Since their inception in 2004, high entropy alloys have become a new area of intense
research in the metallurgical community. Over five hundred distinct compositions have been
examined and they have proven to have unique and promising characteristics in the mechanical,
thermal, and chemical fields. The field of high entropy ceramics, however, only began in 2016
and is still a fledgling field of research. Here, the bulk synthesis and fabrication of high entropy
diborides, carbides, fluorite oxides, and silicides is examined. In the first part of the dissertation,
the fabrication of high entropy diborides from commercial powder via high energy ball milling
and subsequent spark plasma sintering is investigated. The materials are found to have superior
hardness and oxidation resistance to the majority of binary diborides. In the second section, flash
spark plasma sintering is utilized to fabricate high entropy diboride and high entropy carbide
composites with graphite in 90 seconds. The presence of graphite was found to be necessary for
the homogenization of the diborides even at very high temperatures. In the third section, the
direct synthesis of high entropy diborides via borocarbothermal reduction of metal oxides and
spark plasma sintering; this successfully created fully dense, homogenous materials. In the fourth
part, the production of high entropy fluorite oxides based off the yttria-stabilized zirconia (YSZ)
structure is performed. These materials were found to have significantly reduced thermal and
ionic conductivities compared to 8YSZ, a commonly used fluorite oxide material. In the final
part, a high entropy silicide is fabricated via milling and spark plasma sintering. It was found to
have a thermal conductivity of approximately one third that of similar disilcides. The production
of a wide swath of materials allowed for similar characteristics to be found amongst the
materials. In particular, significant reductions in thermal conductivity and improvements in
hardness (both Vickers and nanoindentation) appear to be uniform properties among all the high
entropy ceramics, similar to what is observed in the metallurgical field. The discovery of these
materials opens up a wide new range of compositional space for refractory and rare earth
ceramics.