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| - After Caesar's rebellion against Governor Breck (in Conquest of the Planet of the Apes), Caesar led his ape and human followers out of the city (which could be Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego, New York City or elsewhere, depending on the source) to establish a new settlement. One script outline for Battle for the Planet of the Apes depicts a flashback of Caesar leading an exodus of apes and humans from 'Modern City' in 1991, in the aftermath of his successful revolt. Ape uprisings and general world tensions then led to nuclear devastation (including Modern City) which Caesar's band narrowly escaped. London, Rome, Athens, Rio, Moscow, Tokyo and Peking were all destroyed much the same, and Caesar pointed out that "the city was flattened. The bomb left nothing". His followers establishe
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| - After Caesar's rebellion against Governor Breck (in Conquest of the Planet of the Apes), Caesar led his ape and human followers out of the city (which could be Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego, New York City or elsewhere, depending on the source) to establish a new settlement. One script outline for Battle for the Planet of the Apes depicts a flashback of Caesar leading an exodus of apes and humans from 'Modern City' in 1991, in the aftermath of his successful revolt. Ape uprisings and general world tensions then led to nuclear devastation (including Modern City) which Caesar's band narrowly escaped. London, Rome, Athens, Rio, Moscow, Tokyo and Peking were all destroyed much the same, and Caesar pointed out that "the city was flattened. The bomb left nothing". His followers established an 'Ape City' to the north of Modern City. According to Marvel Comics' Quest for the Planet of the Apes, former Governor Breck, Alma and Mendez had been taken prisoner along with other volatile humans, whom the apes kept alive as a work detail after the rebellion. Two years on, the apes hadn't visited the city since before it was destroyed, but knew it to be 'dead' (it was by then surrounded by a desert wasteland). Aldo challenged Caesar to a quest to determine ape leadership: he and Caesar must return to the old city and each bring something back; whoever found the 'best thing' would rule. Caesar accepted, though MacDonald, knowing the dangers of entering a city only a year after a nuclear war, urged him not to go. The city was a scene of horror, and Caesar knew immediately what to bring back: the knowledge and vision of what strife can cause, and what peace can avoid. He declared the area The Forbidden City and that apes should avoid the area completely. Aldo, meanwhile, found a stocked armory and filled a cart with rifles. Back in Ape City, Breck and other humans revolted and seized Aldo's cart of weapons. The apes killed most escaping humans, but a few, including Breck, Mendez and Alma, fled into the Forbidden Zone. An old orangutan named Mandemus, who had saved Caesar's life, scorned the idea of keeping the weapons to protect themselves, so Caesar made him the Keeper of the Armory to make sure they were never used for evil. For a time there was peace between apes and the remaining humans, though Aldo continued to bide his time until another opportunity to challenge Caesar presented itself. It was many years later, when Caesar, Virgil and MacDonald (somewhat recklessly) decided to search the bomb-proof Archive section of the Forbidden City for tapes of Caesar's parents, that either the apes or the local mutants were aware of the other's survival. Aldo again took the chance to try to take over Ape City. Governor Kolp was by then the leader of the physically damaged and mentally unbalanced mutants, but he and the more able-bodied and aggressive members of the community were mostly wiped out during a failed invasion of Caesar's City, with only a few escaping and another group taken as prisoners. A final confrontation between Aldo and Caesar ended with Aldo falling from a tree and Caesar securing his leadership of a city which promised more inclusion for its humans. Two generations on, in Malibu Graphics' Planet of the Apes, Caesar's grandson and heir, Alexander, struggled to stop the city he had inherited from falling into chaos. By this time only one human child in Ape City was still able to talk - Simon. And instead of dying after his battle with Caesar, Aldo had in fact survived and led his followers into exile. One of this tribe, Ollo, had massacred all of his community before becoming head of the Ape City army. Over the span of a few years, aided by Jacob, son of Virgil, Alexander had to stop the various plots from Ollo. Alexander went on a special expedition into the Forbidden Zone and visited the Forbidden City, where he was attacked by a throng of mutants. There, he freed a group of mutated 'Forgotten Apes' held captive since Caesar's revolution. Like Aldo before him, General Ollo took advantage of Alexander's absence to seize control, but he too was unsuccessful and went into exile. Many of his 'Aldonite' supporters mimicked his battle scar and some went with him. One - Colonel Urchak - was sent on a grueling road-building project into the uncharted territories of the Mud People, north of Memphis. Despite their help in defeating Ollo, Jacob was reluctant to allow any rights to humans. General Ollo allied with the Forgotten Apes and provoked a war between them and their Swamp Ape neighbours in the Forbidden Zone, and he later formed a somewhat contradictory alliance with Simon's human tribe and the alien Tenctonese. All attempts had little success, and Ollo met with an anti-climactic death at the hands of the resurrected spirit of Governor Breck. The grand-daughter of two time-travelling astronauts turned up in Alexander's city, and after Breck had annihilated all of the communities outside of the Ape City, the ghost of Caesar finally overcame him, again with the help of humans. Ultimately, Alexander's society survived and once again promised to start a new era of co-operation between apes and humans. MR Comics' Revolution on the Planet of the Apes: Ape Shall Not Kill Ape (drawn by original Malibu artist Kent Burles) was set in 'The Valley' - a village where humans and apes lived in peace. A Lawgiver named Greybeard was attacked and killed on the orders of Augustus, the Lawgiver of the 'Hill Tribes' who had left (Caesar's?) Ape City in protest at humanity's integration into ape society. Augustus then ordered all humans cast out and the time of human/ape cohabitation at an end. Although not set in Ape City itself, this story might explain later events there. In Malibu Graphics' Planet of the Apes: The Forbidden Zone - set some centuries after the time of Alexander - one character deduced that humans must have been made primitive outcasts from Ape City in the era of Alexander and Jacob (which is true, but ignores the conclusion of that story). In this era, the ape-only city was led by the female chimp Councillor Zoe. Gorilla Julius led an 'exploratory expedition' into the Forbidden Zone, where he found remnants of a human civilization, much to his surprise. Meanwhile, the mutant Mendez Ten was condemned for his independent thinking and heresy against the worship of the Alpha-Omega Bomb. He escaped across the Forbidden Zone and both he and Julius found themselves at the mercy of a community known as the Primacy - a settlement once under the jurisdiction of Ape City, but the spread of the radioactive wastelands cut off communications between the two towns. Primacy maintained and developed the ideas of human integration that Ape City had since turned its back on. The armies of the mutants and of Ape City invaded Primacy but, using the advice of Mendez and Julius, they were able to maneuver the two armies into wiping each other out.
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