Dark Age of Technology
"In ancient times, men built wonders, laid claim to the stars and sought to better themselves for the good of all. But we are much wiser now."
- – Archmagos Ultima Cryol - Speculations On Pre-Imperial History
"The day science begins to study non-physical phenomena, it will make more progress in one decade than in all previous centuries of its existence"
- – Nikola Tesla
"There have been numerous sages among the nations of mankind. The knowledge that has not come down to us is larger than the knowledge that has. Where are the sciences of the Persians that ‘Umar ordered to be wiped out at the time of the conquest? Where are the sciences of the Chaladaeans, the Syrians and the Babylonians, and the scholarly products and results that were theirs? Where are the sciences of the Copts, their predecessors?"
- – Ibn Khaldun - Muqaddimah
The Dark Age of Technology (or just the Age of Technology) was a period of history before the Imperium of Man, where human civilization flourished and spread throughout the stars. It takes place shortly after the discovery of the Warp-drive and the Navigator gene.
Thanks to the discovery of the Warp drive technology, Geller Fields allowing for Warp travel (alongside the heavily implied "design" of the Navigator sub-species. There are several hints throughout the books that they did not evolve "naturally") and the Standard Template Constructs, humanity was able to spread far and wide, settling millions of planets and driving out the xenos-civilizations that came before them. The result was akin to a golden age for humanity, with technological marvels (beyond even the Adeptus Mechanicus's ability to recreate comprehend) being constructed, and laws of physics being re-written.
The Age of Technology ironically ended because humanity had become too dependent on their technology and on Warp travel. They lost the former with the rebellion of the Men of Iron, and the latter as the increasing emergence of psykers and the uncontrolled release of their powers (as they did not know how to control them, let alone shield themselves from the Warp, making them either convenient focal points for daemons to enter real space, or turning them into them power-hungry, possibly Chaos corrupted slaver-kings as it happened on numerous worlds during the Age of Strife), and Eldar partying too hard caused Warp storms. Enslaver plagues wiping out entire populations due to the increasing number of Human psykers and the resulting (aforementioned) close encounters of the daemonic kind on various populated human worlds and spacecraft (think "Event Horizon") throughout the galaxy further accelerated the downfall to this "first" human empire preceding the Imperium. With humanity struggling to battle the backlash of this sudden mayhem, aliens long thought to have been driven off, or who lived under the benevolent care of the human empire came back / rebelled for that sweet sweet vengeance. Thus, humanity fell into a period that would later become known as the Age of Strife. Interestingly the emergence of psykers in human strangely coincides with the gestation of Slaanesh.
The "Dark" in "Dark Age of Technology" is kind of misleading, as it implies that the Imperium considers technology to be inherently evuuul. In truth though, one of the major reasons why humanity uses the term "dark" is that - during the Age of Strife - which was characterized by civil unrest, daemonic incursions, including but not limited to depopulation of whole planets, Warp travel / communication becoming impossible (resulting in complete isolation of human populated worlds, disintegrating what was left of the first intergalactic human civilization) all of this combined led to the first major loss of previously obtained knowledge. Following this dark era the wars of the Great Crusade, and in particular the Horus Heresy, followed by the long millennia of the Age of the Imperium (which - as we all know is characterized by unending war on all sides, superstition, xenophobia, etc) finally resulted in destroying basically all records of the Age of Strife and the Dark Age of technology, respectively, that may have been preserved until then, leaving only scraps of knowledge and rumours behind.... or as Kasper Hawser put it in the Horus Heresy novel "Prospero Burns": "Do we even know what we have lost? or something like that. Needs a proper citation). The Horus Heresy certainly didn't improve the situation. To come back to why the Dark Age of Technology is called "dark". In part this is for one due to the above mentioned circumstances - Humanity simply knows next to nothing about this era anymore. The closest thing we know how Humanity may have lived during this Age were the Interex, a civilization that was more advanced than the Imperium, but was unfortunately wiped out at some point by the Luna Wolves, the war starting with Erebus secretly stealing an Anatheme (the very same warp-corrupted sword that was later used to mortally wound Horus in order to engineer his corruption) from one of their museums. This convinced the Interex the Imperials had been corrupted by Chaos already, leading to the start of hostilities. However, it is also called "Dark Age", because it is now considered a spiritual dark age compared to the "glorious modern age", as humanity used to put science first (which may or may not have caused the birth of the Omnissiah - probably not - but the Void Dragon imprisoned on Mars by the Empra is a hot candidate. Also highly ironic considering the Emperor wanted to get back there with his whole "Imperial Truth" idea), rather than the God-Emperor of Mankind. The irony of all this is lost on every human in the setting. The only remnants of the technological wonders of that age (called "archeotechnology" or "archeotech," which the Adeptus Mechanicus furiously seeks), are the STCs, which could be the Imperiums' salvation. Other creations of that age, like the Men of Iron, are best left forgotten (or better yet, destroyed). Pfft... good luck getting a tech-priest to not poke around the possibly-dangerous ancient technology, though.
Highlights of the technology that has been hinted at canonically include still-pristine warships with bridges made of solid light, something equivalent to time-weapons, and a cloud of sentient nano-machines that can kill you by making your blood explode. Dark Age of humanity wasn't nothin' to fuck with.
TL;DR: It's basically Star Trek meets Atlantis.
List of reasons why the Dark Age was kickass
A.K.A. why the Emperor is kind of a failure.
Canon
- Widespread immunity to all diseases and poisons (The Panacea).
- Far more widespread use of anti-gravity.
- Teleportation.
- Imperial Knights were used during the early stages of the DAOT and were used in the defence of many of humanitys colonies across the galaxy. They proved themselves over and over again but the Thrones of these mighty war machines would over time begin to effect the minds of their user's, turning them from a protective mind set into a far more authoritarian one.
- Guns that can travel their ammo back in time so they can hit their target with 105% accuracy and shoot blackholes. The Speranza from "Priests of Mars" has such a weapon hidden within its body. A vast gun like a great menhir was bought to the surface on heavy duty rails before it fired a silent dark pulse of energy, this energy would then coalesce into a miniature temporary black hole. Although the Eldar ship, the Starblade was able to avoid the shot it's solar sail was brushed by the weapons deadly energy, allowing the secondary effects of the chrono-weaponry to shift the target a nanosecond into the past, forcing identical neutrons of the solar mast into the same quantum space. This courses the mast to detonate violently; now crippled and visible the Starblade was destroyed by the circling Kotov fleet. These weapons were designed to crack the hull's of the ships of their enemies; let that settle in for a moment, these powerful weapons needed to be this strong in order to "damage", not destroy, the ships that opposed them.
- Vigilus Ablaze may have given us an actual name for this type of weapon, the Voidclaw. Just like the weapnon used by the Speranza this weapon focused a beam of crushing energy upon a single point to open a gravitic anomaly smaller than a pearl. The Voidclaw was said to have been constructed using Noctilith, more commonlly known as Blackstone, long before Humanity had quested out into the stars on the Emperor's Great Crusade; this along with the weapons noted alien appearance seems to suggest that this weapon may have had a more alien origin; which may add a bit of evidence towards humanity coexisting, and working alonside other Xenos species during this time.
- Combat augment arrays could be used to transform a person, or entire populations into killing machines. Being able to turn normal colonists into soldiers sounds great but it was considered dishonourable and foolhardy, as although you could get an instant army, the arrays invasive manipulation of nerve pathways, adrenal glands and musculature normally resulted in the fatality of those affected. You could enhance an entire planet's population into super soldiers but you were also more than likely also signing their death warrants; not to mention that reintegrating a generation of young men taught to kill in an "ordinary," ca. late-M2 fashion into society has been enough of a challenge in our own time.
- These Combat augment arrays combined with the existence of butcher's nails seems to add a far darker side to what we know about humanitys golden age; the existence of these technology's either show a flagrant disregard for human lives, or a desperate attempt to create enough fighting body's to counter whatever foes they were facing.
- Robots with the strength of Space Marines that numbered in levels close to the Imperial Guard.
- On a similar note, Sentient AI's. Or close enough to it to be highly capable but not close enough to be people.
- Imperator Titans were practically universal in most planets' PDF.
- Average humans performing really hazardous duty like deep space mining or maintenance of a voidship's plasma coils had access to Terminator armour. Well, not exactly Terminator armour as the Space Marines use; but those incredibly durable exoskeletons-cum-spacesuit that were used by civilians while performing their day job back later served as the template from which Terminator armour was developed by the AdMech. After they recovered a bunch of them during the Great Crusade, they only had to add auto-senses, black carapace interfaces and whatchamallicks to allow a Space Marine to use the suit like a regular set of Power Armour.
- Weapons that could shoot enemy ships in the middle of a warp jump.
- Something like DC Comics' Nth Metal made by Human technology (invented after Psychic Powers are scientifically proven to exist after being used as the poster boy of IRL pseudoscience)
/tg/
A basic Fanon timeline of the Dark Age of Technology http://www.heresy-online.net/forums/155-homebrew-40k-fluff/211473-fanon-history-dark-age-technology.html#post2375305