User:Dr Von Wer/Historical sandbox: Difference between revisions
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|[[2 September (releases)|2]] - [[23 September (releases)|23 September]] 1967 | |[[2 September (releases)|2]] - [[23 September (releases)|23 September]] 1967 | ||
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|''[[The Abominable Snowmen (TV story)|The Abominable Snowmen]]'' | |||
|[[30 September (releases)|30 September]] - [[4 November (releases)|4 November]] 1967 | |||
|Pseudo-historical | |||
|- | |- | ||
|''[[H.M.S. TARDIS (short story)|H.M.S. TARDIS]]'' | |''[[H.M.S. TARDIS (short story)|H.M.S. TARDIS]]'' | ||
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|''[[The Magician (comic story)|The Magician]]'' | |||
|[[6 July (releases)|6 July]] - [[17 August (releases)|17 August]] 1974 | |||
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|''[[Doctor Who and the Abominable Snowmen (novelisation)|Doctor Who and the Abominable Snowmen]]'' | |||
|[[21 November (releases)|21 November]] 1974 | |||
|Pseudo-historical | |||
|- | |||
|''[[Perils of Paris (comic story)|Perils of Paris]]'' | |||
|1974 | |||
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|- | |||
|''[[The Emperor's Spy (comic story)|The Emperor's Spy]]'' | |||
|[[26 July (releases)|26 July]] - [[6 September (releases)|6 September]] [[1975 (releases)|1975]] | |||
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|- | |||
|''[[Timechase (short story)|Timechase]]'' | |||
|[[September (releases)|September]] 1975 | |||
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|- | |||
|''[[Pyramids of Mars (TV story)|Pyramids of Mars]]'' | |||
|[[25 October (releases)|25 October]] - [[15 November (releases)|15 November]] 1975 | |||
|Pseudo-historical | |||
|} | |} |
Revision as of 16:46, 26 December 2018
In an in-universe point of view, as stated by the rules of this Wikia, stories are set in a time period which is not the present, past or future but for the beings living in it. For example, the Doctor neither considers 1930 to be the past, nor 2300 to be the future, because he travels in time.
But ever since Doctor Who was first transmitted, both the viewers and the crew have referred to certain stories as being historical or pseudo-historical. This distinction is based on the setting of such story: If it's situated in a time period prior to the its release and with no science fiction elements (save the Doctor and the Tardis), it should be, by nature, historical. But if it does contain said elements, it's pseudo-historical, as it does not depict events exactly as we know them on the real world. For example, as The Aztecs is set on our past, and didn't show any anachronistic components, only the Aztec society itself, it's commonly catalogued as a historical story. On the other hand, Vincent and the Doctor does contain certain sci-fi elements, such as the Krafayis, so it's known to be pseudo-historical.