Camelot: Difference between revisions

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
No edit summary
Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit
No edit summary
Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit
 
Line 38: Line 38:
[[Category:England]]
[[Category:England]]
[[Category:Wales]]
[[Category:Wales]]
[[Category:Locations visited by the Fifth Doctor]]
[[Category:Locations visited by the Eighth Doctor]]
[[Category:Locations visited by the Eighth Doctor]]
[[Category:Locations visited by the Tenth Doctor]]
[[Category:Locations visited by the Tenth Doctor]]
[[Category:Starless World]]
[[Category:Starless World]]

Latest revision as of 00:02, 13 April 2024

Error creating thumbnail: Read-only mode

Camelot was the domain of the mythical human ruler, King Arthur. (PROSE: The Creation of Camelot)

History[[edit] | [edit source]]

Origin[[edit] | [edit source]]

According to some accounts, Camelot and its knights were mere fiction. However, the Seventh Doctor discovered an interstitial vortex in Carbury near Lake Vortigern, in rural England, which seemed to connect a real Camelot to the 20th century. Upon coming across knights of Camelot who wielded energy weapons, the Seventh Doctor guessed that this Camelot belonged to an alternate Earth where advanced technology developed alongside magic. For example, Ancelyn told Brigadier Winifred Bambera that cars did not exist in Arthur's world. However, flying machines called ornithopters were used as transport. (PROSE: One Fateful Knight, TV: Battlefield)

According to some accounts, he was correct; one claimed that, unlike other alternative timelines, Arthur's World was a natural alternative that had sprung from the universe, (PROSE: No Future) while according to another, it was one of many alternate timeline versions of Camelot created by the Guardian of Magic from the Druse as she reset her "game" with the Guardian of Might over and over. (PROSE: Legends of Camelot)

However, according to other accounts, Camelot was part of England's history in the Doctor's own universe. (PROSE: The Creation of Camelot, One Fateful Knight, A Honeycomb of Souls) Upon returning to Camelot and becoming Merlin, the Eighth Doctor realised that his earlier guess about alternate timelines had been wrong: King Arthur's knights wielded advanced technology because it had been gifted to them by an earlier self-declared "Merlin", actually a Renegade Time Lord who wished to sow chaos in Earth's causal nexus. (PROSE: One Fateful Knight)

Visited by Basil Brush[[edit] | [edit source]]

According to an account in which Camelot was real in the Doctor's universe, Basil Brush may have been given a £5 fine for fishing in the moat. He later visited Camelot while King Arthur stood in front of it, collecting either £20, £15, £10, or £5 rent. (GAME: Basil Brush goes Rent Collecting [+]Loading...["Basil Brush goes Rent Collecting (game)"])

Starless World[[edit] | [edit source]]

In one final account, at least within the Starless World, which was an alternate timeline on the verge of collapse, Camelot was indeed a real kingdom, but located in Wales, not England. Here, Rory Williams served alongside Sir Lancelot as one of King Arthur's faithful knights. Sir Lancelot had a crush on Rory. (AUDIO: The Once and Future Nurse)

Merlin succeeded in overtaking Arthur, becoming the ruler of Camelot for a short time, but was ultimately thwarted by Rory, the Champion of Camelot, who named Guinevere as Arthur's successor. (AUDIO: The Last King of Camelot)

Legacy[[edit] | [edit source]]

Within the Dalek Dome in 2323 was a psychoscape of King Arthur's Camelot in 666 AD facing an attack by Imperial Daleks, who intended to seize all of Albion. (COMIC: Liberation of the Daleks [+]Loading...["Liberation of the Daleks (comic story)"])

Behind the scenes[[edit] | [edit source]]

Welsh origins[[edit] | [edit source]]

Camelot being located in Wales is not a throwaway reference. Most historians agree that the Matter of Britain, containing the original Arthurian legends, has Welsh origins.

Researchers have linked major characters in the stories to Celtic figures like the Morrígan and Artio, rather than stories brought in by the invading Britons.