Granby: Difference between revisions
Cyruptsaram (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
m (Bot: Cosmetic changes) |
||
(18 intermediate revisions by 8 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''Granby''' was a young soldier who was killed | {{character stub}} | ||
[[ | '''Granby''' was a young soldier, formerly serving in the Royal Navy before being assigned to the [[British Imperial Spacefleet]], who was killed while scouting [[the Moon]]'s surface. He had been killed maliciously by the [[Vrall]], who took his brain tissue and used it to give themselves knowledge of Earth, absorbing the electric enzymes and thus his knowledge, allowing them to speak English and create a story that would appeal to the expedition. However, this helped the [[Fifth Doctor|Doctor]] [[deduce]] the true nature of the Vrall; they claimed to gain knowledge of English via a [[Telepathy|telepathic]] 'download' from [[Vislor Turlough|Turlough]], but among other minor linguistic anomalies, they referred to robots as 'mechanical servants', which was a term that Granby would have used rather than Turlough. ([[PROSE]]: '' [[Imperial Moon (novel)|Imperial Moon]]'') | ||
{{NameSort}} | |||
[[Category:19th century individuals]] | [[Category:19th century individuals]] | ||
[[Category:Human soldiers]] | [[Category:Human soldiers]] | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:Alternate timeline (Imperial Moon) individuals]] | ||
[[Category:Human astronauts]] |
Latest revision as of 10:57, 26 February 2019
Granby was a young soldier, formerly serving in the Royal Navy before being assigned to the British Imperial Spacefleet, who was killed while scouting the Moon's surface. He had been killed maliciously by the Vrall, who took his brain tissue and used it to give themselves knowledge of Earth, absorbing the electric enzymes and thus his knowledge, allowing them to speak English and create a story that would appeal to the expedition. However, this helped the Doctor deduce the true nature of the Vrall; they claimed to gain knowledge of English via a telepathic 'download' from Turlough, but among other minor linguistic anomalies, they referred to robots as 'mechanical servants', which was a term that Granby would have used rather than Turlough. (PROSE: Imperial Moon)