Odin: Difference between revisions

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{{Infobox Individual
{{Infobox Individual
|main alias       = Wotan
|main alias       = Wotan
|image             = Odin.jpg
|image           = Odin.jpg
|species           =  
|species         =  
|job               = King
|job             = King
|affiliation       =
|affiliation     =
|origin           =  
|origin           =  
|first mention     = The War Machines (TV story)
|first mention cs = The War Machines (TV story)
|first             =
|first cs        = Dr. Who's Time Tales (DWM 37 comic story){{!}}Dr. Who's Time Tales
|only              = Dr. Who's Time Tales (DWM 37 comic story){{!}}Dr. Who's Time Tales
|appearances     = [[PROSE]]: {{cs|The Claus-Rosen Bridge (short story)}}
|appearances       =  
|main actor       =  
|main actor       =  
}}
}}
{{wikipediainfo}}
{{wikipediainfo}}

Revision as of 20:05, 31 January 2024

Odin

Odin was a deity in Norse mythology. He was the god of war, poetry and death, (PROSE: A History of Humankind) and was believed to be the king of the gods. (TV: The Girl Who Died) He was considered by historians to be one of the three most important Norse gods. (PROSE: A History of Humankind) His High German name was Wotan. (TV: The War Machines)

Biography

According to one of the Fourth Doctor's "time tales", Odin was in fact an actual deity. He elected to fulfil the term of the curse that the Viking captain Gundar called down on his mutinous crew, causing a storm which shipwrecked them on an unmarked island, and freezing them in time, such that they would remain there forever with no escape even in death. (COMIC: Dr. Who's Time Tales)

In another account, when the Third Doctor and Jo Grant met Odin in 141, they discovered that he was actually the human "High King" of all Sweden, who was mistakenly thought to be a god due to the power of Gungnir or Spear of Destiny, an alien artefact he possessed. He was the father of Thor The Master, under the alias of Frey, influenced the Vanir, a tribe of Vikings in 141 to fight Odin, Thor and the Third Doctor so that he could get Gungnir. The Doctor explained to Jo at the time that Norse mythology probably came from real adventures of early Viking history, as here the fight between Vanir and Odin's folk. (PROSE: The Spear of Destiny)

Impersonations

When the Twelfth Doctor was captured by Vikings, he attempted to convince them he was Odin by using a yo-yo. Instead, they believed the leader of the Mire, who appeared to them from the sky and used a "very realistic hologram" to project the appearance of a bearded, one-eyed man, was the real Odin. (TV: The Girl Who Died)