Uncanny X-Men #97 was a telepathic vision experienced by Professor X. Her first physical appearance was in issue #105.
Empress Lilandra Neramani made her first, albeit shadowy, appearance in Uncanny X-Men #97 in February 1976. Her full debut came in Uncanny X-Men #105 in June 1977. She was a pivotal creation of the legendary X-Men creative team, writer Chris Claremont and artist Dave Cockrum.
Her introduction was a cornerstone of Claremont's ambitious plan to elevate the X-Men from a team of Earth-bound heroes to figures of cosmic importance. Before Lilandra, the X-Men's adventures were largely confined to our planet. By creating a vast, complex Shi'ar Empire and placing a sympathetic, regal figure like Lilandra at its heart, Claremont and Cockrum opened up a universe of storytelling possibilities. Lilandra was conceived as a “sci-fi princess” archetype, but one infused with political burden and agency. Her design by Cockrum, with her striking human-like features and distinctive avian-inspired crest of hair and feathers, immediately made her visually unique and established the Shi'ar as a species descended from avian ancestors. The telepathic romance she shared with Charles Xavier was a groundbreaking concept, a love story not bound by physical distance but by a meeting of minds across the void of space. This relationship would become the emotional anchor for the X-Men's most celebrated cosmic saga and a defining element of both characters for decades to come.
Lilandra Neramani's story is a royal drama of Shakespearean proportions, set against a backdrop of alien worlds and galactic war. She is the younger sister of D'Ken Neramani, the reigning Majestor of the Shi'ar Empire, and Cal'syee Neramani, who would become the warrior renegade Deathbird. The Neramani dynasty was one of conquest and tradition, but while D'Ken inherited their father's madness and ambition, and Deathbird their violent, atavistic fury, Lilandra developed a more progressive and compassionate worldview. Her origins are tied directly to her opposition to her brother's insanity. Emperor D'Ken became obsessed with the M'Kraan Crystal, a nexus of all realities containing unimaginable power. He believed that by mastering it, he could become a god. Lilandra recognized that his tampering with such a fundamental cosmic force would not bring glory, but would instead unmake the entire universe. As Grand Admiral of the Imperial Fleet, she attempted to stop him through official channels but was branded a traitor. Forced to flee for her life, Lilandra began a rebellion against her brother's tyrannical rule. Desperate for allies, she reached out with her latent telepathic abilities, sending a psychic cry for help across the cosmos. This distress call miraculously found a mind powerful enough to receive it: Professor Charles Xavier on the distant, primitive planet Earth. For months, Xavier was haunted by vivid dreams and nightmares of a beautiful alien princess and a “crystal that was the heart of the universe.” He eventually recognized it not as a dream, but as a genuine telepathic message. This psychic connection brought the attention of D'Ken's agents, such as the Shi'ar enforcer Erik the Red, to Earth, directly leading to the X-Men's first major foray into cosmic affairs. The X-Men, along with the space-faring pirates known as the starjammers, ultimately allied with Lilandra. They traveled to the Shi'ar home galaxy and confronted D'Ken at the site of the M'Kraan Crystal. It was the phoenix_force, then inhabiting the body of Jean Grey, that ultimately saved all of creation by repairing the damage D'Ken had done to the crystal's matrix, driving the emperor permanently insane in the process. With D'Ken catatonic and Deathbird in exile, the Shi'ar High Council had little choice but to name the hero of the rebellion, Lilandra, as the new Majestrix of the Shi'ar Imperium. Her reign, however, would be anything but peaceful, constantly challenged by her sister, galactic threats, and the impossible demands of a militaristic empire that often chafed under her enlightened rule.
To be unequivocally clear, Empress Lilandra Neramani has not appeared, nor has she been mentioned, in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (Earth-199999) to date. The Shi'ar Empire itself has yet to be formally introduced in the MCU canon.
A common point of confusion arises from the 20th Century Fox film, Dark Phoenix (2019). This film exists in a separate continuity and is not part of the MCU. In this movie, the primary antagonist is Vuk, the leader of a race of shapeshifting aliens called the D'Bari, whose planet was destroyed by the Phoenix Force. Seeking to control the Phoenix to restore her world, she manipulates Jean Grey.
While Vuk's role as an alien leader pursuing the Phoenix-possessed Jean Grey is narratively similar to Lilandra's role in The Dark Phoenix Saga comic, the similarities end there.
This character is, at best, a loose composite, blending Lilandra's function in the plot with the name of the D'Bari, the race whose star system was famously destroyed by the Dark Phoenix in the comics. This adaptation made significant changes, removing the entire political and emotional complexity that the Shi'ar Empire and Lilandra's love for Xavier brought to the original story.
Lilandra's capabilities are a blend of her unique Shi'ar physiology, royal training, and personal character. She is far more than a simple monarch who rules from a throne.
Lilandra is defined by a powerful sense of duty and justice. She is fundamentally a progressive, compassionate ruler trapped at the head of a feudal, expansionist, and often ruthless empire. She genuinely wishes for peace and enlightenment but is pragmatic enough to understand that power must sometimes be met with power. Her most defining internal conflict is the constant struggle between her personal desires—specifically, her deep and abiding love for Charles Xavier—and her responsibilities as Majestrix. She has been forced to make impossible choices, such as condemning the woman her beloved's student had become to death for the sake of universal stability. She carries the weight of these decisions with a quiet, regal sorrow, making her one of Marvel's most noble and tragic cosmic figures.
As Empress Lilandra has not appeared in the MCU, there are no abilities, equipment, or personality traits to analyze within this continuity. The alternate Vuk character from the Fox Dark Phoenix film possesses a completely different powerset (shapeshifting, energy absorption) and a personality driven by singular vengeance, bearing no resemblance to the comic book version of Lilandra.
This two-part epic is Lilandra's defining story. Her telepathic pleas bring the X-Men into a cosmic war against her brother D'Ken. It is during the climax of the Phoenix Saga that the Phoenix-powered Jean Grey saves the universe by mending the M'Kraan Crystal. Lilandra is crowned Empress, and a new era of cooperation between Earth and the Shi'ar begins. This idyllic state is shattered in the Dark Phoenix Saga. After the Phoenix Force is corrupted and becomes the nihilistic Dark Phoenix, it consumes the D'Bari star system, killing billions. As Empress, Lilandra cannot ignore this act of cosmic genocide. She convenes the Galactic Council, which decrees that the Phoenix entity must be “psychically lobotomized” to remove its threat forever. She leads a Shi'ar battlecruiser to Earth to carry out the sentence. This places her in direct opposition to the X-Men, who believe Jean can be saved. The resulting confrontation leads to a Shi'ar trial by combat—a duel of honor on the Blue Area of the Moon between the X-Men and Lilandra's Imperial Guard. The battle ends in tragedy when the Dark Phoenix re-emerges, and Jean Grey, in a moment of clarity, chooses to sacrifice her own life. Lilandra's actions, though born of duty, created a rift with Xavier and the X-Men that would take years to heal.
During this storyline, Lilandra is deposed by her sister, Deathbird, who has formed an unholy alliance with the parasitic alien race, the Brood. Lilandra is forced into exile and becomes a fugitive, hunted by her own empire. She once again turns to Charles Xavier and the X-Men for aid. This saga sees the X-Men captured and implanted with Brood embryos, leading to a horrifying body-horror epic. Lilandra, alongside the Starjammers, fights a guerrilla war to reclaim her throne. The story reinforces her reliance on her off-world allies and showcases the ever-present threat her sister poses to her reign.
Grant Morrison's run on New X-Men presented one of the greatest challenges to Lilandra's rule. Cassandra Nova, inhabiting Professor X's body, travels to the Shi'ar Imperium. Over a period of time, she whispers psychic poison into Lilandra's mind, preying on her insecurities and fears. Convinced that the X-Men and the mutant genome itself are a cosmic contagion that must be sterilized, a maddened Lilandra orders the Imperial Guard to Earth to forcibly quarantine the planet and exterminate all mutants. The ensuing battle with the X-Men is brutal. It is only when the Stepford Cuckoos and Jean Grey expose Cassandra Nova's control that the Imperial Guard stands down. The event left Lilandra mentally shattered, and she stepped down from her throne for a time to recover, her reputation badly damaged throughout the galaxy.
This was Lilandra's final, tragic chapter. The throne had been violently seized by the prodigal Summers brother, Gabriel Summers, who crowned himself Emperor Vulcan. His aggressive, expansionist policies plunged the Shi'ar Empire into a devastating war with the Kree Empire (then ruled by the Inhumans). Lilandra, returned to her senses and horrified by what Vulcan was doing to her people, emerged as the leader of a rebellion, a role she was all too familiar with. Supported by the Starjammers and a faction of loyal Shi'ar, she fought to depose Vulcan and restore peace. During a climactic battle, Lilandra was on the verge of victory. She had rallied the majority of the Shi'ar people to her cause and was about to reclaim her throne. In that critical moment, she was assassinated. Her killer was Darkhawk, who was being mentally controlled by a sleeper personality from the Fraternity of Raptors, an ancient and insidious enemy of the Shi'ar Empire. Lilandra Neramani was murdered in front of her loyalists, her death broadcast across the Empire. Her last thoughts were of her beloved Charles. Her death extinguished the best hope for peace and ensured the War of Kings would continue to its destructive conclusion, marking a dark turning point for Marvel's cosmic landscape.
For an entire generation, this was the definitive version of Lilandra. The animated series adapted the Phoenix and Dark Phoenix Sagas with remarkable fidelity, capturing the essence of her character perfectly. Voiced by Camilla Scott, she was portrayed as a noble, intelligent, and capable leader who formed a deep and believable psychic romance with Professor Xavier. Her anguish at having to confront the Dark Phoenix was a central emotional anchor of the cartoon's most famous episodes, making her a well-known and beloved character to millions who had never read a comic book.
In this dark, alternate timeline created by the death of a young Charles Xavier, Lilandra's life was drastically different. Without Xavier to receive her telepathic call for help, her rebellion against D'Ken failed. She was captured and became a prize for Apocalypse's servant, Gladiator, who was now a brutal and heartless killer. She was eventually murdered by Gladiator after he was brainwashed, a tragic footnote in a world without the X-Men's hope.
The Ultimate Universe offered a radical re-imagining. Here, Lilandra was not an empress but the figurehead of a secretive organization known as the Church of Shi'ar Enlightenment. This group was a religious cult that worshipped the Phoenix Force as a god. They believed that its human host must be controlled to ensure a peaceful cosmic rebirth. When they discovered Jean Grey was the Phoenix's host, they sent their enforcers to Earth to contain her, leading to a conflict with the X-Men. This version removed the royal lineage and the romance with Xavier, transforming Lilandra into a zealous, though not necessarily evil, religious leader.
Uncanny X-Men #97 was a telepathic vision experienced by Professor X. Her first physical appearance was in issue #105.War of Kings #4 (2009). The event also saw the apparent death of her nemesis, Vulcan, and the Inhuman king, Black Bolt.