- You may wish to consult
Dalek invasion
for other, similarly-named pages.
The event known to the Time Lords as the Planetary Relocation Incident, (PROSE: Dalek Combat Training Manual) and referred to as the Stolen Earth scenario by Intersol, (COMIC: Ghosts of the Northern Line) was a temporal war fought between the New Dalek Empire and other races — mostly humans in the aftermath of the Last Great Time War inside the Medusa Cascade in a tiny pocket of time that was put one second out of sync with the rest of the universe in the late 2000s.[1]
Nevertheless, the presence of the cracks in time led to the public invasions since 2006 being erased from Earth's history, (TV: The Pandorica Opens [+]Steven Moffat, Doctor Who series 5 (BBC One, 2010).) with the Dalek invasion scrubbed out of existence. (TV: Victory of the Daleks [+]Mark Gatiss, Doctor Who series 5 (BBC One, 2010).) The Eleventh Doctor eventually closed the cracks, allowing for the restoration of things lost to them. (TV: The Big Bang [+]Steven Moffat, Doctor Who series 5 (BBC One, 2010).) Though various people still were unfamiliar with aliens, (TV: The Woman Who Fell to Earth [+]Chris Chibnall, Doctor Who series 11 (BBC One, BBCA, Space and Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 2018).) humanity was left with an instinctive fear of the Daleks. (AUDIO: Recruits)
History[]
A day to come[]
Through the projections of the Matrix, the Time War-era Time Lords learnt of these events which they considered the Daleks' most diabolical plan yet. They were concerned that Davros was once again working with his creations, yet they were alarmed even more by how a single bronze Dalek, even if it had enhanced mental capacity, was able to break through a time lock. The Time Lords began to investigate the matter. Despite foreseeing how the encounter ended, the Time Lords noted that moving the Earth was one of their own tactics, having done so during the Ravolox affair. Therefore, they realized the Daleks were willing to employ their own tactics against them. Furthermore, the fact that the Daleks managed to move the Earth without devastating the planetary biosphere proved to the Gallifreyans that their enemy had better technology than their own. The ways through which the New Dalek Empire moved entire planets thus became a matter that they began to urgently study. (PROSE: Dalek Combat Training Manual)
Background[]
In the first year of the Last Great Time War, Davros' command ship flew into the jaws of the Nightmare Child at the Gates of Elysium. He was rescued by Dalek Caan, the last survivor of the Cult of Skaro; after activating an emergency temporal shift, Caan entered the time-locked Time War - "flew into the wild and fire", as he put it - and rescued his creator. Caan went mad and gained psychic abilities following this event; it is unclear whether it was the act of breaking the time lock, or entering the War, that caused this.
Davros made Caan his prophet and set to work reviving the Dalek Empire of before the Time War. After building the Crucible, restoring the Dalek Fleet to two hundred ships and creating thousands of Daleks with the Kaled mutants inside grown from the cells of his own body, self-mutilating himself until his ribcage and vital organs were exposed, (TV: The Stolen Earth [+]Russell T Davies, Doctor Who series 4 (BBC One, 2008).) Davros set to work creating a reality bomb. This superweapon was to destroy all of reality in every universe except the Crucible, leaving Daleks the only species in existence. (TV: Journey's End [+]Russell T Davies, Doctor Who series 4 (BBC One, 2008).)
To power the reality bomb, twenty-six planets and one moon were stolen from times and places across the universe so their gravitational fields, once aligned, would act as a gigantic engine. (TV: The Stolen Earth [+]Russell T Davies, Doctor Who series 4 (BBC One, 2008). / Journey's End [+]Russell T Davies, Doctor Who series 4 (BBC One, 2008).) These included Earth, which brought the problem to the Tenth Doctor's attention. The Shadow Proclamation, after the Doctor's visit to them, wanted to go to war with the as yet unknown perpetrators of this event. However, the Doctor did not wish for a full-scale war and left for the Medusa Cascade. (TV: The Stolen Earth [+]Russell T Davies, Doctor Who series 4 (BBC One, 2008).)
Invasion of Earth[]
Not long after the planets were brought into the Cascade, the Dalek Fleet attacked. Most of the efforts seemed to go to Earth. The Unified Intelligence Taskforce and the armies of Earth fought back, but were no match for the Dalek onslaught and were quickly slaughtered. The UNIT aircraft carrier Valiant was overwhelmed almost immediately, the RAF retreated over North Africa, and military bases across the planet were attacked and personnel exterminated, although Martha Jones used Project Indigo to teleport away with an Osterhagen Key. (TV: The Stolen Earth [+]Russell T Davies, Doctor Who series 4 (BBC One, 2008).) New York was reduced to ruins. (PROSE: The Secret Lives of Monsters)
When the Valiant was forced over heavily populated areas, the decision was taken to land on empty farmland, avoiding a further loss of life. However, the attack still continued. (PROSE: The Battle of the Valiant) Captain Marion Price was in command of the Valiant at the time of its destruction. (PROSE: UNIT History)
Soon afterward, the Commander General of the United Nations unconditionally surrendered Earth to the Daleks. A subwave network, created by the Mr Copper Foundation and developed by Harriet Jones, former British Prime Minister, was used by Harriet to try to contact the Doctor. While the Daleks attacked Harriet's house, killing her, Harriet, Torchwood, Martha and Sarah Jane Smith (with the help of Mr Smith) transmitted a message to the Doctor, helping him find the location of the stolen Earth. The Daleks traced the signal and attacked Torchwood. (TV: The Stolen Earth [+]Russell T Davies, Doctor Who series 4 (BBC One, 2008).)
The Doctor arrived as the Dalek assault continued. Thanks to a time lock in the Torchwood Hub, the Torchwood team survived the attack on them. Sarah Jane, trying to find the Doctor, was found by Daleks but saved by dimension-hopping Mickey Smith, Rose Tyler and Jackie Tyler. When Rose and the Doctor reunited, he was shot by a Dalek. Jack quickly teleported to them, destroying the Dalek. Jack, Donna and Rose then helped the Doctor back to the TARDIS and watched him prepare to regenerate. However, the Doctor managed to abort the process by channelling the energy into his severed hand - thus using up his eleventh regeneration. (TV: The Time of the Doctor [+]Steven Moffat, Doctor Who Christmas Special 2013 (BBC One, 2013).) They surrendered to the Daleks to find the Doctor, who had been taken prisoner with Donna Noble, Jack Harkness and Rose Tyler and taken to the Crucible. (TV: Journey's End [+]Russell T Davies, Doctor Who series 4 (BBC One, 2008).)
Reality Bomb[]
The Daleks, using Davros' plans, had created a weapon called the reality bomb. Powered by the twenty-seven planets the Daleks had stolen, this ultimate weapon was capable of literally reducing the entire universe to nothing. They ran a test of the bomb on a small group of human prisoners, including Sarah Jane Smith, Mickey Smith and Jackie Tyler. Mickey and Sarah Jane escaped to a side chamber and Jackie teleported to it with her dimension jump just before the weapon was tested.
This saved them from being reduced to atoms. This terrible weapon would wipe out all life in every universe. In Pete's World, a universe which the Doctor said was further ahead in time than his, the reality bomb had already put out the stars. Meanwhile, the Daleks captured and tried to destroy the TARDIS with Donna Noble still inside. The regenerative energy in the Doctor's severed hand triggered a Meta-Crisis in conjunction with Donna Noble. A new version of the Tenth Doctor was produced. This Meta-Crisis Doctor and Donna escaped in the TARDIS, which everyone else thought destroyed in the Z-Neutrino core. They prepared to turn the reality bomb on the Daleks themselves.
Sarah Jane, Mickey, Jackie and Captain Jack threatened to detonate a warp star to destroy the Crucible if the Daleks did not back down and Martha Jones threatened to destroy the Earth with the Osterhagen Project to make the required twenty-seven planets twenty-six if the same thing wasn't done, but the Daleks teleported them all to the Vault and trapped them there with the Doctor and Rose. The Meta-Crisis Doctor and Donna arrived in the TARDIS to put their own plan into action, but were quickly stopped by Davros, who zapped them with his electricity-shooting prosthetic hand.
For a moment all seemed lost. However, the shock that Donna had received caused her Time Lord side to activate. She had become part-Time Lord when the Meta-Crisis Doctor was created, causing her to gain the Doctor's intelligence. She manually deactivated the reality bomb by closing off all of the Z-Neutrino energy relay loops using an internalised synchronous back-feed reversal loop, disabled the Daleks' weapons and systems by locking their weaponry in a self-replicating energy blindfold matrix through macrotransmission of a K-filter wavelength and creating a trip stitch circuit-breaker in the psycho-kinetic threshold manipulator. She also released the others from their cells. The Doctor was reminded of his and Donna's encounter with the Ood, whom referred to the DoctorDonna, coming to understand that they had seen this coming. (TV: Journey's End [+]Russell T Davies, Doctor Who series 4 (BBC One, 2008).)
Destruction of the Crucible[]
With the reality bomb disabled and Dalek controls malfunctioning, the Doctor's companions got rid of all of the Daleks in the Crucible. Mickey held off Davros with Rose's gun. The two Doctors and Donna started returning all twenty-seven planets to where they belonged, but the Supreme Dalek descended to the Vault and attacked, disabling the machinery before Jack killed him. All of the planets but Earth had been returned, but the Doctor readied the TARDIS to tow it back. The Doctors also realised that Dalek Caan had been manipulating everything to destroy the Daleks. With his warped mind no longer truly Dalek, he had realised how evil they were. Goaded by Dalek Caan and knowing the Daleks had sufficient numbers to take the universe by force; even without the reality bomb, the Meta-Crisis Doctor used the control panel to overload all of the Daleks' Dalekanium and blast it back, destroying the Daleks and their ships and blowing up the Crucible.
The two Doctors and their companions escaped in the TARDIS. Although the Doctor offered, Davros refused to come with them and suffered an unknown fate when the Crucible blew up, along with Dalek Caan. With the help of Mr Smith, K9, Ianto and Gwen, the Doctor towed the Earth back to where it belonged with Sarah Jane, Mickey, Rose, Martha and Jack acting as co-pilots in the TARDIS. (TV: Journey's End [+]Russell T Davies, Doctor Who series 4 (BBC One, 2008).) Unknown to them, a Dalek flying saucer and its crew of three Daleks (TV: Victory of the Daleks [+]Mark Gatiss, Doctor Who series 5 (BBC One, 2010).) survived the fall of the New Empire, (PROSE: Dalek: The Astounding Untold History of the Greatest Enemies of the Universe) once again giving the Daleks the chance to rebuild. (TV: Victory of the Daleks [+]Mark Gatiss, Doctor Who series 5 (BBC One, 2010).)
Aftermath and legacy[]
The reality bomb and the Void[]
The effects of the reality bomb broke down the Void, destroying the millions of Daleks and Cybermen that were previously trapped there in the Battle of Canary Wharf. However, a small portion of Cybermen fell to Victorian era London around December 1851. They were later stopped by the Tenth Doctor, who sent them into the time vortex, where they disintegrated. (TV: The Next Doctor [+]Russell T Davies, Doctor Who Christmas Special 2008 (BBC One, 2008).)
More groups of Cybermen, however, also apparently managed to escape the Void and went on to develop space travel, allowing them to begin expanding again. (TV: The Pandorica Opens [+]Steven Moffat, Doctor Who series 5 (BBC One, 2010)., GAME: Return to Earth) It was even speculated that the Cybus Cybermen active in the Doctor's universe eventually met their native cousins, the Cybermen of Mondasian evolution. Allying together, the two Cyber-races formed into a stronger force, (PROSE: The Whoniverse) with the ensuing Cyber Legions making use of Cybus Cyber-bodies without a "C" on their chest (TV: A Good Man Goes to War [+]Steven Moffat, Doctor Who series 6 (BBC One, 2011).) and some retaining that Cybus logo. (TV: Nightmare in Silver [+]Neil Gaiman, Doctor Who series 7 (BBC One, 2013).) In Pete's World itself, as the reality bomb was stopped, dimensional retroclosure restored the damage and sealed the Void again. (TV: Journey's End [+]Russell T Davies, Doctor Who series 4 (BBC One, 2008).)
Effect on Earth[]
Trinity Wells reported on the Earth being stolen. (AUDIO: Driving Miss Wells) By September 2009, at least half of Earth accepted the existence of alien life, while the other half remained in denial. The events, combined with other invasions, led to an increase in suicide from crises of faith. Prime Minister Brian Green was left fatalistic by the invasion. (TV: Children of Earth: Day One)
The events of this invasion were recounted in Daleks - Invasion Earth, by Christian Peterson. The frontpiece to the book depicted the Daleks amid a burning city. Peterson also speculated that the Cult of Skaro may have been actively involved in the invasion, (PROSE: The Secret Lives of Monsters) which was somewhat true due to Caan's role in the New Dalek Empire, but incorrectly (TV: The Stolen Earth [+]Russell T Davies, Doctor Who series 4 (BBC One, 2008).) guessed that the cult's actions at Canary Wharf may have been a fact-finding operation as a prelude to the proper invasion. (PROSE: The Secret Lives of Monsters)
When Clyde Langer admitted to his father that he fought aliens, Paul used the Daleks as a frame of reference. (TV: The Mark of the Berserker)
Adelaide Brooke, commander of the first mission to colonise Mars in the 2050s, was a little girl at the time of the attack on Earth. Both her parents were lost and presumed killed. Her father's last words to her were to stay inside. She did, but a hovering Dalek approached her house. It saw Adelaide, but, apparently realising she was a fixed point in time, did not exterminate her; (TV: The Waters of Mars [+]Russell T Davies and Phil Ford, Doctor Who Autumn Special 2009 (BBC One, 2009).) the Time Lords guessed this Dalek, despite being part of a campaign that called for a universal doomsday, believed the temporal affects of killing Brooke before the reality bomb went off could derail the ongoing invasion. (PROSE: Dalek Combat Training Manual) This encounter with an alien inspired her to explore in space. According to the Tenth Doctor, Brooke's exploration of Mars, destined to end with her death, not only inspired generations of her family to reach beyond Earth, but also had a major impact on the human race leaving the confines of Earth. (TV: The Waters of Mars [+]Russell T Davies and Phil Ford, Doctor Who Autumn Special 2009 (BBC One, 2009).)
Following its destruction, the Valiant was replaced by a new Valiant-class aircraft carrier, one of multiple planned sister ships. (PROSE: UNIT History) Indeed, the Twelfth Doctor and Kate Stewart acknowledged the existence of what the former called "Cloudbase" during the 3W Institute Affair. (TV: Death in Heaven [+]Steven Moffat, Doctor Who series 8 (BBC One, 2014).)
The Eleventh Doctor realised something was wrong with Amy Pond's memories/timeline when she didn't recognise the Daleks. (TV: Victory of the Daleks [+]Mark Gatiss, Doctor Who series 5 (BBC One, 2010).)
Across time and space[]
The lost moon of Poosh reappeared on 10 April 5993, ruining the careers of academics who had spent their lives looking for it. (PROSE: Time Traveller's Diary)
The Doctor and his companions[]
Due to the creation of his half-human clone, this left the Doctor with a final regeneration in his first cycle. (TV: The Time of the Doctor [+]Steven Moffat, Doctor Who Christmas Special 2013 (BBC One, 2013).) This event caused the Doctor to lose all of his companions: Martha and Jack returned to their normal lives with Mickey joining them as he no longer had anything to tie him to Pete's World. Sarah Jane also returned to her family, the Doctor returned Jackie to Pete's World where he left Rose against her wishes, but left the Meta-Crisis Doctor with her who, due to being half-human, would be able to live a normal life with her. However, while Donna was willing to stay with him, having a Time Lord mind overwhelmed her and the Doctor was forced to erase all knowledge of his existence from her mind and return her to her family. (TV: Journey's End [+]Russell T Davies, Doctor Who series 4 (BBC One, 2008).) As a result, the Doctor originally chose not to have any permanent companions anymore, but then later ignored this, taking on Heather McCrimmon, Gabby Gonzalez and Cindy Wu and, after his regeneration into the Eleventh Doctor, Amy Pond. (TV: Planet of the Dead [+]Russell T Davies and Gareth Roberts, Doctor Who Easter Special 2009 (BBC One, 2009)., The Eleventh Hour [+]Steven Moffat, Doctor Who series 5 (BBC One, 2010)., COMIC: The Chromosome Connection, The Arts in Space, Arena of Fear)
State in the timeline[]
Despite the impact the invasion had on the people of Earth, the Eleventh Doctor discovered that his companion, Amy Pond, despite being from 2010, knew nothing of it. (TV: Victory of the Daleks [+]Mark Gatiss, Doctor Who series 5 (BBC One, 2010).) The Doctor later linked this to the nature of the time field, a form of crack or entity that had erased people and events like this from history by unwriting their/its existence. When the cracks erased an event from history, the change to history was usually minor. In some cases, the consequences of the event still remained. (TV: Flesh and Stone [+]Steven Moffat, Doctor Who series 5 (BBC One, 2010).) Following the Total Collapse Event Incident, the Doctor initiated Big Bang Two to "reboot" the universe, resulting in the return of individuals who had been erased by the cracks such as Amy's mother and father. (TV: The Big Bang [+]Steven Moffat, Doctor Who series 5 (BBC One, 2010).) However, through the extrapolations of the Matrix, the Time War-era Time Lords became aware that Big Bang Two would cause subtle changes to Earth's timeline, citing the later 2021 Dalek civil war as evidence that, at large, humans of the 21st century remained unaware of the Daleks. (PROSE: Dalek Combat Training Manual)
The Doctor, the Daleks, (TV: Victory of the Daleks [+]Mark Gatiss, Doctor Who series 5 (BBC One, 2010).) and Davros all remembered the invasion. (TV: The Magician's Apprentice [+]Steven Moffat, Doctor Who series 9 (BBC One|BBC One]], 2015).) Being amongst the memories of Dalek destruction showcased by the Twelfth Doctor and Clara Oswald, Rusty the Dalek knew of the invasion. (TV: Into the Dalek) Davros also had footage of the Doctor during the invasion. (TV: The Magician's Apprentice [+]Steven Moffat, Doctor Who series 9 (BBC One|BBC One]], 2015).) Additionally, the book The Secret Lives of Monsters chronicled both the invasion and the earlier Battle of Canary Wharf. According to the book, the Dalek occupation scarred millions of people forever, and there was an ever-present fear that the Daleks would return. (PROSE: The Secret Lives of Monsters)
In line with the Time Lords' projections, (PROSE: Dalek Combat Training Manual) the Twelfth Doctor's companion Bill Potts, who was from the year 2017, (TV: Knock Knock [+]Mike Bartlett, Doctor Who series 10 (BBC One, 2017).) was unaware of what Daleks were. (TV: The Pilot [+]Steven Moffat, Doctor Who series 10 (BBC One, 2017).) The Thirteenth Doctor's friends Graham and Grace O'Brien, Ryan Sinclair and Yasmin Khan as well as Karl Wright, despite being from 2018, were unfamiliar with aliens. (TV: The Woman Who Fell to Earth [+]Chris Chibnall, Doctor Who series 11 (BBC One, BBCA, Space and Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 2018).) Graham, Ryan and Yaz likewise were surprised when the Doctor told them about her towing Earth back in place. (TV: The Battle of Ranskoor Av Kolos [+]Chris Chibnall, Doctor Who series 11 (BBC One, 2018).) They also didn't recognise the shape of the Dalek recon scout. (TV: Resolution [+]Chris Chibnall, Doctor Who New Year Special 2019 (BBC One, 2019).)
However, the Anti-Dalek Force still knew of the invasion, recounting it in The Stolen Earth, (PROSE: The New Dalek Paradigm) as did a book chronicling the history of the universe, which included information on the invasion. (PROSE: The Whoniverse) The Testimony Foundation, which came from the era of New Earth, had audio of Davros from the fall of the Crucible. (TV: Twice Upon a Time [+]Steven Moffat, Doctor Who Christmas Special 2017 (BBC One, 2017).)
Indeed, the Daleks did again attack 21st century Earth, as a force of Death Squad Daleks attacked in 2021 upon being summoned by the Thirteenth Doctor to deal with the New Dalek Army. The Death Squad Daleks had also known to expect resistance from 21st century Earth. Jack Robertson, who did not recognise the word "Dalek," and the citizens of the United Kingdom were not familiar with the design of the Defence Drones. Even following the 2021 attack, (TV: Revolution of the Daleks [+]Chris Chibnall, Doctor Who New Year Special 2021 (BBC One, 2021).) Dan Lewis, Sarah and Nick did not recognise the Daleks. (TV: Eve of the Daleks [+]Chris Chibnall, Doctor Who New Year Special 2022 (BBC One, 2022).) Likewise, in 2012, the Dalek named "Metaltron" by Henry van Statten could not find any information about the Daleks on Earth. (TV: Dalek [+]Robert Shearman, adapted from Jubilee (Robert Shearman), Doctor Who series 1 (BBC One, 2005).)
When Cleo Proctor found an inactive Dalek within a UNIT warehouse, she was instinctively scared of it despite not knowing what it was, feeling as though she had seen it before. (AUDIO: Recruits) The Twelfth Doctor noted that humanity had a great power in being able to forget past problems, instead placing what they learned into "fairy stories". (TV: In the Forest of the Night [+]Frank Cottrell-Boyce, Doctor Who series 8 (BBC One, 2014).) By 2021, examples of aliens on Earth were considered examples of the Mandela Effect, as only some people could remember them. (PROSE: The Mandela Effect, Or Monsters on the Streets of London) Yvonne Hartman remembered the invasion, (AUDIO: The Five People You Kill in Middlesbrough) as did Dorothy McShane and St John Colchester. (AUDIO: The Red List) Stew Ferguson, who lost his job as milkman that day, remembered when planets appeared in the sky over Earth. Sylvia Noble also remembered the invasion. (PROSE: The Star Beast [+]Gary Russell, adapted from The Star Beast (Russell T Davies), 60th Anniversary Novels (Target Books, 2024).)
Behind the scenes[]
Explaining how Henry van Statten was unfamiliar with the Dalek he named Metaltron, The Time Traveller's Almanac suggested that the Van Statten Incident took place in a timeline where the Cult of Skaro did not emerge from the Sphere resulting in the Earth not having been transported to the Medusa Cascade since the personal timelines of both the Doctor and the Dalek race had not progressed to the point where those events occurred.
According to The Dalek Handbook, the three Daleks which created and were subsequently destroyed by the New Dalek Paradigm in Victory of the Daleks [+]Mark Gatiss, Doctor Who series 5 (BBC One, 2010). were survivors of the 2009 Dalek invasion of Earth. An in-universe book, Dalek: The Astounding Untold History of the Greatest Enemies of the Universe, later confirmed this was the case.
Special Daleks, a 1994 short story in DWPM 1, was the first source to mention a 21st century Dalek invasion of Earth, though Marcus Hearn had no way of knowing, at the time, that such an event would actually be depicted on television a decade later — nor does it seem likely that Russell T Davies intentionally referenced Special Daleks in plotting out the Series 4 finale. All the same, Hearn correctly predicted that the invasion would be overseen by a Supreme Dalek.
Footnotes[]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Though The Stolen Earth [+]Russell T Davies, Doctor Who series 4 (BBC One, 2008). and Journey's End [+]Russell T Davies, Doctor Who series 4 (BBC One, 2008). themselves do not give a date for the episodes or the surrounding era, TV: The Fires of Pompeii [+]James Moran, Doctor Who series 4 (BBC One, 2008)., TV: The Waters of Mars [+]Russell T Davies and Phil Ford, Doctor Who Autumn Special 2009 (BBC One, 2009)., PROSE: A Brief History of the Daleks, and AUDIO: SOS place this time as 2008, while PROSE: Beautiful Chaos, COMIC: Ghosts of the Northern Line and PROSE: The Secret Lives of Monsters instead put it in 2009.