Deus Machina}}
2006
{{Main|Ba'al clone (Stronghold)}}
Later, Ba'al managed to regain an army by recruiting
Jaffa, largely through the use of
brainwashing. One of Ba'al's clones initiated a scheme to take control of the
Jaffa High Council to prevent their rise to democracy with his brainwashing technology, turning key members of the Jaffa High Council against the idea of democracy. At the time Ba'al merely claimed that this was done to provide strong leadership (in the shape of himself) to aid the Jaffa against the newly emergent threat of the
Ori, but
Vala Mal Doran (whom Ba'al had previously known in the guise of
Qetesh) later opined that the subversion of the council was done to gain control of the
Dakara superweapon, using it to destroy all life in the galaxy (something planned by Ba'al's previous master
Anubis) - apart from Ba'al and his slaves. This would have caused the Ori to lose interest in the galaxy. Though Ba'al indicated this to be the case, saying it wasn't a very original plan, the scheme was foiled and the clone was killed by
Teal'c. {{Cite|SG1|Stronghold|Insiders}}
{{Main|Ba'al clone (Off the Grid)}}
thumb|left|Ba'al in the Season 9 episode, "Off the Grid".">
.png)
thumb|left|Ba'al in the Season 9 episode, "Off the Grid".
Ba'al also planned to rebuild his empire by using
Asgard transporter to steal
Stargates from other planets and hide them using a method developed by
Nerus, Ba'al's former servant who defected to the
Ori and was captured by
Stargate Command. His plan was foiled when Nerus returned to Ba'al and accidentally downloaded a virus into one of
Ba'al's Ha'tak. The Stargates were then beamed off the Ha'tak by the newly-built Earth ship, the
Odyssey, and the Ha'tak—along with several Ba'al clones—was destroyed by the
Lucian Alliance. {{Cite|SG1|Off the Grid}}
thumb|right|200px|Ba'al and his clones at the SGC.">

thumb|right|200px|Ba'al and his clones at the SGC.
Later, Ba'al flew an
Al'kesh to
Earth and was shot down by
F-16 Fighting Falcons. He was captured and taken to
Stargate Command. He was interrogated by
SG-1 and told them his clones had turned on him and the SGC needed to captured them because they had knowledge of the
Sangraal. He planted
locator beacons in all of them and they used the tracking system on the Al'kesh to capture them. After all the clones were captured,
Malcolm Barrett, who was
Brainwashing|brainwashed, helped Ba'al escape. He forced
Lt. Colonel Samantha Carter to give him
Ancient list of Stargate addresses and they used the locator chips, which in close proximity to one another, amplified the signal they sent out and they were beamed out. {{cite|SG1|Insiders}}
When he discovered the existence of
Merlin's
Sangraal|Anti-Ori weapon that could not only destroy the Ori, but the
Ancients as well, one of the Ba'al clones found the
Osric's planet|planet where the weapon was located. His ships could not locate it, so he had to come by
Stargate. However, the
Morgan's puzzles|puzzles made by the ascended Ancient
Morgan Le Fay made it impossible for Ba'al to reach it. His Jaffa had abandoned him, trying to find a way to free him from a forcefield. He was then forced to work alongside
SG-1 and
Adria. He was transported to the tomb of
Myrddin when the Ancient was awakened who, in his daze, likened Ba'al to
Mordred. Ba'al attempted for the remainder of the time to find a way to dial out from the planets
Stargate which was locked into a random system that beamed the occupants of Myrddins tomb to
Morgan's planetary circuit|random worlds in a closed gate system to prevent discovery by the
Ori. When Adria discovered the location of the world, Ba'al was stunned by the
Ori Commander (The Quest)|Ori Commander with his
Ori stun weapon. His fate afterwards is unknown. It's possible that Ba'al was either killed or stranded on the planet. {{Cite|SG1|The Quest, Part 1|The Quest, Part 2}}
2007
{{Main|Ba'al clone (Dominion)}}
thumb|200px|left|Ba'al in the host body of Adria">

thumb|200px|left|Ba'al in the host body of Adria
With the
Ori making such advances into the
Milky Way, Ba'al devised an ingenious plan. He intended to capture
Adria and take her as a
host, by ambushing
SG-1's plan to capture the
Orici. Upon capturing her, Ba'al sent a message to his clones to meet to discuss the situation. Once they arrived, he beamed canisters of
symbiote poison into the camp, killing his clones. After implanting himself in Adria, SG-1 boarded his
Ba'al's Ha'tak|Ha'tak and killed another clone. Ba'al offered to help SG-1 in driving the
Ori Army out of the galaxy, saying that the Ori were indeed dead. However, SG-1 contacted the
Tok'ra, who removed Ba'al from Adria, presumably killing him, but not before he released his
symbiote toxin into her.
Lt. Colonel Cameron Mitchell also expressed some doubt about whether or not Ba'al was truly dead, fearing that one or more of the clones may have survived. {{Cite|SG1|Dominion}}
At the time of the
Atlantis expedition's encounter with the rogue
Asgard Fenrir, the Tau'ri and
Free Jaffa Nation were planning a joint attack on one of Ba'al's bases. A Free Jaffa Nation fleet and the
Odyssey gathered at
Golla IX in preparation for this attack, forcing
Lt. Colonel John Sheppard and
Dr. Rodney McKay to meet the
Odyssey at the planet in order to access the
Asgard computer core. {{cite|SGA|Nightfall}}
2008
{{Main|Ba'al clone (Continuum)}}
Despite these deaths, both the real Ba'al and at least
Ba'al clone (Continuum)|one clone survived. The clone was ultimately tracked down through its tracking device- the true Ba'al apparently being the only Ba'al capable of removing his device. Taken to the
Tok'ra homeworld to undergo a extraction, the clone warned
SG-1 and
General Jack O'Neill that they had made a terrible mistake as the real Ba'al had a failsafe in place in case of such an eventuality. Despite the clone's warnings, the
Extraction Ceremony proceeded without incident and Ba'al's symbiote was extracted and died after the
Tok'ra Elder smashed the container holding it.
Aziru|Ba'al's host survived the extraction and
Vala planned to help him adjust.
At the same time, the real Ba'al traveled back in time to
1939 using the
solar observation outpost on
Praxyon with a contingent of loyal
Jaffa to sink the
Achilles with the
Alpha Gate onboard before it could reach the United States. However, the
Colonel Cameron Mitchell of an
alternate timeline where Ba'al's plan had succeeded was waiting and
Death of Ba'al on the Achilles|ambushed Ba'al's forces alongside
Bosun when they emerged through the Stargate. Spotting Mitchell, Ba'al could only stare at him in shock before Mitchell shot Ba'al in the head with a
Thompson submachine gun, finally killing him. The death of the real Ba'al in 1939 and his clone brought a final end to both Ba'al and the Goa'uld
System Lords. {{cite|Stargate: Continuum}}
Alternate realities
In an alternate reality, Ba'al was defeated by Stargate Command#Alternate realities|Stargate Command in 2005 under the same circumstances as occurred in our reality. {{Cite|SG1|Ripple Effect}}
Alternate timelines
thumb|200px|Ba'al in an alternate timeline.">

thumb|200px|Ba'al in an alternate timeline.
In 2008, during the extraction of his clone, the real Ba'al went back in time to 1939 to change history by stopping the Stargate on Earth from ever reaching America which ultimately resulted in Stargate Command and Stargate Program never existing. When Ba'al got to Earth, he arrived on the ship Achilles and killed the crew of a ship carrying the Stargate (including Captain Mitchell, Colonel Cameron Mitchell's grandfather) and set a bomb before leaving through the Stargate to build a new empire in that time. Mitchell's grandfather managed to dump the bomb overboard, where it exploded harmlessly, but the ship ended up trapped in the ice of the Arctic, allowing Ba'al's plan to work to officially change the timeline. In this alternate timeline, Ba'al, retaining the knowledge of the previous timeline, became the leader of the Goa'uld, using his knowledge of the other timeline to anticipate his enemies' moves and destroy them, as well as gaining the support of other System Lords. Ba'al also used his knowledge in other ways; by promising the establishment of a Free Jaffa Nation, Ba'al was able to sway Teal'c of Chulak#Alternate timelines|Teal'c to his side as his First Prime. He also made Qetesh who was still in control of Vala Mal Doran, having never been extracted from her his Queen. Ba'al went on to attack Earth with a massive fleet, but, having been impressed with the humans in the other timeline, advocated that they be not be slaughtered and enslaved outright, but instead deceived. However, Qetesh, suspicious of Ba'al's uncanny knowledge of Earth and how he had anticipated his enemies' moves, turned on him with the ultimate goal of seizing power for herself and stabbed him with a sword. However, she kept him alive long enough to interrogate him via a hand device with Ba'al who was in a weakened state and even near death disclosing everything he knew. When Teal'c returned, Ba'al hoped to be freed, only for Teal'c to realize that Qetesh would kill him. This was proven true when Qetesh instantly turned on Teal'c before removing the sword from Ba'al which not resulted in Ba'al's death straightaway but also Ba'al splitting in half as well. SG-1 - who had managed to escape the changes to the timeline by traveling in a wormhole back to Earth at the moment history changed - managed to use his device and the Stargate to travel back to 1929 (the closest time they could get) to stop him although only Mitchell made it through.Colonel Mitchell was able to stop Ba'al and fix the timeline back to the correct course with the alternate timeline version of Ba'al, the clone, and the real Ba'al all dead. {{cite|Stargate: Continuum}}
Appearances
{| class="mw-collapsible mw-collapsed wikitable" width="100%"
! Appearances for Ba'al
|-
|
In chronological order:
Stargate SG-1*SG-1 Season 5|Season 5**"Summit"**"Last Stand"*SG-1 Season 6|Season 6**"Abyss"**"Prophecy" {{m}}
*SG-1 Season 7|Season 7**"Homecoming"**"Orpheus" {{m}}
**"Avenger 2.0" {{m}}
**"Fallout" {{m}}
**"Evolution, Part 1" {{m}}
*SG-1 Season 8|Season 8**"New Order, Part 1" {{m}}
**"New Order, Part 2" {{m}}
**"Zero Hour"**"Sacrifices" {{m}}
**"Endgame" {{m}}
**"Prometheus Unbound" {{m}}
**"It's Good to Be King" {{m}}
**"Full Alert" {{m}}
**"Reckoning, Part 1"**"Reckoning, Part 2"**"Threads"*SG-1 Season 9|Season 9**"Origin (episode)|Origin" {{m}}
**"The Powers That Be" {{m}}
**"Beachhead" {{m}}
**"Ex Deus Machina" <small>(Also Ba'al clone (Ex Deus Machina)|clone duplicate)</small>**"The Fourth Horseman, Part 2" {{m}}
**"Ripple Effect" {{m}}
**"Stronghold" <small>(Ba'al clone (Stronghold)|Clone duplicate only)</small>**"Off the Grid" <small>(Ba'al clone (Off the Grid)|Clone duplicate only)</small>*SG-1 Season 10|Season 10**"Insiders" <small>(Also clone duplicates)</small>**"Uninvited" {{m}}
**"Memento Mori" {{m}}
**"The Quest, Part 1"**"The Quest, Part 2"**"The Shroud" {{m}}
**"Dominion" <small>(Ba'al clone (Dominion)|Clone duplicate only)</small>Stargate: Atlantis*Atlantis Season 5|Season 5**"Search and Rescue" {{m}}
Stargate: Continuum <small>(Also alternate timeline duplicate and Ba'al clone (Continuum)|clone duplicate)</small>|}
Personality
{{Quote|I'm a god. Gods are all-knowing.|Ba'al|Reckoning, Part 2}}
Although exceptionally ruthless, Ba'al seemed to possess a somewhat better understanding of human nature than was typical for the Goa'uld, and he also has a vague understanding of the concept of humor. Unlike the "typical" Goa'uld, Ba'al's personality was generally wry and sardonic rather than melodramatically megalomaniacal; his methods often involved deception and subterfuge rather than brute force, and his style tended toward subtle insidiousness rather than outright cruelty.
In keeping with his more subtle modus operandi, Ba'al also maintained an image of almost entirely non-military refinement, with a rather less threatening appearance than was usual for the Goa'uld. He had a beard, but it was small and kept neat, and even before adopting Earth clothing he was also consistently well-dressed. Notably, where most Goa'uld tended to allow their underlings to do most of their work, Ba'al was willing to take a more 'hands-on' approach to his affairs, seen most keenly in his detailed knowledge of the Stargate network, allowing him to perform such feats as developing a program that could dial every Stargate in the galaxy simultaneously.
Ba'al was also distinct from most Goa'uld in that despite the above-mentioned ruthlessness, his motivations are much more complex than simple evil in a moral absolutist sense. He was rational, adaptable, and less attached to the trappings of power; since the collapse of the Goa'uld Empire, he freely acknowledged that he is not a god (prior to the downfall of the Goa'uld, he would treat his "godhood" rather flippantly to those who already knew about the secret — a marked contrast to other Goa'uld, who gave every impression of actually believing their own propaganda — even admitting that he doesn't believe in it, and saying that other Goa'uld don't really either). During the war with the
Ori, Ba'al occasionally remarked that he found aspects of human culture "amusing", and even goes so far as to largely stop using the
symbiote voice distinctive of the Goa'uld, only using it when trying to intimidate opponents. Also, he had started to wear elements of 21st-century Earth fashion, even when offworld.
In the alternate reality he created, Ba'al also demonstrated that he was willing to break the cycle of Goa'uld megalomania resulting in conquest, preferring to negotiate an alliance of sorts with the
Tau'ri (with himself in overall control) rather than simply slaughtering and enslaving them. He even chastised
Cronus for suggesting he do so. Furthermore, he was willing to consent to the establishment of a
Free Jaffa Nation as it meant he was able to sway Teal'c into his service (although it is unclear if he would have actually gone through with this promise if he was ever put in a position where he would
have to honour it). In spite of the potentially huge implications of this once Ba'al had solidified power, it proved a worthwhile gamble as Teal'c's military skill proved invaluable in defeating the other System Lords, and Ba'al showed willing to keep his word, providing half of Australia for the Free Jaffa (at the expense of
Camulus).
Ba'al cared only for his own interests, and was a persistent enemy of SG-1 and the
Tau'ri. Throughout this however, he displayed a very uncharacteristic ability to recognize universal threats, and occasionally worked cooperatively with SG-1 for brief periods when he recognized that it was in his own best interests to do so. This would imply that although he was egocentric and desires self-aggrandizement, he was not purely chaotic, but rather that he at times committed actions that would commonly be defined as evil, simply because he saw said means as being the fastest and most direct way of obtaining what he wanted.
Ba'al was also extremely intelligent and a brilliant military strategist, but his strategies, while used to defeat his opponents, were always aimed at giving him more power. He was also a more than capable scientist, overseeing at least some of his experiments and projects personally {{Cite|SG1|Abyss}}
, and proved to be a cunning and shrewd businessman on Earth at taking over
The Trust.
Equipment
{{Expand}}
Weapons
Kara kesh: To be addedSIG P226: To be addedBa'al's knife: To be addedShikra blade: To be added
Vehicles
Ba'al's Ha'tak: To be addedBa'al's Al'kesh: To be addedBa'al's Tel'tak: To be addedAnubis' mothership: To be added
Notes
Ba'al was the first Goa'uld whose extraction was shown. He is also the only known System Lord who was extracted from their host.* Osiris was once a System Lord, but was not at the time of his extraction from Sarah Gardner.
External links
{{Source images2}}
{{Lexicon|baal.htm|Ba'al}}
{{GWomni|Baal|Baal}}
{{SGWwiki|Ba'al|Ba'al}}
{{WP|Ba'al|The mythological Ba'al}}
Category:Clones>Category:Clones
Category:Goa'uld>Category:Goa'uld
Category:Recurring SG-1 characters>Category:Recurring SG-1 characters
Category:Supreme Commanders>Category:Supreme Commanders
Category:System Lords>Category:System Lords
Category:Underlords>Category:Underlords
Category:Warmasters>Category:Warmasters
Category:Deceased characters>Category:Deceased characters
Category:Mentioned-only Atlantis characters>Category:Mentioned-only Atlantis characters
Category:Members of the Trust>Category:Members of the Trust