Jump to content

Time Lord

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Timelords)

Time Lords
Doctor Who race
The Fourth Doctor (Tom Baker) in Time Lord regalia from The Deadly Assassin (1976).
First appearanceThe War Games (1969)
In-universe information
Home worldGallifrey
TypeTime Lords

The Time Lords are a fictional ancient race of extraterrestrial people in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who. Time Lords are so named for their command of time travel technology and their non-linear perception of time.[1][2] Originally, they were described as a powerful and wise race from the planet Gallifrey, from which the Doctor was a renegade; details beyond this were very limited for the first decade of the series. They later became integral to many episodes and stories as their role in the universe developed. For the first eight years after the series resumed in 2005, the Time Lords were said to have been destroyed during the Last Great Time War at some point in the show's continuity between the television movie in 1996 and the show's revival. In 2013, the 50th anniversary special "The Day of the Doctor" concerned this supposed destruction and their eventual survival.

They developed a culture of custodianship and time-related technologies based on this perception which includes strictly controlled space/time travel machines (known as "TARDISes") and monitoring devices to travel through time and to prevent time from being subverted or abused—although actual action was described as rare in practice due to their traditional policy of strict non-interference and neutrality. They can act to manipulate timelines of a wide range of events and individuals, so long as they do not cross back into their own timeline. Over subsequent episodes their history, their development of time manipulation, and their internal politics were touched upon, with Time Lord society portrayed as a stagnated ceremony-bound oligarchy and their past having descended into myth and legend. The Doctor became at times an ally, being appointed their president during his fourth, fifth, and twelfth incarnations and assisting them on many other occasions.

Creation

[edit]

In an audio commentary recorded for the 2009 DVD release of The War Games (1969), producer Derrick Sherwin mentioned how in a discussion with the serial's co-writer Terrance Dicks the previous day, Dicks was "absolutely certain" that Sherwin created the Time Lords for the serial, although Sherwin could not remember himself.[3] Later in the commentary, Dicks recalled Sherwin telling him in the discussions with Dicks and Dicks' fellow co-writer Malcolm Hulke that because the Doctor had always been established as being on the run from his own people, that if he has to appeal to them, the Doctor would be in trouble.[4] In a 2016 interview with The Essential Doctor Who magazine, Dicks mentioned how when Sherwin and he were discussing The War Games one day, Sherwin said, "He belongs to this mysterious race called the Time Lords, doesn't he?" with "everything" ultimately coming from that discussion.[5] In The War Games DVD commentary, Sherwin mentioned that he recalled hearing about the Time Lords at the beginning of the series, but as no one else remembered this, it "might have come out of [his] dreams".[4]

Elaborating on this genesis in a 2014 interview in Doctor Who Magazine, Sherwin said of The War Games, "It was a case of what shall we do, how can we end this? Let's go back to the beginning and say [the Doctor] was a Time Lord, a renegade Time Lord, a pain in the arse for the other Time Lords who stole his TARDIS and buggered off around the universe. So if he's going to be called to book let's bring in the Time Lords."[6]

Overview

[edit]

Early on in the series, the Doctor was identified as a human being;[7] however, his home planet, which from the start of the series is explicitly established as not being Earth,[8] was not named. In The War Games (1969), the Doctor's people appeared, who from then on are known as a race called Time Lords,[9][10] and in Spearhead from Space (1970), the Doctor's earlier description of himself as a human is retconned when the Third Doctor explicitly states that he is not human.[11][12] In The Time Warrior (1973–1974), the name of the Doctor's home planet, Gallifrey, was revealed on screen for the first time.[13][14]

The Time Lords are considered one of the oldest and most technologically powerful races in the Doctor Who universe. In The Time Warrior, the Time Lords are characterised by Sontaran military intelligence, quoted by Commander Linx, as "a race of great technical achievement, but lacking the morale to withstand a determined assault".[14] In "The Witch's Familiar" (2015), Davros mentions a prophecy on the Doctor's world that spoke of a hybrid made up of "two great warrior races forced together to create a warrior greater than either", which is "half-Dalek, half-Time Lord",[15] while in "Hell Bent" (2015), the General, while describing the prophecy of the Hybrid, mentions the Time Lords as one of two warrior races along with the Daleks.[16] In "Before the Flood" (2015), the Fisher King describes the Time Lords as "cowardly, vain curators, who suddenly remembered they had teeth, and became the most warlike race in the galaxy".[17] In the very distant past, the Time Lords fought a genocidal war against the Great Vampires, which led to such a catastrophic loss of life that the Time Lords renounced violence.[18] In The War Games, the Second Doctor mentions that the Time Lords' "great powers" are hardly ever used due to their policy of non-intervention into the affairs of other planets, and that they instead observe and gather knowledge. Because of this, holding a trial is a "very rare" event for the Time Lords. Exceptions to this policy are made only in extreme circumstances when they feel they have to, such as where the Doctor calls them for help in the serial.[19]

At the start of the 2005 television series, Gallifrey was thought to have been destroyed and the Time Lords functionally extinct as a result of a mutually destructive Time War with the Dalek race; the Ninth Doctor describes his planet as "just rocks and dust" in "The End of the World" (2005),[20] and mentions in "Dalek" (2005) that the Time Lords "burnt" with the Daleks at the end of the "Last Great Time War",[21] and the Tenth Doctor tells the Master in "The Sound of Drums" (2007) that the Time Lords are "dead" and "all [they've] got is each other".[22] The Doctor describes himself as the last of his kind and says his planet burned on numerous other occasions, as do other individuals, such as the Krillitane Mr Finch in "School Reunion" (2006).[23]

In "Father's Day" (2005), the Ninth Doctor remarks that before Time Lords were "all gone", they would have prevented or repaired paradoxes such as that which attracted the Reapers to 1987 Earth.[24]

In "Rise of the Cybermen" (2006), the Tenth Doctor mentions, "When the Time Lords kept their eye on everything, you could pop between realities, home in time for tea. Then they died, and took it all with them. Walls of reality closed, the worlds were sealed. Everything became that bit less kind."[25] In "The Satan Pit" (2006), the Tenth Doctor states that his people "practically invented black holes. Well, in fact, they did."[26] Both the Beast (in "The Satan Pit")[27] and the Doctor (in "The Sound of Drums" and "The Doctor's Wife", 2011)[28][29] believe the Doctor ended the War by killing all of the Time Lords and many of the Daleks.

The Tenth Doctor's artificially created "daughter" Jenny is speculated by Donna Noble in "The Doctor's Daughter" (2008) to be a surviving Time Lord, though the Doctor initially rejects the suggestion.[30]

Two other Time Lord-like beings appeared in "Journey's End" (2008): Donna, briefly empowered with the mind and knowledge of a Time Lord, and a half-human clone of the Tenth Doctor. Donna's memories related to the Doctor, as well as her Time Lord knowledge, are buried in order to save her life, while the clone lives out his existence in a parallel universe with Rose Tyler.[31]

Seal of The High Council of the Time Lords.

"The End of Time" (2009–10) shows the High Council of Time Lords, led by Lord President Rassilon, attempting to escape the Time War by materialising Gallifrey in the place of Earth at Christmas. However, the Tenth Doctor destroys the device which allows their passage into the present, sending them back into the events of the Time War.[32]

During the episode "The Doctor's Wife" it is revealed that several Time Lords and their TARDISes had been trapped and destroyed by an entity called House who lived in a separate bubble universe.[33]

In "A Good Man Goes to War" (2011), it is revealed that the daughter of Amy Pond and Rory Williams, Melody Pond (who later goes by her transliterated name "River Song"), has been born with Time Lord-like genetic traits. An old acquaintance of the Doctor's, Madame Vastra, reminds the Doctor that the Time Lord race developed due to their billions of years' exposure to the time vortex. The Doctor then recalls that Rory and Amy had spent their wedding night in the TARDIS; therefore it is theorised by Vastra that River's conception mirrored that of the Time Lords' genesis and therefore she herself developed Time Lord genetic characteristics.[34]

In "The Night of the Doctor" (2013), it is shown that the Eighth Doctor regenerates into the War Doctor to fight in the Time War.[35] Many years later, as shown during "The Day of the Doctor" (2013) and also described by the Partisan in "The End of Time", the War Doctor originally planned to use a Time Lord weapon known as the Moment to destroy the Time Lords and Daleks.[32][36] However, after being shown the Tenth and Eleventh Doctors during "The Day of the Doctor", he works together with them to change the assumed outcome of the Time War: thirteen incarnations of the Doctor team up together to freeze Gallifrey in time and place it outside of their universe (protecting it and the remaining Time Lords), while the Daleks destroy themselves in their own crossfire once Gallifrey is gone. The War Doctor does not retain the memory of these events and the Doctor spends centuries believing he burnt Gallifrey until the Eleventh Doctor's time; this is because the time streams are out of sync after the War Doctor meets his future selves and the altered events are only known to the Doctor once they occur in the Eleventh Doctor's experience and become part of his memory. Indeed, earlier on in the episode, both the Tenth and the Eleventh Doctors mistakenly believe that the War Doctor killed all of the Time Lords on the last day of the Time War. After being informed that the plan to save Gallifrey was successful, the Eleventh Doctor sets out to find Gallifrey and restore the Time Lords.[36]

In "The Time of the Doctor", the Doctor visits the planet Trenzalore where he discovers a question being broadcast through all of time and space through a crack in the universe: "Doctor Who?" The Doctor realizes that the Time Lords are attempting to return to the universe and will come back if he speaks his true name. Due to "half the universe" surrounding Trenzalore, a siege begins that lasts centuries as the Doctor knows that if the Time Lords return, the Time War will begin anew. With the Doctor on the verge of death, Clara Oswald pleads with the Time Lords through the crack to intervene and save the Doctor. Through the crack, the Time Lords grant the Doctor a new regeneration cycle, saving his life before sealing the crack again.

In "Hell Bent" (2015), it is revealed that Gallifrey returned to the universe around the time of its end.[16] After escaping his confession dial in "Heaven Sent" (2015), still furious over the death of Clara Oswald in "Face the Raven" (2015),[37] the Doctor manages to depose Rassilon—who had put the Doctor there to begin with for questioning—and exile him in "Hell Bent" before running off again.[16]

Physical characteristics

[edit]

Time Lords and human beings look alike,[38][39] however they differ in many respects. Physiological differences from humans include two hearts which normally beat at 170 beats per minute,[40] and a "respiratory bypass system" that allows them to survive strangulation. The Twelfth Doctor was able to survive direct exposure to the vacuum of space in "Oxygen".[41] Time Lords also seem to have an increased resilience to higher frequencies of sound, as seen in "The Christmas Invasion"[42] and "Partners in Crime".[43] If severely injured, Time Lords can go into a healing coma which lowers their body temperature to below freezing which the Doctor did in Planet of the Daleks. In the serial Destiny of the Daleks,[44] Romana was able to voluntarily stop both of her hearts beating, to fool the Daleks into believing that she was dead. The Doctor also shows a greater tolerance to cold compared to humans in The Seeds of Doom[45] and "Planet of the Ood"[46] and even Romana in The Ribos Operation,[47] and in "42",[48] the Tenth Doctor states he is able to survive at absolute zero for a short period of time. In "World War Three",[49] the Doctor is able to shake off an electrocution attempt which is fatal to a number of humans, and appears unaffected by the energy whip wielded by the Sycorax in "The Christmas Invasion".[42] In "Smith and Jones" the Tenth Doctor says that the radiation given off by X-rays pose no real threat to Time Lords, and proceeds to absorb an amount that would be lethal to a human, which he subsequently expels through his foot.[50] "The End of Time"[32] shows the Tenth Doctor as being capable of surviving (for a short period) a massive burst of radiation that would have killed anything else instantly. However, the radiation burst caused enough damage to start a regeneration.

Time Lords are extremely long-lived, routinely counting their ages in terms of centuries; the Second Doctor claimed in The War Games[10] that Time Lords could live "practically forever, barring accidents". The series has suggested that Time Lords have a different concept of ageing from humans. In "The Stolen Earth",[51] the Tenth Doctor refers to when who he thought was his original incarnation was a "kid" at 90 years old. However, within a specific incarnation, a Time Lord is able to age, albeit much more slowly than a human. The War Doctor[35][36] and Eleventh Doctor,[52] over the course of the Last Great Time War and the Battle of Trenzalore, respectively, are seen to age within their respective incarnations to what would appear to a human to be old age; both conflicts are suggested within the series to last hundreds if not thousands of Earth years.[note 1]

In The Two Doctors,[54] the Second Doctor states that the "Rassilon Imprimatur" allows Time Lords to safely travel through time, becoming symbionts with their TARDISes, and that the reason other species are incapable of developing time travel is that they lack the imprimatur. However, he implies later that he was lying about at least some of this information to mislead the Sontarans. At the beginning of The Trial of a Time Lord,[55] the Sixth Doctor suggests that a number of elder Time Lords were able to use their combined mental energy to summon his TARDIS against his will.

In the episode "Cold Blood",[56] the Eleventh Doctor experiences excruciating pain when the Silurian attempts to decontaminate him of surface bacteria. The Doctor states this would kill him, most likely due to the scanners being programmed to "detox" humans and therefore being unaware of what elements the Doctor requires.

A Time Lord is able to conceal their Time Lord nature, and become a human, by using the Chameleon Arch – a device that stores their "essence" and memories in an innocuous device such as a fob watch, and replaces them with false counterparts until the object is later re-opened. The process allows them to disguise themselves as humans physiologically and psychologically, meaning they only have one heart and are stripped of non-human powers, and of any memory of having been a Time Lord. This story element was notably featured in Series 3; the Doctor uses it to hide himself from the Family of Blood and becomes a schoolteacher in Edwardian England.[57][58] His nemesis the Master used it to disguise himself as a human to escape the Time War.[59] The story element is later revisited in the Series 12 episode "Fugitive of the Judoon" when a mysterious, unknown incarnation of the Doctor (played by Jo Martin), is revealed to have been hiding on Earth as a tour guide named “Ruth Clayton” using a Chameleon Arch.[60]

Mental powers

[edit]

Time Lords can communicate by telepathy,[38][61] and can link their minds to share information and enhance their powers.[62] In Castrovalva,[63] the Doctor activates the TARDIS' Zero Room mentally. Additionally, both the Doctor and the Master demonstrate significant hypnotic abilities which may be supplemented by their telepathic abilities.[64]

These powers were elaborated upon from 2005. The Eleventh Doctor is seen using this method to query a cat about the goings-on of the flat in "The Lodger".[65] In "A Good Man Goes to War" [34] and "Closing Time" [66] he is apparently able to even understand babies, as well as horses in "A Town Called Mercy".[67] In "The Girl in the Fireplace",[68] the Tenth Doctor reads the mind of Madame de Pompadour—and in the process, to his surprise, she is able to read his mind as well. In "The End of Time",[69] the Master uses the same technique, allowing the Tenth Doctor to hear the drumming sound the Master constantly hears. The Doctor later displays his telepathic communion powers in "Fear Her" [70] and in "The Shakespeare Code",[71] where by using his mind melding technique he is partially able to relieve a man of his mental illness as he traces back through his memories. In "Planet of the Ood",[46] the Tenth Doctor seems able to temporarily confer some degree of telepathy on his companion Donna Noble, so that she can hear the telepathic song of the Ood. When she is unable to bear the song, the Doctor removes the ability.

In "The Lodger",[65] the Eleventh Doctor (pressed for time and needing to convey a great deal of information to someone) smashed his forehead into another person's forehead, causing a massive instantaneous transfer of information.

The Doctor also contacts the Time Lords by going into a trance and creating an assembling box in The War Games.[10] In The Two Doctors,[54] the Doctor engages in astral projection, but warns that if he is disturbed while doing so, his mind could become severed from his body and he could die. In "Last of the Time Lords", the Doctor telepathically interfaces with a network tapped into the human population who collectively chant his name. The focus of psychic energy granted the Doctor the ability to de-age himself, float through the air, deflect shots from the Master's laser screwdriver, and telekinetically disarm the Master.[72]

In addition, Time Lords may be clairvoyant, or have additional time-related senses. In The Time Monster,[73] and Invasion of the Dinosaurs,[74] the Third Doctor is able to resist fields of slow time, being able to move through them even though others are paralysed. In City of Death,[75] both the Fourth Doctor and Romana notice distortions and jumps in time that no one else does.

In the 2005 series, the Ninth Doctor claims that he can sense the movement of the Earth through space[76] as well as being able to perceive the past and all possible futures.[77] He is also able to concentrate and time his motions well enough to step safely through the blades of a rapidly spinning fan,[20] and later claims that if any Time Lords still existed, he would be able to sense them.[22] As the Tenth Doctor he repeats this assertion, adding also that he is somehow innately able to sense which events in time are 'fixed' and which are in 'flux'.[78] The Eleventh Doctor slightly amends what was said earlier in "The Doctor's Wife",[33] saying that he could only sense if there were other Time Lords in this universe. In the original series episode Warriors' Gate, Romana is called a 'time-sensitive' by a marauding slaver and, though she seems to deny this, is able to interface with his spaceship in ways that only a 'time-sensitive' is supposed to be able to.[79] In "Utopia",[59] the Tenth Doctor states that he finds it difficult to look at Captain Jack Harkness because Jack's existence has become fixed in time and space.

In the Series 4 episode "Journey's End",[31][80] the Tenth Doctor was shown to use his telepathic abilities to wipe Donna Noble's mind of certain memories, specifically the memories of her travels in the TARDIS and to 'implant' a defence mechanism which is activated in "The End of Time".[32] The War Games [10] showed that other Time Lords are also able to erase people's memories, as in that story, Jamie and Zoe's travels with the Doctor were erased from their memory, and the council of Time Lords also put a memory block on the Doctor so he could not pilot the TARDIS. In the Series 5 episode "The Big Bang" [81] the Doctor telepathically left a message in Amy Pond's head before sealing her into the Pandorica so that she would know what was happening when she woke up.

Regeneration

[edit]
The Fourth Doctor regenerates into the Fifth Doctor (from Logopolis, 1981).

Time Lords also have the ability to regenerate their bodies when their current body is mortally wounded. This process results in their body undergoing a transformation, gaining a new physical form and a new personality.

Regenerations can be traumatic. In Castrovalva, the Fifth Doctor requires the use of a Zero Room, a chamber shielded from the outside universe that provides an area of calm for him to recuperate. The Time Lord's personality also sometimes goes through a period of instability following a regeneration, such as in The Christmas Invasion.

It was first stated in The Deadly Assassin that a Time Lord can regenerate twelve times (thirteen incarnations in all).[61] There were exceptions to this rule, however: when the Master reached the end of his regenerative cycle, he took possession of the body of another person to continue living.[82] In "The Five Doctors", the Master was offered a new cycle of regenerations by the High Council to save the Doctor from the Death Zone, which may indicate that there are methods to circumvent the twelve regeneration limit. The Master says in "The Sound of Drums" [22] that the Time Lords "resurrected" him to fight in the Time War. It was revealed in The Brain of Morbius [83] that the Time Lords also use the Elixir of Life in extreme cases, where regeneration is not possible. It is confirmed in "The Time of the Doctor" [52] that a Time Lord can normally regenerate only twelve times but that the Time Lords have the ability to grant more regenerations: at the behest of Clara Oswald they granted the Doctor himself a new cycle when he was at the point of death from old age, having used up his entire cycle.

Regeneration, regardless of how many regenerations the individual Time Lord has already undergone, is a conditional and non-inevitable phenomenon. This is stated in "The End of Time" when the Tenth Doctor explains to Wilfred Mott that a Time Lord can die before they have a chance to regenerate, in which case they die outright.[69] In The Deadly Assassin at least one of the murders was carried out with a 'staser', possibly a weapon designed to both kill and prevent regeneration (stasers are also stated to have little effect on non-living tissue).[61] In the Series 4 episode "Turn Left",[84] the Tenth Doctor's body is shown on a stretcher following the parallel events of "The Runaway Bride". A UNIT officer states that the Doctor's death must have been too quick to allow for regeneration.

In Destiny of the Daleks,[44] Romana showed the ability to rapidly change form several times in a row during her first regeneration, and apparently had the ability to change into whatever appearance she desired. When the Doctor remarks upon her ability, she comments that he should have stayed in university. However, despite showing several appearances, Romana regenerated only once on that occasion.

In "Utopia",[59] the Master, just before regeneration, claimed that he would become "young and strong", implying that he could choose the form of his new body. The human-Time Lord hybrid River Song in "Let's Kill Hitler" claimed she was "focusing on a dress size", but subsequently weighed herself, seeming unsure of how her new body had truly developed.[85] The Doctor said on several occasions he wished he was "ginger", which he has seemed unable to control in previous regenerations.[32][42] In "Last of the Time Lords",[72] when the Master is fatally wounded, he chooses not to regenerate, essentially committing suicide rather than regenerate and be kept prisoner by the Doctor forever. This again implies that regeneration is not inevitable and can indeed be refused.

Upon encountering the remains of fellow Time Lord the Corsair in "The Doctor's Wife", the Doctor refers to the Corsair as both male and female, hinting that Time Lords can switch genders upon their regenerations;[33] this is confirmed in "Dark Water", in which the Master, previously seen in various male incarnations for over forty years, returned as a female. The Doctor also regenerated as a woman in "Twice Upon A Time", as the Thirteenth Doctor.

Whether or not Time Lords can recognise each other across regenerations is not made entirely clear:

  • In The War Games,[10] the War Chief recognises the Second Doctor despite his regeneration and it is stated that they know each other when they first meet.
  • In The Three Doctors,[62] the Second Doctor recognises the Third Doctor immediately, despite the fact that the Third Doctor is a future incarnation of himself. Omega is similarly able to recognise the two Doctors as the same man.
  • In Terror of the Autons,[86] the Third Doctor fails to recognise The Master's voice, when the Master speaks to him on a telephone.
  • In Planet of the Spiders,[87] the Third Doctor has trouble recognising his former mentor.
  • In The Deadly Assassin,[61] Announcer Runcible, an old classmate, recognises the Fourth Doctor despite his changes in appearance and mentions that the Doctor appears to have had a "face lift" since they last met.
  • In The Armageddon Factor,[88] Drax, another alumnus immediately recognises the Fourth Doctor, though the Doctor does not recognise him.
  • In "The Five Doctors",[89] the Third Doctor is unable to initially recognise the Master in his non-Gallifreyan body.
  • In The Twin Dilemma,[90] the Doctor's old friend Azmael fails to recognise him, as the Doctor has regenerated twice since their last encounter.
  • In The Two Doctors,[54] when the Sixth Doctor and Second Doctor first meet, they are initially quiet until they face each other and simultaneously yell at each other, each recognising immediately the other.
  • In Survival, the Master recognises the Seventh Doctor on sight.[91]
  • In Doctor Who (1996), the Eighth Doctor is unable to recognise the Master while he possesses a human body, only recognising the Master when he corrects Grace's grammar.[1]
  • In "Utopia",[59] the Tenth Doctor does not recognise the human form of the Master, although the Doctor did recognise him, and name him "Master", as soon as he recovered his Time Lord physiology and mind.
  • In "The Sound of Drums",[22] the Doctor states that Time Lords can "always" recognise each other, although, while on Earth, the Master used satellites with a telepathic network to mask his presence from the Doctor. The Doctor in this circumstance appears to only be referring to recognition of the individual as a Time Lord, not necessarily the specific identity. However, when he sees the Master on television, he recognises him.[22]
  • In "Time Crash",[92] the Fifth Doctor could not instinctively recognise that the Tenth Doctor was a Time Lord, much less one of his own later incarnations.
  • In "The Next Doctor",[93] the Tenth Doctor initially seems unable to detect that the human Jackson Lake, who identifies himself as the Doctor, is not actually his regenerated future self.
  • In "The End of Time",[32] the Doctor immediately recognises an unidentified elderly female Time Lord on sight, and also refers to the lead Time Lord by the name Rassilon (an earlier incarnation of Rassilon had appeared in "The Five Doctors"). In the context of the story, however, he may have encountered both during the Time War, though he himself has regenerated since they last saw him. Rassilon and the woman recognised the Doctor on sight as well, but the Doctor's presence, regardless of incarnation, was expected.
  • In "The Day of the Doctor",[36] the War Doctor recognises neither the Tenth Doctor nor the Eleventh, initially assuming them to be future companions. Likewise, earlier on, when the Tenth and Eleventh Doctors first meet, the Tenth Doctor does not recognise his successor at first, but after the Eleventh Doctor's reaction upon seeing him, he is quick to realise who the Eleventh Doctor is.
  • In "Dark Water",[94] the Twelfth Doctor is unable to recognise the Master until she reveals her identity.
  • In "Spyfall",[95] the Thirteenth Doctor is unable to recognize the Master until he tells her.

In "The Impossible Astronaut",[96] a future version of the Eleventh Doctor is shot, causing him to begin his regeneration cycle. He is shot again before the regeneration completes, causing him to die instantly. However, in "The Wedding of River Song",[97] it is revealed this was a shape shifting android the Doctor used to fake his death, making this questionable.

It's a bit dodgy, this process, you never know what you're gonna end up with.

— The Ninth Doctor in "The Parting of the Ways".[77]

In cases of non-fatal injury, Time Lords who have recently regenerated can use left over cellular energy to heal and even regrow severed limbs, as seen in "The Christmas Invasion" where the Tenth Doctor regrows a hand.[42] Also seen in "Journey's End", is the apparent ability to siphon off regeneration energy in order to cancel the effect of changing appearance; which requires them to have a "bio-matching receptacle" (in this case the Doctor's severed hand), which is usually impractical.[31] However, this "non-regeneration" was revealed as "counting" towards the Doctor's twelve possible regenerations during the events of "The Time of the Doctor".[52][98]

In "The End of Time", the Tenth Doctor was able to postpone his regeneration long enough so that he could travel in time and space to see his past companions for one last time before he regenerated. The Fifth Doctor had also shown a similar ability in The Caves of Androzani, fighting off the effects of an impending regeneration so he can return to Androzani Minor to save his companion Peri.

Time Lords appear to have the ability to stay conscious for moments after events that would outright kill other lifeforms instantly, giving them the opportunity to regenerate. This is seen in Logopolis (fall from a great height), and The Caves of Androzani (fatal disease). In both "The Stolen Earth" and "The Big Bang", the Doctor is shot by a Dalek's energy weapon, which has almost always been shown to instantly kill any other lifeform, yet is still conscious and able to return to return to the TARDIS and Pandorica respectively.

In Death of the Doctor, the Eleventh Doctor responds to a question from Clyde Langer by saying he can regenerate "507" times.[99] Early news reports, before the episode was broadcast, suggested he would say there is no limit to the number of regenerations.[100] Writer Russell T Davies stated in an interview with SFX that the line was not intended to be taken seriously and is instead a commentary. He said that the "thirteen lives" rule was too deeply entrenched in the viewer consciousness for his throwaway line to affect it.[99]

It is revealed in "The Time of the Doctor" that this was in fact false and that due to his various regenerations, the Eleventh Doctor was in fact his last incarnation. However, the Time Lords intervened through a crack in time to grant him a full new regeneration cycle. The revelation in 2020's The Timeless Children that The Doctor is, in fact, not Gallifreyan and instead had their DNA used to give Gallifreyans the ability to regenerate, calls into doubt whether or not the Doctor does in fact have a limit to their regenerations, or if they merely believed they did due to all other Time Lords being limited.

Planet

[edit]
The Citadel of the Time Lords on Gallifrey (from "The Sound of Drums")[101]

The Time Lord homeworld, Gallifrey, is an Earth-like planet in the fictional constellation of Kasterborous. It is located in a binary star system[102] 250 million light years from Earth.[103] The points in time when Gallifrey appears are never definitively stated. As the planet is often reached by means of time travel, its relative present could conceivably exist almost anywhere in the Earth's past or future, as well as anywhere in the conceivable universe.

From space, Gallifrey is seen as a yellow-orange planet and was close enough to central space lanes for spacecraft to require clearance from Gallifreyan Space Traffic Control as they pass through its system.[104] The planet was protected from physical attack by an impenetrable barrier called the quantum force field, and from teleportation incursions by the transduction barrier—which could be reinforced to repel most levels of this type of technological attack.[105]

The Doctor's granddaughter Susan first describes her home world (not named as "Gallifrey" at the time) as having bright, silver-leafed trees and a burnt orange sky at night in the serial The Sensorites (1964).[106] This casts an amber tint on anything outside the city, as seen in The Invasion of Time.[104] However, Gallifrey's sky appears blue and Earth-like in "The Five Doctors" (1983) within the isolated Death Zone.[107]

In "Gridlock", the Tenth Doctor echoes Susan's description of the world now named as Gallifrey and goes further by mentioning the vast mountain ranges "with fields of deep red grass, capped with snow". He then elaborates how Gallifrey's second sun would "rise in the south and the mountains would shine", with the silver-leafed trees looking like "a forest on fire" in the mornings.[102]

Culture and society

[edit]

The capital city is referred to as the Citadel, and contains the Capitol, the seat of Time Lord government. At the centre of the Capitol is the Panopticon, beneath which is the Eye of Harmony. Outside the Capitol lie wastelands where the "Outsiders", Time Lords who have dropped out of Time Lord society, live in less technologically advanced communities, shunning life in the cities as revealed in The Invasion of Time.

There are also Time Lords, such as The Doctor, The Master, The Rani, etc., who, having rejected the rules of the Time Lords' High Council (for whatever reason), cast-off or-else stop using their name and take-on a new name or title, and only to use their original ones under certain circumstances. Their new names are indicative of the characters and goals. The Doctor also testified, in "The Day of the Doctor", that his taking-on the name of 'Doctor' was also a promise to himself ("Never cruel nor cowardly", "Never give up. Never give in"); and in The Name of the Doctor and The Day of the Doctor, it's highlighted that, when 'The Doctor' became 'The War Doctor' ("A Warrior", "Doctor No-more"), he stopped thinking of himself as 'The Doctor' until after the climax of The Day of the Doctor ("I am 'The Doctor' again").

The Doctor Who Roleplaying Game by FASA equates the Outsiders with the "Shobogans", a group mentioned briefly in The Deadly Assassin[61] as being responsible for acts of vandalism around the Panopticon, but there is actually nothing on screen that explicitly connects the two.

In "The Timeless Children" (2020), it is revealed that the Shobogans were the first race of peoples who resided on Gallifrey, only becoming the Time Lords after gene-splicing the ability to regenerate from the Doctor.[108]

Romana and the Doctor have also referred to "Time Tots", or infant Time Lords,[109][110][note 2] and (in "Smith and Jones") the Doctor refers his compatriots and he playing "with Röntgen bricks in the nursery".[50] In "The Sound of Drums", the Master is seen as a child, apparently at the age of 8.[22]

In general, the Time Lords are an aloof people, with a society full of pomp and ceremony. The Doctor has observed that his people "enjoy making speeches"[111] and have an "infinite capacity for pretension".[112]

The Sixth Doctor has also characterised the Time Lords as a stagnant and corrupt society, a state caused by ten million years of absolute power.[113] Their portrayal in the series is reminiscent of academics living in ivory towers, unconcerned with external affairs. The Doctor states that the Time Lords were sworn never to interfere, only to watch.[22] It has been suggested that, since perfecting the science of time travel, they have withdrawn, bound by the moral complexity of interfering in the natural flow of history; in Earthshock,[114] the Cyberleader, when notified of the arrival of a TARDIS, is surprised at the presence of a Time Lord, stating "they are forbidden to interfere". In The Two Doctors,[54] it is suggested that Time Lords are responsible for maintaining a general balance of power between the races of the Universe.

While interference is apparently against Time Lord policy, there are occasions when they do intervene, albeit indirectly through their CIA or Celestial Intervention Agency. The CIA has occasionally sent the Doctor on missions that required plausible deniability, as in The Two Doctors,[54] and sometimes against his will, as in Colony in Space[115] and The Monster of Peladon.[116] He is also sent on a mission in The Mutants [117] which was intended to help preserve the existence of a unique race, which was being destroyed by the excesses of the Earth empire. The Doctor's mission in Genesis of the Daleks[118] even involves changing history to avert the creation of the Daleks, or at least temper their aggressiveness.

Children of Gallifrey are taken from their families at the age of 8 and admitted into the Academy.[22][119] Novices are then taken to an initiation ceremony before the Untempered Schism, a gap in the fabric of reality that looks into the time vortex. Of those that stare into it, some are inspired, some run away and others go mad. The Doctor suggests that the Master went mad, while admitting that he ran away.[22][120]

Each Time Lord belongs to one of a number of various colleges or chapters, such as the Patrexes, Arcalian, and the Prydonian chapters, which have ceremonial and possibly political significance. In The Deadly Assassin,[61] it is explained that each chapter has its own colours; the Prydonians wear scarlet and orange, the Arcalians wear green, and the Patrexeans wear heliotrope. However, in that same serial, Cardinal Borusa, described as "the leader of the Prydonian chapter", wears heliotrope. Other Prydonians wear orange headdresses with orange-brown (not scarlet) robes. The colleges of the Academy are led by the Cardinals. Ushers, who provide security and assistance at official Time Lord functions, may belong to any chapter, and wear all-gold uniforms. Also mentioned in The Deadly Assassin are 'plebeian classes'.[61]

The executive political leadership is split between the Lord President, who keeps the ceremonial relics of the Time Lords, and the Chancellor, who appears to be the administrative leader of the Cardinals and who acts as a check on the power of the Lord President. The President is an elected position; on Presidential Resignation Day, the outgoing President usually names his successor, who is then usually confirmed in a non-contested "election", but it is still constitutionally possible for another candidate to put themselves forward for the post, as the Doctor did in The Deadly Assassin.[61] In that story, the Presidency was described as a largely ceremonial role, but in The Invasion of Time[111] the orders of the office were to be obeyed without question. In the event the current Lord President is unable to name a successor, the council can appoint a President to take his place. In "The Five Doctors",[89] the council appoints the Doctor as president after Borusa is imprisoned by Rassilon, and later deposed him after he neglected his duties.

The President and Chancellor also sit on the Time Lord High Council, akin to a legislative body, composed variously of Councillors and more senior Cardinals. Also on the High Council is the Castellan of the Chancellery Guard, in charge of the security of the Citadel, whom the Doctor has referred to as the leader of a trumped-up palace guard. According to the constitution, if while in emergency session the other members of the High Council are in unanimous agreement, even the President's orders can be overruled.[89][121]

Race or title

[edit]

The television series and people involved in its production repeatedly refer to the Time Lords, interchangeably, as a species or race, including the Doctor,[19][122][123] his enemies,[14][124][125] and other time lords.[16]

The crew has also repeated this statement, including Malcolm Hulke and Terrance Dicks,[126] Derrick Sherwin,[127] and Russell T Davies,[128] and

"The Stolen Tardis" (1979), a spin-off comic printed in issue No. 9 of Doctor Who Weekly (the original name of Doctor Who Magazine) also claims that "not everyone on Gallifrey is a Time Lord",[129] while a feature in issue No. 21 instead states that the Doctor is "a member of a race called the Time Lords".[130]

Technology

[edit]

The Moment was claimed by the Time Lords to be the most powerful weapon in the Universe and capable of destroying entire galaxies. The Moment was locked in Gallifrey's Time Vaults, specifically in the Omega Arsenal. The Moment is so powerful that the weapon's operating system became sentient, leading the Time Lords to wonder "How do you use a weapon when it can stand in judgement of you?" and that "only one man would be mad enough to try it". In the 50th anniversary special "The Day of the Doctor", the War Doctor breaks into the Omega Arsenal, steals the Moment and is about to destroy both Time Lords and Daleks alike to stop the Time War before the Moment engineers a meeting with his succeeding regenerations to convince him otherwise.[36][131]

Another impressive example of Time Lord technology is the Eye of Harmony, a repurposed black hole singularity contained within the instrumentality below the Panopticon. This is the source of their power and the anchor of the Web of Time itself, created by Rassilon and the co-founders of Time Lord society in the distant past. [citation needed] The Time Lords were accomplished stellar engineers and could control the development of stars with devices like the Hand of Omega, which was shown to be capable of forcing a star to go supernova. [citation needed] The Eye of Harmony exists within the Doctor's TARDIS as a collapsing star suspended in a permanent state of decay, hence harnessing the potential energy of a collapse that would never occur.[132] Whether these are all aspects of the Eye of Harmony on Gallifrey or individual stars in their own right is not made clear on screen. [note 3]

Paradoxically, although the Time Lords are a scientifically and technologically advanced race, the civilisation is so old that key pieces of their technology have become shrouded in legend and myth. [citation needed] In the spin-off fiction, [citation needed] an edict and general aversion against exploring Gallifrey's past also contributes to this. Accordingly, until the Master rediscovers it, the Time Lords forgot that the location of the Eye of Harmony is beneath their capital. [citation needed] They also treated such ceremonial symbols as the Key and Sash of Rassilon as mere historical curiosities, being unaware of their true function. [citation needed]

In the revived series, there were instances in which evil alien species have stolen Time Lord technology for their own purposes but such is its complexity that they are unable to operate it, as illustrated in "Doomsday" when the Genesis Ark was stolen by the Daleks and even they could not open it. Furthermore, the Genesis Ark was just one Time Lord prison that held millions of Daleks, demonstrating "bigger on the inside than it is on the outside" Time Lord technology.[134][135] The classic series also makes reference to the inability of other races to successfully use Time Lord technology, with The Two Doctors [54] stating that even if a race managed to copy and build their own TARDISes, they would be ripped apart by the molecular stresses of time travel as all TARDISes have a fail-deadly approach to unauthorised use unless primed with a Rassilon Imprimatur, creating a symbiotic link to a specific Time Lord.

During the final hours of the Time War, the High Council of Gallifrey refer to defenses called 'Sky Trenches' which appear to be at least somewhat effective against invading Daleks and/or their ships, as seen in "The Day of the Doctor".[36]

TARDISes are characterised not just by their ability to travel in time, but also their dimensionally transcendent nature. A TARDIS' interior spaces exist in a different dimension from its exterior, allowing it to appear to be bigger on the inside. The Doctor states that transdimensional engineering was a key Time Lord discovery in The Robots of Death.[133][136] The Doctor states in "The Impossible Planet" that TARDISes are grown, not made.[137] It is seen in "The Name of the Doctor" [138] that as a TARDIS dies, its 'dimension dams' can break down causing a 'size leak' wherein the exterior dimensions of a TARDIS begin to expand to match its inner dimensions.

Fitting their generally defensive nature, Time Lord weapons technology is rarely seen, other than the staser hand weapons used by the Guard within the Capitol.

Standard TARDISes do not generally seem to use any on-board weaponry, although War or Battle TARDISes (armed with "time torpedoes" that freeze their target in time) have appeared in the spin-off media. [citation needed] In the novels, [citation needed] the Eighth Doctor's companion Compassion, a living TARDIS, has enough firepower to annihilate other TARDISes. In the serial Castrovalva,[63] the Master's TARDIS is equipped with an energy field that he uses to temporarily disable or stun several human security guards outside the vessel.

One exception to the Time Lords' defensive weaponry is the de-mat gun (or dematerialisation gun). The de-mat gun is a weapon of mass destruction that removes its target from space-time altogether, as seen in The Invasion of Time.[111] The de-mat gun was created in Rassilon's time and is a closely guarded secret; the knowledge to create one is kept in the Matrix and is available only to the President. To make sure this knowledge is not abused, the only way to arm a de-mat gun is by means of the Great Key of Rassilon, whose location is only known to the Chancellor. As a means of extreme sanction, the Time Lords have also been known to place whole planets into time-loops, isolating them from the universe in one repeating moment of time [citation needed] as well as hurling planets from one galaxy to another using a weapon referred only as a magnetron in The Trial of a Time Lord.[55]

In the Doctor Who Annual 2006,[139] a section by Russell T Davies says that during the Time War, the Time Lords used Bowships (used against the Great Vampires in an ancient war), Black Hole Carriers and N-Forms (war machines first mentioned in the Virgin New Adventures novel Damaged Goods,[140] written by Davies).

In "The End of Time",[32][141] Rassilon is shown wearing a gauntlet with several powers, primarily the ability to disintegrate a target and the ability to reverse changes made to the human race by the Master. When Rassilon throws the white point star into the hologram of the Earth, the diamond is able to arrive at the planet by following the Master's signal, travelling through the time-locked war to the post-war universe.

Gallifreyan paintings were unique in that they were in 3D, as they acted as snapshots of a single moment in time by use of stasis cubes. This meant that they could be used as rudimentary time travel, by freezing a person inside a painting and then letting them out at the required point in time. An example of this is Gallifrey Falls No More as seen in "The Day of the Doctor".[36]

History

[edit]
The Dark Tower in the Death Zone on Gallifrey

Details of the Time Lords' history within the show are sketchy and are fraught with supposition and contradiction. The series 12 finale "The Timeless Children" (2020) reveals the Time Lords were originally members of the Shobogan race who were genetically altered with the genetic code of "The Timeless Child", a being that later came to be as the Doctor. The Time Lords became the masters of time travel when one of their number, the scientist Omega, created an energy source to power their experiments in time.[62] To this end, Omega used a stellar manipulation device, the Hand of Omega, to rework a nearby star into a new form to serve that source.[112] Unfortunately, the star flared, first into a supernova, and then collapsed into a black hole. Omega was thought killed in that explosion but unknown to everyone, had somehow survived in an anti-matter universe beyond the black hole's singularity. [citation needed] Rassilon, the ultimate founder of Time Lord society, then took a singularity (assumed by fans and the spin-off media [citation needed] to be the same one as Omega's) and placed it beneath the Time Lords' citadel on Gallifrey. This perfectly balanced Eye of Harmony then served as the power source for their civilisation as well as their time machines.[61]

At some point in their history the Time Lords interacted with the civilisation of the planet Minyos, giving them advanced technology (including the ability to "regenerate" to a limited degree, by rejuvenating their bodies when they grow too old). This met with disastrous results, (which is said to be the reason the Time Lords adopted a philosophy of "non-interference"). The Minyans destroyed themselves in a series of nuclear wars.[142]

In "Dalek" (2005), the Ninth Doctor explains that his people perished along with the Dalek race in the "Last Great Time War", leaving the Doctor the last of his race.[21] In "The Satan Pit" (2006), the Beast identifies the Tenth Doctor as "the killer of his own kind".[26] In "The Sound of Drums" (2007), the Master reveals he escaped the war by turning himself into a human following the Dalek Emperor taking control of the Cruciform.[22] In "The End of Time" (2009–10), the Time Lords, after attempting to break out the time lock of the Time War and become creatures of consciousness, are shown being sent back into the War on the last day through the Tenth Doctor's intervention. The Master also disappears along with them. Rassilon describes Time Lord history in this story as having lasted "a billion years" up until the end of the Time War.[143]

In "The Day of the Doctor" (2013), thirteen incarnations of the Doctor are shown successfully attempting to freeze the Time Lords and their home world of Gallifrey in time, by transporting them to a "parallel pocket universe" using their TARDISes. Because the time streams are out of sync, the Doctor does not retain the memory of this until his eleventh incarnation. Indeed, earlier on in the episode, both the Tenth and the Eleventh Doctors mistakenly believe that the War Doctor killed all of the Time Lords on the last day of the Time War. While the plan is being outlined, the War Doctor notes that to the rest of the universe, it only appears as if the Time Lords and Daleks had mutually destroyed each other, when in fact, the Daleks had fired upon themselves in the crossfire after Gallifrey vanished, ending in the destruction of most of their own race, but not the Time Lords.[36] In "Death in Heaven" (2014), the Master, now regenerated into a female form called "Missy",[144][145] explains that when the Doctor saved Gallifrey, this caused the Doctor to save her as well. She bluffs the Twelfth Doctor into thinking that Gallifrey has returned to its original co-ordinates, but when the Doctor goes looking, he finds nothing there.[146]

In "Face the Raven" (2015), the immortal Ashildr makes a deal to have the Doctor's TARDIS keys and confession dial taken and to teleport the Twelfth Doctor away in exchange for her trap street's safety.[147] In "Heaven Sent" (2015), the Twelfth Doctor escapes his confession dial and finds himself near the Citadel on Gallifrey. He tells a young child to inform the Time Lords that he knows what they have done and that he has returned "the long way around". He then tells the Time Lords through his confession dial the hybrid they fear "is me".[37] In "Hell Bent" (2015), Gallifrey is revealed to have come back from the pocket universe it was frozen in and exist at the end of the universe. Rassilon is revealed to have been the one who had the Doctor teleported into the confession dial.[16]

In "Spyfall" (2020), the Master reveals that he returned to Gallifrey, slaughtered the population and devastated the planet in his rage over discovering the truth about the Time Lords’ origins and the identity of the Timeless Child. Later, in "The Timeless Children" (2020), the Master lures the Thirteenth Doctor back to Gallifrey, opening a path for the Cybermen to invade and convert the bodies of deceased Time Lords to create CyberMasters - a subrace of Cybermen capable of regeneration. The Doctor, after being shown the truth about their past, plants an explosive in the Citadel, seemingly destroying the CyberMasters and the Master while rendering Gallifrey devoid of any organic life.

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ A minimum of 300 years is confirmed by the Eleventh Doctor to have passed during one of the time skips on Trenzalore.[52] In the episode before "The Time of the Doctor", "The Day of the Doctor", the Eleventh Doctor describes himself as "twelve hundred or something",[36] while in "Deep Breath", which is set immediately after the end of the Battle of Trenzalore, the Twelfth Doctor says he's "over 2000 years old".[53]
  2. ^ The unfinished story Shada was originally intended for broadcast for the show's seventeenth season, and was released in 1992 on VHS with narration segments to fill in the gaps not shot due to industrial action halting shooting of the serial. It was followed by an animated webcast version from 2003 that stuck closely to Douglas Adams' original script and was remounted to feature Paul McGann's Eighth Doctor instead of Tom Baker's Fourth Doctor.
  3. ^ According to Doctor Who: How to Be a Time Lord: Official Guide, the Eye of Harmony within "each TARDIS" is described as a "section" of the Eye.[133]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Jacobs, Matthew (writer); Sax, Geoffrey (director) (14 May 1996). Doctor Who. Fox.
  2. ^ Donaghy 2014, p. 7.
  3. ^ Sherwin, Derrick; Padbury, Wendy; Hines, Frazer; Sherwin, Jane (2009). The War Games Episode Three commentary (DVD). BBC Worldwide. BBCDVD1800.
  4. ^ a b Sherwin, Derrick; Dicks, Terrance; Madoc, Philip; Weston, Graham (2009). The War Games Episode Nine commentary (DVD). BBC Worldwide. BBCDVD1800.
  5. ^ Dicks, Terrance; Wright, Mark (March 2016). "Creation Theories". The Essential Doctor Who. No. 7: The Time Lords. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd. p. 24.
  6. ^ Sherwin, Derrick; Adams, Matt (December 2014). "Down to Earth". Doctor Who Magazine. No. 479. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd. p. 58.
  7. ^ Watcher, The (April 2015). "Loving the Alien". Doctor Who Magazine. No. 484. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd. p. 22. [B]ut we can't ignore the fact that, for the remainder of the 1960s, there are plenty of hints that the Doctor is a human being. On more than one occasion, the First Doctor says as much himself. Here he is in the second episode of The Sensorites: 'It's a fallacy, of course, that cats can see in the dark. They can't. But they can see better than we humans...' In Episode 2 of The Savages, he tells Edal that the savages are 'human beings, like you and me'.
  8. ^ Watcher, The (April 2015). "Loving the Alien". Doctor Who Magazine. No. 484. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd. p. 22. First of all, let's put from our minds the obvious fact that the Doctor comes from another world – that particular cat exits the bag before the end of Doctor Who's first episode. ... To start at the beginning, let's consider that all-important line in An Unearthly Child: 'Susan and I are cut off from our own planet.'
  9. ^ McGown, Alistair (March 2016). "Gallifrey Guardians". The Essential Doctor Who. No. 7: The Time Lords. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd. p. 7. ISBN 9781846532207.
  10. ^ a b c d e Dicks, Terrance; Hulke, Malcolm (writers); Maloney, David (director) (19 April – 21 June 1969). The War Games. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  11. ^ Watcher, The (April 2015). "Loving the Alien". Doctor Who Magazine. No. 484. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd. p. 24. And finally, after six long years of prevarication, the last episode of Spearhead [from Space] lays its cards on the table when the Doctor says to Channing those three magic words: 'I'm not human.' There, at long last, we have it. Case closed.
  12. ^ Holmes, Robert (writer); Martinus, Derek (director) (24 January 1970). "Episode 4". Spearhead from Space. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  13. ^ McGown, Alistair (March 2016). "Gallifrey Guardians". The Essential Doctor Who. No. 7: The Time Lords. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd. p. 8. ISBN 9781846532207.
  14. ^ a b c Holmes, Robert (writer); Bromly, Alan (director) (22 December 1973). "Part Two". The Time Warrior. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  15. ^ Moffat, Steven (writer); MacDonald, Hettie (director) (26 September 2015). "The Witch's Familiar". Doctor Who. Series 9. Episode 2. BBC. BBC One.
  16. ^ a b c d e Moffat, Steven (writer); Talalay, Rachel (director) (5 December 2015). "Hell Bent". Doctor Who. Series 9. Episode 12. BBC. BBC One.
  17. ^ Whithouse, Toby (writer); O'Hara, Daniel (director) (10 October 2015). "Before the Flood". Doctor Who. Series 9. Episode 4. BBC. BBC One.
  18. ^ Season 18. State of Decay. Doctor Who. 22 November – 13 December 1980. BBC. BBC1. Anyway, according to the story, we Time Lords hunted them down across the universe in a war so long and so bloody that we were sickened of violence forever.
  19. ^ a b Dicks, Terrance; Hulke, Malcolm (writers); Maloney, David (director) (21 June 1969). "Episode Ten". The War Games. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  20. ^ a b Davies, Russell T (writer); Lyn, Euros (director) (2 April 2005). "The End of the World". Doctor Who. Series 1. Episode 2. BBC. BBC One.
  21. ^ a b Shearman, Robert (writer); Ahearne, Joe (director) (30 April 2005). "Dalek". Doctor Who. Series 1. Episode 6. BBC. BBC One.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Davies, Russell T (writer); Teague, Colin (director) (23 June 2007). "The Sound of Drums". Doctor Who. Series 3. Episode 12. BBC. BBC One.
  23. ^ Whithouse, Toby (writer); Hawes, James (director) (29 April 2006). "School Reunion". Doctor Who. Series 2. Episode 3. BBC. BBC One. Mr Finch: And what of the Time Lords? I always thought of you as such a pompous race. Ancient, dusty senators, so frightened of change and chaos. And of course, they're all but extinct. Only you, the last.
  24. ^ Cornell, Paul (writer); Ahearne, Joe (director) (14 May 2005). "Father's Day". Doctor Who. Series 1. Episode 8. BBC. BBC One.
  25. ^ MacRae, Tom (writer); Harper, Graeme (director) (13 May 2006). "Rise of the Cybermen". Doctor Who. Series 2. Episode 5. BBC. BBC One.
  26. ^ a b Jones, Matt (writer); Strong, James (director) (10 June 2006). "The Satan Pit". Doctor Who. Series 2. Episode 9. BBC. BBC One.
  27. ^ Jones, Matt (writer); Strong, James (director) (10 June 2006). "The Satan Pit". Doctor Who. Series 2. Episode 9. BBC. BBC One. The Beast: This one knows me as I know him. The killer of his own kind.
  28. ^ Davies, Russell T (writer); Teague, Colin (director) (23 June 2007). "The Sound of Drums". Doctor Who. Series 3. Episode 12. BBC. BBC One. The Master: How can Gallifrey be gone? Tenth Doctor: It burnt. The Master: And the Time Lords? Tenth Doctor: Dead. And the Daleks, more or less. What happened to you? The Master: The Time Lords only resurrected me because they knew I'd be a perfect warrior for a time war. I was there when the Dalek Emperor took control of the Cruciform. I saw it. I ran. I ran so far. Made myself human so they would never find me, because, I was so scared. Tenth Doctor: I know. The Master: All of them? But not you, which must mean... Tenth Doctor: I was the only one who could end it. And I tried. I did. I tried everything.
  29. ^ Gaiman, Neil (writer); Clark, Richard (director) (14 May 2011). "The Doctor's Wife". Doctor Who. Series 6. Episode 4. BBC. BBC One. House: Fear me. I've killed hundreds of Time Lords. Eleventh Doctor: Fear me. I've killed all of them.
  30. ^ Greenhorn, Stephen (writer); Troughton, Alice (director) (10 May 2008). "The Doctor's Daughter". Doctor Who. Series 4. Episode 6. BBC. BBC One.
  31. ^ a b c Davies, Russell T (writer); Harper, Graeme (director) (5 July 2008). "Journey's End". Doctor Who. Series 4. Episode 13. BBC. BBC One.
  32. ^ a b c d e f g Davies, Russell T (writer); Lyn, Euros (director) (1 January 2010). "Part Two". The End of Time. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC One.
  33. ^ a b c Gaiman, Neil (writer); Clark, Richard (director) (14 May 2011). "The Doctor's Wife". Doctor Who. Series 6. Episode 4. BBC. BBC One.
  34. ^ a b Moffat, Steven (writer); Hoar, Peter (director) (4 June 2011). "A Good Man Goes to War". Doctor Who. Series 6. Episode 7. BBC. BBC One.
  35. ^ a b Moffat, Steven (writer); Hayes, John (director) (14 November 2013). "The Night of the Doctor". Doctor Who. BBC. BBC Red Button.
  36. ^ a b c d e f g h i Moffat, Steven (writer); Hurran, Nick (director) (23 November 2013). "The Day of the Doctor". Doctor Who. BBC. BBC One.
  37. ^ a b Moffat, Steven (writer); Talalay, Rachel (director) (28 November 2015). "Heaven Sent". Doctor Who. Series 9. Episode 11. BBC. BBC One.
  38. ^ a b Donaghy 2014, p. 12.
  39. ^ Moffat, Steven (writer); Gunn, Andrew (director) (10 April 2010). "The Beast Below". Doctor Who. Series 5. Episode 2. BBC. BBC One.
  40. ^ Houghton, Don (writer); Camfield, Douglas (director) (9 May – 20 June 1970). Inferno. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  41. ^ Jeffery, Morgan (13 May 2017). "Doctor Who episode 5: 8 big questions after 'Oxygen'". Digital Spy. Retrieved 28 February 2019.
  42. ^ a b c d Davies, Russell T (writer); Hawes, James (director) (25 December 2005). "The Christmas Invasion". Doctor Who. BBC. BBC One.
  43. ^ Davies, Russell T (writer); Strong, James (director) (5 April 2008). "Partners in Crime". Doctor Who. Series 4. Episode 1. BBC. BBC One.
  44. ^ a b Nation, Terry (writer); Grieve, Ken (director) (1–22 September 1979). Destiny of the Daleks. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  45. ^ Stewart, Robert Banks (writer); Camfield, Douglas (director) (31 January – 6 March 1976). The Seeds of Doom. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  46. ^ a b Temple, Keith (writer); Harper, Graeme (director) (19 April 2008). "Planet of the Ood". Doctor Who. Series 4. Episode 3. BBC. BBC One.
  47. ^ Holmes, Robert (writer); Spenton-Foster, George (director) (2–23 September 1978). The Ribos Operation. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  48. ^ Chibnall, Chris (writer); Harper, Graeme (director) (19 May 2007). "42". Doctor Who. Series 3. Episode 7. BBC. BBC One.
  49. ^ Davies, Russell T (writer); Boak, Keith (director) (23 April 2005). "World War Three". Doctor Who. Series 1. BBC. BBC One.
  50. ^ a b Davies, Russell T (writer); Palmer, Charles (director) (31 March 2007). "Smith and Jones". Doctor Who. Series 3. Episode 1. BBC. BBC One.
  51. ^ Davies, Russell T (writer); Harper, Graeme (director) (28 June 2008). "The Stolen Earth". Doctor Who. Series 4. Episode 12. BBC. BBC One.
  52. ^ a b c d Moffat, Steven (writer); Payne, Jamie (director) (25 December 2013). "The Time of the Doctor". Doctor Who. BBC. BBC One.
  53. ^ Moffat, Steven (writer); Wheatley, Ben (director) (23 August 2014). "Deep Breath". Doctor Who. Series 8. Episode 1. BBC. BBC One.
  54. ^ a b c d e f Holmes, Robert (writer); Moffatt, Peter (director) (16 February – 2 March 1985). The Two Doctors. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  55. ^ a b Holmes, Robert; Martin, Philip; Baker, Pip; Baker, Jane (writers); Mallett, Nicholas; Jones, Ron; Clough, Chris (directors) (4 October – 6 December 1986). The Trial of a Time Lord. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  56. ^ Chibnall, Chris (writer); Way, Ashley (director) (29 May 2010). "Cold Blood". Doctor Who. Series 5. Episode 9. BBC. BBC One.
  57. ^ Cornell, Paul (writer); Palmer, Charles (director) (26 May 2007). "Human Nature". Doctor Who. Series 3. Episode 8. BBC. BBC One.
  58. ^ Cornell, Paul (writer); Palmer, Charles (director) (2 June 2007). "The Family of Blood". Doctor Who. Series 3. Episode 9. BBC. BBC One.
  59. ^ a b c d Davies, Russell T (writer); Harper, Graeme (director) (16 June 2007). "Utopia". Doctor Who. Series 3. Episode 11. BBC. BBC One.
  60. ^ Patel, Vinay (writer); Chibnall, Chris (writer); Manzoor, Nida (director) (26 January 2020). "Fugitive of the Judoon". Doctor Who. Series 12. Episode 5. BBC. BBC One.
  61. ^ a b c d e f g h i Holmes, Robert (writer); Maloney, David (director) (30 October – 20 November 1976). The Deadly Assassin. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  62. ^ a b c Baker, Bob; Martin, Dave (writers); Mayne, Lennie (director) (30 December 1972 – 20 January 1973). The Three Doctors. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  63. ^ a b Bidmead, Christopher H. (writer); Cumming, Fiona (director) (4–12 January 1982). Castrovalva. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  64. ^ Kistler, Alan (1 October 2013). Doctor Who: A History. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9781493000166.
  65. ^ a b Roberts, Gareth (writer); Morshead, Catherine (director) (12 June 2010). "The Lodger". Doctor Who. Series 5. Episode 11. BBC. BBC One.
  66. ^ Roberts, Gareth (writer); Hughes, Steve (director) (24 September 2011). "Closing Time". Doctor Who. Series 6. Episode 12. BBC. BBC One.
  67. ^ Whithouse, Toby (writer); Metzstein, Saul (director) (15 September 2012). "A Town Called Mercy". Doctor Who. Series 7. Episode 3. BBC. BBC One.
  68. ^ Moffat, Steven (writer); Lyn, Euros (director) (6 May 2006). "The Girl in the Fireplace". Doctor Who. Series 2. Episode 4. BBC. BBC One.
  69. ^ a b Davies, Russell T (writer); Lyn, Euros (director) (25 December 2009). "Part One". The End of Time. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC One.
  70. ^ Graham, Matthew (writer); Lyn, Euros (director) (24 June 2006). "Fear Her". Doctor Who. Series 2. Episode 11. BBC. BBC One.
  71. ^ Roberts, Gareth (writer); Palmer, Charles (director) (7 April 2007). "The Shakespeare Code". Doctor Who. Series 3. Episode 2. BBC. BBC One.
  72. ^ a b Davies, Russell T (writer); Teague, Colin (director) (30 June 2007). "Last of the Time Lords". Doctor Who. Series 3. Episode 13. BBC. BBC One.
  73. ^ Sloman, Robert (writer); Bernard, Paul (director) (20 May – 24 June 1972). The Time Monster. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  74. ^ Hulke, Malcolm (writer); Russell, Paddy (director) (12 January – 16 February 1974). Invasion of the Dinosaurs. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  75. ^ Agnew, David (writer); Hayes, Michael (director) (29 September – 20 October 1979). City of Death. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  76. ^ Davies, Russell T (writer); Boak, Keith (director) (26 March 2005). "Rose". Doctor Who. Series 1. Episode 1. BBC. BBC One.
  77. ^ a b Davies, Russell T (writer); Ahearne, Joe (director) (18 June 2005). "The Parting of the Ways". Doctor Who. Series 1. Episode 13. BBC. BBC One.
  78. ^ Moran, James (writer); Teague, Colin (director) (12 April 2008). "The Fires of Pompeii". Doctor Who. Series 4. Episode 2. BBC. BBC One.
  79. ^ Gallagher, Stephen (writer); Joyce, Paul (director) (3–24 January 1981). Warriors' Gate. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  80. ^ Donaghy 2014, p. 31.
  81. ^ Moffat, Steven (writer); Haynes, Toby (director) (26 June 2010). "The Big Bang". Doctor Who. Series 5. Episode 13. BBC. BBC One.
  82. ^ Byrne, Johnny (writer); Black, John (director) (31 January – 21 February 1981). The Keeper of Traken. Doctor Who. BBC1. BBC.{{cite serial}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  83. ^ Bland, Robin (writer); Barry, Christopher (director) (3–24 January 1976). The Brain of Morbius. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  84. ^ Davies, Russell T (writer); Harper, Graeme (director) (21 June 2008). "Turn Left". Doctor Who. Series 4. Episode 11. BBC. BBC One.
  85. ^ Moffat, Steven (writer); Senior, Richard (director) (27 August 2011). "Let's Kill Hitler". Doctor Who. Series 6. Episode 8. BBC. BBC One.
  86. ^ Holmes, Robert (writer); Letts, Barry (producer) (2–23 January 1971). Terror of the Autons. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  87. ^ Sloman, Robert (writer); Letts, Barry (director) (4 May – 8 June 1974). Planet of the Spiders. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  88. ^ Baker, Bob; Martin, Dave (writers); Hayes, Michael (director) (20 January – 24 February 1979). The Armageddon Factor. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  89. ^ a b c Dicks, Terrance (writer); Moffatt, Peter (director) (23 November 1983). The Five Doctors. Doctor Who. PBS.
  90. ^ Steven, Anthony (writer); Moffatt, Peter (director) (22–30 March 1984). The Twin Dilemma. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  91. ^ Munro, Rona (writer); Wareing, Alan (director) (22 November – 6 December 1989). Survival. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  92. ^ Moffat, Steven (writer); Harper, Graeme (director) (17 November 2007). "Time Crash". Doctor Who. BBC. BBC One.
  93. ^ Davies, Russell T (writer); Goddard, Andy (director) (25 December 2008). "The Next Doctor". Doctor Who. BBC. BBC One.
  94. ^ Moffat, Steven (writer); Talalay, Rachel (director) (1 November 2014). "Dark Water". Doctor Who. Series 8. Episode 11. BBC. BBC One.
  95. ^ "BBC One - Doctor Who, Series 12, Spyfall, Part 1". BBC. Retrieved 6 May 2022.
  96. ^ Moffat, Steven (writer); Haynes, Toby (director) (23 April 2011). "The Impossible Astronaut". Doctor Who. Series 6. Episode 1. BBC. BBC One.
  97. ^ Moffat, Steven (writer); Webb, Jeremy (director) (1 October 2011). "The Wedding of River Song". Doctor Who. Series 6. Episode 13. BBC. BBC One.
  98. ^ Stubby the Rocket (25 November 2013). "Answers on Regeneration: Steven Moffat Drops A Bomb About the Doctor Who Christmas Special". tor.com. Archived from the original on 28 December 2013.
  99. ^ a b "INTERVIEW Russell T Davies talks about THAT Sarah Jane Adventures line". SFX. 26 October 2010. Archived from the original on 27 September 2013. Retrieved 17 September 2013.
  100. ^ Emily Barr (13 October 2010). "Doctor Who is now immortal, reveals the BBC". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 5 August 2013. Retrieved 13 October 2010.
  101. ^ Davies, Russell T (writer); Teague, Colin (director) (23 June 2007). "The Sound of Drums". Doctor Who. Series 3. Episode 12. BBC. BBC One.
  102. ^ a b Davies, Russell T (writer); Clark, Richard (director) (14 April 2007). "Gridlock". Doctor Who. Series 3. Episode 3. BBC. BBC One.
  103. ^ Cremona, Patrick (1 March 2020). "Doctor Who: A brief history of Gallifrey on screen". Retrieved 14 November 2024.
  104. ^ a b Agnew, David (writer); Blake, Gerald (director) (11 March 1978). The Invasion of Time. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  105. ^ Richards, Justin (October 2014). "Gallifrey". The Essential Doctor Who (3: Alien Worlds). Panini UK Ltd: 31.
  106. ^ Newman, Peter R. (writer); Pinfield, Mervyn; Cox, Frank (directors) (1 August 1964). The Sensorites. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  107. ^ Dicks, Terrance (writer); Moffatt, Peter (director) (23 November 1983). The Five Doctors. Doctor Who. PBS.
  108. ^ Chris Chibnall (writer), Jamie Magnus Stone (director), Alex Mercer (producer) (1 March 2020). "The Timeless Children". Doctor Who. Series 12. Episode 10. BBC. BBC One.
  109. ^ Adams, Douglas (writer); Roberts, Pennant (director) (6 July 1992). Shada (home video). Doctor Who. BBC.
  110. ^ Adams, Douglas (writer); Russell, Gary (director) (2003). Shada. Doctor Who. BBCi.
  111. ^ a b c Agnew, David (writer); Blake, Gerald (director) (4 February – 11 March 1978). The Invasion of Time. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  112. ^ a b Aaronovitch, Ben (writer); Morgan, Andrew (director) (5–26 October 1988). Remembrance of the Daleks. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  113. ^ Holmes, Robert; Baker, Pip; Baker, Jane (writers); Clough, Chris (director) (29 November – 6 December 1986). The Ultimate Foe. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  114. ^ Saward, Eric (writer); Grimwade, Peter (director) (8–16 March 1982). Earthshock. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  115. ^ Hulke, Malcolm (writer); Briant, Michael E. (director) (10 April – 15 May 1971). Colony in Space. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  116. ^ Hayles, Brian (writer); Mayne, Lennie (director) (23 March – 27 April 1974). The Monster of Peladon. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  117. ^ Baker, Bob; Martin, Dave (writers); Barry, Christopher (director) (8 April – 13 May 1972). The Mutants. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  118. ^ Nation, Terry (writer); Maloney, David (director) (8 March – 12 April 1975). Genesis of the Daleks. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  119. ^ Donaghy 2014, p. 16.
  120. ^ Donaghy 2014, p. 20.
  121. ^ Donaghy 2014, p. 32.
  122. ^ Davies, Russell T (writer); Palmer, Charles (director) (31 March 2007). "Smith and Jones". Doctor Who. Series 3. Episode 1. BBC. BBC One.
  123. ^ Bartlett, Mike (writer); Anderson, Bill (director) (6 May 2017). "Knock Knock". Doctor Who. Series 10. Episode 4. BBC. BBC One.
  124. ^ Harris, Stephen (writer); Russell, Paddy (director) (15 November 1975). "Part Four". Pyramids of Mars. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  125. ^ Moffat, Steven (writer); MacDonald, Hettie (director) (26 September 2015). "The Witch's Familiar". Doctor Who. Series 9. Episode 2. BBC. BBC One.
  126. ^ Hulke, Malcolm; Dicks, Terrance (1972). The Making of Doctor Who. Piccolo Books. p. 19. ISBN 0-330-23203-7.
  127. ^ Dicks, Terrance; Wright, Mark (March 2016). "Creation Theories". The Essential Doctor Who. No. 7: The Time Lords. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd. p. 24. ISBN 9781846532207.
  128. ^ Davies, Russell T (25 May 2005). "The Evasion of Time". Doctor Who Magazine. No. 356. Tunbridge Wells: Panini Publishing Ltd. p. 66.
  129. ^ Moore, Steve (w), Dillon, Steve (a). "The Stolen Tardis: A Tale of the Time Lords: Part One" Doctor Who Weekly, no. 9 (12 December 1979). London: Marvel UK.
  130. ^ "The Time Lords of Gallifrey". Doctor Who Weekly. No. 21. London: Marvel UK. 5 March 1980. p. 10.
  131. ^ Donaghy 2014, p. 163.
  132. ^ Thompson, Steve (writer); King, Mat (director) (27 April 2013). "Journey to the Centre of the TARDIS". Doctor Who. Series 7. Episode 10. BBC. BBC One.
  133. ^ a b Donaghy 2014, p. 37.
  134. ^ Davies, Russell T (writer); Harper, Graeme (director) (8 July 2006). "Doomsday". Doctor Who. Series 2. Episode 13. BBC. BBC One.
  135. ^ Donaghy 2014, p. 162.
  136. ^ Boucher, Chris (writer); Briant, Michael E. (director) (29 January – 19 February 1977). The Robots of Death. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  137. ^ Jones, Matt (writer); Strong, James (director) (3 June 2006). "The Impossible Planet". Doctor Who. Series 2. Episode 8. BBC. BBC One.
  138. ^ Moffat, Steven (writer); Metzstein, Saul (director) (18 May 2013). "The Name of the Doctor". Doctor Who. Series 7. Episode 13. BBC. BBC One.
  139. ^ Davies, Russell T; Hickman, Clayton (August 2005). Doctor Who Annual 2006. Panini Publishing. ISBN 978-1-904419-73-0.
  140. ^ Davies, Russell T (October 1996). Damaged Goods. Virgin New Adventures. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20483-2.
  141. ^ Donaghy 2014, p. 159.
  142. ^ Baker, Bob; Martin, Dave (writers); Stewart, Norman (director) (7–28 January 1978). Underworld. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC1.
  143. ^ Davies, Russell T (writer); Lyn, Euros (director) (1 January 2010). "Part Two". The End of Time. Doctor Who. BBC. BBC One.
  144. ^ McGown, Alistair (March 2015). "Dark Water/Death in Heaven". The Essential Doctor Who. No. 4: The Master. Tunbridge Wells: Panini UK Ltd. p. 112. ISBN 9781846532054. Missy then reveals her plan: to upload dying minds to the data slice, edit out the emotions and then download them to 'upgraded' Cyberman bodies. Then she reveals her true identity: she is the Master, now in a female body.
  145. ^ Moffat, Steven (writer); Talalay, Rachel (director) (8 November 2014). "Death in Heaven". Doctor Who. Series 8. Episode 12. BBC. BBC One. Osgood: Who is she? Twelfth Doctor: You'd never believe me if I told you. Osgood: Because I thought she might be the Master, regenerated into female form. Your childhood friend, responsible for a number of previous incursions. Twelfth Doctor: That was fairly quick.
  146. ^ Moffat, Steven (writer); Talalay, Rachel (director) (8 November 2014). "Death in Heaven". Doctor Who. Series 8. Episode 12. BBC. BBC One.
  147. ^ Dollard, Sarah (writer); Molotnikov, Justin (director) (21 November 2015). "Face the Raven". Doctor Who. Series 9. Episode 10. BBC. BBC One.

Bibliography

[edit]
[edit]