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"The novels are not considered canon by most fans" - I can see this sentence causing some debate... Angmering 22:12, 14 Jul 2004 (UTC)
I'll put up some more info this weekend when I get the time.
I know where the anon thinks he's getting the info from, so I should explain why I'm reverting it. Firstly, the 29,000 light years figure is from Terror of the Autons, where the Time Lord emmisary sent to warn the Doctor about the Master says he's travelled 29,000 years. However, although it was probable that Robert Holmes intended that to be the distance from Earth to the as-yet-unnamed Time Lord homeworld, it is never made explicit that is precisely where he's come from. He could have hopped from somewhere else. Holmes's weak grasp of scientific concepts and distances aside, this is explictly contradicted by the TVM which places Gallifrey 250 million light years away. So between one vague reference and one specific one, the one to be preferred becomes obvious.
Which brings us to where Gallifrey is. Mutter's Spiral is assumed by many to be the Time Lord name for the Milky Way, but nowhere does it say in the television series that Gallifrey is in Mutter's Spiral. Earth is in Mutter's Spiral, that much is certain from The Deadly Assassin, but we are never told what Mutter's Spiral is. As Lawrence Miles points out, for all we know, from Gallifrey's viewpoint, the area of space Earth is in looks like a spiral, even if Gallifrey was within the same galaxy. So it's not at all certain that Gallifrey itself is in Mutter's Spiral.
Yes, it is implied in Pyramids of Mars (where the coordinates for Gallifrey come from) that it must be within the same galaxy, but it is again not explicit, and besides, the Doctor wasn't exactly trying to be cooperative. Once again, we come back to 250 million light years away, which definitely places it outside our galaxy. Considering the orders of magnitude from 29,000 to 250 million, a drift of that much is really implausible, so that's a further strike against the credibility of the 29,000 figure.
Just wanted to make it clear. :) We now return to non-anorak programming. -- khaosworks ( talk • contribs) 06:21, 29 December 2005 (UTC)
Constellation can refer to two things if you think about it. 1: Location via a traditional astronomical constellation. After all, if you have a universe with races, it would be logical to assume that Earth isn't the only one to trace patterns in the sky. Some race near them saw a pattern of stars with Gallifrey's Star and perhaps oblivious, named it as such.
2: Location via elements of time/relativity/location in relative time. Instead of using binary coordinates, just gives the location using a known or maybe unknown star grouping/sector.
As for the 29,000 or 250 Million Light Years distance discrepancy. Aside Terror of the Autons, there is the Brain of Morbius and the Doctor's mentioning of "I recognize these stars he was born in these parts within a couple of billion miles.” Mehendri Solon is not a humanoid, he's human; the abandoned plant turned science lab is also indicated to have been designed by humans. As far as we know, even by 10 Million AD itself, Humans are still in the Galaxy with, their Empire long declined. The Doctor knows Solon is a Terran neurosurgeon who specializes in microsurgical techniques in tissue transplantation, and places the dates around the 50-60th Centuries. If Karn is near Gallifrey that would mean that Solon was somehow able to cross 250 Million light years, set up shop, and has been in that area of the universe ever since. Hyperspace travel in the Whovian Universe appears faster than in others, but it isn't that fast.
As for planetary shifting, we’ve seen races capable of moving worlds. One notable one is the Cybermen, another are the Time Lords. The Cybermen shifted Mondas back to the Sol System. If everyone will remember the Trial of a Time Lord, After finding a way into the Matrix, the Andromedans set up a base on Earth in order to prevent the Time Lords from tracing their home world, but the Time Lords used a Magnetron to draw the Earth and its constellation out of position, causing the solar fireball which ravaged the planet and causing the Andromedan recovery mission to miss Earth.
Considering this example, it wouldn’t be too difficult to believe that the Gallifreyans moved their Homeworld into another part of space, maybe another Galaxy. This could have been done via Transmat or Spacio-Temporal Shifting, which for any of it wouldn’t be difficult for a race that has accomplished phenomenal things. Also, when watching the movie, there are two Eras noted: the Rassilon and Humanian. When the Doctor points out Gallifrey, in whose Era is he showing it too, his, or Grace’s?
I've updated the bit about the Gallifrey audios, per the Big Finish website. I'm not sure whether it's been officially announced that this is the last series, but Gary Russell said so on a panel at the Gallifrey convention with Louise Jameson and Mary Tamm, which is good enough for me. — Josiah Rowe ( talk • contribs) 23:33, 10 March 2006 (UTC)
Does anyone else think perhaps some of this article should be made past tense. Since the Time Lords are all dead now, I think some change may be needed. Example: "The Eye provides the power required for time travel, and all Time Lord TARDIS time machines draw their power from it." It became apparent in the episode Boom Town that the Doctor's TARDIS is no longer powered by the Eye of Harmony. Whether any other TARDISes exist anymore is also debatable.
References
So does anyone else think that this is Gallifrey, one way or another? Of course, this is purely speculation, but a black hole and the Doctor is sure it's not possible? What else could it be? :) Phil 01:14, 28 May 2006 (UTC)
I've added a few bits in, and taken one or two ickle bits out that didnt make much sense in terms of various novels texts/stories....but I'm new to wiki, so the format probably isnt quiet right. So I'd love it if one of you clever regular people could fix it when you have time (or show me how to get things right for wiki.). Also........should I put stuff about the Pythia, Heroes and the Rational Revoloution here, or is that for the Time Lord entry I wonder? Its hard, because Gallifrey is very tied in with its peoples. Almost inseperable. Jaime9526jaime9526
It is entirely possible that the Eighth Doctor's BBC Novels, from Alien Bodies forward, all take place in an aborted or alternate time line as from that moment forward his time line was infected by paradox. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 66.64.1.106 ( talk) 00:07, 11 February 2015 (UTC)
While in terms of content this is a most pleasing page, I can't help but thinking it is undermined by some of the quality of writing. Flagging it for clean-up. Sjc 04:52, 13 June 2006 (UTC)
About the neat footnote concerning the Shobogans/Outsiders--while I think it's mostly on the mark, a rewatching of 'Invasion of Time' put a spin on those characters that I'm (absent a well worded and vociferous dissent here) going to add in. In conversation between Leela and Nesbin, the chief of the Outsiders, he asserts that they were at one point Time Lords that dropped out of Time Lord society (Serial 3, 19:35). This point is picked up in the BBC web site, which distinguishes outsiders like the ones Leela ran across from the Shobogans mentioned in Deadly Assasin.
I think the FASA reference should stay in, but the reference to Outsiders should 1) unequivocally distinguish Shobogans as separate from the Outsiders, and 2) following 'Deadly Assassin' classify the general class of non-time lords as Shobogans, people who are ruled by the time lords, live outside Gallifrey city, and (in some capacity) consent to be governed by the time lords.
Don't know how this squares with the NAs, so any advice is welcome. Jahenderson 02:10, 23 June 2006 (UTC)
ok...its been a while since i came by and sat up all night with books n my lap to expand on the point someone else had made about The War and gallifrey's discussion....at great length.
And it got cut out.
Apparently we are keeping it simple now....so i propose we cut all of the doctro who pages to one page mentioning that its a very nice sci-fi series that ran/runs for a very long time?
since anything else may be deemed too much information....
Oh and the capitol may be in the citadel, but it is not and has never been, named gallifrey...thats just silly.
and the tower of rassilon was referred to onscreen as the dark tower.
but i dont know anything me.
I actually think I may leave this little community, so soon after joining, on the grounds that its entries on gallifrey and time lords are run by people exactly like gallifreyan based time-lords.
file under imagination, lack of.
I dont like the way that unless certain people have read the same bits or seen the same bits you have, it just gets eaten. I dont mean opinions...everyone can have those, and everyone can use those when appropriate. For example...I would mention that the only Doctor in Dimensions in time is the seventh, but he is being pushed through his own timeline to become the other Doctors....I know this because he says so in the story, and because the writers on the episode said so (David Roden and JNT, nice chaps...signed my ghost light script book for me...) If I put that up here, it'd be shot because...well its open to interpretation as to whether or not Dit is canon. It was supposed to be of course....to be honest its only when some areas of fandom gave up on DW in the 90's and didnt bother with the NA's that canon rears its head. The NAs were official, were the continuation, until Gary Russel (pretty much) chnged his mind in the magazines comic strip....and again in the Audio's. Everything to Dying days is on elong thing....then it all goes tits up, and people like Larry Miles have to do clever things in the books to tie it ll up again...and then it all gets eaten alive for the audios. And it all comes down to whether or not you like the NA's and how much power in fandom you have. Thats what lead to canonicity problems in the big way, and the factionalism that now exists in fandom, and indeed the Doctor Who wiki entries.....All sent up recently in Love and Monsters oddly enough. Can you talk of britain without mentioning its invasions and races? only if your only entry would be its a couple of islands Can you talk about Gallifrey without mentioning its wars? Its very Destruction? If my information was wrong...then fine. But it wasnt wrong, it just wasnt liked....and I've noticed a cadre of people who are fed up with this, not just me....and I cant be bothered getting into petty intellectual squabbles, without any real discussion. Its so...pointless. I guess this is a tad of a rant, but its also my critique of the wiki who project.....love for the subject has been superseded by pride and a love of the power wiki's open approach allows. The thing is...the right thing for me to do would be to go on sticking bits in here and there...but after a while that becomes pointless, I dont have time to fight a battle with people I should be friends with. And those with more constant connections and time will always rule the roost here...there is no community, just heirarchy. And I will just be another person who came along, tried to help, and realised that that wasnt actually what anyone wanted. Others have said it left right and center on here, so I dont think I have the wrong idea. ANd I say again...its not my bits getting the chop that bothers me, so much as it is happening to lots of people across the board. I quit. For the most part, before i began. Oh I'll pop by now and then, but I really cant be bothered bringing anything to this, I'll enjoy my 20 plus years of books and whatnot piled around, I'll enjoy DW. But I'll leave this banana republic alone...should have known better really, I read about the factions before I met them. And here I am letting one win. Jaime9526 14:43, 2 July 2006 (UTC)jaime9526
This is a repost of an earlier comment, about the logic of using the "250,000,000" line from the TVM as definitive, which appears to have been missed.
At the same time as the Doctor says "250 million light years away" he also describes Gallifrey as being "on the other side of your galaxy". Surely that places it inside the Milky Way? And if no two objects in the Milky Way can be 250 million light years apart (given that the Milky Way is only 300,000 light years across) then maybe the TARDIS at that moment in the TV movie wasn't actually near the Earth, but was 250 million light years outside the galaxy. Marwood 15:55, 4 April 2007 (UTC)
should it be mentioned in the article that it is within the constellation Kasterborus? Shinigami Josh ( talk) 21:53, 11 February 2008 (UTC)
The Article says in the article that it was first mentioned in the revival in The Runaway Bride, but I remember the Doctor and Sarah Jane Smith talking about it in School Reunion, and I'm pretty sure it was mentioned by name. 77.99.107.117 21:34, 2 June 2007 (UTC)
In the infobox, there is the field "notable people". Is this only currently-living? Or all? If the latter, I'd say Omega, Rassilon, the Other and Romanadvoratrelundar should be on there... D B D 12:46, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
Doesn't Susan specify in the Sensorites that the sky is orange at night? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 129.120.207.172 ( talk) 19:29, 19 October 2007 (UTC)
According to the article, the coordinates are "1001100x02" which could mean "10011001001100". In binary, it means "TM
". So, the planet apparently has a trademark. Weird...
Im a bell(Don't ask) 23:07, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
Hello, Just a suggestion, but shouldn't the heading 'Geography' be changed to 'Galeography'? Although geography in generic terms describes the features of a planet, but there are some specific terms used for other planets too. For example, Martian 'geography' is areography. Anybody for this? :) George Adam Horváth ( talk) 13:35, 28 December 2007 (UTC)
"presumably Gallifrey, but not named as such". Presumed by who? A reliable third party or an editor? If its an editor than this inclusion violates WP:OR.-- 58.230.124.16 ( talk) 08:46, 16 June 2008 (UTC)
Hi I'm a bit new to this, but I thought, in the section on the novels that mentions the Matrix being downloaded into the Doctor's head, you should add the quote from "Forest of the Dead" (s4 e9) where the doctor says of CAL (not sure of exact wording) "having the conciousnesses of 2000 people in your head, that would be, like being me" Surely we could interpret this as a reference to the Matrix memories. Your thoughts? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Yankafaust ( talk • contribs) 02:01, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
Just edited out that line from the first paragraph. I know it's not technically a minor edit. -- JohnDoe244 ( talk) 21:49, 15 May 2009 (UTC)
In The Fires Of Pompeii one of the Soothsayers, mentions that Doctor is from Gallifrey and it's destruction, stating "a planet of fire", it makes sense when put in the context the Soothsayer is speaking in. m w ( talk) 21:24, 7 October 2009 (UTC)Phthinosuchusianancestor
It seems to me we need to do some updating vis a vis Gallifrey, now that we have canon visual evidence to establish certain facts. By my measurements, Gallifrey is about 2.3 times the diameter of Earth. Now, if Earth's mean diameter is 6,371 km, then Gallifrey's should be about 14653.3 km. Moreover, can any of the more science-y and/or hard-core Dr. Who history types hereabouts do some kind of wizardry vis a vis lack of apparent oceans? I understand that "Wikipedia is not the venue for original research" but simply stating the obvious shouldn't be, IMO, "research". Thanks! Capedude2005 ( talk) 06:47, 5 January 2010 (UTC)
Bold text
The statement that Gallifrey seems to still exist is false, or at least misleading. It was being moved out of the (Doctor's relative) past from before it & the Time Lords were destroyed. All the scenes on Gallifrey were back during the last day of the Time War. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 173.45.204.150 ( talk) 23:34, 11 January 2010 (UTC)
It is stated that the novels mention moons, but it gives the number as seven yet only has two names. An edit for clarity may be useful. 204.210.115.173 ( talk) 23:51, 27 July 2012 (UTC)
The Article sates
" Another two unfortunate facts of the aftermath of the Time War, was that the Daleks had four survivors, and that was all it took to restore their empire. These four survivors were the Cult of Skaro"
This is incorrect. The there was another dalek that survived as show in the 1 season episode "dalek" as well a the dalek emperor.
And did the cult of skaro really restore the dalek Empire? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 31.127.55.0 ( talk) 23:08, 7 January 2013 (UTC)
very much missing in this article.
For instance, Bob Holmes gives the name in Time Warrior, and fleshes out the location out in Deadly Assassin, together with references to the Time Lords/Gallifrey during his period as script editor (Genesis of the Daleks, Brain of Morbius,). GraemeLeggett ( talk) 20:41, 15 May 2014 (UTC)
Noticed an edit war surrounding the infobox, where User:Gothaparduskerialldrapolatkh asserts that Time Lord is a status of a race called Gallifreyans, and User:Edokter and User:DonQuixote claim that Time Lord is the name of the race on Gallifrey. I was going to get round to adding a footnote pointing out all the facts supporting Time Lords as a race, but I wanted to wait until I gathered info from both classic and modern Who as well as a few secondary sources before actually placing it on this page, which is likely going to take a good while. Either way, there is precedent in multiple stories after 2006 (I currently only have access to stories from the TV series from between the 1996 movie and " Death in Heaven" from 2014) that Time Lord is known, at least primarily, as a race.
" School Reunion" (~23:44):
" Smith and Jones" (~39:26):
" Evolution of the Daleks" (~39:26):
" Human Nature" (~32:43):
" Utopia" (~16:41):
" The Sound of Drums" (~24:45):
" Journey's End":
~15:18
~40:51
" Planet of the Dead" (~30:09):
" A Good Man Goes to War" (~32:04):
The closest the 2005 series gets to the other definition is " Listen", which is a vague and ambiguous story already, when it mentions the Doctor going to the Academy instead of the army, and says literally nothing about the term "Gallifreyan" anywhere (in fact, the episode doesn't directly name the planet Gallifrey). All uses of "Gallifreyan" after 2005 refer either to a general demonym for messages (" The Time of the Doctor") or technology (" Dark Water") that originate from Gallifrey the planet or to the fictional language, and in " The Time of Angels", the Eleventh Doctor specifies Old High Gallifreyan as "the lost language of the Time Lords." TardisTybort ( talk) 21:27, 27 June 2015 (UTC)
(Also posted at Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Doctor Who)
My source for adding the University of Gallifrey to List of fictional British and Irish universities has been removed as not being a WP:RS. If anyone has a better source, please add it. The only other sources I can find are dozens of vendors of teeshirts etc. While it could be argued that it's not "British or Irish" I think its cultural roots place it there, along with University of Maximegalon and the Unseen University - at least until someone creates List of fictional extraterrestrial universities or similar. Pam D 12:22, 5 March 2020 (UTC)
I think Tecteun technically founded Time Lord society, if The Timeless Children is to be believed. DoctorWhoEditor2 ( talk) 19:47, 4 April 2020 (UTC)