Difference between revisions of "Kubla Khan"
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26 || [[Parthecon XXVI]] || April 24-26, 1998 || [[Joe Haldeman]], [[Andrew J. Offutt]] | 26 || [[Parthecon XXVI]] || April 24-26, 1998 || [[Joe Haldeman]], [[Andrew J. Offutt]] | ||
27 || [[Parthecon XXVII]] || 1999 || | 27 || [[Parthecon XXVII]] || 1999 || | ||
− | 28 || [[Parthecon XXVIII]] || 2000 || | + | 28 || [[Parthecon XXVIII]] || 2000 || |
− | 29 || [[Kubla Khan XXIX]] || 2001 || | + | 29 || [[Kubla Khan XXIX]] || April 6-8, 2001 || Matt Forbeck, Don Perrin, Justin Achilli, John Ickes, [[Ursula Vernon]] |
30 || [[Kubla Khan XXX]] || 2002 || | 30 || [[Kubla Khan XXX]] || 2002 || | ||
</tab> | </tab> |
Revision as of 06:57, 5 July 2023
(Are you looking for the San Francisco Bay Area gaming convention?)
A series of conventions in Nashville, TN founded and chaired by Ken Moore and run under the auspicious of the Middle Tennessee Science Fiction Society..
There were 30 conventions in the series (from 1973 to 2002), but numbers 26-28, run by Dr. Charles Dickens and Patricia Clements, were renamed Parthecon. Andrew Offutt was MC for all of the conventions.
After Kubla Khan/Parthecon ended, Nashville was without a convention until Dan Caldwell and Fred Grimm revived Xanadu.
Convention | |
1973—2002 |
This is a convention page. Please extend it by adding information about the convention, including dates, GoHs, convention chairman, locale, sponsoring organization, external links to convention pages, awards given, the program, notable events, anecdotes, pictures, scans of publications, pictures of T-shirts, con reports, etc. |