User:Tybort/Sandbox

Charles III

 * A recurring way of indicating it's the near future is to have a King (Charles) instead of Queen Elizabeth: this was the idea behind Battlefield and "the King" is briefly mentioned in AUDIO: The Longest Night. However, in the real world Charles became the King eleven years after the death of Lethbridge-Stewart actor Nicholas Courtney, and 33 years after the initial broadcast of Battlefield, a story which first aired less than halfway through Elizabeth's 70-year reign, and 17 years after the release of The Longest Night, released roughly three-quarters into her reign. Indeed, TV stories like Survivors of the Flux establish Kate Stewart as the head of UNIT before 2017, suggesting that the Queen outlived Kate's father Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart.

Aliens of London dating controversy
Towards the end of the Davies era of Doctor Who, no on-screen date is given for the 2009 Easter Special Planet of the Dead, nor The End of Time, which comprises the 2009 Christmas Special and the 2010 New Year's Day Special, though Planet of the Dead alludes to the real-world. Early into Steven Moffat's run as executive producer of Doctor Who, Flesh and Stone (2010) directly describes Amy Pond's home time as 2010, synchronising Doctor Who's present-day Earth stories with their date of broadcast.

The other of Davies' spin-offs, The Sarah Jane Adventures, makes several references to then-current Doctor Who stories, but rarely gives an on-screen date beyond The Mad Woman in the Attic (2009) and The Curse of Clyde Langer (2011) taking place at some undefined point after the, and Whatever Happened to Sarah Jane? (2007) being approximately 40 years after 1964. It thus does not make it clear when it was written to be a year ahead and when it was not. Two notable contradictions both take place during SJA's fourth series from 2010, when Doctor Who was executive produced by Steven Moffat but Davies still ran SJA. In Death of the Doctor, Sarah Jane Smith tells Jo Jones that her first reunion with the Doctor happened "four years ago", referring to the 2006 Doctor Who story School Reunion, the latter ostensibly being set in 2007. In Lost in Time, however, a newspaper dates the modern-day setting of that story to 23 November 2010.

The Sarah Jane Adventures

 * In the 2010 SJA story Death of the Doctor, Sarah Jane tells Jo Jones that she first encountered the Doctor again "four years ago", referring to the events of the 2006 Doctor Who story School Reunion, and apparently putting Death of the Doctor in 2011.
 * In Lost in Time (2010), a newspaper is dated 23 November 2010.

2000s
There were few precise accounts as to when the early adventures of Sarah Jane Smith, Maria Jackson, Luke Smith, Clyde Langer, and Rani Chandra where they fought aliens on Earth took place. However, what was known was that these took place in the 21st century (TV: Eye of the Gorgon) and approximately 40 years after Andrea Yates' death in 1964, (TV: Whatever Happened to Sarah Jane?) placing them in the 2000s.

The exact placement of the eras Martha Jones and Donna Noble first travelled in time with the Tenth Doctor on a regular basis and made trips home was inconsistent. However, as they took place after the Sycorax invasion of Earth, Harriet Jones being deposed as Prime Minister, (TV: The Sound of Drums, The Stolen Earth) and the Battle of Canary Wharf, (TV: Smith and Jones) and 1930 was "nearly 80 years ago" according to Martha, (TV: Daleks in Manhattan) this would place their adventures in or around the late 2000s, after Rose Tyler's disappearance on 6 March 2005. (TV: Aliens of London)

DWM comic stories
In the 1990s DWM temporarily ran a series of comic strips featuring past Doctors in lieu of the then-current Seventh Doctor, but from 1996 it once again nearly exclusively featured the current Doctor; the Eighth Doctor was current in DWM's comic strip from 1996-2005, followed by the Ninth Doctor in 2005; the Tenth Doctor from 2006-10; the Eleventh Doctor from 2010-14; and the Twelfth Doctor beginning in 2014.

The Eighth Doctor's companions during his DWM tenure were all original to the magazine, and included Izzy Sinclair, a friend of a character from the 1982 comic story Stars Fell on Stockbridge called Maxwell Edison, and Kroton, who was originally a character from the backup strips in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Maxwell himself made further guest appearances in the 2000s and 2010s.

From 2005, the magazine also more regularly featured the Doctor travelling with their contemporary companions on TV with the likenesses of their respective actors. The comic adventures of Rose Tyler in the pages of DWM were published from 2005-06; Martha Jones from 2007-08; Donna Noble in 2008; Amy Pond from 2010-12; Rory Williams from 2011-12; Clara Oswald from 2013-16; and Bill Potts from 2017-18.

The "modern" Doctors also occasionally reunited with past companions from the 1963 version of Doctor Who in the DWM comic strip. Two such examples were the 2007 story The Warkeeper's Crown, where the Tenth Doctor had an adventure with Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart, and the 2013 story Hunters of the Burning Stone, where the Eleventh Doctor met Ian Chesterton and Barbara Wright.

The Doctor also occasionally had comics-exclusive companions in DWM during periods in the late 2000s and 2010s when the show was off air longer than usual, and the regular companion on TV had also left Doctor Who. Majenta Pryce travelled with the Tenth Doctor in the DWM comic strip from 2008-10 after Donna's departure in the 2008 episode Journey's End, while following Clara's departure in the late 2015 episode Hell Bent, the Twelfth Doctor appeared in a series of comics from 2016-17 where he lived with Jess Collins' family on 1970s Earth until the TARDIS could repair itself.

In issue 455 in 2012, the sole comic strip other than the three-panel Doctor Whoah! was a Doctor-less story (apart from a doll with the Eleventh Doctor's likeness) called Imaginary Enemies. This story featured a pre-TARDIS travel Amy and Rory, along with their time-travelling daughter Mels, and was set during a twelve-year narrative gap in the 2010 episode The Eleventh Hour. It was published after the final comic story in the magazine where Amy and Rory were travelling with the Eleventh Doctor, and before Hunters of the Burning Stone. Over issues 475 and 476 in 2014, the sole comic strip other than Doctor Whoah! in issue 475 was a Doctor-less story called The Crystal Throne. This comic story was published after the Eleventh Doctor's final comic strip in the magazine and before the Twelfth Doctor's DWM debut, and instead featured Vastra, Jenny Flint and Strax, who appeared in several episodes of the Doctor Who TV series between 2011 and 2014.

Known staff
Staff of Torchwood One included Eliza Cooper, Robert Lewis, Yvonne Hartman, Rajesh Singh, Adeola Oshodi, Gareth Evans, Matt Crane, Sebastian, (TV: Army of Ghosts) Lisa Hallett, Ianto Jones, (TV: Cyberwoman) Rupert Howarth  and Carlie Roberts, (AUDIO: Submission) while Archie staffed Torchwood Two.

Ianto Jones moved to Torchwood Three after the fall of Torchwood One, (TV: Cyberwoman) which was also staffed in its history by Captain Jack Harkness, Gwen Cooper, Suzie Costello, Owen Harper, Toshiko Sato, (TV: Everything Changes) Alice Guppy, Emily Holroyd, Alex Hopkins, (TV: Fragments) Charles Gaskell, Gerald Carter, Harriet Derbyshire, (TV: To the Last Man) Douglas Caldwell, Lydia Childs, Charles Quinn, Tilda Brennan, Llinos King, Greg Bishop, Rhydian, Kenneth Valentine,  Lucia Moretti (TV: Children of Earth: Day Three) and Charles Cromwell.

Staff at Torchwood India included Eleanor, Duchess of Melrose, George Gissing, Das and Mahajan. (AUDIO: Golden Age)

Stevie worked at a parallel Torchwood on Pete's World, (TV: Rise of the Cybermen) as did Rose Tyler. (TV: Doomsday) In an alternate universe, Eric Lawson worked at Torchwood Three.

First Doctor
According to one account, the Seventh Doctor could remember his existence before being loomed into the House of Lungbarrow, along with his cousins. According to this account, the Doctor was a genetic reincarnation of the Other. (PROSE: Lungbarrow) According to another account, the Twelfth Doctor claimed that birth and death were two events experienced by "every living being" that "no-one remembers anything about". (TV: Heaven Sent)

Gallifreyans
According to the Gallifreyan Lord Griffen, the Gallifreyans would become "Lords of Time" once the collapse of the star Qqaba into a black hole caused energy to be released that the Gallifreyans could control time with. Fenris claimed that this point in time was when the Time Lords came into existence. (COMIC: Star Death)

References cited on Gallifreyan, Time Lord, Gallifreyan history and Gallifrey regarding "Gallifreyans"

 * TV: The Keys of Marinus - Predates the first mention of the planet Gallifrey as well as the Time Lords.


 * TV: The Tomb of the Cybermen - Predates the first mention of the planet Gallifrey as well as the Time Lords.


 * TV: The Mind of Evil - Predates the first mention of the planet Gallifrey.


 * TV: The Three Doctors - Predates the first mention of the planet Gallifrey.


 * TV: The Time Warrior -


 * TV: The Hand of Fear -


 * TV: The Deadly Assassin (Shobogans) -


 * TV: The Robots of Death -


 * TV: The Invasion of Time (Outsiders) -


 * TV: The Androids of Tara -


 * TV: City of Death -


 * COMIC: 4-D War -

Gallifreyan is used as a noun, but in the context given, it means the species before the initial time travel experiments where the Gallifreyans essentially became Time Lords. No distinction between "Time Lord" (or "Timelord") and "Gallifreyan" is made, and the terms seem to be used interchangeably.


 * Narration box: It has been twenty years since the Gallifreyans conquered time. Twenty years since Rassilon defeated Fenris the Hellbringer, master saboteur from the future.. Fenris had been sent to destroy the Timelords. Instead, he doomed himself to the eternal agony of the Time Vortex. The Hellbringer's passing left many questions unanswered. Who had hired him? And why? Twenty years ago, the Timelords banished Fenris to the Zone of No Return... Today, they have to bring him back!


 * TV: The Caves of Androzani


 * AUDIO: Slipback -


 * PROSE: Cat's Cradle: Time's Crucible -


 * PROSE: Lucifer Rising -


 * PROSE: The Crystal Bucephalus -


 * PROSE: Human Nature -


 * PROSE: Happy Endings -


 * PROSE: Killing Ground -


 * PROSE: Burning Heart -


 * PROSE: So Vile a Sin -


 * PROSE: Alien Bodies -


 * PROSE: Eye of Heaven -


 * PROSE: Interference - Book One -


 * PROSE: Interference - Book Two -


 * PROSE: The Taking of Planet 5 -


 * PROSE: The Ancestor Cell -


 * PROSE: Father Time -


 * WC: Shada, AUDIO: Shada and PROSE: Shada -


 * AUDIO: Omega -


 * AUDIO: Zagreus -


 * PROSE: Halflife -


 * TV: The End of the World -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * TV: Boom Town -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * Blon: As a final resort, the excess poison can be exhaled through the lungs.
 * Ninth Doctor: That's better. Now then, what do you think? Mmm...steak looks nice. Steak and chips.


 * AUDIO: The Kingmaker -


 * TV: The Runaway Bride -

Neither "Time Lord" nor "Gallifreyan" appear in this story, although the Empress acknowledges the name of the planet Gallifrey by associating it with the people that murdered members of the Racnoss.


 * Tenth Doctor: Racnoss? But that's impossible. You're one of the Racnoss?
 * Empress of the Racnoss: Empress of the Racnoss.
 * Tenth Doctor: If you're the Empress, where's the rest of the Racnoss? Or, are you the only one?
 * Empress of the Racnoss: Such a sharp mind.
 * Tenth Doctor: That's it. The last of your kind. The Racnoss come from the Dark Times, billions of years ago. Billions. They were carnivores, omnivores. They devoured whole planets.
 * Empress of the Racnoss: Racnoss are born starving. Is that our fault?
 * Donna: They eat people?
 * Tenth Doctor: H.C. Clements. Did he wear those, those, black and white shoes?
 * Donna: He did. We used to laugh. We used to call him a fat cat in spats. Oh my god.
 * Empress of the Racnoss: Mmm, my Christmas dinner.
 * Tenth Doctor: You shouldn't even exist. Way back in history, the Fledgling Empires went to war against the Racnoss. They were wiped out.
 * Empress of the Racnoss: Except for me.


 * Empress of the Racnoss: Roboforms are not necessary. My children may feast on Martian flesh.
 * Tenth Doctor: Oh, but I'm not from Mars.
 * Empress of the Racnoss: Then where?
 * Tenth Doctor: My home planet is far away and long-since gone, but its name lives on. Gallifrey.
 * Empress of the Racnoss: They murdered the Racnoss!


 * TV: The Sound of Drums -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan". The Time Lords are called a "race" in the Untempered Schism scene, and the children are only referred to as the "children of Gallifrey", "just a child" and "we".


 * Jack: So, Doctor. Who is he? How come the ancient society of Time Lords created a psychopath?
 * Martha: And what is he to you? Like a colleague, or-
 * Tenth Doctor: A friend at first.
 * Martha: I thought you were gonna say he was your secret brother or something.
 * Tenth Doctor: You've been watching too much TV.
 * Jack: But all the legends of Gallifrey made it sound so perfect.
 * Tenth Doctor: Well, perfect to look at, maybe. And it was. It was beautiful. We used to call it the Shining World of the Seven Systems, and on the Continent of Wild Endeavour, in the mountains of Solace and Solitude, there stood the Citadel of the Time Lords, the oldest and most mighty race in the universe, looking down on the galaxies below. Sworn never to interfere, only to watch. Children of Gallifrey, taken from their families age of eight to enter the Academy. Some say that's where it all began, when he was a child. That's when the Master saw eternity. As a novice he was taken for initiation. He stood in front of the Untempered Schism. It's a gap in the fabric of reality through which could be seen the whole of the Vortex. We stand there, eight years old, staring at the raw power of time and space, just a child. Some would be inspired, some would run away and some would go mad.
 * Martha: And what about you?
 * Tenth Doctor: Oh, the one that ran away. I never stopped.


 * AUDIO: The Condemned -


 * TV: The Unicorn and the Wasp -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * TV: The Stolen Earth -

No mention of "Gallifreyan" or "Time Lord" in the scene where the Doctor says he was "a kid", just the pronoun "I".


 * Tenth Doctor: We've stopped.
 * Donna: What do you mean? Is that good or bad? Where are we?
 * Tenth Doctor: The Medusa Cascade. I came here when I was a kid. 90 years old. It was the centre of a rift in time and space.


 * TV: The End of Time -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * TV: The Beast Below -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan". When the Doctor says his people came before humans and that they look like him rather than the other way round, he specifies "Time Lord".


 * Mandy: How do you not know about this? Are you Scottish, too?
 * Eleventh Doctor: Oh, I'm way worse than Scottish. I can't even see the movie. It won't play for me.
 * Amy: It played for me.
 * Eleventh Doctor: Well, the difference being the computer doesn't accept me as human.
 * Amy: Why not? You look human.
 * Eleventh Doctor: No, you look Time Lord. We came first.
 * Amy: So there are other Time Lords, yeah?
 * Eleventh Doctor: No. There were, but there aren't. Just me now. Long story. There was a bad day. Bad stuff happened. And you know what, I'd love to forget it all, every last bit of it. But I don't. Not ever. 'Cause this is what I do. Every time, every day, every second: this. Hold tight. We're bringing down the government.


 * TV: The Rebel Flesh -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * TV: A Good Man Goes to War -

No mention of "Gallifreyan" beyond the writing on the Doctor's cot. The Doctor's people and Melody being turned into a weapon is only known as a "Time Lord". In one instance of comparison to Melody, they're called "your people". The Doctor says that he slept in the cot and avoids the subject when asked if he has children, and says nothing either way about his people directly regarding the cot.


 * Rory: It's, err, it's a cot?
 * Eleventh Doctor: No flies on the Roman. Give her here. Hey?
 * Amy: Here we go.
 * Eleventh Doctor: Hello.
 * Rory: But where would you get a cot?
 * Amy: It's old. Really old. Doctor, umm, do you have children?
 * Eleventh Doctor: No.
 * Amy: Have you ever had children?
 * Eleventh Doctor: [changing the subject] No, no, it's real, it's my hair.
 * Amy: Who slept in here?
 * Vastra: Doctor, we need you in the main control room.
 * Eleventh Doctor: Be right there. Things to do. I've still got to work out what this base is for. We can't leave till we know.
 * Amy: Err, but this is where I was? The whole time I thought I was on the TARDIS, I was really here?
 * Eleventh Doctor: Err, Centurion, permission to hug?
 * Rory: Be aware, I do have a sword.
 * Eleventh Doctor: At all times. [To Amy] You were on the TARDIS, too, your heart, the mind, soul, but physically, yes, you were still in this place.
 * Amy: And when I saw that face looking through the hatch, that woman looking at me.
 * Eleventh Doctor: Reality bleeding through. They must have taken you quite a while back. Just before America.
 * Rory: That's probably enough hugging now? So, her Flesh avatar was with us all that time? But that means they were projecting a control signal right into the TARDIS, wherever we were in time and space.
 * Eleventh Doctor: Yeah, they're very clever.
 * Amy: Who are?
 * Rory: Whoever wants our baby.
 * Amy: But why do they want her?
 * Eleventh Doctor: Exactly.
 * Rory: Is there anything you're not telling us? You knew Amy wasn't real. You never said.
 * Eleventh Doctor: Well, I couldn't be sure they weren't listening.
 * Amy: But, you always hold out on us. Please, not this time. Doctor, it's our baby. Tell us something, one little thing.
 * Eleventh Doctor: It's mine.
 * Rory: What is?
 * Eleventh Doctor: Cot. It's my cot. I slept in there.
 * Amy: Oh my god. It's the Doctor's first stars.


 * Vastra: Now, I have a question, a simple one. Is Melody human?
 * Eleventh Doctor: Sorry? What? Course she is. Completely human. What are you talking about?
 * Dorium: They've been scanning her since she was born, and I think they found what they were looking for.
 * Eleventh Doctor: Human DNA.
 * Vastra: Look closer. Human plus. Specifically, human plus Time Lord.


 * Eleventh Doctor: But she's human. She's Amy and Rory's daughter.
 * Vastra: You've told me about your people. They became what they did through prolonged exposure to the Time Vortex. To the Untempered Schism.
 * Eleventh Doctor: Over billions of years. It didn't just happen.
 * Vastra: So how close is she? Could she even regenerate?
 * Eleventh Doctor: No, no, I don't think so.
 * Vastra: You don't sound so sure.
 * Eleventh Doctor: Because I don't understand how this happened.


 * Eleventh Doctor: Doesn't make sense. You can't just cook yourself a Time Lord.
 * Vastra: Of course not. But you gave them one hell of a start, and they've been working very hard ever since.
 * Dorium: And yet they gave in so easily. Does this not bother anyone else?
 * Eleventh Doctor: Amy, she worried the baby would have a time head. She said that, that-
 * Vastra: Only you would ignore the instincts of a mother.
 * Dorium: Or the instincts of a coward. This is too easy. There's something wrong.
 * Eleventh Doctor: Why even do it? Even if you could get your hands on a brand new Time Lord, what for?
 * Vastra: A weapon?
 * Eleventh Doctor: Why would a Time Lord be a weapon?
 * Vastra: Well, they've seen you.
 * Eleventh Doctor: Me?


 * Amy: Where is he going? What did you tell him?
 * River: Amy, you have to stay calm.
 * Amy: Tell me what you told the Doctor.
 * Rory: Amy, no. Stop it.
 * River: It's OK, Rory. She's fine. She's good. It's the TARDIS translation matrix. It takes a while to kick in with the written word. You have to concentrate.
 * Amy: I still can't read it.
 * River: It's because it's Gallifreyan. It doesn't translate. But this will. It's your daughter's name in the language of the Forest.


 * TV: Night Terrors -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * TV: Closing Time -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * AUDIO: The Great War (part of Dark Eyes) -


 * TV: The Day of the Doctor -

Stasis cubes are known as "Time Lord art", not "Gallifreyan art" (I think?).

The children and civilians are not distinguished from the Time Lords in any way beyond "children on Gallifrey".


 * TV: Dark Water

"Gallifreyan" is only used in the sense of describing the Nethersphere as a Gallifreyan hard drive, or a hard drive from Gallifrey. No real distinction between "Gallifreyans" and "Time Lords/Time Ladies" is made in the narrative, but notably, the script calls the Matrix data slice hard drive "Time Lord technology" twice.

References cited on Gallifreyan physiology regarding "Gallifreyans"

 * TV: An Unearthly Child - Predates the first mention of the planet Gallifrey as well as the Time Lords.


 * TV: The Keys of Marinus - Predates the first mention of the planet Gallifrey as well as the Time Lords.


 * TV: The Gunfighters - Predates the first mention of the planet Gallifrey as well as the Time Lords.


 * TV: The War Machines - Predates the first mention of the planet Gallifrey as well as the Time Lords.


 * TV: The Tomb of the Cybermen - Predates the first mention of the planet Gallifrey as well as the Time Lords.


 * TV: The War Games - Predates the first mention of the planet Gallifrey.


 * TV: Spearhead from Space - Predates the first mention of the planet Gallifrey.


 * TV: Inferno - Predates the first mention of the planet Gallifrey.


 * TV: The Time Monster - Predates the first mention of the planet Gallifrey.


 * TV: Planet of the Daleks - Predates the first mention of the planet Gallifrey.


 * TV: The Green Death - Predates the first mention of the planet Gallifrey.


 * TV: Planet of the Spiders - Predates the first mention of the planet Gallifrey.


 * TV: Invasion of the Dinosaurs -


 * TV: The Ark in Space -


 * TV: Genesis of the Daleks -


 * TV: Terror of the Zygons -


 * TV: Pyramids of Mars -


 * TV: The Android Invasion -


 * TV: The Brain of Morbius -


 * TV: The Seeds of Doom -


 * PROSE: Doctor Who and the Terror of the Autons -


 * PROSE: Doctor Who and the Carnival of Monsters -


 * TV: The Talons of Weng-Chiang -


 * TV: The Invisible Enemy -


 * TV: The Ribos Operation -


 * TV: The Pirate Planet -


 * TV: Destiny of the Daleks -


 * TV: City of Death -


 * TV: State of Decay -


 * TV: Logopolis -


 * TV: Four to Doomsday -


 * TV: The Visitation -


 * TV: The Five Doctors -


 * PROSE: The Highlanders -


 * TV: The Two Doctors -


 * PROSE: Marco Polo -


 * TV: Time and the Rani -


 * PROSE: Cat's Cradle: Time's Crucible


 * PROSE: Lucifer Rising -


 * PROSE: Blood Heat -


 * PROSE: The Left-Handed Hummingbird -


 * PROSE: Legacy -


 * PROSE: Set Piece -


 * PROSE: Managra -


 * PROSE: The Man in the Velvet Mask -


 * TV: Doctor Who -

"Gallifreyan" is not used as a noun, but Eight does refer to the word as an adjective referring to nights on the planet Gallifrey.


 * Grace: Maybe you're the result of some weird genetic experiment?
 * Eighth Doctor: I don't think so.
 * Grace: But you have no recollection of family?
 * Eighth Doctor: No. No, no, no, no. Wait. Wait. Wait. Wait. I remember, I'm with my father, we're lying back in the grass, it's a warm Gallifreyan night.
 * Grace: Gallifreyan?
 * Eighth Doctor: Gallifrey! Yes. This must be where I live. Now, where is that?
 * Grace: I've never heard of it.


 * PROSE: Christmas on a Rational Planet -


 * PROSE: Bad Therapy -


 * PROSE: Lungbarrow -


 * PROSE: The Eight Doctors -


 * PROSE: Legacy of the Daleks -


 * PROSE: Placebo Effect -


 * PROSE: Heart of TARDIS -


 * PROSE: EarthWorld -


 * PROSE: Vanishing Point -


 * PROSE: The Adventuress of Henrietta Street -


 * TV: Rose -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * TV: The End of the World -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * TV: World War Three -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * TV: The Parting of the Ways -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan". In the scene where the Doctor said he might have two heads or no head, regeneration is called a "little trick" which belongs to the Time Lords, while the Ninth Doctor merely says that seeing the timelines is what he sees all the time.


 * Ninth Doctor: But this is wrong! You can't control life and death!
 * Bad Wolf: But I can. The sun, and the moon, the day and night, but why do they hurt?
 * Ninth Doctor: The power's gonna kill you and it's my fault.
 * Bad Wolf: I can see everything. All that is, all that was, all that ever could be.
 * Ninth Doctor: That's what I see all the time. And doesn't it drive you mad?
 * Bad Wolf: My head.
 * Ninth Doctor: Come here.
 * Bad Wolf: It's killing me.
 * Ninth Doctor: I think you need a Doctor.


 * Ninth Doctor: Rose Tyler. I was gonna take you to so many places. Barcelona, not the city Barcelona, the planet Barcelona. You'll love it. Fantastic place. They've got dogs with no noses. Imagine how many times a day you end up telling that joke and it's still funny.
 * Rose: Then why can't we go?
 * Ninth Doctor: Maybe you will, and maybe I will, but not like this.
 * Rose: You're not making sense.
 * Ninth Doctor: I might not ever make sense again. I might have two heads, or no head. Imagine me with no head. And don't say that's an improvement. But it's a bit dodgy, this process. You never know what you're gonna end up with.
 * Rose: Doctor!
 * Ninth Doctor: Stay away!
 * Rose: Doctor, tell me what's going on.
 * Ninth Doctor: I absorbed all the energy of the Time Vortex, and no-one's meant to do that. Every cell in my body's dying.
 * Rose: Can't you do something?
 * Ninth Doctor: Yeah, I'm doing it now. Time Lords have this little trick. It's sort of a way of cheating death, except it means I'm gonna change and I'm not gonna see you again. Not like this. Not with this daft old face.


 * PROSE: Island of Death


 * TV: The Christmas Invasion -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * COMIC: The Betrothal of Sontar -


 * TV: Tooth and Claw -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * TV: The Age of Steel -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * TV: The Idiot's Lantern -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * PROSE: The Art of Destruction -


 * AUDIO: Blood of the Daleks -


 * AUDIO: Frostfire -


 * TV: Smith and Jones -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * TV: The Shakespeare Code

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * PROSE: The Last Dodo -


 * TV: Evolution of the Daleks -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * TV: 42 -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * TV: Utopia -

The "teeth" scene literally has the Doctor show his teeth to show he isn't Futurekind, and he's mistaken for human (while the same episode elsewhere says the Time Lords are a species). No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * Guard: Show me your teeth, show me your teeth!
 * Padra: Show him your teeth!
 * Guard: Human! Let 'em in! Let 'em in!


 * TV: The Sound of Drums -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan". The Time Lords are called a "race" in the Untempered Schism scene, and the children are only referred to as the "children of Gallifrey", "just a child" and "we".


 * TV: The Infinite Quest -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * PROSE: Wishing Well -


 * AUDIO: The Bride of Peladon -


 * TV: The Fires of Pompeii -


 * TV: Planet of the Ood -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * TV: The Doctor's Daughter -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * TV: Forest of the Dead -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * TV: The Stolen Earth -

No mention of "Gallifreyan" or "Time Lord" in the scene where the Doctor says he was "a kid", just the pronoun "I".


 * Tenth Doctor: We've stopped.
 * Donna: What do you mean? Is that good or bad? Where are we?
 * Tenth Doctor: The Medusa Cascade. I came here when I was a kid. 90 years old. It was the centre of a rift in time and space.


 * AUDIO: The Forever Trap -


 * TV: The End of Time -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * TV: The Eleventh Hour -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan". In fact, while the term "Time Lord" appears, Amy doesn't realise the Eleventh Doctor isn't human until The Beast Below.


 * TV: The Time of Angels -

"Gallifreyan" exists in this episode only as the language "Old High Gallifreyan", and not the species. The language is also referred to as the Time Lords' language.


 * Amy: Oh, great. A box.
 * Eleventh Doctor: It's from one of the old starliners. A home box.
 * Amy: What's a home box?
 * Eleventh Doctor: Like a black box on a plane, except it homes. Anything happens to the ship, the home box flies home with all the flight data.
 * Amy: So?
 * Eleventh Doctor: The writing, the graffiti. Old High Gallifreyan. The lost language of the Time Lords. There were days, there were many days, these words could burn stars and raise up empires and topple gods.
 * Amy: What does this say?
 * Eleventh Doctor: "Hello, sweetie."


 * TV: The Vampires of Venice -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * TV: The Hungry Earth -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * TV: The Lodger

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * TV: The Pandorica Opens

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * TV: Day of the Moon -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * HOMEVID: Night and the Doctor -


 * TV: The Doctor, the Widow and the Wardrobe -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * PROSE: Shada


 * TV: Dinosaurs on a Spaceship -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * TV: The Power of Three -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * TV: Journey to the Centre of the TARDIS

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".


 * TV: Mummy on the Orient Express -

No instance of the term "Gallifreyan".

Children of Gallifrey
TV: "An Unearthly Child"
 * Ian: You're treating us like children.
 * First Doctor: Am I? The children of my civilisation would be insulted.

TV: The Time Monster


 * Third Doctor: Well, when I was a little boy, we used to live in a house that was perched halfway up the top of a mountain.

TV: The Empty Child


 * Ninth Doctor: What's this, then? Never easy being the only child left out in the cold, you know.
 * Nancy: I suppose you'd know?
 * Ninth Doctor: I do, actually. Yes.

TV: The Girl in the Fireplace


 * Tenth Doctor: Sorry. You might find old memories reawakening. Side effect.
 * Reinette: Oh, such a lonely childhood.
 * Tenth Doctor: It'll pass. Stay with me.
 * Reinette: Oh, Doctor. So lonely. So very, very alone.
 * Tenth Doctor: What do you mean, alone? You've never been alone in your life. When did you start calling me "Doctor"?
 * Reinette: Such a lonely little boy. Lonely then and lonelier now. How can you bear it?
 * Tenth Doctor: How did you do that?
 * Reinette: A door once opened may be stepped through in either direction.

TV: A Good Man Goes to War


 * Eleventh Doctor: It's mine.
 * Rory: What is?
 * Eleventh Doctor: Cot. It's my cot. I slept in there.

TV: Listen


 * Man: Well, he's not going to the Academy, is he, that boy?

Fatherhood on Gallifrey
TV: Doctor Who


 * Grace: Maybe you're the result of some weird genetic experiment?
 * Eighth Doctor: I don't think so.
 * Grace: But you have no recollection of family?
 * Eighth Doctor: No. No, no, no, no. Wait. Wait. Wait. Wait. I remember, I'm with my father, we're lying back in the grass, it's a warm Gallifreyan night.
 * Grace: Gallifreyan?
 * Eighth Doctor: Gallifrey! Yes. This must be where I live. Now, where is that?
 * Grace: I've never heard of it.

TV: Fear Her


 * Rose: Easy for you to say. You don't have kids.
 * Tenth Doctor: I was a dad once.

TV: The Fires of Pompeii


 * Quintus: Don't tell my dad.
 * Tenth Doctor: Only if you don't tell mine.

TV: The Doctor's Daughter


 * Tenth Doctor: Donna, I've been a father before.
 * Donna: What?
 * Tenth Doctor: Lost all that a long time ago, along with everything else.

TV: The End of Time


 * The Master: I had estates. Do you remember my father's land back home? Pastures of red grass stretching far across the slopes of Mount Perdition. We used to run across those fields all day, calling up at the sky. Look at us now.

TV: Listen


 * Rupert: Would you read me a story to help me get to sleep?
 * Clara: Sure.
 * Twelfth Doctor: Once upon a time, the end. Dad skills.

TV: Death in Heaven


 * Cyberman: Identify.
 * Clara: Oh, don't be so slow, it's so embarrassing. Who could fool you like this? Who could hide right under your nose? Who could change their face any time they want? You see, I'm not Clara Oswald. Clara Oswald has never existed.
 * Cyberman: Identify.
 * Clara: I'm the Doctor.


 * Clara: Well, gentlemen, where to start? I was born on the planet Gallifrey, in the constellation of Kasterborous. I'm a Time Lord, but my Prydonian privileges were revoked when I stole a time capsule and ran away. Currently pilot Type 40 TARDIS, I've been married four times, all deceased. My children and grandchildren are missing, and I assume, dead. I have a non-Gallifreyan daughter created via genetic transfer. How much more do you need? I'm the Doctor.

The Master
...was a renegade Time Lord and "one of the oldest and deadliest" of the Doctor's "enemies". (TV: Survival)

, "an evil genius" by the Seventh Doctor, (TV: Survival)

References to gender
TV: "Flashpoint"


 * First Doctor: During all the years I've been taking care of you, you, in return, have been taking care of me.
 * Susan: Oh, grandfather, I belong with you.
 * First Doctor: Not any longer, Susan. You're still my grandchild, and always will be, but now, you're a woman, too. I want you to belong somewhere, to have roots of your own. With David, you'll be able to find those roots, and live normally like any woman should do. Believe me, my dear, your future lies with David, and not with a silly old buffer like me. One day, I shall come back. Yes, I shall come back. Until then, there must be no regrets, no tears, no anxieties. Just go forward in all your beliefs, and prove to me that I am not mistaken in mine. Goodbye, Susan. Goodbye, my dear.

TV: The Time Monster


 * Third Doctor: Well, when I was a little boy, we used to live in a house that was perched halfway up the top of a mountain.

TV: Black Orchid


 * Adric: So what is a railway station?
 * Fifth Doctor: Well, a place where one embarks and disembarks from compartments on wheels, drawn along these rails by a steam engine. Rarely on time.
 * Nyssa: What a very silly activity.
 * Fifth Doctor: You think so? As a boy I always wanted to drive one.

TV: The Girl in the Fireplace


 * Reinette: Oh, Doctor. So lonely. So very, very alone.
 * Tenth Doctor: What do you mean, alone? You've never been alone in your life. When did you start calling me "Doctor"?
 * Reinette: Such a lonely little boy. Lonely then and lonelier now. How can you bear it?

TV: The End of Time


 * Wilf: But I keep thinking, Doctor, there's one thing you never told me. That woman. Who was she?

TV: The Night of the Doctor


 * Eighth Doctor: Hang on. Is it you? Am I back on Karn? You're the Sisterhood of Karn, keepers of the Flame of Utter Boredom.
 * Ohila: Eternal Life.
 * Eighth Doctor: That's the one.
 * Ohila: Mock us if you will, but our elixir can trigger your regeneration, bring you back. Time Lord science is elevated here on Karn. The change doesn't have to be random. Fat or thin, young or old, man or woman.

COMIC: The Eye of Torment


 * Rudy: Wait, who the heck are you?! Y-you're a guy!
 * Twelfth Doctor: And you clearly have massive powers of observation, congratualations!


 * The Umbra: Sad little boy. All the lives you failed. All the loves you lost. All the roads not taken. Now you are ours.

TV: Listen


 * Man: Well, he's not going to the Academy, is he, that boy?

TV: In the Forest of the Night


 * Twelfth Doctor: You're pursuing a little lost girl through the forest. The path has disappeared. You find yourself with a strangely compelling masculine figure.

TV: Death in Heaven


 * Osgood: Who is she?
 * Twelfth Doctor: You'll never believe me if I told you.
 * Osgood: Because I thought she might be the Master, regenerated into female form.

Like humans, Time Lords could be male or female. The First Doctor was referred to as a "boy", both during his childhood by one man, (TV: Listen) and also according to people who looked back on the Doctor's childhood, such as the Third (TV: The Time Monster) and Fifth Doctor, (TV: Black Orchid) Reinette (TV: The Girl in the Fireplace) and the Umbra. (COMIC: The Eye of Torment) The Twelfth Doctor once implied to Clara Oswald that he was a "strangely compelling masculine figure". (TV: In the Forest of the Night) The Twelfth Doctor also congratulated Rudy Zoom on his "massive powers of observation" when Rudy identified the Doctor as "a guy". (COMIC: The Eye of Torment) While saying his goodbyes to Susan Foreman, the First Doctor told Susan that she was "still [his] grandchild and always [would] be", but she was "a woman, too". (TV: "Flashpoint") Wilfred Mott described one Time Lord that had communicated with Wilf as "that woman". (TV: The End of Time) Osgood correctly guessed that was "the Master, regenerated into female form". (TV: Death in Heaven) Ohila claimed that the manner in which the Sisterhood of Karn's elixir could trigger regeneration meant that the physical change in a Time Lord's regenerative process "[didn't] have to be random", and the Eighth Doctor could choose to become become a "man or [a] woman". (TV: The Night of the Doctor)

Females called Time Lord or Time Lady?
TV: Dark Water


 * Twelfth Doctor: How did you get ahold of Time Lord technology? Who are you?
 * Missy: You know who I am. I told you. You felt it. Surely you did.
 * Twelfth Doctor: Two hearts?
 * Missy: And both of them yours.
 * Twelfth Doctor: You're a Time Lord?
 * Missy: Time Lady, please. I'm old-fashioned.
 * Twelfth Doctor: Which Time Lady?
 * Missy: Well, the one you abandoned, Doctor. The one you left for dead. Didn't you ever think I'd find my way back?

Creation of the Daleks
Although one account described the Daleks as descendants of mutations from a neutronic war, (TV: The Daleks) and another described the travel machines as the creation of the humanoid Dalek Yarvelling, (COMIC: Genesis of Evil) the majority of accounts described the Kaled scientist Davros as the creator of the Daleks. (TV: Genesis of the Daleks, Destiny of the Daleks, The Stolen Earth, The Magician's Apprentice, The Witch's Familiar)

Lord Barset
Lord Barset was a hereditary title on Earth. It was given to at least two human explorers involved in Antarctic expeditions in the 20th and 21st centuries; they were respectively a grandfather and his grandson.

The grandfather
In 1929, Lord Barset unearthed a city of intelligent "lizard men" with superior technology beneath the Antarctic ice. He wrote about this in his diary. All but one of the expedition died in the encounter; the expedition's ship, the Rochester, having been lost. This crewmember was discovered holding Lord Barset's diary; he was seemingly driven insane and died just a few days afterwards. (AUDIO: Frozen Time)

The grandson
The diary of Lord Barset was secretly passed down to his grandson, another Lord Barset. Lord Barset was granted a licence to go on an Antarctic expedition to both find the remains of his grandfather's expedition the lizard men's city. He wanted to control the technology he thought was buried there for himself without brand executives getting in his way and selling it off into "a million competing franchises".

Lord Barset arrived in Antarctica in the Fortitude in 2012. When his people failed to make radio contact after six days, he and several others from the Fortitude arrived to the dig site with arms. There, instead of the city his grandfather found, he discovered the remains of an Ice Warrior maximum security prison, where the Seventh Doctor was thawed.

In a "quest for knowledge", he had the Ice Warrior war criminals, led by Lord Arakssor, thawed. Lord Barset and Captain Harman were trapped inside the prison, while the Doctor, Geni and Mac left in Aristo One. Barset and Harman tried to escape to the Fortitude, but Harman was killed by an Ice Warrior's sonic weapon, and Lord Barset was injured and presumed dead. Discovering the Doctor and Geni had returned, he worked with them to stop the Ice Warriors altering the structure of Earth's greenhouse gases to cool down the planet and make it into Arakssor's "fortress".

As the process started, Lord Barset was knocked out by giant falling hail. The Doctor and Geni put him in a small chamber for him to recover. When he woke, he shot at Lord Arakssor, allowing the Doctor to boost the signal to get the attention of the warship of Red 0089. Arakssor then killed him. (AUDIO: Frozen Time)

Behind the scenes
The grandson Lord Barset was a vocal role voiced by Anthony Calf in Frozen Time. The grandfather, who died decades before Frozen Time's main setting, did not appear in a flashback and had no performer in the story. Category:Titles and offices

Diana, Princess of Wales
Diana, Princess of Wales, née Lady Diana Spencer (PROSE: Prisoners of the Sun) and sometimes known as Lady Di, (PROSE: The Dying Days) was the wife of Prince Charles. (PROSE: Prisoners of the Sun) She married Charles in 1981. (PROSE: Graham Dilley Saves the World)

When Peter Tyler got his wedding vows to Jackie Prentice wrong, Jackie told the registrar to carry on with the vows, saying, "It's good enough for Lady Di." (TV: Father's Day) Category:20th century individuals Category:Aristocracy from the real world Category:Royalty from the real world Category:British aristocrats Category:British royalty

Views on the Doctor
In the words of Madame Vastra, the Doctor was "kind", "a hero" and "the saviour of worlds". (TV: The Snowmen) Clara Oswald didn't know if he was a good man, but believed that he tried to be and thought "that's probably the point". (TV: Into the Dalek) Rose Tyler said that the way of living one's life the Doctor showed her was that "you don't just give up. You don't just let things happen. You make a stand. You say no. You have the guts to do what's right when everyone else just runs away". (TV: The Parting of the Ways) When Ohila mentioned to the Eighth Doctor that calling himself "the Doctor" was "the same thing in [his] mind" as calling himself "the good man", the Doctor responded, "I'd like to think so." (TV: The Night of the Doctor)

Others were less willing to describe the Doctor in such benign terms, including the Doctor himself; instead describing him as someone to fear or dread or otherwise being filled with cruel tendencies.

The Doctor was referred to in "the ancient legends of the Dalek homeworld" (TV: The Parting of the Ways) and by the Tenth Doctor (TV: The Day of the Doctor) as "the Oncoming Storm". The Tenth Doctor referred to himself as "the Bringer of Darkness". (TV: The Day of the Doctor) The Metaltron inside Henry van Statten's Vault declared the Doctor an "enemy" of the Daleks who "must be destroyed". (TV: Dalek) The Eleventh Doctor described himself as the Daleks' "enemy" and the Daleks as his and noted that they hated him and wanted to kill him. (TV: Victory of the Daleks) The Dalek Rusty, after looking into the Doctor's "soul", saw "hatred". (TV: Into the Dalek) Both Rose Tyler (TV: Doomsday) and Oswin Oswald (TV: Asylum of the Daleks) noted that the Daleks feared the Doctor. The Dalek Emperor mockingly hailed the Doctor as "the Great Exterminator" and also named him "the Heathen". (TV: The Parting of the Ways) In the words of the Great Intelligence, the Doctor was "the cruel tyrant", "the Slaughterer of the Ten Billion" and "blood soaked". (TV: The Name of the Doctor) Davros named the Doctor as "the Destroyer of Worlds". (TV: Journey's End)

When the Eleventh Doctor asked Madame Vastra why a Time Lord would be a weapon, Vastra mentioned that the Silence had seen him. (TV: A Good Man Goes to War) Both the Seventh (PROSE: Love and War, AUDIO: Love and War) and the Tenth Doctor (TV: The Girl in the Fireplace) proclaimed themselves to be what "monsters" had nightmares about. The Twelfth Doctor claimed that the Doctor's role to play was that of "[t]he man that stop[ped] the monsters." (TV: Flatline) The Twelfth Doctor told Clara Oswald that he lived for over 2,000 years, "not all of them were good" and that he "made many mistakes". (TV: Deep Breath)

Victor Kennedy said he read up on the Doctor and how he was "so passionate" and "so sweet". The Tenth Doctor responded that he may have been these things, but warned Victor not to mistake these traits for "nice". (TV: Love & Monsters)

Humanian Era
The Humanian Era was a period of Earth history which encompassed at least 29-31 December 1999. (TV: Doctor Who)

CyberNomads
"CyberNomads" was the name of a group of nomadic Cybermen which were postulated by ArcHivist Hegelia to have travelled out into the galaxy prior to the massive loss of life of the Cybermen that stayed behind in the solar system on Planet 14.

After several failed attempts at taking over Earth following the destruction of Mondas, by 2191, the Cybermen were considered to have become extinct. Although most were hibernating in the Cyber-tombs on Telos, Hegelia thought there was another group — the cyberNomads. These were thought to have been the Cybermen which were active on Agora in 2191.

Hegelia hypothesised that another group of cyberNomads reopened the Cyber-tombs on Telos, which helped create a new race — the Neomorphs. (PROSE: Killing Ground)

Neomorphs
According to ArchHivist Hegelia, the Neomorphs were a "new race" of Cybermen which the cyberNomads helped create when they reopened the Cyber-tombs on Telos. They were the Cybermen which proliferated during the 26th century. (PROSE: Killing Ground)

Earth economic systems
to be added

Political divisions and powers of Earth
to be added

Cold War and fears of nuclear war
to be added