The Mark of Mandragora (comic story)


 * You may be looking for the graphic novel collection of the same name.

The Mark of Mandragora was a Seventh Doctor comic strip published in Doctor Who Magazine.

Summary
to be added

Characters

 * Seventh Doctor
 * Ace
 * Captain Muriel Frost
 * Beanie
 * Stranks
 * Sergeant Jasper Bean
 * Lynodd
 * Brigadier Alistair Lethbridge-Stewart

Continuity

 * The Doctor and Ace return to the secondary console room. (TV: The Masque of Mandragora et al.)
 * The TARDIS features a library of bookcases embedded in its walls. (TV: Deep Breath et al.)
 * Ace briefly encounters Magog, still trapped in the Doctor's TARDIS and pleading for release. (COMIC: The Iron Legion)
 * M, or Mandrake, is a popular drug amongst teenagers and young adults that first appeared in 1997, and is the most important teenage problem in some European countries, but carries a more malevolent, alien purpose with the Mandragora. The Seventh Doctor later encountered cocaine, or SMILE, in 1987, that had become infused with the N-Forms. (PROSE: Damaged Goods, AUDIO: Damaged Goods)
 * The Doctor states that the Mandragora Helix aligns with Earth every five centuries. (TV: The Masque of Mandragora) Repercussions of the alignment would be felt in 2009. (PROSE: Beautiful Chaos)
 * Frost states that following the Gantac Invasion and the Availlon fiasco, (COMIC: Invaders from Gantac!, TV: Battlefield) UNIT have been operating under a greater degree of public transparency, with aliens now a public fact. However, by 2005, public knowledge had diminished. (TV: Aliens of London)
 * Due to UNIT's new public and global position, Frost sows the seeds for the later organisation Foreign Hazard Duty, to operate in a secret position. (COMIC: Echoes of the Mogor!) It is implied that their name originates from the fact Mandrake is classified as a foreign hazard.
 * Frost says that the Brigadier suggested the Doctor could become part of FHD's core team, likely alluding to his previous role of scientific advisor. (TV: Spearhead from Space et al.)