Hell: Difference between revisions

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In [[1215]], in [[England]], the [[Fifth Doctor]] and his companions were mistaken as [[demon]]s from Hell. ([[TV]]: ''[[The King's Demons (TV story)|The King's Demons]]'')
In [[1215]], in [[England]], the [[Fifth Doctor]] and his companions were mistaken as [[demon]]s from Hell. ([[TV]]: ''[[The King's Demons (TV story)|The King's Demons]]'')
[[Rita (The God Complex)|Rita]], a [[Muslim]], believed that [[Prison ship (The God Complex)|The Hotel]] was [[Jahannam]], the Islamic version of Hell


== Perception ==
== Perception ==

Revision as of 15:38, 10 November 2013

Hell was believed by some cultures to be the place of punishment after death for those who had sinned in life.

Concept

Hell was embedded in the minds of species like humans through religions like Christianity, the opposite afterlife being Heaven. The Seventh Doctor claimed there was no such place as Hell, but he probably spoke in terms of the popular concept of Hell. (AUDIO: Gods and Monsters)

Some people called the Void Hell. (TV: Army of Ghosts) Hell was also a part of Gallifreyan mythology. (AUDIO: Minuet in Hell)

The Third Doctor thought that the surface of an unnamed planet about to be destroyed by a supernova looked like the human conception of Hell. (COMIC: The Labyrinth)

In 1215, in England, the Fifth Doctor and his companions were mistaken as demons from Hell. (TV: The King's Demons)

Rita, a Muslim, believed that The Hotel was Jahannam, the Islamic version of Hell

Perception

Hell was often used to describe greatly uncomfortable situations. Morbius described his deteriorated state as hell, (TV: The Brain of Morbius) and the Tenth Doctor later described the Last Great Time War as hell. (TV: The End of Time)

Real Hell

While it was a concept, Hell was also a plane of existence or universe somewhere in reality that had a fiery geometry. The Scourge lived here and tortured the humans of their universe. (AUDIO: The Shadow of the Scourge)

Jason Kane spent several years in Hell, described as predominantly rock where tunnelling craft tunnelled their way between bubbles of places which weren't rock, which would in theory be the equivalent of planets. This may have been the Infernal Regions, however, which is probably where the idea of Hell came from. (PROSE: The Infernal Nexus)


Hell