1901: Difference between revisions

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(→‎Behind the scenes: the date which a song later used by the DW production office was written isn't notable to this wiki. that's what wikipedia is for, really. Production info starts in 1960, period.)
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On [[12 December]], while on an expedition to the ruins of [[Babylon]], [[time sensitive]] linguist [[John Lafayette]] stumbled across [[the Path]] to Babylon, circa [[BC#6th century B.C.|570 B.C.]] ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Walking to Babylon (novel)|Walking to Babylon]]'')
On [[12 December]], while on an expedition to the ruins of [[Babylon]], [[time sensitive]] linguist [[John Lafayette]] stumbled across [[the Path]] to Babylon, circa [[BC#6th century B.C.|570 B.C.]] ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Walking to Babylon (novel)|Walking to Babylon]]'')


== Behind the scenes ==
 
* "[[The Honeysuckle and the Bee]]", a song sung by [[Goronwy]] as he tended to his [[bee]]s, ([[TV]]: ''[[Delta and the Bannermen (TV story)|Delta and the Bannermen]]'') was written in 1901.
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[[Category:DWU years]]
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Revision as of 20:21, 5 July 2013

1901 in

the DWU • vital statistics

Timeline for 1901
20th century | 1900s

1895 • 1896 • 1897 • 1898 • 1899 • 1900 • 1902 • 1903 • 1904 • 1905 • 1906 • 1907
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In 1901, Jack Harkness, who had been buried alive under Cardiff since 27 AD, was recovered by Alice Guppy and the Torchwood Cardiff team when they received a signal from a transmitter hidden on him by John Hart. To avoid a paradox of meeting his younger self, who at this time was on an assignment, Jack asked to be cryo-preserved until he caught up to his proper timeline in 2009. (TV: Exit Wounds)

Also during 1901, an English author began writing stories for The Ensign, a magazine for young boys. He would later vanish into the Land of Fiction and become the Master of the Land. (TV: The Mind Robber)

The first British submarine was launched. (TV: Enlightenment)

The Lankester sank on 20 October during its yearly voyage from from Madagascar to New Orleans. (AUDIO: Cryptobiosis)

On 12 December, while on an expedition to the ruins of Babylon, time sensitive linguist John Lafayette stumbled across the Path to Babylon, circa 570 B.C. (PROSE: Walking to Babylon)