Second Doctor: Difference between revisions

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== Psychological profile ==
== Psychological profile ==
=== Personality ===
=== Personality ===
{{Section stub|Information from ''[[The Phoenix in the Tardis (feature)|The Phoenix in the Tardis]]'' needs to be added.}}
[[File:Thought Channel.jpg|thumb|left|The Doctor defends his interference in time. ([[TV]]: ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'')]]
[[File:Thought Channel.jpg|thumb|left|The Doctor defends his interference in time. ([[TV]]: ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'')]]
Striving to be the "nicest possible person", ([[TV]]: ''[[The Enemy of the World (TV story)|The Enemy of the World]]'') the Second Doctor enjoyed embroiling himself in dangerous adventures that provided the "spice of life", ([[TV]]: ''[[The Highlanders (TV story)|The Highlanders]]'', ''[[Fury from the Deep (TV story)|Fury from the Deep]]'') to the extent that he envied those in more perilous situations than himself. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'') He privately hoped to find "pre-historic monsters" when thinking about where the TARDIS could land. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Underwater Menace (TV story)|The Underwater Menace]]'') He could be assertive in where he went, believing he was "allowed everywhere". ([[TV]]: ''[[The Five Doctors (TV story)|The Five Doctors]]'') However, he would not turn down the chance for relaxation when it presented itself, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Macra Terror (TV story)|The Macra Terror]]'', ''[[Fury from the Deep (TV story)|Fury from the Deep]]'') and would be upset when his rest was interrupted. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Wheel in Space (TV story)|The Wheel in Space]]'')
Striving to be the "nicest possible person", ([[TV]]: ''[[The Enemy of the World (TV story)|The Enemy of the World]]'') the Second Doctor enjoyed embroiling himself in dangerous adventures that provided the "spice of life", ([[TV]]: ''[[The Highlanders (TV story)|The Highlanders]]'', ''[[Fury from the Deep (TV story)|Fury from the Deep]]'') to the extent that he envied those in more perilous situations than himself. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'') He privately hoped to find "pre-historic monsters" when thinking about where the TARDIS could land. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Underwater Menace (TV story)|The Underwater Menace]]'') He could be assertive in where he went, believing he was "allowed everywhere". ([[TV]]: ''[[The Five Doctors (TV story)|The Five Doctors]]'') However, he would not turn down the chance for relaxation when it presented itself, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Macra Terror (TV story)|The Macra Terror]]'', ''[[Fury from the Deep (TV story)|Fury from the Deep]]'') and would be upset when his rest was interrupted. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Wheel in Space (TV story)|The Wheel in Space]]'')
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Despite his tendency to panic when events got out of control, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Abominable Snowmen (TV story)|The Abominable Snowmen]]'', ''[[The Krotons (TV story)|The Krotons]]'') the Second Doctor always acted heroically and morally in his desire to help the oppressed fight "the most terrible things [in the universe]", ([[TV]]: ''[[The Moonbase (TV story)|The Moonbase]]'', ''[[The Enemy of the World (TV story)|The Enemy of the World]]'', ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'') often being the first to jump to the rescue when someone needed saving, ([[TV]]: ''[[Fury from the Deep (TV story)|Fury from the Deep]]'') and deeming himself the "enemy of anything that [was] wrong or evil in [the] universe". ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Final Sanction (novel)|The Final Sanction]]'') He was even willingly to sacrifice his safety and freedoms to prevent his friends from undergoing preventable suffering. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Underwater Menace (TV story)|The Underwater Menace]]'', ''[[The Web of Fear (TV story)|The Web of Fear]]'', ''[[The Krotons (TV story)|The Krotons]]'', ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'', ''[[The Two Doctors (TV story)|The Two Doctors]]'') However, he refused to act when he did not know the allegiances of the side he was working with, demanding they backed up their intentions with tangible evidence. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Enemy of the World (TV story)|The Enemy of the World]]'')
Despite his tendency to panic when events got out of control, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Abominable Snowmen (TV story)|The Abominable Snowmen]]'', ''[[The Krotons (TV story)|The Krotons]]'') the Second Doctor always acted heroically and morally in his desire to help the oppressed fight "the most terrible things [in the universe]", ([[TV]]: ''[[The Moonbase (TV story)|The Moonbase]]'', ''[[The Enemy of the World (TV story)|The Enemy of the World]]'', ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'') often being the first to jump to the rescue when someone needed saving, ([[TV]]: ''[[Fury from the Deep (TV story)|Fury from the Deep]]'') and deeming himself the "enemy of anything that [was] wrong or evil in [the] universe". ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Final Sanction (novel)|The Final Sanction]]'') He was even willingly to sacrifice his safety and freedoms to prevent his friends from undergoing preventable suffering. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Underwater Menace (TV story)|The Underwater Menace]]'', ''[[The Web of Fear (TV story)|The Web of Fear]]'', ''[[The Krotons (TV story)|The Krotons]]'', ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'', ''[[The Two Doctors (TV story)|The Two Doctors]]'') However, he refused to act when he did not know the allegiances of the side he was working with, demanding they backed up their intentions with tangible evidence. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Enemy of the World (TV story)|The Enemy of the World]]'')


Having a liking for the dark, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Macra Terror (TV story)|The Macra Terror]]'') but a fear of the unknown, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Mind Robber (TV story)|The Mind Robber]]'') the Doctor "live[d] in [the] hope" that he would always survive his dangerous escapades, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Ice Warriors (TV story)|The Ice Warriors]]'') trying his best to avoid pessimism ([[TV]]: ''[[The Space Pirates (TV story)|The Space Pirates]]'') or see "danger in [his] own shadow", ([[TV]]: ''[[The Five Doctors (TV story)|The Five Doctors]]'') believing that the "universe tend[ed] towards good" ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Wonderland (novel)|Wonderland]]'') and that there was "no such thing as defeat". ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Tests of Trefus (comic story)|The Tests of Trefus]]'') He held the greatest virtues in a person as being "courage, pity, chivalry, friendship, [and] even compassion". ([[TV]]: ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'')
The Doctor championed free will and the right for people to remain non-stagnant and "always make up [their] own mind", even if it meant questioning authority, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Macra Terror (TV story)|The Macra Terror]]'', ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Mind Robber (TV story)|The Mind Robber]]'') though was adamant that such things had to come naturally instead of from augmentation from outside forces. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Two Doctors (TV story)|The Two Doctors]]'') He himself would refuse to be treated as a slave, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'') and would only cooperate if he was addressed "properly". ([[TV]]: ''[[The Ice Warriors (TV story)|The Ice Warriors]]'')


He also had a warmer, gentler way about him than his previous incarnation, taking time during his adventures to check if his friends were feeling alright and comfort them when they were frightened, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Moonbase (TV story)|The Moonbase]]'', ''[[The Faceless Ones (TV story)|The Faceless Ones]]'', ''[[The Tomb of the Cybermen (TV story)|The Tomb of the Cybermen]]'', ''[[Fury from the Deep (TV story)|Fury from the Deep]]'', ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'') keeping their wellbeing first and foremost in his mind, even when he got caught up in events around him, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Underwater Menace (TV story)|The Underwater Menace]]'', ''[[The Abominable Snowmen (TV story)|The Abominable Snowmen]]'') prioritising their safety before his own. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Faceless Ones (TV story)|The Faceless Ones]]'', ''[[The Abominable Snowmen (TV story)|The Abominable Snowmen]]'', ''[[The Web of Fear (TV story)|The Web of Fear]]'')
He also had a warmer, gentler way about him than his previous incarnation, taking time during his adventures to check if his friends were feeling alright and comfort them when they were frightened, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Moonbase (TV story)|The Moonbase]]'', ''[[The Faceless Ones (TV story)|The Faceless Ones]]'', ''[[The Tomb of the Cybermen (TV story)|The Tomb of the Cybermen]]'', ''[[Fury from the Deep (TV story)|Fury from the Deep]]'', ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'') keeping their wellbeing first and foremost in his mind, even when he got caught up in events around him, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Underwater Menace (TV story)|The Underwater Menace]]'', ''[[The Abominable Snowmen (TV story)|The Abominable Snowmen]]'') prioritising their safety before his own. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Faceless Ones (TV story)|The Faceless Ones]]'', ''[[The Abominable Snowmen (TV story)|The Abominable Snowmen]]'', ''[[The Web of Fear (TV story)|The Web of Fear]]'')
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He was easily distracted, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'') and would talk to himself to think, treating his inner thoughts as a separate person while in conversation. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Moonbase (TV story)|The Moonbase]]'')
He was easily distracted, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'') and would talk to himself to think, treating his inner thoughts as a separate person while in conversation. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Moonbase (TV story)|The Moonbase]]'')


He was very aware of his own genius, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Underwater Menace (TV story)|The Underwater Menace]]'', ''[[The Seeds of Death (TV story)|The Seeds of Death]]'', ''[[The Five Doctors (TV story)|The Five Doctors]]'', ''[[The Two Doctors (TV story)|The Two Doctors]]'') and would react with indignity if he felt his brilliance was being questioned, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Moonbase (TV story)|The Moonbase]]'', ''[[The Tomb of the Cybermen (TV story)|The Tomb of the Cybermen]]'', ''[[The Ice Warriors (TV story)|The Ice Warriors]]'', ''[[The Two Doctors (TV story)|The Two Doctors]]'') but he was able to admit when he had been a "silly idiot" ([[TV]]: ''[[The Space Pirates (TV story)|The Space Pirates]]'') and when he was at fault for a situation getting out of hand due to his own miscalculations. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'') However, he was adamant on solving a problem with the solution that he had come up with. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'')
<!--Examples following this point focus on traits that highlight this particular incarnation of the Doctor being self-defensive or insecure-->
He was very aware of his own genius, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Underwater Menace (TV story)|The Underwater Menace]]'', ''[[The Seeds of Death (TV story)|The Seeds of Death]]'', ''[[The Five Doctors (TV story)|The Five Doctors]]'', ''[[The Two Doctors (TV story)|The Two Doctors]]'') and would react with indignity if he felt his brilliance was being questioned, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Moonbase (TV story)|The Moonbase]]'', ''[[The Tomb of the Cybermen (TV story)|The Tomb of the Cybermen]]'', ''[[The Ice Warriors (TV story)|The Ice Warriors]]'', ''[[The Two Doctors (TV story)|The Two Doctors]]'') but was able to admit when he had been a "silly idiot" ([[TV]]: ''[[The Space Pirates (TV story)|The Space Pirates]]'') and when he was at fault for a situation getting out of hand due to his own miscalculations. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'') However, he was adamant on solving a problem with the solution that he had come up with. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'')


<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's likes, dislikes and beliefs-->
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's likes and dislikes-->
The Second Doctor liked to consume [[fruit]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'') [[plankton]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Underwater Menace (TV story)|The Underwater Menace]]'') [[wine]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'') [[pork]], [[potato]]es, [[carrots]], [[ice cream]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Wheel in Space (TV story)|The Wheel in Space]]'') [[patty cake]]s, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Invasion (TV story)|The Invasion]]'') champagne cognac, ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Foreign Devils (novel)|Foreign Devils]]'') and [[cheesecake]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Juror's Story (short story)|The Juror's Story]]'')
While he would normally leave discreetly without a goodbye when he had solved the problem at hand, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Moonbase (TV story)|The Moonbase]]'', ''[[The Ice Warriors (TV story)|The Ice Warriors]]'', ''[[The Krotons (TV story)|The Krotons]]'', ''[[The Seeds of Death (TV story)|The Seeds of Death]]'') the Second Doctor was quite willing to enjoy fame, and even fortune, when he could find it. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Martha the Mechanical Housemaid (comic story)|Martha the Mechanical Housemaid]]'') Other times, however, he just accepted a simple "thank you" as reward for his heroic actions. ([[TV]]: ''[[Fury from the Deep (TV story)|Fury from the Deep]]'')


He enjoyed saying tongue twisters, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'') drawing, [[marbles]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Space Pirates (TV story)|The Space Pirates]]'') books, and receiving gifts. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Nameless City (short story)|The Nameless City]]'') He was also fond of [[Cluedo]], ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Menagerie (novel)|The Menagerie]]'') and had a fascination for jungles. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Combat Rock (novel)|Combat Rock]]'')
He enjoyed saying tongue twisters, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'') drawing, [[marbles]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Space Pirates (TV story)|The Space Pirates]]'') books, and receiving gifts. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Nameless City (short story)|The Nameless City]]'') He was also fond of [[Cluedo]], ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Menagerie (novel)|The Menagerie]]'') and had a fascination for jungles. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Combat Rock (novel)|Combat Rock]]'')


While he would normally leave discreetly without a goodbye when he had solved the problem at hand, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Moonbase (TV story)|The Moonbase]]'', ''[[The Ice Warriors (TV story)|The Ice Warriors]]'', ''[[The Krotons (TV story)|The Krotons]]'', ''[[The Seeds of Death (TV story)|The Seeds of Death]]'') the Doctor was quite willing to enjoy fame, and even fortune, when he could find it. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Martha the Mechanical Housemaid (comic story)|Martha the Mechanical Housemaid]]'') Other times, however, he just accepted a simple "thank you" as reward for his heroic actions. ([[TV]]: ''[[Fury from the Deep (TV story)|Fury from the Deep]]'')
He disliked being a leader, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Macra Terror (TV story)|The Macra Terror]]'') and goodbyes. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Krotons (TV story)|The Krotons]]'') He also "never like[d] to make predictions" about seeing the last of something, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Tomb of the Cybermen (TV story)|The Tomb of the Cybermen]]'') and bemoaned that humans were always "trying to destroy each other." ([[TV]]: ''[[The Enemy of the World (TV story)|The Enemy of the World]]'')
 
He disliked being a leader, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Macra Terror (TV story)|The Macra Terror]]'') and goodbyes. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Krotons (TV story)|The Krotons]]'') He also claimed to hate computers, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Invasion (TV story)|The Invasion]]'') and would only use them when he had no alternative. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Ice Warriors (TV story)|The Ice Warriors]]'') He similarly dismissed robots as machines "built to obey". ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Robot King (comic story)|Robot King]]'')


Having a distain for bureaucracy, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Faceless Ones (TV story)|The Faceless Ones]]'') the Doctor believed it was justified to break the "bad" laws, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Macra Terror (TV story)|The Macra Terror]]'') especially the laws that actively encouraged letting people suffer. ([[TV]]: ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'') He "never like[d] to make predictions" about seeing the last of something, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Tomb of the Cybermen (TV story)|The Tomb of the Cybermen]]'') and bemoaned that humans were always "trying to destroy each other." ([[TV]]: ''[[The Enemy of the World (TV story)|The Enemy of the World]]'')
While [[New York City]] was his favourite [[city]], ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Monsters from the Past (comic story)|The Monsters from the Past]]'') the Doctor always fond it "marvelous" to visit [[London]]. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Death Race (comic story)|Death Race]]'')


He was frightened of [[vampire]]s. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Murder Game (novel)|The Murder Game]]'')
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's dietary preferences-->
The Second Doctor liked to consume [[fruit]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'') [[plankton]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Underwater Menace (TV story)|The Underwater Menace]]'') [[wine]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'') [[pork]], [[potato]]es, [[carrot]]s, [[ice cream]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Wheel in Space (TV story)|The Wheel in Space]]'') [[patty cake]]s, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Invasion (TV story)|The Invasion]]'') [[roast duck]], ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Action in Exile (comic story)|Action in Exile]]'') champagne cognac, ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Foreign Devils (novel)|Foreign Devils]]'') and [[cheesecake]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Juror's Story (short story)|The Juror's Story]]'')


He believed that "life depend[ed] on change and renewal," ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'') and that one should prioritise "a modern scientific brain" instead of favouring "heathen idol[s]", ([[TV]]: ''[[The Underwater Menace (TV story)|The Underwater Menace]]'') but he did respect how other cultures valued their beliefs. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Moonbase (TV story)|The Moonbase]]'') When Ben and Polly suggested taking some jewels from the tomb of [[Pharaoh]] [[Tut-Ankh-Amen]], the Doctor was aghast and berated them for wanting to steal from the deceased, calling it a "monstrous notion". ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The King of Golden Death (short story)|The King of Golden Death]]'')
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's beliefs and opinions-->
Having a liking for the dark, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Macra Terror (TV story)|The Macra Terror]]'') but a fear of the unknown, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Mind Robber (TV story)|The Mind Robber]]'') the Doctor "live[d] in [the] hope" that he would always survive his dangerous escapades, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Ice Warriors (TV story)|The Ice Warriors]]'') trying his best to avoid pessimism ([[TV]]: ''[[The Space Pirates (TV story)|The Space Pirates]]'') or see "danger in [his] own shadow", ([[TV]]: ''[[The Five Doctors (TV story)|The Five Doctors]]'') believing that the "universe tend[ed] towards good" ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Wonderland (novel)|Wonderland]]'') and that there was "no such thing as defeat", ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Tests of Trefus (comic story)|The Tests of Trefus]]'') though he knew when to abandon a hopeless course. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Atoms Infinite (comic story)|Atoms Infinite]]'') He held the greatest virtues in a person as being "courage, pity, chivalry, friendship, [and] even compassion", ([[TV]]: ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'') and thought that intelligent beings should not be used as [[slave]]s. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Tests of Trefus (comic story)|The Tests of Trefus]]'')


He believed in [[destiny]], telling Ben and Polly that [[The Doctor's TARDIS|the TARDIS]]' seemingly random journeys were controlled by destiny and that, "if [they] just obey[ed] destiny blindly, all [would] be well". ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Only a Matter of Time (short story)|Only a Matter of Time]]'') He also believed that [[logic]] "merely enable[d] one to be wrong with authority." ([[TV]]: ''[[The Wheel in Space (TV story)|The Wheel in Space]]'') He did not, however, believe in luck, ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Forgotten (comic story)|The Forgotten]]'') or [[Tibetan Yeti|yetis]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Dr. Second (novel)|Dr. Second]]'')
Having a disdain for bureaucracy, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Faceless Ones (TV story)|The Faceless Ones]]'') the Doctor believed it was justified to break the "bad" laws, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Macra Terror (TV story)|The Macra Terror]]'') especially the laws that actively encouraged letting people suffer. ([[TV]]: ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'') He believed that "life depend[ed] on change and renewal," ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'') and that one should prioritise "a modern scientific brain" instead of favouring "heathen idol[s]", ([[TV]]: ''[[The Underwater Menace (TV story)|The Underwater Menace]]'') but he did respect how other cultures valued their beliefs. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Moonbase (TV story)|The Moonbase]]'') When Ben and Polly suggested taking some jewels from the tomb of [[Pharaoh]] [[Tut-Ankh-Amen]], the Doctor was aghast and berated them for wanting to steal from the deceased, calling it a "monstrous notion". ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The King of Golden Death (short story)|The King of Golden Death]]'')


The Doctor championed free will and the right for people to remain non-stagnant and "always make up [their] own mind", even if it meant questioning authority, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Macra Terror (TV story)|The Macra Terror]]'', ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Mind Robber (TV story)|The Mind Robber]]'') though was adamant that such things had to come naturally instead of from augmentation from outside forces. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Two Doctors (TV story)|The Two Doctors]]'') He himself would refuse to be treated as a slave, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'') and would only cooperate if he was addressed "properly". ([[TV]]: ''[[The Ice Warriors (TV story)|The Ice Warriors]]'')
The Second Doctor believed in [[destiny]], telling Ben and Polly that [[The Doctor's TARDIS|the TARDIS]]' seemingly random journeys were controlled by destiny and that, "if [they] just obey[ed] destiny blindly, all [would] be well". ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Only a Matter of Time (short story)|Only a Matter of Time]]'') He also believed that [[logic]] "merely enable[d] one to be wrong with authority." ([[TV]]: ''[[The Wheel in Space (TV story)|The Wheel in Space]]'') He did not, however, believe in luck, ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Forgotten (comic story)|The Forgotten]]'') or [[Tibetan Yeti|yetis]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Dr. Second (novel)|Dr. Second]]'')


<!--Examples following this point focus on the Second Doctor's attitude towards time travel and the Web of Time-->
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's fears-->
While the Second Doctor preached in keeping the stability of the Space-Time continuum intact, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Two Doctors (TV story)|The Two Doctors]]'') he was willing to indulge in "bending [the Laws of Time] a little" when he could. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Five Doctors (TV story)|The Five Doctors]]'')
The "enemy [he] fear[ed] most" were the [[Cybermen]], ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Coming of the Cybermen (comic story)|The Coming of the Cybermen]]'') and he was also frightened of [[vampire]]s. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Murder Game (novel)|The Murder Game]]'')


<!--Examples following this point focus on the Second Doctor's attitude towards violence and death-->
<!--Examples following this point focus on the Second Doctor's attitude towards violence and death-->
[[File:SecondStern.jpg|thumb|A more serious side of the Doctor. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Krotons (TV story)|The Krotons]]'')]]
While he "never held that the end[s] [justified] the means", ([[TV]]: ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'') the Second Doctor was aware that there were times that risking the lives of a few people was necessary to protect everyone else, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Ice Warriors (TV story)|The Ice Warriors]]'', ''[[The Wheel in Space (TV story)|The Wheel in Space]]'') or to at least allow "a little injustice" to prevent a "wholesale slaughter", ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'') though he did not like having such a philosophy. ([[TV]]:''[[The Enemy of the World (TV story)|The Enemy of the World]]'')
While he "never held that the end[s] [justified] the means", ([[TV]]: ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'') the Second Doctor was aware that there were times that risking the lives of a few people was necessary to protect everyone else, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Ice Warriors (TV story)|The Ice Warriors]]'', ''[[The Wheel in Space (TV story)|The Wheel in Space]]'') or to at least allow "a little injustice" to prevent a "wholesale slaughter", ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'') though he did not like having such a philosophy. ([[TV]]:''[[The Enemy of the World (TV story)|The Enemy of the World]]'')


In his more ruthless moments, the Doctor wired the [[Cyber-Tombs]]' doors to fatally electrocute anyone trying to open them, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Tomb of the Cybermen (TV story)|The Tomb of the Cybermen]]'') pursued the [[Kraal (Freedom by Fire)|Kraals]] into extinction, ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Freedom by Fire (comic story)|Freedom by Fire]]'') ensured that a relatively helpless party of Daleks would all die, ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Bringer of Darkness (comic story)|Bringer of Darkness]]'') steered an [[Ice Warrior]] fleet into the sun, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Seeds of Death (TV story)|The Seeds of Death]]'') and used a [[ray gun]] he had invented to kill the [[Master of Spiders]] while shouting, ''"Die, hideous creature. Die!"'' ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Master of Spiders (comic story)|Master of Spiders]]'') He also appeared unfazed to [[Ramón Salamander]]'s fate in the [[Time Vortex]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Web of Fear (TV story)|The Web of Fear]]'') However, when he was about to take a risk, he would warn others to leave if they felt unsafe. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Tomb of the Cybermen (TV story)|The Tomb of the Cybermen]]'')
In his more ruthless moments, the Doctor wired the [[Cyber-Tombs]]' doors to fatally electrocute anyone trying to open them, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Tomb of the Cybermen (TV story)|The Tomb of the Cybermen]]'') pursued the [[Kraal (Freedom by Fire)|Kraals]] into extinction, ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Freedom by Fire (comic story)|Freedom by Fire]]'') ensured that a relatively helpless party of Daleks would all die, ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Bringer of Darkness (comic story)|Bringer of Darkness]]'') steered an [[Ice Warrior]] fleet into the sun, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Seeds of Death (TV story)|The Seeds of Death]]'') and used a [[ray gun]] he had invented to kill a [[giant spider]] while shouting, ''"Die, hideous creature... Die!"'' ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Master of Spiders (comic story)|Master of Spiders]]'') He also appeared unfazed to [[Ramón Salamander]]'s fate in the [[Time Vortex]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Web of Fear (TV story)|The Web of Fear]]'') However, when he was about to take a risk, he would warn others to leave if they felt unsafe. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Tomb of the Cybermen (TV story)|The Tomb of the Cybermen]]'')
 
While he "care[d] about life", ([[TV]]: ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'') the Doctor knew that there were situations with "no time for mercy" ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Coming of the Cybermen (comic story)|The Coming of the Cybermen]]'') and was unafraid to resort to violence by brutalising a person if it was beneficial to his plans, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Highlanders (TV story)|The Highlanders]]'') nor did he fear launching himself at an unaware opponent to stop their evil plans, ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Space War Two (comic story)|Space War Two]]'', ''[[Operation Wurlitzer (comic story)|Operation Wurlitzer]]'', ''[[Action in Exile (comic story)|Action in Exile]]'') and was even ready to arm himself with a [[knife]] if he believed it was the best way to defend himself. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Two Doctors (TV story)|The Two Doctors]]'') However, he saw crests that glorified combat as "romantic piffle", ([[TV]]: ''[[The Highlanders (TV story)|The Highlanders]]'') and would seek all forms of justice that were not personal executions, as he did not believe anyone had the right to kill. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Enemy of the World (TV story)|The Enemy of the World]]'') Indeed, he would regret it if he himself killed someone when trying to only incapacitate them. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[A Comedy of Terrors (short story)|A Comedy of Terrors]]'')
 
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's opinions on technology and machinery-->
He also claimed to hate computers, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Invasion (TV story)|The Invasion]]'') and would only use them when he had no alternative. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Ice Warriors (TV story)|The Ice Warriors]]'') He similarly dismissed robots as machines "built to obey", ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Robot King (comic story)|Robot King]]'') as he considered machines to be a preferable form of slavery. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Tests of Trefus (comic story)|The Tests of Trefus]]'')


While he "care[d] about life", ([[TV]]: ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'') the Doctor was unafraid to resort to violence by brutalising a person if it was beneficial to his plans, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Highlanders (TV story)|The Highlanders]]'') and was ready to arm himself with a [[knife]] if he believed it was the best way to defend himself. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Two Doctors (TV story)|The Two Doctors]]'') However, he saw crests that glorified combat as "romantic piffle", ([[TV]]: ''[[The Highlanders (TV story)|The Highlanders]]'') and would seek all forms of justice that were not personal executions, as he did not believe anyone had the right to kill. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Enemy of the World (TV story)|The Enemy of the World]]'') Indeed, he would regret it if he himself killed someone when trying to only incapacitate them. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[A Comedy of Terrors (short story)|A Comedy of Terrors]]'')
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While the Second Doctor preached in keeping the stability of the Space-Time continuum intact, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Two Doctors (TV story)|The Two Doctors]]'') he was willing to indulge in "bending [the Laws of Time] a little" when he could. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Five Doctors (TV story)|The Five Doctors]]'')


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The Second Doctor had a noticeably antagonistic relationship with the [[Third Doctor]], their personalities so different that they seemed incapable of working together without the authoritative presence of the [[First Doctor]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'') whom the Second Doctor was slightly afraid of. ([[WC]]: ''[[Doctors Assemble! (webcast)|Doctors Assemble!]]'') While combating [[Adam Mitchell]]'s [[Auton]]s, the Second Doctor associated himself with his first and [[seventh incarnation]]s, combining with them to think of a solution to the situation. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Endgame (POT comic story)|Endgame]]'')
The Second Doctor had a noticeably antagonistic relationship with the [[Third Doctor]], their personalities so different that they seemed incapable of working together without the authoritative presence of the [[First Doctor]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'') whom the Second Doctor was slightly afraid of. ([[WC]]: ''[[Doctors Assemble! (webcast)|Doctors Assemble!]]'') While combating [[Adam Mitchell]]'s [[Auton]]s, the Second Doctor associated himself with his first and [[seventh incarnation]]s, combining with them to think of a solution to the situation. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Endgame (POT comic story)|Endgame]]'')


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While the [[Sixth Doctor]] considered his second incarnation to be an "antediluvian fogey" for apparently being captured by the [[Sontaran]]s, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Two Doctors (TV story)|The Two Doctors]]'') the [[Eighth Doctor]] remembered the Second Doctor as a "gentle little fellow who had sacrificed his own freedom so that others might be free". ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Eight Doctors (novel)|The Eight Doctors]]'')
While the [[Sixth Doctor]] considered his second incarnation to be an "antediluvian fogey" for apparently being captured by the [[Sontaran]]s, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Two Doctors (TV story)|The Two Doctors]]'') the [[Eighth Doctor]] remembered the Second Doctor as a "gentle little fellow who had sacrificed his own freedom so that others might be free". ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Eight Doctors (novel)|The Eight Doctors]]'')


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The Second Doctor was highly defensive of his TARDIS, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Moonbase (TV story)|The Moonbase]]'') describing it as "a magnificent machine" and "utterly reliable", trusting it would bring him to where his help was needed. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Dr. Second (novel)|Dr. Second]]'')
The Second Doctor was highly defensive of his TARDIS, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Moonbase (TV story)|The Moonbase]]'') thinking it as the "most valuable thing in the world" ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Egyptian Escapade (comic story)|Egyptian Escapade]]'') and describing it as "a magnificent machine" and "utterly reliable", trusting it would bring him to where his help was needed. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Dr. Second (novel)|Dr. Second]]'')


By the time he fought [[Side]], the Doctor considered Jamie to be the most reliable friend that he had ever had. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Jigsaw War (audio story)|The Jigsaw War]]'') The [[Sixth Doctor]] even told his companion, [[Peri Brown]], that he was "always very fond of Jamie." When [[Chessene of the Franzine Grig]] informed him that Jamie had most likely been killed in a Sontaran attack, the Doctor began going into a grief-stricken rage until he was restrained. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Two Doctors (TV story)|The Two Doctors]]'')
By the time he fought [[Side]], the Doctor considered Jamie to be the most reliable friend that he had ever had. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Jigsaw War (audio story)|The Jigsaw War]]'') The [[Sixth Doctor]] even told his companion, [[Peri Brown]], that he was "always very fond of Jamie." When [[Chessene of the Franzine Grig]] informed him that Jamie had most likely been killed in a Sontaran attack, the Doctor began going into a grief-stricken rage until he was restrained. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Two Doctors (TV story)|The Two Doctors]]'')


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Wanting to have his [[revenge]] on them, ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Doctor Strikes Back (comic story)|The Doctor Strikes Back]]'') the Doctor saw the [[Dalek]]s as nothing more than "a living plague of hatred and fear", and felt justified in destroying them, with Victoria unsettled by how his voice "[carried] such hatred" as he spoke of them. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Bringer of Darkness (comic story)|Bringer of Darkness]]'') He even took glee in tricking the Daleks into destroying each other. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Doctor Strikes Back (comic story)|The Doctor Strikes Back]]'')
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[[Samantha Briggs]] believed the Second Doctor was a "weirdy", though [[Jamie McCrimmon]] defended his intelligence, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Faceless Ones (TV story)|The Faceless Ones]]'') with [[the Brigadier]] recognising that the Doctor had "an incredible knack of being one jump ahead of everyone." ([[TV]]: ''[[The Invasion (TV story)|The Invasion]]'') [[Victoria Waterfield]] saw the Second Doctor as a beacon of "kindness, compassion, wisdom, [and] great knowledge", ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Power Play (audio story)|Power Play]]'') with [[Zoe Heriot]] considering the Doctor to be a "lovely little man" who was "fun to be with." ([[PROSE]]: ''[[One Small Step... (short story)|One Small Step...]]'') On another occasion, she described him as "old, clever and kind." ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Five Dimensional Man (audio story)|The Five Dimensional Man]]'')
[[Samantha Briggs]] believed the Second Doctor was a "weirdy", though [[Jamie McCrimmon]] defended his intelligence, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Faceless Ones (TV story)|The Faceless Ones]]'') with [[the Brigadier]] recognising that the Doctor had "an incredible knack of being one jump ahead of everyone." ([[TV]]: ''[[The Invasion (TV story)|The Invasion]]'') [[Victoria Waterfield]] saw the Second Doctor as a beacon of "kindness, compassion, wisdom, [and] great knowledge", ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Power Play (audio story)|Power Play]]'') with [[Zoe Heriot]] considering the Doctor to be a "lovely little man" who was "fun to be with" ([[PROSE]]: ''[[One Small Step... (short story)|One Small Step...]]'') as he was "old, clever and kind." ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Five Dimensional Man (audio story)|The Five Dimensional Man]]'')


{{Ainley|c}} described the Second Doctor as "the comedian", but noted he was "not quite the clown he look[ed]". ([[GAME]]: ''[[Destiny of the Doctors (video game)|Destiny of the Doctors]]'') [[River Song]] found the Second Doctor "fun, but [she] wouldn't trust him as far as [she] could throw him". ([[GAME]]: ''[[The Eternity Clock (video game)|The Eternity Clock]]'') When the [[Eighth Doctor]] had a [[tarot]] card reading, the Second Doctor was identified as "the Hermit". ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The City of the Dead (novel)|The City of the Dead]]'')
The [[Tremas Master]] described the Second Doctor as "the comedian", but noted he was "not quite the clown he look[ed]". ([[GAME]]: ''[[Destiny of the Doctors (video game)|Destiny of the Doctors]]'') [[River Song]] found the Second Doctor "fun, but [she] wouldn't trust him as far as [she] could throw him". ([[GAME]]: ''[[The Eternity Clock (video game)|The Eternity Clock]]'') When the [[Eighth Doctor]] had a [[tarot]] card reading, the Second Doctor was identified as "the Hermit". ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The City of the Dead (novel)|The City of the Dead]]'')


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When sentenced to a forced regeneration by the Time Lords, the Doctor was initially concerned was his next incarnation's appearance, though he rejected the faces offered to him, maintaining that he alone had the right to decide what he looked like. Once the Time Lords decided to start to begin the regeneration, however, the Doctor quickly protested how unfairly he was being treated, and continued protesting in the void, ([[TV]]: ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'') until the [[Celestial Intervention Agency]] intervened. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[World Game (novel)|World Game]]'') When the regeneration was finally triggered after he was shot by the Time Lords' [[Animated scarecrow (The Night Walkers)|animated scarecrows]], the Doctor used his dying breath to reassure Farmer [[Glenlock-Hogan]], who had been ridiculed for seeing his scarecrows come to life, that the phenomenon would not happen again after the night was over. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Night Walkers (comic story)|The Night Walkers]]'') As he entered his final moments, the Second Doctor thought of his companions, and, though afraid, felt excitement by the feeling of renewal, as he continued to feel justified by his violation of the non-interference policy. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Timewyrm: Apocalypse (novel)|Timewyrm: Apocalypse]]'')
When sentenced to a [[forced regeneration]] by the Time Lords, the Doctor was initial concern was his next incarnation's appearance, though he rejected the faces offered to him, maintaining that he alone had the right to decide what he looked like. Once the Time Lords decided to start to begin the regeneration, however, the Doctor quickly protested how unfairly he was being treated, and continued protesting in the void, ([[TV]]: ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'') until the [[Celestial Intervention Agency]] intervened. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[World Game (novel)|World Game]]'') When the regeneration was finally triggered after he was shot by the Time Lords' [[Animated scarecrow (The Night Walkers)|animated scarecrows]], the Doctor used his dying breath to reassure Farmer [[Glenlock-Hogan]], who had been ridiculed for seeing his scarecrows come to life, that the phenomenon would not happen again after the night was over. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Night Walkers (comic story)|The Night Walkers]]'') As he entered his final moments, the Second Doctor thought of his companions, and, though afraid, felt excitement by the feeling of renewal, as he continued to feel justified by his violation of the non-interference policy. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Timewyrm: Apocalypse (novel)|Timewyrm: Apocalypse]]'')


=== Habits and quirks ===
=== Habits and quirks ===
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He was prone to exclaiming, "Oh, my word!", when startled, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Ice Warriors (TV story)|The Ice Warriors]]'', ''[[Fury from the Deep (TV story)|Fury from the Deep]]'', ''[[The Dominators (TV story)|The Dominators]]'') analysing, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Web of Fear (TV story)|The Web of Fear]]'', ''[[The Space Pirates (TV story)|The Space Pirates]]'', ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'') alleviated, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Dominators (TV story)|The Dominators]]'', ''[[The Seeds of Death (TV story)|The Seeds of Death]]'') amazed, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Mind Robber (TV story)|The Mind Robber]]'', ''[[The Invasion (TV story)|The Invasion]]'', ''[[The Seeds of Death (TV story)|The Seeds of Death]]'') intrigued, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Mind Robber (TV story)|The Mind Robber]]'') baffled, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Invasion (TV story)|The Invasion]]'', ''[[The Space Pirates (TV story)|The Space Pirates]]'', ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'', ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'', ''[[The Two Doctors (TV story)|The Two Doctors]]'') or annoyed. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Seeds of Death (TV story)|The Seeds of Death]]'') Another favoured exclamation of his was, "Ah ha", which he would say in moments of gleeful realisation or when celebrating a positive outcome. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Abominable Snowmen (TV story)|The Abominable Snowmen]]'', ''[[The Dominators (TV story)|The Dominators]]'')
He was prone to exclaiming, "Oh, my word!", when startled, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Ice Warriors (TV story)|The Ice Warriors]]'', ''[[Fury from the Deep (TV story)|Fury from the Deep]]'', ''[[The Dominators (TV story)|The Dominators]]'') analysing, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Web of Fear (TV story)|The Web of Fear]]'', ''[[The Space Pirates (TV story)|The Space Pirates]]'', ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'') alleviated, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Dominators (TV story)|The Dominators]]'', ''[[The Seeds of Death (TV story)|The Seeds of Death]]'') amazed, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Mind Robber (TV story)|The Mind Robber]]'', ''[[The Invasion (TV story)|The Invasion]]'', ''[[The Seeds of Death (TV story)|The Seeds of Death]]'') intrigued, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Mind Robber (TV story)|The Mind Robber]]'') baffled, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Invasion (TV story)|The Invasion]]'', ''[[The Space Pirates (TV story)|The Space Pirates]]'', ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'', ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'', ''[[The Two Doctors (TV story)|The Two Doctors]]'') or annoyed. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Seeds of Death (TV story)|The Seeds of Death]]'') Another favoured exclamation of his was, "Ah ha", which he would say in moments of gleeful realisation or when celebrating a positive outcome. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Abominable Snowmen (TV story)|The Abominable Snowmen]]'', ''[[The Dominators (TV story)|The Dominators]]'')


The Doctor was prone to saying, "I wonder...", when thinking aloud,{{source}} or when stating his disbelief in a statement. ([[TV]]: [[TV]]: ''[[The Wheel in Space (TV story)|The Wheel in Space]]'') He would also utter, "shush", when needed his friends to be silent.{{source}} As with his previous incarnation, he would say, "come along", when instructing people to follow him.{{source}} Another favoured phrase of his was, "By the planets!" ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Coming of the Cybermen (comic story)|The Coming of the Cybermen]]'', ''[[The Faithful Rocket Pack (comic story)|The Faithful Rocket Pack]]'', ''[[The Time Museum (comic story)|The Time Museum]]'')
Other favoured phrases of his to yell in surprise were, ''"Great powers"'', ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Monsters from the Past (comic story)|The Monsters from the Past]]'', ''[[The Faithful Rocket Pack (comic story)|The Faithful Rocket Pack]]'', ''[[The Witches (comic story)|The Witches]]'', ''[[Attack of the Daleks (comic story)|Attack of the Daleks]]'', ''[[Dr. Who and the Space Pirates (comic story)|Dr. Who and the Space Pirates]]'', ''[[Masquerade (comic story)|Masquerade]]'', ''[[Invasion of the Quarks (comic story)|Invasion of the Quarks]]'', ''[[Ice Cap Terror (comic story)|Ice Cap Terror]]'', ''[[The Electrodes (comic story)|The Electrodes]]'', ''[[Father Time (comic story)|Father Time]]'', ''[[The Duellists (comic story)|The Duellists]]'', ''[[Eskimo Joe (comic story)|Eskimo Joe]]'', ''[[Peril at 60 Fathoms (comic story)|Peril at 60 Fathoms]]'', ''[[Test Flight (comic story)|Test Flight]]'', ''[[The Entertainer (comic story)|The Entertainer]]'', ''[[Action in Exile (comic story)|Action in Exile]]'') and, ''"By the planets!"''. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Coming of the Cybermen (comic story)|The Coming of the Cybermen]]'', ''[[The Faithful Rocket Pack (comic story)|The Faithful Rocket Pack]]'', ''[[The Witches (comic story)|The Witches]]'', ''[[Cyber-Mole (comic story)|Cyber-Mole]]'', ''[[The Sabre-Toothed Gorillas (comic story)|The Sabre-Toothed Gorillas]]'', ''[[The Jokers (comic story)|The Jokers]]'', ''[[Jungle of Doom (comic story)|Jungle of Doom]]'', ''[[The Time Museum (comic story)|The Time Museum]]'', ''[[Peril at 60 Fathoms (comic story)|Peril at 60 Fathoms]]'')


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[[File:Second Doctor Hat.jpg|thumb|The Doctor exclamates his point. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Pursued by the Trods (comic story)|Pursued by the Trods]]'')]]
A fidgety incarnation, it was rare for the Second Doctor to go long without continuously wringing and interlocking his hands together. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Highlanders (TV story)|The Highlanders]]'', ''[[The Space Pirates (TV story)|The Space Pirates]]'') However, he was known to stand with his hands simply crossed in front of him, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Macra Terror (TV story)|The Macra Terror]]'', ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Tomb of the Cybermen (TV story)|The Tomb of the Cybermen]]'', ''[[The Abominable Snowmen (TV story)|The Abominable Snowmen]]'', ''[[The Ice Warriors (TV story)|The Ice Warriors]]'', ''[[The Mind Robber (TV story)|The Mind Robber]]'', ''[[The Invasion (TV story)|The Invasion]]'', ''[[The Seeds of Death (TV story)|The Seeds of Death]]'', ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'', ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'', ''[[The Five Doctors (TV story)|The Five Doctors]]'') and occasionally held behind his back. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Underwater Menace (TV story)|The Underwater Menace]]'', ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'', ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'', ''[[The Five Doctors (TV story)|The Five Doctors]]'')
A fidgety incarnation, it was rare for the Second Doctor to go long without continuously wringing and interlocking his hands together. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Highlanders (TV story)|The Highlanders]]'', ''[[The Space Pirates (TV story)|The Space Pirates]]'') However, he was known to stand with his hands simply crossed in front of him, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Macra Terror (TV story)|The Macra Terror]]'', ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Tomb of the Cybermen (TV story)|The Tomb of the Cybermen]]'', ''[[The Abominable Snowmen (TV story)|The Abominable Snowmen]]'', ''[[The Ice Warriors (TV story)|The Ice Warriors]]'', ''[[The Mind Robber (TV story)|The Mind Robber]]'', ''[[The Invasion (TV story)|The Invasion]]'', ''[[The Seeds of Death (TV story)|The Seeds of Death]]'', ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'', ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'', ''[[The Five Doctors (TV story)|The Five Doctors]]'') and occasionally held behind his back. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Underwater Menace (TV story)|The Underwater Menace]]'', ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'', ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'', ''[[The Five Doctors (TV story)|The Five Doctors]]'')


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He would also pat himself with his handkerchief after moments of intensity. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Underwater Menace (TV story)|The Underwater Menace]]'', ''[[The Ice Warriors (TV story)|The Ice Warriors]]'', ''[[The Enemy of the World (TV story)|The Enemy of the World]]'', ''[[The Dominators (TV story)|The Dominators]]'', ''[[The Seeds of Death (TV story)|The Seeds of Death]]'', ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'')
He would also pat himself with his handkerchief after moments of intensity. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Underwater Menace (TV story)|The Underwater Menace]]'', ''[[The Ice Warriors (TV story)|The Ice Warriors]]'', ''[[The Enemy of the World (TV story)|The Enemy of the World]]'', ''[[The Dominators (TV story)|The Dominators]]'', ''[[The Seeds of Death (TV story)|The Seeds of Death]]'', ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'')


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He would sometimes carry food on his person to snack on during his adventures, such as [[sherbet lemon]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Wheel in Space (TV story)|The Wheel in Space]]'') [[jelly babies]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Dominators (TV story)|The Dominators]]'', ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'', ''[[The Five Doctors (TV story)|The Five Doctors]]'') and an [[apple]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Five Doctors (TV story)|The Five Doctors]]'')
He would sometimes carry food on his person to snack on during his adventures, such as [[sherbet lemon]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Wheel in Space (TV story)|The Wheel in Space]]'') [[jelly babies]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Dominators (TV story)|The Dominators]]'', ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'', ''[[The Five Doctors (TV story)|The Five Doctors]]'') and an [[apple]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Five Doctors (TV story)|The Five Doctors]]'')


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The Doctor possessed [[The Doctor's recorder|a recorder]], which he played when he needed to pass the time, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Underwater Menace (TV story)|The Underwater Menace]]'', ''[[The Abominable Snowmen (TV story)|The Abominable Snowmen]]'', ''[[The Web of Fear (TV story)|The Web of Fear]]'') to raise morale in a dire situation, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Highlanders (TV story)|The Highlanders]]'') to help him to concentrate, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'') or simply as a tool to make him seem less suspicious. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Macra Terror (TV story)|The Macra Terror]]'') He could also use his recorder as an effective tool, having a separate mouthpiece that turned it into a spyglass, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Wheel in Space (TV story)|The Wheel in Space]]'', ''[[The Invasion (TV story)|The Invasion]]'') and improvise it into a blowgun. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Underwater Menace (TV story)|The Underwater Menace]]'') Because his companions disliked the instrument, ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Forgotten (comic story)|The Forgotten]]'') the Doctor took to carrying spares, ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Twin Piques (short story)|Twin Piques]]'', ''[[The Avant Guardian (short story)|The Avant Guardian]]'') as playing them helped him to think. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'') He displayed a fondness of music in other ways besides the recorder, such as telling Jamie he could travel in the TARDIS in return for teaching him to play the [[bagpipes]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Highlanders (TV story)|The Highlanders]]'')
The Doctor possessed [[The Doctor's recorder|a recorder]], which he played when he needed to pass the time, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Underwater Menace (TV story)|The Underwater Menace]]'', ''[[The Abominable Snowmen (TV story)|The Abominable Snowmen]]'', ''[[The Web of Fear (TV story)|The Web of Fear]]'') to raise morale in a dire situation, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Highlanders (TV story)|The Highlanders]]'') to help him to concentrate, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'') or simply as a tool to make him seem less suspicious. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Macra Terror (TV story)|The Macra Terror]]'') He could also use his recorder as an effective tool, having a separate mouthpiece that turned it into a spyglass, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Wheel in Space (TV story)|The Wheel in Space]]'', ''[[The Invasion (TV story)|The Invasion]]'') and improvise it into a blowgun. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Underwater Menace (TV story)|The Underwater Menace]]'') Because his companions disliked the instrument, ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Forgotten (comic story)|The Forgotten]]'') the Doctor took to carrying spares, ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Twin Piques (short story)|Twin Piques]]'', ''[[The Avant Guardian (short story)|The Avant Guardian]]'') as playing them helped him to think. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'') He displayed a fondness of music in other ways besides the recorder, such as telling Jamie he could travel in the TARDIS in return for teaching him to play the [[bagpipes]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Highlanders (TV story)|The Highlanders]]'')


It was during his second incarnation that the Doctor began to regularly carry a [[sonic screwdriver]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Fury from the Deep (TV story)|Fury from the Deep]]'', ''[[The Dominators (TV story)|The Dominators]]'', ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'') He also carried a [[magnifying glass]] on his person, and would utilise it for investigation purposes. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Highlanders (TV story)|The Highlanders]]'', ''[[The Faceless Ones (TV story)|The Faceless Ones]]'', ''[[The Tomb of the Cybermen (TV story)|The Tomb of the Cybermen]]'', ''[[The Web of Fear (TV story)|The Web of Fear]]'', ''[[The Invasion (TV story)|The Invasion]]'')
It was during his second incarnation that the Doctor began to regularly carry a [[sonic screwdriver]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Fury from the Deep (TV story)|Fury from the Deep]]'', ''[[The Dominators (TV story)|The Dominators]]'', ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'') He also carried a [[magnifying glass]] on his person, and would utilise it for investigation purposes, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Highlanders (TV story)|The Highlanders]]'', ''[[The Faceless Ones (TV story)|The Faceless Ones]]'', ''[[The Tomb of the Cybermen (TV story)|The Tomb of the Cybermen]]'', ''[[The Web of Fear (TV story)|The Web of Fear]]'', ''[[The Invasion (TV story)|The Invasion]]'') and made use of [[The Doctor's utility belt|a utility belt]] to hold his various gadgets. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Egyptian Escapade (comic story)|Egyptian Escapade]]'', ''[[The Witches (comic story)|The Witches]]'', ''[[The Cyber Empire (comic story)|The Cyber Empire]]'', ''[[The Dyrons (comic story)|The Dyrons]]'')
 
The Doctor was prone to saying, "I wonder...", when thinking aloud,{{source}} or when stating his disbelief in a statement. ([[TV]]: [[TV]]: ''[[The Wheel in Space (TV story)|The Wheel in Space]]'') He would also utter, "shush", when needed his friends to be silent.{{source}} As with his previous incarnation, he would say, "come along", when instructing people to follow him.{{source}}


=== Skills ===
=== Skills ===
[[File:Masquerade.jpg|thumb|left|The Doctor disguises himself as a Cyberman. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Masquerade (comic story)|Masquerade]]'')]]
[[File:TwoInDisguiseTUM.png|thumb|The Doctor in disguise. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Underwater Menace (TV story)|The Underwater Menace]]'')]]
The Second Doctor had a gift for diplomacy and winning others over to his side, enabling him to fool his enemies into thinking they had an advantage over him, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Web of Fear (TV story)|The Web of Fear]]'', ''[[The Wheel in Space (TV story)|The Wheel in Space]]'') trick others into doing what he wished, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Faceless Ones (TV story)|The Faceless Ones]]'', ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'') and convince people into trusting him against their initial judgment, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Enemy of the World (TV story)|The Enemy of the World]]'', ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'') The [[Third Doctor]] even acknowledged that his second incarnation was better with people than he was. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'')
The Second Doctor had a gift for diplomacy and winning others over to his side, enabling him to fool his enemies into thinking they had an advantage over him, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Web of Fear (TV story)|The Web of Fear]]'', ''[[The Wheel in Space (TV story)|The Wheel in Space]]'') trick others into doing what he wished, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Faceless Ones (TV story)|The Faceless Ones]]'', ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'') and convince people into trusting him against their initial judgment, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Enemy of the World (TV story)|The Enemy of the World]]'', ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'') The [[Third Doctor]] even acknowledged that his second incarnation was better with people than he was. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Three Doctors (TV story)|The Three Doctors]]'')


Instinctively knowing whom to trust from what he deduced of their character, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Enemy of the World (TV story)|The Enemy of the World]]'') the Doctor was highly deductive, able to tell if he had fooled someone by observing their reactions to his actions, and could tell someone was hiding information from noticing absences in their behaviour or inconsistencies in their appearance. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Invasion (TV story)|The Invasion]]'') He could also triangulate a person's birthplace by studying their accent, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Enemy of the World (TV story)|The Enemy of the World]]'') and notice and decipher hidden codes in anagrams and acronyms, though it could take some time. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'')
Instinctively knowing whom to trust from what he deduced of their character, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Enemy of the World (TV story)|The Enemy of the World]]'') the Doctor was highly deductive, able to tell if he had fooled someone by observing their reactions to his actions, and could tell someone was hiding information from noticing absences in their behaviour or inconsistencies in their appearance. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Invasion (TV story)|The Invasion]]'') He could also triangulate a person's birthplace by studying their accent, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Enemy of the World (TV story)|The Enemy of the World]]'') and notice and decipher hidden codes in anagrams and acronyms, though it could take some time. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'')


[[File:Masquerade.jpg|thumb|left|The Doctor disguises himself as a Cyberman. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Masquerade (comic story)|Masquerade]]'')]]
He was also a convincing actor, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Highlanders (TV story)|The Highlanders]]'', ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Enemy of the World (TV story)|The Enemy of the World]]'', ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'') easily donning disguises without self-consciousness to age, gender, or even dignity. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Highlanders (TV story)|The Highlanders]]'', ''[[The Underwater Menace (TV story)|The Underwater Menace]]'', ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'')
He was also a convincing actor, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Highlanders (TV story)|The Highlanders]]'', ''[[The Evil of the Daleks (TV story)|The Evil of the Daleks]]'', ''[[The Enemy of the World (TV story)|The Enemy of the World]]'', ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'') easily donning disguises without self-consciousness to age, gender, or even dignity. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Highlanders (TV story)|The Highlanders]]'', ''[[The Underwater Menace (TV story)|The Underwater Menace]]'', ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'')


<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's skills in combat and similar physical prowess-->
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Physically younger than his predecessor, the Second Doctor was able to outrun various pursuers, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Underwater Menace (TV story)|The Underwater Menace]]'', ''[[The Seeds of Death (TV story)|The Seeds of Death]]'') and avoid weapon ammunition fired at him. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Invasion (TV story)|The Invasion]]'') He also learned the arts of [[Venusian aikido]] on [[Venus]]. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Year of the Drex Olympics (audio story)|Year of the Drex Olympics]]'')
Physically younger than his predecessor, the Second Doctor was able to outrun various pursuers, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Underwater Menace (TV story)|The Underwater Menace]]'', ''[[The Seeds of Death (TV story)|The Seeds of Death]]'') and avoid weapon ammunition fired at him. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Invasion (TV story)|The Invasion]]'') He proved adept at [[skiing]], ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Eskimo Joe (comic story)|Eskimo Joe]]'') and also learned the arts of [[Venusian aikido]] on [[Venus]]. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Year of the Drex Olympics (audio story)|Year of the Drex Olympics]]'')
 
He proved a crack shot with a pistol, having the accuracy to disable an armed opponent by shooting the weapon out of their hand, and was also effective with a [[whip]]. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Duellists (comic story)|The Duellists]]'')


<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's telepathy, hypnotism and similar mental prowess-->
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's telepathy, hypnotism and similar mental prowess-->
[[File:DocHypnotizesVana2.jpg|thumb|right|The Doctor puts [[Vana]] in a hypnotic trance. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Krotons (TV story)|The Krotons]]'')]]
The Second Doctor possessed strong telepathic abilities, such as being able to use [[telepathy]] via mental projection to show [[Zoe Heriot]] one of his battles with the Daleks, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Wheel in Space (TV story)|The Wheel in Space]]'') though he found the process tiring. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Dominators (TV story)|The Dominators]]'') He could also restore erased memories by placing his hands on someone's head. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Tales from the Vault (audio story)|Tales from the Vault]]'') He had a strong resistance to other telepaths trying to intrude into his mind, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Mind Robber (TV story)|The Mind Robber]]'', ''[[The Two Doctors (TV story)|The Two Doctors]]'') and was even able to lock his mind in battle with the [[Great Intelligence]] long enough for his friends to act against it. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Abominable Snowmen (TV story)|The Abominable Snowmen]]'')
The Second Doctor possessed strong telepathic abilities, such as being able to use [[telepathy]] via mental projection to show [[Zoe Heriot]] one of his battles with the Daleks, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Wheel in Space (TV story)|The Wheel in Space]]'') though he found the process tiring. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Dominators (TV story)|The Dominators]]'') He could also restore erased memories by placing his hands on someone's head. ([[AUDIO]]: ''[[Tales from the Vault (audio story)|Tales from the Vault]]'') He had a strong resistance to other telepaths trying to intrude into his mind, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Mind Robber (TV story)|The Mind Robber]]'', ''[[The Two Doctors (TV story)|The Two Doctors]]'') and was even able to lock his mind in battle with the [[Great Intelligence]] long enough for his friends to act against it. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Abominable Snowmen (TV story)|The Abominable Snowmen]]'')


He was also shown to be adept with at least a basic level of hypnosis, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Abominable Snowmen (TV story)|The Abominable Snowmen]]'', ''[[The Krotons (TV story)|The Krotons]]'') and was able to reverse the hypnotism of {{Delgado}}. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Dark Path (novel)|The Dark Path]]'') He could even use hypnotism to induce [[amnesia]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Roundheads (novel)|The Roundheads]]'')
He was also shown to be adept with [[hypnosis]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Abominable Snowmen (TV story)|The Abominable Snowmen]]'', ''[[The Krotons (TV story)|The Krotons]]'') being able to overpower the hypnotism of the [[Zagbor]] and then spend days releasing the hypnotised humans, ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Zombies (comic story)|The Zombies]]'') and was able to reverse the hypnotism of {{Delgado}}. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Dark Path (novel)|The Dark Path]]'') He could even use hypnotism to induce [[amnesia]]. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Roundheads (novel)|The Roundheads]]'')


<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's mechanical prowess and similar technological repertoires-->
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's mechanical prowess and similar technological repertoires-->
The Second Doctor was a talented tinkerer, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Web of Fear (TV story)|The Web of Fear]]'') able to create a glass harmonica out of a water glass to pick the sonic lock in his prison cell on [[Vulcan (Invasion of the Daleks)|Vulcan]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'') construct the [[pedal-copter]], ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Attack of the Daleks (comic story)|Attack of the Daleks]]'') fix [[Isobel Watkins]]' [[camera]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Invasion (TV story)|The Invasion]]'') and build a series of [[robot]]s to do housework through various means. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Martha the Mechanical Housemaid (comic story)|Martha the Mechanical Housemaid]]'')
The Second Doctor was a talented tinkerer, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Web of Fear (TV story)|The Web of Fear]]'') and a "dab hand at [[mechanic]]s". ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Death Race (comic story)|Death Race]]'') He was able to create a glass harmonica out of a water glass to pick the sonic lock in his prison cell on [[Vulcan (Invasion of the Daleks)|Vulcan]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Power of the Daleks (TV story)|The Power of the Daleks]]'') construct the [[pedal-copter]], ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Attack of the Daleks (comic story)|Attack of the Daleks]]'') fix [[Isobel Watkins]]' [[camera]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Invasion (TV story)|The Invasion]]'') design and manufacture effective vehicles, ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Return of the Witches (comic story)|Return of the Witches]]'', ''[[Car of the Century (comic story)|Car of the Century]]'') and build a series of [[robot]]s to do chores for him. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Barnabus (comic story)|Barnabus]]'', ''[[Martha the Mechanical Housemaid (comic story)|Martha the Mechanical Housemaid]]'')


<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's medical skillset-->
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<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's piloting-->
While the Doctor could pilot a [[helicopter]] with only minimal success, ([[TV]]: ''[[Fury from the Deep (TV story)|Fury from the Deep]]'') he was more successful when driving a car. ([[TV]]: ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'')
While the Doctor could pilot a [[helicopter]] with only minimal success, ([[TV]]: ''[[Fury from the Deep (TV story)|Fury from the Deep]]'') he was more successful when driving a [[car]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The War Games (TV story)|The War Games]]'') even being able to maneuver around [[dinosaur]]s while driving backwards, ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Monsters from the Past (comic story)|The Monsters from the Past]]'') or a [[motorbike]]. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Action in Exile (comic story)|Action in Exile]]'') He could also ride a [[horse]], ([[COMIC]]: ''[[The Duellists (comic story)|The Duellists]]'') and was able to commandeer ''[[the Dart]]'' to engage the Cybermen in an aerial fight that emerged victorious from. ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Test Flight (comic story)|Test Flight]]'')


<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's cookery-->
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's cookery-->
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's omnilingualism-->
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's omnilingualism-->
While he preferred to use [[English]], the Doctor could speak [[French]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Mind Robber (TV story)|The Mind Robber]]'')
While he preferred to use [[English]], the Doctor could speak [[French]], ([[TV]]: ''[[The Mind Robber (TV story)|The Mind Robber]]'') and also read [[Old High Gallifreyan]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Five Doctors (TV story)|The Five Doctors]]'')


<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's miscellaneous skills-->
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's miscellaneous skills-->
The Doctor had an encyclopaedic knowledge of various laws, and could map the night sky, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Highlanders (TV story)|The Highlanders]]'') create a fire with two sticks, ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Freedom by Fire (comic story)|Freedom by Fire]]'') and donate indefinitely large amounts of blood. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Heart of TARDIS (novel)|Heart of TARDIS]]'') He was instinctively able to keep track of time, even without a way to measure its passing. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Murder Game (novel)|The Murder Game]]'')
The Doctor had an encyclopaedic knowledge of various laws, and could map the night sky, ([[TV]]: ''[[The Highlanders (TV story)|The Highlanders]]'') create a fire with two sticks, ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Freedom by Fire (comic story)|Freedom by Fire]]'') pick a lock with his [[tie-pin]], ([[COMIC]]: ''[[Action in Exile (comic story)|Action in Exile]]'') and donate indefinitely large amounts of blood. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[Heart of TARDIS (novel)|Heart of TARDIS]]'') He was instinctively able to keep track of time, even without a way to measure its passing. ([[PROSE]]: ''[[The Murder Game (novel)|The Murder Game]]'')
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's regenerative abilities-->
<!--Examples following this point focus on this particular incarnation of the Doctor's regenerative abilities-->



Revision as of 08:34, 19 February 2024

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This article needs a big cleanup.

As detailed at Thread:264489, to avoid overly long articles, highly-recurring character pages' biography should only have AT MOST 2-3 sentences per story, not whole paragraphs of plot detail. This page needs a major cleanup in that area.

These problems might be so great that the article's factual accuracy has been compromised. Talk about it here or check the revision history or Manual of Style for more information.

Though outwardly warm, bumbling and clownish, the Second Doctor also had a darker, more cunning aspect to his personality — one which he usually kept hidden in order to carry out his plans. Regenerating when his first incarnation gave in to old age and fatigue following his fight with the Cybermen, this new incarnation was the product of the Doctor's first known regeneration.

He travelled with a number of companions, starting with his previous incarnation's last companions, Ben Jackson and Polly Wright, before adding Highland Scot Jamie McCrimmon to the TARDIS. After a while, Ben and Polly left, to be replaced by Victoria Waterfield, a woman orphaned by the Daleks. In time, she too left, and the Doctor made a new friend in the mentally gifted Zoe Heriot. At some point, he also travelled with his grandchildren, John and Gillian Who.

His adventures came to an end when he called on his people for help with the evil machinations of the War Lords. Though the Time Lords did indeed render assistance, they also condemned him to exile on Earth and a new body for breaking their non-interference policy many times over. The Celestial Intervention Agency was able to stay the execution of this sentence for a while in exchange for the Doctor providing his services to them. During these later years of his life, the Second Doctor variously carried out covert operations for the CIA and lived in luxury and fame in the heart of 1960s London. Eventually, though, Time Lord justice reasserted itself, and the Doctor was indeed forced to regenerate into his third body.

Biography

A day to come

This section's awfully stubby.

Info from The Witch Hunters needs to be added

When the First Doctor was a young boy studying at the Time Lord Academy, Borusa gave him a lecture on regeneration, telling him he would "walk into a storm and a stranger [would] walk back out, and that [the] stranger [would] be [him]." (PROSE: The Day of the Doctor) While living on Gallifrey, there was a rumour that the Doctor was able to glimpse his first seven regenerations during a game of Eighth Man Bound. (PROSE: Christmas on a Rational Planet, Lungbarrow) Susan Foreman predicted to the First Doctor that he would "grow younger" as the years went by. (PROSE: The Longest Story in the World) The Doctor himself would occasionally have premonitions of his future incarnations. (PROSE: A Big Hand for the Doctor)

During a duel with a Soul Pirate, the First Doctor had his left hand severed, but the fact that the heated blade also cauterised the severance prevented the Doctor from needing to regenerate. When haggling for a price on a new hand, the Xing surgeon Aldridge suggested the First Doctor should simply regenerate. During the operation to get the replacement attached, the Doctor twice came close to regenerating. (PROSE: A Big Hand for the Doctor) While observing the Ashtallans on Ashtallah, the First Doctor pondered on the nature of his regeneration. (AUDIO: The Invention of Death)

After returning from his role in the Omega crisis, (TV: The Three Doctors) the First Doctor retained a vague recollection of having met "a clown" while he was away. (PROSE: The Empire of Glass) Shortly after he met Katarina, the First Doctor began to feel he was nearing the end of his life. (PROSE: Scribbles in Chalk) Several months later, while in ancient Egypt, the hot weather bearing down on him caused him to consider that he was no longer as young as he once was, or "would be again". (PROSE: The Mutation of Time) While contemplating his sacrifice to satisfy the Web of Time, the First Doctor reflected on regeneration, and the person he could become when he regenerated. (AUDIO: Men of War)

After his struggle with the Celestial Toymaker, the First Doctor became increasingly unwell from fatigue, (PROSE: The Man in the Velvet Mask) and was aware his loss of strength would lead to his regeneration, something he was afraid of. (PROSE: Ten Little Aliens) After he was joined in his travels by Ben Jackson and Polly Wright, (TV: The Smugglers) the First Doctor was aware that his regeneration was nearing. (PROSE: Ten Little Aliens, Five Card Draw) Throughout all this time, however, he resisted and suppressed the regeneration process. (PROSE: Twice Upon a Time)

When the First Doctor learned that he was diverted from the South Pole by "forces from the future" to stop him from becoming an incarnation that would play a key role in a future conflict, he was informed by the Player that the incarnation in the conflict would not be his immediate successor. (AUDIO: The Plague of Dreams) Shortly before his regeneration, the First Doctor was told of "a few false starts" before he became the Twelfth Doctor. (TV: Twice Upon a Time)

Post-regeneration

Main article: First Doctor's renewal
The Second Doctor emerges from the First Doctor's regeneration. (TV: The Tenth Planet)

After having the "stuffing knocked out of him" fighting the Cybermen in Antarctica in December 1986, (COMIC: Blood and Ice) and after coming to terms with the change, (TV: Twice Upon a Time) the Doctor regenerated on the floor of his TARDIS, his appearance changing into that of a much younger man. (TV: The Tenth Planet) However he would lose all memory of his predecessor initially refusing to regenerate, due to his encounter with his twelfth incarnation putting his timeline out of synch. (TV: Twice Upon a Time) After the regeneration, which he referred to as a "renewal", was completed, the new Doctor found himself suspected as an impostor by Ben, this being due to the Doctor failing to inform his companions of Time Lords' ability to regenerate, while Polly was more ready to believe that he was the same Doctor.

Before he had time to recover, the TARDIS landed on Vulcan, where the Doctor witnessed the murder of an Earth examiner sent to check on the human colony. Posing as the examiner, the Doctor tried to stop the colony's scientist, Lesterson, from reactivating three captured Daleks, but failed. Sceptical about the apparent reformed Daleks serving the colony, the Doctor desperately tried to convince the humans that they were using their colony to produce new Daleks. By the time Lesterson uncovered the truth, it was too late: Thousands of Daleks, now showing their true colours, attacked the colony and killed many colonists. The Doctor and his companions remained to fight alongside the colonists, with the Doctor destroying his foes by using their power against them, and exposing security head Bragen as the murder of the examiner. (TV: The Power of the Daleks)

Immediately after leaving Vulcan, the Doctor, Ben and Polly briefly encountered a "ghost" in the TARDIS, while the Doctor was also avoiding Polly's questions about possibly meeting the Daleks again, (AUDIO: The Light at the End) as he was mourning the loss of his signet ring, until he decided it was replaceable. (COMIC: The Chameleon Factor) Soon after regenerating, the Doctor met Lilith on the Panjistri homeworld, when the Timewyrm had been recuperating in his mind since his regeneration. However, the Timewyrm passed from the Doctor to Lilith. (PROSE: Timewyrm: Apocalypse)

New adventures with Ben and Polly

This section's awfully stubby.

Info from The Curator's Egg, & Lost and Found needs to be added

The Doctor, Polly and Ben came across the body of a terraformer on Pluto's moon, Charon, and prevented a shadow creature from escaping its capture after Professor Magellan and his spacecraft crew set it free by killing the beings who had imprisoned it. (PROSE: Pluto)

The Doctor, Ben and Polly fought a mechanical grasshopper whilst taking a stroll on an alien planet. (PROSE: The Sour Note) On Dorada, they were enslaved by the Masters of Dorada, having their memories altered so they wouldn't remember living anywhere else and being forced to work in their factories. They were freed by two rebel Doradans, but refused to assist them in killing the Masters. Shaken after watching the deaths of the rebels, the Doctor and his companions shut down the machines controlling the Masters' life processes. (PROSE: The Dream Masters)

The trio then visited a planet where blonde-haired people were considered inferior to those with dark hair. The Doctor defended the blonde-haired people to the ruler of the planet, who put them through the Tests of Trefus, which they won and were accepted into society. (COMIC: The Tests of Trefus) On his own, the Doctor played a part in preventing the extinction of the Tryods. (PROSE: The Word of Asiries)

After landing on an Arcturian spaceship under the impression it was hostile, the Doctor was greeted by a peaceful species from Arcturus, who had fled from their own planet after losing the atmosphere. Knowing humanity would consider them a threat and fight them, the Doctor altered their time co-ordinates and transported their fleet to the Ninth Dimension, where they could find a new world to call home. (PROSE: Only a Matter of Time)

The Doctor took Ben and Polly to the idyllic planet Harmony. However, he learnt the population were harvesting visitors for food as the planet's animals had all died out. Barely escaping with his life, the Doctor collected his companions and fled in the TARDIS, not telling Ben and Polly about his gruesome discovery. (PROSE: Planet of Bones)

After exploring the vast emptiness of space, (PROSE: When Starlight Grows Cold) the Doctor, Ben and Polly next travelled to the "planet of Light", before an eclipse that plunged the planet into darkness began. Teaming up with an ancient resident called Igor, the Doctor helped the citizens overcome their fear of the dark, and parked the TARDIS in orbit as the planet fell into darkness. (COMIC: World Without Night)

The Doctor tried and failed to change history by preventing Horatio Nelson from being killed during the Battle of Trafalgar, (PROSE: H.M.S. Tardis) and next fought grave robbers in the tomb of king Pharaoh Tut-Ankh-Amen in Egypt. (PROSE: The King of Golden Death)

The Doctor, Ben and Polly stopped an elemental force called Saint Nick from feeding on the energy of those who believed in Christmas. (PROSE: The Feast)

The Doctor, Ben and Polly then encountered Cat-People and Euterpians in 1994, where Polly's latent psychic powers were nearly used to trap Earth's essence in a small ball before the Doctor trapped one Euterpian in a time loop and tricked the other into destroying itself by triggering its powerful song inside the TARDIS. (PROSE: Invasion of the Cat-People)

The TARDIS crew met Draconians, Alpha Centaurans, and Venusians in a bar, before a strange signal drew them to the Hotel Galaxian, where the Doctor had to prevent the Selachians getting their hands on a lethal computer program that could turn any existing computer system into a weapon against its assigned target. (PROSE: The Murder Game)

On holiday in Hollywood in 1947, the Doctor's investigation into the death of his old acquaintance, Harold Reitman, led to the discovery that producer Leonard De Sande was working with an alien race he called the Selyoids, his plans essentially bringing peace to the world at the cost of making everyone blindly devoted to the Selyoids. Polly briefly fell under the Selyoids' influence, but the Doctor and Ben were able to help her realise what she had become. (PROSE: Dying in the Sun)

The Doctor and his companions next stopped off in San Francisco in 1967, where they joined the search for Jessica Willamy's boyfriend, Denny Glass, and discovered he had been recruited by a shadow government known as the Combine, who were making and spreading Blue Moonbeams, a more dangerous drug than LSD. (PROSE: Wonderland)

The Doctor travelled to Draconia during the reign of the Fifteenth Emperor. He cured a plague from space and was made a noble of Draconia for his actions. (TV: Frontier in Space; PROSE: The Dark Path)

Joined by Jamie

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The Doctor, Ben, and Polly on the cusp of meeting Jamie. (TV: The Highlanders)

Arriving in Scotland after the Battle of Culloden in 1746, the Doctor, Ben and Polly met young Highlander Jamie McCrimmon. After exposing Solicitor Grey as a slave trader, they invited him to come with them in the TARDIS, which he accepted. (TV: The Highlanders)

With Jamie now in tow, they next landed in the lost city of Atlantis, where the Doctor met Professor Zaroff, a well renowned scientist who had created a way to harness plankton into edible food. The Atlantians let him stay under the promise that he would raise their city from the sea. The Doctor realised this plan would destroy the Earth and tried to convince their leaders, to no avail. They managed to foil Zaroff's plan by flooding the city, and thereby saved the Earth. (TV: The Underwater Menace)

Intending to reach Mars the Doctor, instead, landed the TARDIS on the Moon. After enjoying the lack of gravity, the TARDIS crew discovered a giant Moonbase in the next valley. In the Moonbase, they met the base’s commander Hobson, who showed the Doctor and Ben the Gravitron, a giant gravity device used to control the weather on Earth. He also told them the Moonbase was under quarantine because a new disease had broken out among the crew. After discovering the Cybermen were in the base, Hobson gave the Doctor and his friends 24 hours to find the cause of the disease. The Doctor eventually realised that the Moonbase's sugar supplies had been contaminated by the Cybermen, which was the source of the disease.

After a Cyberman appeared, the Doctor and Moonbase crew were taken hostage in the Gravitron room, and the Doctor discovered that the Cybermen’s aim was to use controlled humans to operate the Gravitron and disrupt the weather on Earth. However, the Cybermen were soon overthrown by the Doctor’s companions and their ‘Polly Cocktail’. The controlled humans were then removed and locked in the sick bay. However, soon more Cybermen advanced, en masse towards the Moonbase from across the Moon. To stop them, the Doctor suggested the Gravitorn be lowered so it aimed onto the Moon’s surface, and the Cybermen were deflected, harmlessly, off into deep space. Making a quick exit and back in the TARDIS with his friends, the Doctor decided to use his time scanner to see where they might go next; the screen showed a giant crab’s claw... (TV: The Moonbase)

The travellers then encountered the Macra on an Earth colony. (TV: The Macra Terror)

When Ben, Polly and Jamie accidentally unleashed a swarm of creatures from the Time Vortex with a Ouija Board in another control room, the Doctor exorcised the creatures from Jamie with a "magical spell" from a Gallifreyan book and banished them with the TARDIS' telepathic circuits. (PROSE: Something at the Door)

The Doctor decided to teach Ben and Polly how to pilot the TARDIS, but the TARDIS faltered in the vortex and deposited them in New Houston, a place the Doctor had visited with Dodo Chaplet. When he realised that his old friend, Meg Carvossa, had been murdered, he promptly investigated it, but soon discovered that she wasn't dead. (AUDIO: The Yes Men)

After landing on a planet where human colonists had settled in a fictional recreation of an English village during the Second World War to live in peace away from Earth, the Doctor and his companions were all hypnotised by the Master, who had taken control of the village to perform an experiment of conflict. The Doctor became the head of the Home Guard, Polly and Jamie thought they were married, and Ben was made a sailor coming back from the war. The Doctor, however, immersed himself too deep in the role and started to make contact with the aliens to reach a peaceful solution, proving his good faith by provided them with all information regarding the village's defence system.

The Master tried to stop him by having his companions turn against him, but he was unable to do so because, as a consequence of the Doctor's actions, the aliens attacked earlier than he anticipated. Cuffed in his office, the Doctor was released by Ben, who regained his memory, and he too managed to regain his own. As the Master escaped in his TARDIS, with the intent of returning to look on the results of the conflict, the Doctor was able to stop the fight and have the two groups come to a ceasefire. When the Master came back to look upon the results of the fight, they arrested him and put him to trial for illegal use of mind control, while the Doctor and his companions departed. (AUDIO: The Home Guard)

They later arrived in Vichy France on a train-line, and the Doctor had to abandon the TARDIS to find where Ben and Jamie had been taken by the Milice. (AUDIO: Resistance)

The Doctor, Polly, Ben and Jamie were trapped on a doomed world scheduled for cremation and had to escape the Gathernaut. (AUDIO: The Three Companions: Polly's Story)

When the TARDIS landed in Kent in 1920, it was hit by a train. The Doctor was delighted when he met the Signalman and started to talk about train regulations. When Ben told him that he could see dead navy officers, whilst Jamie saw highland soldiers, the Doctor theorised that they were created due to the grief of the nation and the broken telepathic circuit of the TARDIS. (AUDIO: The Mouthless Dead)

The Doctor was concerned when the TARDIS crashed into something and it shoved them back in time by thirty-five years. When he realised that the Earth they were on was greying and lifeless, he explained to Polly that something was sapping the energy from the Earth. He encountered the Vist and theorised that they saw time like humans saw space. He tried to persuade the Vist that they could lock off a section of time and make people pay a toll for living in that time. He tricked them into going back in time to the Big Bang and they blinked out of existence. (AUDIO: The Forbidden Time)

After landing near the Galacti-bank, the TARDIS got impounded for not paying a parking ticket. Soon after, the Selachians attacked the bank looking for something. The Doctor managed to negotiate the release of some of their hostages and to find a way to stop the Selachians from stealing from the vault. (AUDIO: The Selachian Gambit) They later landed in a casino run by the Sidewinder Syndicate. The Doctor had an illegal device planted on him, which Polly used to escape the Sidewinder Syndicate. (AUDIO: House of Cards)

The TARDIS landed in Kenga, Singapore during World War II, where the Doctor was taken to the nearby hotel by Clive Freeman. When both Polly and Jamie saw a vision of the Grim Reaper, he went looking for it and accidentally set off Jamie's trap. Whilst examining a piece of alien technology, he was visited by the Forsaken. After Maggie Bishop was killed, Polly helped the Doctor search for clues. (AUDIO: The Forsaken)

The Doctor allowed Polly to pilot the TARDIS to their next destination, which was supposed to be Russia in the 18th century, but they landed in 1942 instead, shortly before a battle between the German army and the Soviet air force. The Doctor was arrested by Nadia Vasney. Later, when he went to go fetch the TARDIS, the Doctor and Jamie were used as target practice. They discovered that the TARDIS had been taken by the Germans but managed to get it back. The Doctor worked out that Tatiana Kregki was impersonating Polly, but despite this, the TARDIS team still helped her stand up to Nadia. (AUDIO: The Night Witches)

The Doctor landed the TARDIS on a strange asteroid in an underground city that he thought abandoned. To avoid being arrested by Chatura Sharma, he posed as an Earth Examiner to help in investigating their troubles and learned that what was being mined on the planet was an ingredient for a weapon. He thought there was something living on the asteroid that didn't want the humans there, and after communicating with it, he was kidnapped. The Doctor and his friends were taken to a cell deep under water, where he learnt that the reason the creatures creatures were contacting the humans was because they had foreseen a catastrophe. (AUDIO: The Outliers)

Planning to take Ben and Polly home, the Doctor landed the TARDIS in the 1860s instead of the 1960s. Shortly after, the TARDIS disappeared. but the Doctor traced it to Josiah Morton's museum. He hoped to get it back once Josiah had examined it. When Josiah was almost arrested, he helped to foil the policeman's reasoning. He was interested in a strange necklace in the collection which had a suspicious story associated with it. He was later attacked by Dexter. (AUDIO: The Morton Legacy)

After the TARDIS was captured by an insectoid species that resembled playing cards, the Doctor, Jamie, Ben and Polly were tasked with capturing thirteen of the insectoids, and choosing the correct one on threat of death. When the Doctor deduced the correct one to give them, he and his friends were allowed to reclaim the TARDIS. (COMIC: Card Conundrum)

Next, the group met and defeated the Chameleons at Gatwick Airport on 20 July 1966. After realising that they had arrived home on the same day they had originally left, Ben and Polly parted company with the Doctor and Jamie, opting to remain on Earth in their own time. (TV: The Faceless Ones)

The Human Factor incident

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After the TARDIS was stolen at the behest of the Daleks, the Doctor and Jamie were lured by Edward Waterfield who transported them back to 2 June 1866. Waterfield and his colleague Theodore Maxtible recruited the Doctor to help their experiment to isolate the Human Factor, with Waterfield's daughter Victoria being held hostage by the Daleks. Using Jamie as an unwilling subject, the Doctor successfully identified the factor and implanted it into three Daleks who he named Alpha, Beta and Omega. With the experiment a success, the group was forced to travel to the Dalek City on Skaro where the Doctor confronted the Dalek Emperor. The Emperor revealed they'd tricked the Doctor into identifying the Dalek Factor to spread on humans and the Doctor in turn tricked the Daleks into believing he'd been converted by the Dalek Factor. With the three humanised Daleks causing unrest, the Doctor suggested that all Daleks be sent through a Dalek Factor conversion arch, having switched it to pass on the Human Factor instead. This instigated a civil war on Skaro, during which Edward was killed saving the Doctor from a Black Dalek. Promising to look after his daughter, the Doctor and Jamie left with Victoria, believing the Daleks had met their "final end". (TV: The Evil of the Daleks)

The Doctor and Jamie then introduced Victoria to the TARDIS and its console room as they depart Skaro. The Doctor also tells Victoria his age in Earth terms, and suggests Jamie help her find a new set of clothes. (TV: The Tomb of the Cybermen)

Looking after Victoria

The Doctor and Jamie welcome Victoria aboard the TARDIS. (TV: The Tomb of the Cybermen)

With Jamie and Victoria alongside him, the Doctor aided an archaeological team on Telos in opening a Cyber-tomb, unable to resist his curiosity. To his horror Eric Klieg awakened the Cybermen and the Cyber-Controller from their five-hundred year slumber, but the Doctor and Jamie sealed them away again. The Doctor electrified the entrance, the hatch leading to the tombs and the symbolic logic controls to prevent anyone else from entering. (TV: The Tomb of the Cybermen)

Returning Victoria to her original time, the Doctor was introduced to the recluse Sir Charles Westbrooke, who had reanimated six dead people in an experiment to bring his wife back to life. However, he was killed when it was revealed that he was his wife's killer, and as the animated corpses rampaged, the Doctor cooked up a formula, filled a rifle with tranquilliser darts and defeated the deceased with Victoria's aid. (PROSE: The Age of Ambition)

When the TARDIS landed in Sumatra, the travellers found the Great Space Elevator, a method of reaching a space station without using rockets, and arrived just as the space station lost power. When the Doctor found a way to get to the space station to discover the cause of the problem, the crew claimed that there was nothing wrong, but a member of the crew told the Doctor that the crew was infected by static electricity, which allowed the humans to be conductive. (AUDIO: The Great Space Elevator)

When the TARDIS landed in a museum, the Doctor, Jamie and Victoria were attacked by robotic yetis, but Jamie was able to gain control of them with a pyramid of glowing orbs. (PROSE: Dr. Second)

Reunited with Edward Grainger, the Doctor discovered a slave race called the Virtors had been transporting New York Supplementary Education Institution students back to their home world of Virtus. He prevented them from capturing Victoria, Jamie and Edward, but accidentally fell into their portal to Virtus himself. Trapped on Virtus for a long period of time, the Doctor led a slave rebellion and, eventually, led the ageing humans back home, merely seconds after he had originally left from Earth's perspective. (PROSE: The Lost)

The Doctor took Jamie and Victoria to an alien arena to watch a fight between soldiers and a dragon. However, the Mantis mistook the travellers for pirates and threw the Doctor into the arena to fight the dragon, where he played a tune on his recorder to enthral it and set it upon the audience, who fled. (PROSE: Valley of Dragons)

After escaping the destruction of a civilisation in the Uranium Universe, (COMIC: Atoms Infinite) the Doctor and Jamie were taken prisoner by the Cogwens on Pendant, but they were rescued by Victoria and a gang of outcasts, just in time for the Doctor to stop the Cogwens from stealing the TARDIS. (PROSE: World of Ice)

Attempting to bypass the anti-theft protocols in the TARDIS that allegedly prevented him from controlling the TARDIS himself, the Doctor accidentally disabled so many security protocols that the ship materialised in a pocket dimension containing the displaced town of Lychburg. The pocket reality prevented the Doctor, Jamie and Victoria from returning to the TARDIS. Determining what they were dealing with, the Doctor unintentionally disrupted the control of the entity manipulating the pocket dimension when a doctor who was trying to plant a control device in the Doctor's neck accidentally stabbed himself in the gut. After the Doctor tracked the controlling entity to a prototype TARDIS, Jamie killed the controller, the last Gallifreyan Woprat in existence, and unintentionally caused the final collapse of the pocket dimension. The Doctor then regained access to the TARDIS when someone modified the dimensional settings from inside the ship, but this gave him time to implement a plan and evacuate Lychburg's entire population into the TARDIS and take them to safety once the pocket dimension collapsed. (PROSE: Heart of TARDIS)

The TARDIS landed on Amyryndaa where the travellers joined a survey team investigating why the population had become extinct. When parts of the team kept dying, the Doctor sent his companions to safety in the TARDIS but they disobeyed and came to his aid, helping him determine the people of the planet and archaeologists had been killed by a Story-Form. (AUDIO: The Story of Extinction)

The Doctor is used as bait by the warrior monks at Det-Sen Monastery in an attempt to trap the Yeti. (TV: The Abominable Snowmen)

Arriving in Tibet, the Doctor sought to return the Holy Ghanta to Det-Sen Monastery that he'd been gifted on his previous visit. Initially accused of attacking British explorer Professor Edward Travers, the Doctor found the mountain was under siege by Robot Yeti. He discovered they were controlled by a Great Intelligence which had been possessing his old friend Padmasambhava for centuries. He confronted the Intelligence as it manifested, enabling Jamie and Travers to destroy Padmasambhava's equipment, banishing the Intelligence and freeing his old friend so he could finally die. (TV: The Abominable Snowmen)

They subsequently landed on Earth again in a new Ice Age near Brittanicus Base where the Doctor helped the crew stop their ioniser overloading, impressing their commander Clent. One of the crew found an Ice Warrior buried in the ice, who awoke and took Victoria hostage however Clent refused to let the Doctor leave to find her whilst he was needed for the work on the ioniser. After devising a calculation the Doctor went in search of Victoria and was captured by the Ice Warriors at their crashed ship. He and Victoria unsuccessfully tried to stop the Ice Warriors firing a sonic cannon at the base, but devised a way to use it to immobilise them when they marched on the base. He returned to the base as the Warriors retreated and helped persuade the crew to fire the ioniser, destroying the Ice Warriors. (TV: The Ice Warriors)

Missions with Jamie

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The Doctor, Jamie and Victoria landed on a human spaceship where they aided a Gallifreyan calling himself "Constable Pavo of Chapter 9" with his investigation of a nearby artificial black hole. According to one account, While Victoria stayed behind with him, Pavo sent the Doctor on a mission to Space Station Camera to meet with Joinson Dastari, but they fled when they saw the Station attacked by Sontarans. Instead, the Doctor and Jamie spent weeks travelling on their way back to pick up Victoria, during which time they visited the City of Owls and helped the people of McKenzie. The Doctor and Jamie returned to the ship they departed from before they actually first arrived on the ship, and found the real Pavo, helping her to defeat the Monk, after which Pavo agreed not to arrest the Doctor, but erased the Doctor and his friends' memory of the event nonetheless. (AUDIO: The Black Hole)

Final adventures with Victoria

The Doctor befriended Stuart Mallory, a distinguished naturalist, when he assisted him in ordering from a takeaway, and invited him, Jamie and Victoria to dine with him. (PROSE: The Last Emperor)

The Doctor visited East Ridge, where he helped a farmer called Thomas Watson to protect his family's farm from ruthless New York businessman, John Glassman, turning the whole town against the Watsons. The Doctor, Jamie and Victoria managed to expose John's dishonesty to the town's sheriff, which saved Watson's farm and place within the town. (PROSE: The Farmer's Story)

Whilst Jamie slept in the TARDIS, the Doctor took Victoria to a pub, where he annoyed locals with his tales of Saint Nicholas. When sailors from Bari arrived, the Doctor got them drunk, snuck onto their ship and retrieved the bones of Saint Nicholas, which they had just stolen, before burying them in the North Pole. (PROSE: Saint Nicholas's Bones)

The Doctor's first adventure with Colonel Lethbridge-Stewart. (TV: The Web of Fear)

The Doctor set the TARDIS controls for both his friend William Shakespeare's house in Stratford and the Pan-Galactic Games on Alpha Centauri, as Victoria had wanted to see how her ancestors had lived in the late 16th century and Jamie had wanted some excitement and spectacle, reasoning that he stood a fifty-fifty chance of arriving at one or the other. Instead, to their disappointment, they materialised in Australia in 2018. The Doctor briefly wondered if something was causing the TARDIS to keep coming back to Earth, but dismissed the thought. (PROSE: Timewyrm: Apocalypse) The Doctor was drawn into a plan to impersonate his double, Ramón Salamander, and uncover his plans to become dictator of Earth. He succeeded, and Salamander was sucked out into the Time Vortex when he tried to escape in the TARDIS. (TV: The Enemy of the World)

In 1960s London, the Doctor discovered that the Great Intelligence had returned, and was using the Yeti to take over the London Underground. During this conflict, the Doctor made the acquaintance of Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart. The Doctor tried to drain the Intelligence's mind, but interference from his friends resulted in the Intelligence being banished into space instead. (TV: The Web of Fear)

Before departing London, the Doctor discovered a robot duplicate of Edward Waterfield had been created by the Daleks to exact revenge on him for destroying them in the 19th century. (PROSE: Father Figure)

Aided by his other incarnations and their companions, the Second Doctor and Victoria helped Dan Dare to fight off the Mekon and his army of Treens, Daleks, Ice Warriors, Cybermen, Sontarans and Draconians in 1991. (COMIC: Comic Relief Comic)

After the TARDIS landed once more on Vortis, where the Doctor defeated the "seed" of the Animus he had encountered in his previous incarnation, (PROSE: Twilight of the Gods) the TARDIS crew travelled near the Darkheart. They encountered the war-like Veltrochni and Koschei, an old friend of the Doctor's from Gallifrey, travelling with Ailla. However, the temptation posed by the Darkheart device proved too much for Koschei, and the revelation that his companion Ailla was a spy destroyed the last traces of good in him. After he proclaimed himself "the Master", the Doctor had to trap him in a black hole. (PROSE: The Dark Path)

After a holiday in Grasmere, (PROSE: The Hollow Men) the Doctor, Jamie and Victoria travelled to Venus, where the Doctor learned Venusian aikido (AUDIO: Voyage to Venus) from "a many-armed glowing-eyed being in a misty cavern". (PROSE: Endgame)

Making an emergency landing due to colliding with a meteor, the Doctor, Victoria and Jamie found themselves in China around 200 BC. Shortly afterwards, they encountered a pile of dead bodies, which disgusted the Doctor. He was initially thought to be be a spy and was taken to the Emperor Qin Shi Huang. The Emperor wanted him in order to find the secret of eternal life. Victoria found him while he was biding his time as he had worked out that the Emperor was going to die soon anyway. Escaping the palace, he learnt that the Emperor wanted the TARDIS. (AUDIO: The Emperor of Eternity)

Back on 20th century Earth, the Doctor discovered that a weed creature was taking over a Euro Sea Gas refinery, and used amplified sound to destroy it. Craving peace and quiet, Victoria left the TARDIS crew to live with Frank and Maggie Harris. (TV: Fury from the Deep)

Shortly after leaving Victoria behind, the Doctor and Jamie visited the Paradox Jungles on the planet Zeiton where they stopped the hollow wraiths. (AUDIO: Jamie)

Solo adventures

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The Doctor on Zaos (PROSE: Daleks Invade Zaos)

After leaving Jamie in 1967 Scotland, (COMIC: Invasion of the Quarks) the Doctor returned to Zaos, which was being invaded by the Asymmetrical Daleks. With the aid of Commander Clay of the Sky Ray Space Raiders, he recruited the Astrobeetles to assist the Zaons in destroying the Daleks. (PROSE: Daleks Invade Zaos)

Escaping from a cosmic whirlpool in which the stinging butterflies of Phlok had trapped his TARDIS, the Doctor met the Guerners on Rimba as they were preparing to evacuate the planet and colonise another one. He particularly befriended one Guerner, by the name of Swee. (PROSE: The Sleeping Beast)

The Second Doctor was taken out of his timezone by the Father of Time to partake in "the Final Test". He was brought to a TARDIS control console room from his future alongside his third, fourth, fifth and sixth incarnations, and told that Time had disassembled the control console and set the TARDIS on a course for the heart of the sun, with the Doctors' only hope being to reassemble the control console. Unable to achieve the task due to their bickering, the Doctors were saved when the First Doctor united them in reversing time itself with their pooled temporal powers. As the TARDIS escaped the sun, the Father of Time congratulated the Doctor and sent them back to their own times. (COMIC: The Test of Time)

The Second Doctor was summoned by his first incarnation, who required the aid of one of his future incarnations to escape a castle in medieval England, where he had been entrapped by knights thinking he was holding Lady Mary hostage in his TARDIS. After the Fifth Doctor lost the game that chose who would face the knights, he explained the situation to them and the Doctors were permitted to leave. (PROSE: Five Card Draw)

The Second Doctor arrived in his TARDIS to assist his other selves during the Fall of Gallifrey. (TV: The Day of the Doctor)

After bumping into her due to being distracted an airship, the Doctor assisted a woman named Mabel by carrying her shopping bags to her house. During the journey, Mabel voiced her frustrations with life, and the Doctor told her that she should repay his kindness to her by doing something that makes somebody else smile. (PROSE: Pass It On)

The Second Doctor teamed up with all of his other incarnations to save Gallifrey from destruction at the end of the Last Great Time War, (TV: The Day of the Doctor) even joining them on the surface of the planet to save people from natural disasters that were occurring as a result of their attempt to shift it into another dimension. Shortly after meeting for tea with his other incarnations to celebrate in the Under Gallery, (PROSE: The Day of the Doctor) the Second Doctor lost all memory of the events due to the timelines not being synchronised. (TV: The Day of the Doctor)

Infiltrating the Blenhim ranks, the Doctor witnessed the Blenhim forces destroy every planet that refused to submit to their domination, and challenged the head Blenhim for the rule of the army. Winning the stand-off by using his laser-ring to destroy a local rock formation, but gaining a scar on his chest from the Blenhim's leader's laser eye vision, the Doctor was accepted as the new leader by the Blenhim. With his new powers, the Doctor instructed the Blenhim to fly east until given further orders, causing all of their forces to fly directly into a sun. (COMIC: The Mark of Terror)

Through a hypercube, the Doctor meets a future companion prematurely. (COMIC: The Lost Dimension)

Along with seven other incarnations, the Second Doctor became trapped in the Void when a Type 1 TARDIS from Ancient Gallifrey began to attack and devour the universe. He tried to avert the disaster by sending a hypercube to Alice Obiefune while the Eleventh Doctor was working on the early TARDISes with Rassilon, but his plan was unsuccessful. He and the others were able to form a dimensional bridge to allow the Eighth Doctor to escape, and were then joined by the War Doctor, followed shortly by the ninth, tenth and twelfth incarnations, who ventured into the Type 1 TARDIS. Forming a plan with the trapped Eleventh Doctor, the Doctors joined their TARDISes to pacify the Type 1 into a peaceful state and return the universe to normal. (COMIC: The Lost Dimension)

The Second Doctor was taken out of time by the Tenth Doctor, who brought him and the First Doctor to the planet Henlen, where their third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth incarnations were trying to correct the temporal paradox caused by the Sirens of Time when they sabotaged the first Gallifreyan experiment for time travel. While the others piloted the TARDIS prototype used in the experiment, the Second Doctor remained with his first and tenth incarnations to make sure the backlash from their operation did not aggravate things. (AUDIO: Collision Course)

John and Gillian

The Doctor with his grandchildren, John and Gillian. (COMIC: The Trodos Ambush)

After the Doctor was reunited with his two grandchildren, John and Gillian Who, he saved every planet in the universe from being attacked by missiles that had been programmed by the Extortioner in his scheme to hold every government in the universe to ransom. (COMIC: The Extortioner)

Taking John and Gillian in the TARDIS with him, the Doctor planned to sign a peace treaty with the Trods of Trodos. However, he found that he had been lured into a trap by the Daleks. Escaping before they could kill him, the Doctor allied with surviving Trods to free Trodos from Dalek control. Leaving the planet, the Doctor swore that he would never flee from the Daleks again, and that in their next encounter they would meet on his terms. (COMIC: The Trodos Ambush)

Leaving Trodos, the Doctor found a Dalek ship was chasing his TARDIS through the time vortex, which eventually forced him to return to the 22nd century at the height of the Dalek Empire. He disguised himself as a Dalek and foiled Dalek Supreme's plot to create thousands of Daleks. When he was detected, the Doctor used his disguise to trick all Daleks into destroying each other, before making a quick exit in the TARDIS with his grandchildren. However, the Dalek Supreme survived the attack, and swore revenge on the Doctor. (COMIC: The Doctor Strikes Back)

Not long after their encounter with the Daleks, the Doctor and his grandkids returned to 1960s Earth and stopped the Zagbors from converting humanity into human robots. (COMIC: The Zombies)

Attempting to test his newly invented ray gun, the Doctor landed his TARDIS in a swamp, where he and his grandchildren were hunted down by spiders, under the command of the Master of Spiders. (COMIC: Master of Spiders)

Taking John and Gillian to another alien planet, the Doctor re-encountered the Daleks and destroyed the Exterminator, a powerful weapon capable of destroying Earth with a single blast, instead using the weapon to destroy a spate of Dalek saucers. (COMIC: The Exterminator)

The Doctor invented a robot named Barnabus to do chores around the TARDIS. On one planet, Barnabus saved the Doctor, John and Gillian from a gun crew who had mistaken them for invaders. (COMIC: Barnabus)

The Doctor invented an exploration truck and decided to test it out on a jungle planet where they again encountered Daleks and destroyed them. (COMIC: Jungle Adventure)

The Doctor next took John and Gillian to the Grand Museum in 1960s New York, where they worked with the Military to destroy three dinosaurs. (COMIC: The Monsters from the Past)

The Doctor and his TARDIS later became the god of a South American tribe after he, John and Gillian saved the tribe from warriors and their ruthless god, Madar. (COMIC: The TARDIS Worshippers)

The Doctor and his grandchildren became caught up in Space War Two in the 30th century, which was being fought between humanity and the robots of Veno. Although he couldn't end the war, the Doctor stopped a vengeful renegade human, Arborge Quince, from creating his own army of robots to attack Earth. (COMIC: Space War Two)

He next took John and Gillian to a cricket match in Egypt in 1880, where the TARDIS was stolen by Arabs working for Mahadi. He failed to stop them attacking a British outpost when he was taken prisoner by the British on suspicion of being a spy. Escaping, he retrieved his grandchildren and left in the TARDIS. (COMIC: Egyptian Escapade)

The Doctor arrived on a planet where he decided to test out his pedal-copter. They again encountered the Daleks and defeated them. (COMIC: Attack of the Daleks)

The Doctor discovered that the TARDIS was being followed by a time machine built by the Trods. They went to prehistoric Earth, where the Doctor used mammoths to destroy the Trods' power supply. (COMIC: Pursued by the Trods)

The Doctor investigated a crashed ship on Minot and discovered a small group of Cybermen had possession of a bomb that they planned to use to destroy Earth. Setting the bomb to destruct earlier than intended, the Doctor accidentally became trapped on the Cybermen's ship as it hurtled through space. Luckily, he managed to contact his grandchildren on Minot and escaped in the TARDIS before the ship exploded and killed all the Cybermen aboard. (COMIC: The Coming of the Cybermen)

In Arizona, the Doctor was kidnapped by foreign agents trying to wreck the testing on American planes. However, he managed to escape by crashing a jet packed with explosives into their base, killing the agents. (COMIC: The Faithful Rocket Pack)

The Doctor, John and Gillian next saved Professor Gnat from the Cybermen by killing them with flowers with a scent that proved toxic with Cybermats. (COMIC: Flower Power)

The Doctor, John and Gillian visited Vargo, where witches throughout the universe held a gathering. The Doctor scared off most the witches by posing as the wizard Omega, and then destroyed the Grand Witch. (COMIC: The Witches)

Dr. Who playing his recorder. (GAME: TV Comic's Counter Game [+]Loading...["TV Comic's Counter Game (1968 game)"])

At some point, Dr. Who played his recorder, with the Diddymen potentially having a break from their hike to listen. (GAME: TV Comic's Counter Game [+]Loading...["TV Comic's Counter Game (1968 game)"]) "Tardis" was once present near a castle when Basil Brush went rent collecting, with him potentially having to go back the way he came to avoid it. (GAME: Basil Brush goes Rent Collecting [+]Loading...["Basil Brush goes Rent Collecting (game)"])

Taking John and Gillian to Zebadee, a planet were higher intellects went to compare studies, the Doctor had a private meeting with the fortune teller, Madam Rosa, where he learned that his next trip in the TARDIS would involve deadly robots. Deciding that his excursions in the TARDIS were becoming too dangerous, the Doctor enrolled John and Gillian at Zebadee University, telling his reluctant grandchildren that it was to improve their education. (COMIC: Invasion of the Quarks)

Travelling with Jamie again

This section's awfully stubby.

Info from Twin Piques, The Revolutionaries, Seven to One & Deleted Scenes needs to be added

The Doctor and Jamie engage the Quark invasion force. (COMIC: Invasion of the Quarks)

After the Doctor successfully convinced John and Gillian to stay on Zebadee, the TARDIS brought him to a Scottish castle in 1967, where the Doctor found the Quarks preparing to launch an invasion. Having been spotted, the Doctor retreated into the castle, where he was saved from a Quark by Jamie, who had come to investigate the flying saucer in the castle. Coming up with a plan, the Doctor and Jamie commandeered the flying saucer and opened fire on the Quark invasion force, causing the Quarks to destroy themselves in the confusion. Returning to destroy the Quarks at the castle, Jamie and the Doctor both agreed to accompany each other in the TARDIS again. (COMIC: Invasion of the Quarks)

The Doctor and Jamie visited Oliver's Inn in 1968 where Constable Bernard Whittam was celebrating his last day before retirement. The Doctor discovered that Bernard was haunted by a wheezing, groaning noise in his head. The Doctor gradually revealed that Bernard, his family, friends and Emma Clarke were not real but the creation of the TARDIS' chameleon circuit from when the ship disguised itself as a police box in 1963. The Doctor switched them off as Bernard and Emma walked away from the TARDIS hand in hand. (AUDIO: The Last Day at Work)

With Jamie by his side, (PROSE: The Colony of Lies) the Doctor was involved in a battle with the Terrible Zodin that involved multiple incarnations of himself, though he lost his memory of the adventure after Zodin used "mind rubbers" on him and his other incarnation. (PROSE: Cold Fusion)

Landing on Gano after a war on the planet was lost, the Doctor and Jamie were attacked by giant wasps, but were able to evade them in a trench. Utilising a discarded anti-aircraft gun, they were able to shoot down a wasp, until the swarm changed formation and tackled the gun over, but exposed an underground city to the Doctor and Jamie in the process. Escaping into the city, the duo were confronted by the Quarks, but were able to avoid them using some old scooters, until they came upon a dead end. However, the wasps arrived to attack the Quarks and the battle between them enabled the Doctor and Jamie to make a break for the exit. After a close encounter with a wasp near the exit, which resulted in the creature's demise, the Doctor and Jamie made it to the TARDIS and left. (COMIC: The Killer Wasps)

After the TARDIS was forced to materialise by an explosion in 1970 Antarctica, the Doctor and Jamie discovered that aliens were threatening to detonate explosions to throw Earth off its axis. After evading a group of Ice Apes, the Doctor and Jamie followed the aliens' craft down a cave, and, after using dynamite to damage the craft, manoeuvred the aliens into a fight with the Ice Apes. After the Ice Apes emerged victorious, the Doctor disarmed the aliens' explosives and, from within the TARDIS, hacked into the world television networks to announce the aliens' defeat to the world. (COMIC: Ice Cap Terror)

Visiting Atkya at the time of the Yelyahj Peace Festival, the Doctor and Jamie saw the Atkyans experience changes to their history, until the Atkyans were brought to extinction by a biological agent accidentally introduced to them by a future incarnation of the Doctor. (PROSE: One Step Forward, Two Steps Back)

Landing on the edge of a jungle, the TARDIS was buried in a rockslide caused by the Quarks, and the Doctor and Jamie were forced to seek shelter from their flying saucer in the jungle. Outrunning the Quarks to a jungle clearing operation, the Doctor and Jamie took control of a bulldozer and an excavator to battle the Quarks directly. Winning the duel with the bulldozer, the Doctor and Jamie made to leave, but were ambushed by the jungle natives enslaved by the Quarks. Forced behind the bulldozer's shovel, the Doctor removed the machine's silencer to frighten the jungle animals into stampeding onto the Quarks. Using the bulldozer to free the TARDIS, which had sustained no damage, the Doctor and Jamie departed the jungle. (COMIC: Jungle of Doom)

While he repaired the TARDIS' time rotor, the Doctor sent Jamie out to find gold, mercury and Zeiton-7. When he returned, Jamie had been given the Necronomicon by the Master, which transported him and the Doctor to the Great Desolation. There, the Doctor discovered that the Master had been working with the Archons, who wanted to seize a TARDIS to attack the Time Lords. After they repaired the TARDIS, the Doctor defeated the Archon by playing his recorder whilst Jamie played the bagpipes, which confused and destroyed them. (PROSE: The Nameless City)

When the TARDIS landed in the Time Temple, the Doctor and Jamie were greeted by Father Time, who decided they needed to be punished for their time travel, and rendered them unconscious. The Doctor awoke to find himself tied to a pendulum lowering him into boiling oil, and Jamie sealed within a giant hour glass. Noticing a loose bolt, the Doctor increased the strain of the pendulum until it collapsed on itself, and also landed on the hour glass, freeing Jamie as well. With Father Time after them, the Doctor took shelter in a cuckoo clock, but Father Time cornered him there. The Doctor was saved by Jamie's intervention, but broke his ankle in the process. Whilst Father Time summoned robots after them, the Doctor was defended by Jamie, who inadvertently damaged the robots enough to set them on Father Time, giving him and the Doctor the chance to escape the Time Temple. (COMIC: Father Time)

The Doctor and Jamie were present in London during the coronation of Elizabeth II on 2 June 1953. In order to hide from what Jamie called a "devil beastie", the pair dressed as royal guards outside Buckingham Palace, only to be caught by the beastie, who was itself dressed as a guard. They were saved when the beastie was subdued by Eva De Ville. (COMIC: Where's the Doctor?)

After the Doctor completed constructing a mechanical housemaid named Martha, the TARDIS landed in 1971 New York City, where the Doctor and Jamie went to see C. G. Slattery of the Inventions International Company, who was impressed enough with Martha to put the Doctor on nationwide television to sell hundreds of thousands of Marthas. After a few weeks of successful business, however, the Marthas were taken over by the Quarks to be used as an invasion force. Though the Doctor was able to bring the Marthas back under his control, the Quarks soon arrived to take New York City by force, but the Doctor was able to turn the Marthas savage again to fight back against the Quarks. When the Quarks finally retreated, the Doctor was hailed as a hero, and even nominated for President of the United States. (COMIC: Martha the Mechanical Housemaid)

Zoe joins the duo

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Info from Foreign Devils, Undercurrents, Mercury, Little Doctors, & Outstanding Balance needs to be added

The Doctor and Jamie fought the Cybermen on Space Station W3 and one of the space station's crew, scientist Zoe Heriot, stowed away aboard the TARDIS. The Doctor tried to dissuade her by using a thought scanner to show her how he ended the Daleks, (TV: The Wheel in Space) but the Daleks frightened her more than he had anticipated, and he apologetically conceded that the TARDIS could "use another genius aboard". (AUDIO: Fear of the Daleks)

The Doctor, Jamie and Zoe visited a space ship that was being attacked by an Alvarian space wyrm, but the Doctor sedated her by playing his recorder. (COMIC: The Forgotten)

Forced to land on a planet orbiting a pulsar in 2724 after two beams of energy from a pulsar collided with the TARDIS, the Doctor, Jamie and Zoe found themselves helping Dr. Sophie Topolovic and her crew rebelling an incursion on Topolovic's base, which was studying the altercations to time on the planet. Staying behind in the control room to let the others escape to the surface, the Doctor searched for another way out. In the base's observation room, the Doctor was told by a future incarnation via the psychic paper to return to the control room and save Dr. Topolovic's research, and discovered that the attackers were the Quiet Ones, the inhabitants of the ancient city Topolovic was studying. With this information, the Doctor spent several years negotiating with the Quiet Ones, until a truce could be formed. After helping the Quiet Ones repair the base and build a better communication device, the Doctor then retrieved Jamie, Zoe and Topolovic's team, with only a few moments passing for them, to inform them of the newfound peace. (AUDIO: Shadow of Death)

Arriving on the abandoned Skybase in 2069, the Doctor was shot while trying to escape, nearly regenerating before an injection of Shiner DNA stabilised his rewiring DNA and kept him alive long enough for his body to heal naturally, although it took six months for him to come out of the subsequent coma. Aware from his link to the Shiners that the Myloki were returning to Earth, the Doctor assisted in the search for the immortal captains Karl Taylor and Grant Matthews. Taylor was killed after Jamie accidentally released him. The Doctor subsequently accompanied Matthews to confront the Myloki, allowing Matthews to join them as he speculated that the Myloki, far from being evil, simply couldn't understand humanity and required Matthews' perspective. (PROSE: The Indestructible Man)

The travellers landed on the asteroid of Lavonia, where a peace conference was held to end the long war between the Xantha Empire and the Tibari Republic. The Doctor, Jamie and Zoe were captured by Atrika, a Tibari scientist in disagreement with the decision of his president, and allied himself with the Daleks to assassinate her, having built a machine, powered by a Dalek crystal, that allowed him to project someone's avatar and control their actions to carry out the mission. Atrika forced Zoe into the machine, and sent her to assassinate the president, but the Daleks forced Atrika to project the Doctor too before the mission was accomplished. With the Doctor's help, Zoe was able to resist Atrika's influence.

The Doctor and Zoe then persuaded Atrika that the Daleks intended to disrupt the conference and destroy both Xantha and Tibari, and convinced him to rebel against them. Atrika attacked the Daleks and was shot, but, before dying, he managed to project his own mind inside the Daleks, and made them feel horror and disgust for her crimes, eventually destroying them. The Doctor and Zoe were then brought back to reality by Jamie and alerted both Xantha and Tibari of the imminent danger. (AUDIO: Fear of the Daleks)

The Land of Fiction

On the planet Dulkis, the Doctor, Jamie and Zoe fought the Dominators and their robotic servants, the Quarks, (TV: The Dominators) and had an adventure in the Land of Fiction, (TV: The Mind Robber) where the Doctor, Jamie and Zoe were approached by "the famous Hat Collector", who asked for the Doctor's stovepipe hat, and dematerialised when the Doctor gave it to her. (COMIC: Time & Time Again)

The Doctors meet Omega. (TV: The Three Doctors)

From the Temporal Control Room, the Doctor was spotted on a primitive planet. (PROSE: The Three Doctors) Immediately returning to the Land of Fiction in an attempt to retrieve his recorder, the Doctor discovered a Time Lord named Goth disguised as Lemuel Gulliver. Goth claimed a great crisis was about to befall Time Lord civilisation, and persuaded the Doctor to help his successor stop Omega from ripping reality apart. (PROSE: Future Imperfect) The Doctor was time-scooped to his TARDIS in the future, where he apparently reunited with the Brigadier and his other UNIT friends. He also encountered Jo Grant, a future travelling companion, and met with his third incarnation. Ultimately, the two incarnations of the Doctor had difficulties working with each other, but were able to work together with the help of the First Doctor, who communicated with them from a time eddy, and when they and their UNIT friends were transported to an antimatter universe. The two Doctors, despite their differences, successfully thwarted Omega's escape, at the cost of the Second Doctor's recorder. With the crisis resolved, the Second Doctor said his farewells and was returned to his rightful place in time (TV: The Three Doctors) with his memory of the event erased from his mind. (PROSE: Briefly Noted)

After he, Jamie and Zoe fought the Bookworms at the Collection, (PROSE: Original Sin) the Doctor realised the absence of his recorder, and went to a music shop on Amber Station to get a new one. (PROSE: Briefly Noted)

Having materialised over the dark side of the Moon, the TARDIS crew saw a missile being fired towards them, and headed to Earth to escape it. The Doctor, Jamie, and Zoe defeated Tobias Vaughn and the Cybermen, with the assistance of the newly promoted Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart. (TV: The Invasion)

When Zoe noticed that a Cyber-ship had escaped the explosion of the cyber-fleet, the Doctor traced it to the planet Isos II. Once there, they encountered friendly giant slugs. The Doctor was later captured by Ison Security agent Enab and questioned by Seru. When Seru showed him a map of the underground network, the Doctor went there to look for Zoe. He saw that the slugs were using the cyber electricity conjunctions boxes to breed. He got onto the train that the Cybermen wanted to run into him, and discovered that it was a spaceship destined for Earth. The Doctor was taken to the Cyber-Controller, who wanted to take all of the Doctor's knowledge so they could invade Earth. The Doctor worked out that the only way that he could stop the Cybermen was to blow up their new spaceship by putting it into a warp ellipse, but that meant sacrificing himself. Hilsee decided that he should be the one to do it, and forced the Doctor off the ship. (AUDIO: The Isos Network)

After the Doctor sent Zoe outside the TARDIS in deep space to repair a crack in the outer shell, they collided with the World. After boarding the ship to try and find Zoe, the Doctor and Jamie discovered a room full of dead bodies. The Doctor worked with Twenty to save the ship from collapsing. He tried to fix the ship but learnt that the ship was inhabited by the Corvus. (AUDIO: The Wreck of the World)

A busy few weeks

The Doctor became angry after Zoe caused the TARDIS to crash into a younger version of itself, causing the Dematerialisation circuit to become damaged. Trying to find parts for the circuit on Urbinia, the Doctor and Zoe were dragged along with a crowd trying to evacuate the planet. The Doctor encountered his previous incarnation and Steven Taylor at the spaceport and realised that something had gone wrong in his past as Katarina was with them. He explained to Katarina the true course of history and she agreed to help him restore it. He used the version of the dematerialisation circuit that his younger self had fixed, and used the fast return switch to avert the collision which created the timeline. (AUDIO: Daughter of the Gods)

The TARDIS crew freed the Gonds from the evil of the alien Krotons. (TV: The Krotons)

After landing in Uzbekistan, 1919, the Doctor posed as a soviet official to investigate the disappearances of several Uzbek children. He discovered that there was an alien taking them as the alien wanted to save them from the terror that the alien had observed taking place in the previous war. (AUDIO: The Memory Cheats)

They once more battled the Ice Warriors, preventing them from turning Earth into their new home through spores. (TV: The Seeds of Death) During this encounter, the Doctor was taken to the Multivarium, where he and another captive spent years trying to escape. (PROSE: The Room with All the Doors)

The Doctor, Jamie and Zoe landed in a cell belonging to Iolas Blue. The Doctor was worried when Iolas told him that he wanted to kill him. After Zoe told him that Iolas knew everything that they had done, the Doctor realised that he was using chaos theory to change the flow of history. One of Iolas' previous manipulations meant that he was able to escape because of an error in the calculations and was part of the Predicticon's plans. (PROSE: Lepidoptery for Beginners)

The Doctor investigated some mysterious robberies that involved a memory altering crystal, and tricked the robbers into erasing their own memories after turning them against each other. Meeting up with the Brigadier, the Doctor gave him the crystal to help UNIT with their clean-up operations, with a copy of Zoe's mind in the crystal to act as a "user's manual". (AUDIO: Tales from the Vault)

The Doctor also saved pilot John Finney after his plane was shot down during the Korean War, (PROSE: Prelude First Frontier) and visited Bob Dovie at 59A Barnsfield Crescent in Totton, Hampshire on 23 November 1963. (AUDIO: The Light at the End)

After Zoe had cut her hand making Haggis, the TARDIS landed at the Whitaker Institute. The Doctor managed to bluff his way into being a station inspector, and worked out that the Achromatics were based on Dorian Gray's portrait. He destroyed the research in order to stop them being used for war. (AUDIO: Echoes of Grey)

The TARDIS then landed on Earth near a funeral of a scientist, as the Doctor had lost control of the ship. Wanting to know what had affected the TARDIS, the Doctor found out that the machine at a nearby research facility was accidentally venting energy into the space-time vortex and he fixed the machine to stop it. (AUDIO: The Uncertainty Principle)

After the Doctor broke the harmonic resonator while playing "keepey-uppey" with a football, the TARDIS made an emergency landing in Tromesis. The Doctor helped to investigate the Hawkers, but he managed to get the version of the city that could stop the meteor that would save the world with Zoe's help. (AUDIO: The Apocalypse Mirror)

The Doctor encountered space pirates led by Maurice Caven. (TV: The Space Pirates) About a week later the Doctor suspected a trap when the TARDIS was summoned to Planetoid X. He went out to investigate, telling Jamie and Zoe to stay behind in the TARDIS. As he returned to the TARDIS a hour later, having decided to leave after encountering a Cyberman, he was transposed with his sixth incarnation (AUDIO: Last of the Cybermen) by the Monk. (AUDIO: The Secret History) As a result of the swap, the Sixth Doctor, Jamie and Zoe became involved in the Cybermen’s scheme to alter the course of the Great Cyber War, with the Sixth Doctor almost prematurely contacting the Time Lords for aid, however managed to rectify events and returned to Planetoid X. There the Doctors swapped back, with Jamie and Zoe losing their memories of the incident. (AUDIO: Last of the Cybermen)

When windows salesman Bill Rigby forced his way into the TARDIS, the Doctor tried to get rid of him without purchasing a window, until Rigby told him that his product had double-glazing with a lifetime guarantee and a view of the customer's choice. The Doctor decided to buy a large, mock-Georgian bay window that had a view of his childhood home. (PROSE: uPVC)

Final adventures with Jamie and Zoe

Arriving on the Independent Earth Colony Axista Four in the year 2539, the Doctor became involved in a refugee crisis sparked by the Earth Federation's intention to resettle eighty-thousand refugees dislocated by the Dalek Wars. He also uncovered a conspiracy stretching back to the colony's foundation a century earlier: the planet was already inhabited by the Tyrenians before the humans arrived. With some brief assistance from the Seventh Doctor, the Second Doctor was able to prevent a war by negotiating a peace settlement between the Tyrenians and the humans. He also foiled a rogue Federation plot to kill everyone on the colony to allow the inbound refugees to start afresh. After the crisis, the Federation agreed to respect the colony's independence. (PROSE: The Colony of Lies)

The Doctor traced a disturbance in the time field to France in the 14th century. Shortly afterwards, he found out that there was a visionary. Upon seeing Marie's relics, he realised that time had been scrambled as the relics came from the future. Zoe later showed him a tank in the courtyard which confirmed what he was thinking. He theorised that a time machine had caused the First World War to collide slightly with the 14th century. (AUDIO: The Iron Maid)

In Scandinavia, during the Dark Ages, Jamie was wounded by a vicious barbarian called Vignor. The Doctor and his friends were saved by Bior and joined his tribe. The Doctor soon discovered Bior was using magic to transform himself and his tribe into bears to protect their village. When Vignor attacked the village and killed Bior's younger son, Bior went on a vengeful attack, slaughtering men, women and children. The Doctor was forced to trap Bior in his form as a bear forever after he killed Vignor. (PROSE: That Which Went Away)

Unimpressed by Zoe's haughty demeanour, the Doctor took her to Los Angeles in 1999 at Christmas to teach her a lesson in humility. They helped to provide food, drink and shelter for the homeless and the poor. (PROSE: Goodwill Toward Men)

Arriving in Scotland, the Doctor, Jamie and Zoe accidentally inspired Macbeth to slay the Scottish king. Afterwards, Macbeth confused the Doctor and Jamie for assassins-for-hire, and the Doctor agreed to kill Banquo to ensure his escape, giving Banquo a perception filter to give Macbeth a fright. Needing to lure Macbeth into a false sense of security, the Doctor, Jamie and Zoe disguised themselves as three witches and convinced Macbeth that he needed to kill Macduff. Saving Macduff's family, the Doctor observed Lady Macbeth's obsessive compulsive sickness and helped organise the British Army's assault plan for Macbeth's fortress. Satisfied that history was put back on the correct course, the Doctor, Jamie and Zoe left. (PROSE: The True Tragedie of Macbeth)

After the TARDIS landed in the Frenko Bazaar, a famous intergalactic trading post where one could buy "just about anything", the Doctor, in an attempt to take down the slave market, placed a homing device on Jamie, and followed some Voraxx into Stellar Imports & Exports to gain their attention. A member told the Doctor that Jamie, coming from the past, was "worth a mint", but, when the Doctor said that he wasn't for sale, the Voraxx members kidnapped Jamie, and took him aboard a slaver ship in orbit. Following Jamie's signal, the Doctor and Zoe found the trans-mat that led to the ship and found Jamie. They then awoke some Ice Warriors, who started an uprising. The slaves took over the ship, forcing the slavers to leave. As the trio teleported back to the shop, Jamie and Zoe were captured by Adam Mitchell. (COMIC: Bazaar Adventures)

Following a chronal trail left his the Eleventh Doctor as the Tenth Doctor merged their TARDISes together, the Second Doctor joined his other incarnations as they stormed Adam's fortress in Limbo to save their friends from Adam and the Tremas Master. Though the Master attacked them with Autons, the Second Doctor got Frobisher to free the captured companions, and they helped the Doctors fight off the Autons, as Adam had a change of heart when the Master revealed he intended to use the chronal energies he had stolen across the Doctor's timelines to destroy the universe. After the Master killed Adam as he foiled his plans, the eleven Doctors honoured Adam as a "true companion". (COMIC: Endgame)

After arriving on the Royal Space Cruiser Starlight, the Doctor, Jamie and Zoe were mistaken for pantomime actors, and had to help thwart a Raxacoricofallapatorian from committing regicide against the Princess Triana of the Sita Federation to prevent her stopping the strip-mining operations of the Hanazeeen-Blathereen family on Luxona. (PROSE: A Comedy of Terrors)

When Jamie and Zoe were imprisoned in an alien prison disguised as an English country home, the Doctor allied himself with gentlemen thief Lucas Seyton. The pair infiltrated the prison and, after being reunited with his friends, the Doctor closed the prison down. (PROSE: Fallen Angel)

After he discovered that it was a scientific research facility, the Doctor became was very interested in the Edge. When he asked to tour the labs, he was given a test by Sebastian, as well as being offered the mind altering drug Acuman to help him. Provost Curtis asked him to join his crew permanently, but the Doctor didn't want to. Jamie stopped Curtis from taking him, but the Doctor had to quickly escape as the Edge began breaking apart due to his actions. (AUDIO: The Edge)

Trial

The Doctor and the War Chief. (TV: The War Games)

The Doctor and his companions landed on a planet where the War Lords planned to use human soldiers as an army to conquer the galaxy by picking them out of various periods of Earth's history with the War Chief's space-time vessel technology that had been given to them. The Doctor, Jamie and Zoe helped unite the various resistance movements on the planet to fight the War Lords. Unable to return all the kidnapped soldiers to their correct places in time and space, the Doctor called the Time Lords for help with a hypercube, thereby betraying his location to them, (TV: The War Games) following advice given to him by the Eighth Doctor in a time bubble. (PROSE: The Eight Doctors)

The Doctor, Jamie and Zoe tried to slip away before the Time Lords arrived, but the Time Lords started interfering with the TARDIS operation and demanded the Doctor hand himself over. Wanting to escape their detection, the Doctor materialising the TARDIS on an ocean and then in space, (TV: The War Games) and even briefly on the Ulk-Ra planet, where the Doctor reluctantly "switched off" Ossu-male. (PROSE: War Crimes) With the Time Lords still hot on their heels, another trip brought them to Estringokl where the Doctor celebrated Christmas Eve while Jamie and Zoe waited in the TARDIS. (PROSE: The Thousand Years of Christmas) They continued their attempts to flee the Time Lords, but were inevitably caught and brought to the Time Lords' home planet, (TV: The War Games) Jewel (COMIC: Return of the Daleks) or Gallifrey. (TV: The Time Warrior) As he was forced back to his home planet, the Doctor reflected on his travels. (POEM: Goodbyes)

After the Time Lords dematerialised the War Lord for his crimes, they placed the Doctor on trial for violating the non-interference policy of the Time Lords. When asked to justify his actions, the Doctor claimed that there was evil in the universe that had to be fought and used a thought channel to show that his interfering with time actually helped prevent evils such as the Daleks, Quarks, Yeti, Cybermen and Ice Warriors from gaining significant power in the universe. Needing some time to ponder the Doctor's sentencing, the Time Lords sent the Doctor away to await their decision.

While awaiting the result of his trial, the Doctor learned that the Time Lords intended to send Jamie and Zoe back to their own established places in history with the memories of the time they spent travelling with him removed, save for their first adventure. A Time Lord takes pity on them and allows them to briefly reunite and attempt an escape. However the Time Lords prevented them from escaping and they are forced to say their goodbyes. As Jamie and Zoe were sent away, the Doctor was informed that his presence was required in the trial chamber, as his fate had been decided. (TV: The War Games)

Sentenced to death

According to one account, following his trial the Doctor was ultimately sentenced to death. Having been sent to a luxurious anteroom to await his fate, the Doctor, the Doctor was approached with an alternative option by Sardon of the Celestial Intervention Agency, who promised him a commuted sentence to a period of exile, with the eventual possibility of a restoration to full Time Lord status. However in return the Doctor would be required to perform one or more missions on behalf of the CIA. (PROSE: World Game) The Doctor agrees to the deal, under the condition that the Time Lords first send him on a proving trip to one of the time zones affected by the War Lords. In agreement, the Doctor is given a Time Ring and is sent to 1915 France where he is briefly reunited with Jeremy Carstairs and Jennifer Buckingham. The Doctor uncovers interference in Earth's timeline caused by The Players and upon his return to Gallifrey, offers to investigate it further on the Time Lords' behalf, to which Sardon happily agrees. (PROSE: The Players)

First mission for the CIA

Sardon assigns Lady Serena as the Doctor's companion and supervisor for his mission to investigate The Players alterations to Earth's history. The Doctor is given a Type 97 TARDIS with a fully functioning Chameleon circuit for the mission instead of his own TARDIS. The Doctor and Serena travel to 1794 France to begin their investigation. The Doctor and Serena grow considerably close over the course of the mission, making it all the more tragic when Serena is killed by a shot through both of her hearts while saving the Duke of Wellington. The mission ends when The Players abandon their plot, feeling as though they have drawn too much attention to themselves.

The Doctor travels forward to 1815 and checks to ensure that the timeline is back on track. Feeling that he has earned a holiday, he spends some time in Brighton with the Duke of Wellington. Returning to the CIA, with his hair now streaked with grey from the stress of his mission, the Doctor uses Serena's death as leverage to convince Sardon to return his TARDIS to him with a Stattenheim remote control and to also let Jamie travel with him again. Sardon conceded, and altered Jamie's memory to make him believe Victoria was away studying graphology while they were sent to persuade Joinson Dastari to stop his experiments with time at Space Station Camera by Sardon, (PROSE: World Game) though another account depicted this mission as happening shortly after the London Event. (PROSE: The Legacy of Gallifrey)

Reunited with Jamie

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With Jamie put under a "magic spell", (PROSE: The Two Doctors) the CIA sent him and the Doctor to persuade Joinson Dastari to stop Professors Kartz and Reimer's experiments with time travel at the Space Station Camera, (PROSE: A Brief History of Time Lords) but Dastari and his augmented Androgum, Chessene, had planned to kidnap the Time Lord emissary all along, partnering up with the Sontarans to steal the secret of time travel from the Time Lords' genetic makeup. The Sontarans slaughtered the station and the Doctor's death was faked to hide his kidnapping and seclusion in a hacienda near Seville.

Jamie escaped the massacre and reported everything to the Sixth Doctor and Peri Brown when they discovered him. The Second Doctor was transformed into an Androgum by Dastari and joined Shockeye for food at the Las Cadenas restaurant in Seville, but, because the operation was incomplete, the effect was only temporary. When Dastari and Chessene brought the Second Doctor, and his sixth incarnation, back to the hacienda, the Sixth Doctor sabotaged the attempted TARDIS copy, while Chessene regressed back to her Androgum nature. Dastari then freed the Second Doctor upon realising his mistake in augmenting a primitive Androgum, and was shot by Chessene for betraying her, and was then killed when she attempted to flee in the TARDIS copy. The Second Doctor used his Stattenheim remote control to return his TARDIS to him, and he and Jamie left the hacienda in the TARDIS. (TV: The Two Doctors)

After Polly Wright is manipulated into interfering with nexus points in reality and causes the imminent destruction of the universe, the Time Lords dispatch the Doctor and Jamie to resolve the problem. Afterwards, the pair spend some time catching up with Polly and Ben Jackson. (PROSE: That Time I Nearly Destroyed the World Whilst Looking for a Dress)

As his predecessor had done before him, the Doctor took Jamie back in time to kill a baby destined to grow up into a dictator who would doom the Earth. However, the Doctor was unable to go through with the act, and left. (PROSE: Categorical Imperative) They later travelled to Earth in 54010 and rescued a tribe of Stone Age humans from a bio-dome. (PROSE: All of Beyond) During a visit to Prague, the Doctor and Jamie were caught up in a timeloop created by Kemen who captured a Moerani and used it to manipulate time on Earth. (PROSE: Across Silent Seas)

Seeking to relax, the Doctor and Jamie travelled to Helicon Prime, and stumbled across a set of murders, which the Doctor began to investigate. Investigating the likes of singer Mindy Voir and the ambassador Dromeo, Jamie was sent to the ambassador's room and reported back that he and Voir had assisted Dromeo with killing two of his accomplices, due to them being the last ones to know the "secret of the Fennus treasure". The Doctor recalled the story of the Fennus colony as a rich and prosperous one that was forced to abandon their place when their planet was dying.

After the Doctor gained one of Voir's pendants by asking for an autograph, Helicon Prime was sabotaged into becoming dangerously out of its orbit. In the chaos, the Doctor and Jamie saw Dromeo rummage through some rooms looking for the treasure. Confronting him, Dromeo confessed he was a member of the rescue mission for Fennus that was unable to save the colonists, but found out that they saved all their knowledge and power into a lost database. He asked the Doctor to collaborate with him, but the Doctor left Jamie the task of deciding whether to help the ambassador. Jamie refused. In the following confusion, the Doctor managed to set the station back to its orbit, and he and Jamie escaped in the TARDIS. (AUDIO: Helicon Prime)

When the Fourth Doctor used his TARDIS tuner to begin a temporal meta-collision with his other incarnations, the Second Doctor learnt that Earth was under threat from a pandimensional entity that had trapped his fourth incarnation in his TARDIS. While the Second Doctor argued with his other incarnations, the War Doctor used encoded messages from the Sixth Doctor to stop the invasion before it began, and the Sixth Doctor installed a way to expel the entity from the Fourth Doctor's TARDIS, ending the crisis. (WC: Doctors Assemble!)

Working alone

Jamie was deposited back in the Scottish Highlands, (AUDIO: Helicon Prime) but this time able to keep his memories using a trick the Doctor had taught him, (COMIC: The World Shapers)

The Doctor visited Clio on her birthday to give her a recorder as a present, (PROSE: The Glass Princess) had a telepathic conversation with Greenaway to try to prompt him out of his coma, (PROSE: Greenaway) and attended a private Christmas party hosted by the First Doctor. (POEM: The Feast of Seven... Eight (and Nine))

He gave Winston Churchill lessons in Latin in 1882, particularly in how to address a table in the language. (PROSE: The Lost Diaries of Winston Spencer Churchill)

Wearing his fur coat, the Doctor had an adventure in an American park, where he briefly crossed paths with the Eighth Doctor and a version of Clara Oswald. (TV: The Name of the Doctor) He later attended the funeral of Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart, (PROSE: The Gift) exchanging looks with Mike Yates during the burial. (PROSE: Shroud of Sorrow)

The Doctor with the Brigadier at UNIT HQ. (TV: The Five Doctors)

The Doctor attended a UNIT reunion party, where he and the Brigadier were kidnapped by Borusa and taken to the Death Zone. The two escaped from a squad of Cybermen, encountered a Yeti and faced illusions of Jamie and Zoe. In the Dark Tower, the Doctor met his first, third and fifth incarnations, their companions and the Tremas Master. After Borusa was turned to stone by Rassilon, the Doctor was returned to his timezone with the Brigadier. (TV: The Five Doctors)

The Doctor attempted to form a band with his first, third and fourth incarnations, but creative differences, and the fact that they all wanted to play the drums, broke them up. (COMIC: Day of the Tune)

Whilst hunting a troubled woman who had the ability to make others feel her pain and loneliness, the Doctor met an American teenager called Nanci Cruz, who helped him to stop the woman. (PROSE: Mother's Little Helper)

The Second Doctor acted as a jury member of the First Doctor's trial, (PROSE: The Juror's Story) and helped Jovain Pallis investigate a murder on human colony on Mars, only to discover that Jovain was the murderer. (PROSE: Dust)

The Doctor is captured by the Tremas Master. (GAME: Destiny of the Doctors)

The Doctor was trapped in the Determinant by the Tremas Master, along with his six other incarnations, but was saved when the Graak defeated the Master, and sacrificed its life force to liberate the trapped Doctors. (GAME: Destiny of the Doctors)

The Doctor joined forces with a gang of teenage outcasts to stop the awakening of a golem, (PROSE: Golem) went undercover at a film production which featured the Cybermen, (PROSE: Scientific Adviser) and spent decades learning the psychic techniques of the Mind Monks of Darron. (PROSE: The Quantum Archangel)

Eventually the Time Lords realised that the Doctor would be of most use to them as a man acting with the full force of hope and vigour of a man fighting for his freedom and believing that success would would bring him the repeal of his sentence. Therefore they began erasing his memory after every mission for them, sending him back to the anteroom where he waited out his stay of execution until the Time Lords approached him with another offer to have his death sentence commuted to exile in exchange for him partaking in a mission for them, unbeknownst to him that they had no intention of keeping their end of the bargain. As his missions carried on, the TARDIS console grew battered. One such mission brought the Doctor to the planet Karn where he stopped The War Lord from stealing the secret of regeneration. After which, his memory was erased once again and the Time Lords prepared him for his next mission. (PROSE: Save Yourself)

Sentenced to exile

According to another account, the Doctor's trial ended with a different outcome. (TV: The War Games) This account of events was supposedly substantially re-edited for public consumption and did not reflect events as they truly transpired. (PROSE: World Game) Although the Time Lords were also known to alter the Doctor's memories and re-stage events while toying with the notion of commuting his death sentence to an exile. (PROSE: Save Yourself)

While waiting to hear of Jamie and Zoe's safe return to their own time zones, a Time Lord Inquisitor further questioned the Doctor about his recent exploits and interventions in greater detail. In particular, they noted the Doctor's fondness for the planet Earth and it's regular imperilment at the hands of the Doctor's enemies. (PROSE: Second Session) After being informed that Jamie and Zoe have been successfully returned to their natural time zones and shown their safe arrivals, the Doctor's sentence was handed down. He was to be exiled to Earth in the 20th century with a forced regeneration. He was given a choice of new appearance, but rejected all of the choices. At their wits' end, the Time Lords chose his new face for him and sent the protesting Doctor away to begin his exile. (TV: The War Games)

Snatched from his timeline

This section's awfully stubby.

Info from The Green Man and The Shroud and further info from Jamie and The Annihilators needs to be added

The CIA removed the Doctor from his timestream, one quantum second before his regeneration, so that he could be an agent for them in exchange for his freedom. He was then transported to an unknown snowy planet, where he rescued a woman named Raven. The planet turned out to be Skaro where the Daleks were returning to the timestream after the Doctor's last fight with them, and the CIA asked him to find the previous Time Lord agent that was set there, Celestine. Raven then sent him on his next mission. (AUDIO: The Final Beginning)

Raven sent the Doctor outside Jupiter's orbit, where he encountered a strange signal and a flotilla. He traced it to Earth and landed near Glasgow. He encountered Sheena Flynn before re-encountering the Brigadier. Together, they discovered that an Ice Warrior ship had landed nearby and traced the pilot Skaar to one of Sheena's bothies. The Doctor learnt that Zelanda was planning to invade Mars to take control of the Martian empire. He was taken to Mars with Sheena and realised that it was a long time since Zelanda was exiled, so the world was dead. He was rescued by Skaar and the Brigadier and went back to the TARDIS. Having witnessed the Doctor working alongside the Brigadier, Raven decides to reunite the Doctor with an old friend and sends a new set of coordinates to the TARDIS. (AUDIO: Wrath of the Ice Warriors)

Following Raven's coordinates, the Doctor arrives in 1776 Edinburgh, where he is reunited with Jamie. After freeing him from the thrall of a Hollow Wraith, Jamie rejoins the Doctor in the TARDIS. (AUDIO: Jamie)

The Doctor and Jamie were sent to investigate something strange happening in Northern England. Shortly afterwards he got kidnapped. The Grestrenor Leader told him about their mission and the gravitor star that was going to come to Earth's solar system. He was accidentally shot by the Brigadier and temporally died, but the Time Lords who sent him on this mission resurrected him. (AUDIO: The Annihilators)

Travels with Tarlos

The Doctor's travels brought him to the colony world Triketha where he met Tarlos. After working with him to save Triketha, the Doctor invites Tarlos aboard the TARDIS. They travelled together for some time but when the Doctor attempted to return him home a few minutes after they left, he accidentally left him on the wrong planet and 48 years out of time. (AUDIO: Colony of Fear)

Hiding in luxury

This section's awfully stubby.

Info from Action in Exile, The Mark of Terror, The Brotherhood, & U.F.O. needs to be added

When the CIA needed to cover up their visit to Space Station Camera, it was decided that the Doctor's sentence of exile to Earth was to be enforced. (PROSE: A Brief History of Time Lords) Ultimately, however, the Doctor was able to escape before the Time Lords could enforce a regeneration. (COMIC: The Night Walkers)

Now exiled, the Doctor took up residence in the Carlton Grange Hotel in London, (COMIC: Action in Exile) where he enjoyed considerable luxury and press attention, with people from around the world bringing their problems to him. (COMIC: The Mark of Terror, The Brotherhood, U.F.O.)

Death

Main article: Second Doctor's change of appearance
The Doctor regenerates into his third incarnation. (COMIC: The Night Walkers)

While appearing on the game show Explain My Mystery, the Doctor was asked to consider the case of Mr Glenlock-Hogan, a farmer with walking scarecrows. He wasn't able to do so and arranged for an off-camera visit to the farm. Knowing it was a case so preposterous-sounding that it would not be taken seriously by anyone else but him, the Doctor wanted to investigate the matter privately. When he arrived, the scarecrows duly began to walk around. Eventually, they captured and shot him, revealing that they had been animated by the Time Lords in order to carry out the remaining part of his sentence.

The scarecrows dragged him to his waiting TARDIS, where they forced him to regenerate. During the process, the scarecrows programmed the TARDIS for a final flight, (COMIC: The Night Walkers) and edited the Doctor's memory to remove his knowledge of how to work his TARDIS, (TV: Spearhead from Space, The Claws of Axos) restrict what he knew about other alien species (PROSE: The Ambassadors of Death) and events beyond the 1970s, (PROSE: The Devil Goblins from Neptune) and make him think he had been executed at his trial. (PROSE: The Eight Doctors; AUDIO: Legend of the Cybermen, Stage Fright) Just before the Doctor's regeneration ended, his "entire past and future suddenly became clear to him" and, realising what he had done on the Panjistri homeworld, he sent a telepathic warning to his future self. (PROSE: Timewyrm: Apocalypse)

The TARDIS travelled to an English field, where it was found, along with the newly regenerated Doctor, by UNIT. (TV: Spearhead from Space)

Post-mortem

This section's awfully stubby.

Info from Freedom, Timewyrm: Apocalypse, Timewyrm: Revelation, & Head Games needs to be added

In the Doctor's dream garden, the Second Doctor planted forget-me-nots, in memory of Jamie and Zoe. (PROSE: Into the Silent Land)

When under attack by a space amoeba, the Fourth Doctor briefly turned back into his second incarnation. (COMIC: Timeslip)

When trapped in a dimensionally-unstable pocket universe controlled by Iam and the Rani, the Sixth Doctor's morphic print was destabilised, causing him to unwillingly regress back through his previous incarnations as his body sought a stable morphic print. (PROSE: State of Change)

In a bid to detach the Funhouse from the TARDIS in the time vortex, the Sixth Doctor binded the switch that protected the TARDIS' passengers from the changing time fields outside with a string, allowing him to pull it remotely from the limited protection of the Zero Room. As a result, the Doctor immediately began to regress back through his first five incarnations as he made his way back to the console room where, as the First Doctor, he flipped the switch back, restoring himself while trapping the Funhouse in the vortex. (COMIC: Funhouse)

Whilst the Doctor was shifting between incarnations due to being attacked by a degeneration weapon from the Time War, (AUDIO: Past Lives) the Second Doctor briefly emerged as the TARDIS departed the end of the universe. He realised the TARDIS was being caught in a force field, before shifting to another incarnation. (AUDIO: The Artist at the End of Time)

The Second Doctor strains against the Sin-Eater. (COMIC: Sin-Eaters)

When the Ninth Doctor's Sin-Eater became conscious due to the Doctor's telepathic nature, it mutated to show the Second Doctor's face, among other incarnations, straining against its body. (COMIC: Sin-Eaters)

When the Tenth Doctor was confronted by Es'Cartrss within the TARDIS' Matrix, he summoned the Second Doctor, among his other past incarnations, to use their united memories and willpower to take back control of the Matrix. (COMIC: The Forgotten)

During many failed attempts to duplicate the Tenth Doctor, defective copies of all his past incarnations, including the Second Doctor, were created instead. (COMIC: Breakfast at Tyranny's)

After the Eleventh Doctor was accused of committing deadly crimes against the Overcast, he brooded in the TARDIS for two days, imagining all his previous numbered incarnations, including the Second Doctor, interrogating him over the crimes. When he offered the rational that he always left things better than he found them, they all turned and left him in disgust and disgrace. (COMIC: Pull to Open)

When the Eleventh Doctor was investigating the War Doctor's actions during the Last Great Time War on Lujhimene, he briefly turned into the Second Doctor, alerting him to an ambush from the Then and the Now. (COMIC: Running to Stay Still)

When the Eleventh Doctor entered into the T'keyn Nexus in order to defend himself, Matrix projections of his previous incarnations, including the Second Doctor, appeared inside it to defend themselves as well. When auditor Sondrah accused the Doctor of allowing tragedy to happen, the Second Doctor defended himself by pointing out his inability to interfere with fixed points in time. When the Eleventh Doctor began to deduce Sondrah's true identity, the past Doctors faded away as Oscar Wilde interfered with the Nexus. (COMIC: Dead Man's Hand)

After saving Gallifrey from the Moment at the conclusion of the Last Great Time War, the Eleventh Doctor dreamed of himself standing with all his past incarnation, including the Second Doctor, as he thought about his search for Gallifrey. (TV: The Day of the Doctor)

When he was exposed to energy from a time storm, the Twelfth Doctor degenerated through all of his previous incarnations, including the Second Doctor. (AUDIO: The Lost Magic)

Undated adventures

The Second Doctor is freed from the Rani's time trap. (TV: Dimensions in Time)
The Second Doctor with the Tenth and Eleventh Doctors. (COMIC: The Long Con)

Alternate timelines

In an alternate timeline created by the Discordia, the Doctor had a passionate romantic relationship with River Song that began in his first incarnation, having married her by his fourth incarnation. In one of their outings, River convinced the Doctor to dress as Ramón Salamander for "fun". (AUDIO: Someone I Once Knew)

When the Cybermen allied with Rassilon to take over history, (COMIC: Supremacy of the Cybermen) they manipulated the encounter at the Moonbase so that the Doctor was partially cyber-converted (COMIC: Prologue: The Second Doctor) and led the Cybermen to their victory. This timeline was eventually unwritten by Rassilon and the Twelfth Doctor. (COMIC: Supremacy of the Cybermen)

While aiding an archaeological team on Telos, (TV: The Tomb of the Cybermen) a Cyberman time squad attacked the Doctor. This would have killed him if their Controller didn't order them to stop at the risk of erasing their future invasion of Krelos due to the unwitting role of the Fourth Doctor in that plan. The Second Doctor then witnessed a Krelos robot drone decontaminate Jamie before time was reset and this interlude didn't happen. (AUDIO: Return to Telos)

In an alternate version of the London Event, the Doctor was killed by Colonel Spencer Pemberton in the London Underground. (PROSE: Legacies)

In a negated timeline, the TARDIS was attacked on 23 November 1963 by a conceptual bomb bought by the Decayed Master and began to be erased from time. The Second Doctor, along with his first and third incarnations, became trapped in another dimension, and tried to warn their other incarnations by reducing the explosion to a blinking light on the TARDIS with the coordinates of the explosion. However, when their four successors followed the warning, the Master took direct action in attacking them, until the Sixth Doctor managed to bring them together to formulate a plan. After the Fifth Doctor ensured that the TARDIS would not explode, the Doctors prepared to time ram the Master's TARDIS. However, rather than kill the Master, the First Doctor instead turned off the automatic distress actions, making it so none of the Doctors followed it into the explosion and undoing the events of the day. (AUDIO: The Light at the End)

In the Unbound Universe, the Second Doctor had twice met the Brigadier in the 20th century, aiding him against the Robot Yeti in one of their meetings. The Doctor was eventually detained and tried by the Time Lords. As punishment for violating the non-interference policy, the Doctor was forced to regenerate and was exiled to Earth in the 1970s, though his successor would only arrive in 1997. (AUDIO: Sympathy for the Devil)

Psychological profile

Personality

The Doctor defends his interference in time. (TV: The War Games)

Striving to be the "nicest possible person", (TV: The Enemy of the World) the Second Doctor enjoyed embroiling himself in dangerous adventures that provided the "spice of life", (TV: The Highlanders, Fury from the Deep) to the extent that he envied those in more perilous situations than himself. (TV: The Three Doctors) He privately hoped to find "pre-historic monsters" when thinking about where the TARDIS could land. (TV: The Underwater Menace) He could be assertive in where he went, believing he was "allowed everywhere". (TV: The Five Doctors) However, he would not turn down the chance for relaxation when it presented itself, (TV: The Macra Terror, Fury from the Deep) and would be upset when his rest was interrupted. (TV: The Wheel in Space)

As he "never talk[ed] nonsense", (TV: The Power of the Daleks) the Second Doctor frequently gave the impression that he was a bumbling fool who never knew what he was doing, or what he was doing was part of a larger scheme, as a calculated act to fool those into underestimating his true intellect, (TV: The Underwater Menace, The Tomb of the Cybermen, The Krotons, The Three Doctors) as he surmised that "an unintelligent enemy [was] far less dangerous than an intelligent one". (TV: The Dominators) Despite the Doctor's almost childlike recklessness, it was always clear to his allies that a keen, deliberate intellect lurked behind his every action, (TV: The Highlanders) with the Doctor adopting a grave seriousness when the situation called for it. (TV: The Moonbase, The Enemy of the World, The Seeds of Death, The Three Doctors) He enjoyed keeping people in the dark on how much control he had over a situation, (TV: The Power of the Daleks, The Tomb of the Cybermen) as he enjoyed being "mysterious", (TV: The Enemy of the World) though he would deflect blame to others when his discrepancies backfired on him. (TV: The Web of Fear)

Despite his tendency to panic when events got out of control, (TV: The Abominable Snowmen, The Krotons) the Second Doctor always acted heroically and morally in his desire to help the oppressed fight "the most terrible things [in the universe]", (TV: The Moonbase, The Enemy of the World, The War Games) often being the first to jump to the rescue when someone needed saving, (TV: Fury from the Deep) and deeming himself the "enemy of anything that [was] wrong or evil in [the] universe". (PROSE: The Final Sanction) He was even willingly to sacrifice his safety and freedoms to prevent his friends from undergoing preventable suffering. (TV: The Underwater Menace, The Web of Fear, The Krotons, The War Games, The Two Doctors) However, he refused to act when he did not know the allegiances of the side he was working with, demanding they backed up their intentions with tangible evidence. (TV: The Enemy of the World)

The Doctor championed free will and the right for people to remain non-stagnant and "always make up [their] own mind", even if it meant questioning authority, (TV: The Macra Terror, The Evil of the Daleks, The Mind Robber) though was adamant that such things had to come naturally instead of from augmentation from outside forces. (TV: The Two Doctors) He himself would refuse to be treated as a slave, (TV: The Evil of the Daleks) and would only cooperate if he was addressed "properly". (TV: The Ice Warriors)

He also had a warmer, gentler way about him than his previous incarnation, taking time during his adventures to check if his friends were feeling alright and comfort them when they were frightened, (TV: The Moonbase, The Faceless Ones, The Tomb of the Cybermen, Fury from the Deep, The War Games) keeping their wellbeing first and foremost in his mind, even when he got caught up in events around him, (TV: The Underwater Menace, The Abominable Snowmen) prioritising their safety before his own. (TV: The Faceless Ones, The Abominable Snowmen, The Web of Fear)

He was easily distracted, (TV: The Power of the Daleks, The Evil of the Daleks, The Three Doctors) and would talk to himself to think, treating his inner thoughts as a separate person while in conversation. (TV: The Moonbase)

He was very aware of his own genius, (TV: The Underwater Menace, The Seeds of Death, The Five Doctors, The Two Doctors) and would react with indignity if he felt his brilliance was being questioned, (TV: The Moonbase, The Tomb of the Cybermen, The Ice Warriors, The Two Doctors) but was able to admit when he had been a "silly idiot" (TV: The Space Pirates) and when he was at fault for a situation getting out of hand due to his own miscalculations. (TV: The Three Doctors) However, he was adamant on solving a problem with the solution that he had come up with. (TV: The Power of the Daleks)

While he would normally leave discreetly without a goodbye when he had solved the problem at hand, (TV: The Moonbase, The Ice Warriors, The Krotons, The Seeds of Death) the Second Doctor was quite willing to enjoy fame, and even fortune, when he could find it. (COMIC: Martha the Mechanical Housemaid) Other times, however, he just accepted a simple "thank you" as reward for his heroic actions. (TV: Fury from the Deep)

He enjoyed saying tongue twisters, (TV: The Power of the Daleks) drawing, marbles, (TV: The Space Pirates) books, and receiving gifts. (PROSE: The Nameless City) He was also fond of Cluedo, (PROSE: The Menagerie) and had a fascination for jungles. (PROSE: Combat Rock)

He disliked being a leader, (TV: The Macra Terror) and goodbyes. (TV: The Krotons) He also "never like[d] to make predictions" about seeing the last of something, (TV: The Tomb of the Cybermen) and bemoaned that humans were always "trying to destroy each other." (TV: The Enemy of the World)

While New York City was his favourite city, (COMIC: The Monsters from the Past) the Doctor always fond it "marvelous" to visit London. (COMIC: Death Race)

The Second Doctor liked to consume fruit, (TV: The Power of the Daleks) plankton, (TV: The Underwater Menace) wine, (TV: The Evil of the Daleks) pork, potatoes, carrots, ice cream, (TV: The Wheel in Space) patty cakes, (TV: The Invasion) roast duck, (COMIC: Action in Exile) champagne cognac, (PROSE: Foreign Devils) and cheesecake. (PROSE: The Juror's Story)

Having a liking for the dark, (TV: The Macra Terror) but a fear of the unknown, (TV: The Mind Robber) the Doctor "live[d] in [the] hope" that he would always survive his dangerous escapades, (TV: The Ice Warriors) trying his best to avoid pessimism (TV: The Space Pirates) or see "danger in [his] own shadow", (TV: The Five Doctors) believing that the "universe tend[ed] towards good" (PROSE: Wonderland) and that there was "no such thing as defeat", (COMIC: The Tests of Trefus) though he knew when to abandon a hopeless course. (COMIC: Atoms Infinite) He held the greatest virtues in a person as being "courage, pity, chivalry, friendship, [and] even compassion", (TV: The Evil of the Daleks) and thought that intelligent beings should not be used as slaves. (COMIC: The Tests of Trefus)

Having a disdain for bureaucracy, (TV: The Faceless Ones) the Doctor believed it was justified to break the "bad" laws, (TV: The Macra Terror) especially the laws that actively encouraged letting people suffer. (TV: The War Games) He believed that "life depend[ed] on change and renewal," (TV: The Power of the Daleks) and that one should prioritise "a modern scientific brain" instead of favouring "heathen idol[s]", (TV: The Underwater Menace) but he did respect how other cultures valued their beliefs. (TV: The Moonbase) When Ben and Polly suggested taking some jewels from the tomb of Pharaoh Tut-Ankh-Amen, the Doctor was aghast and berated them for wanting to steal from the deceased, calling it a "monstrous notion". (PROSE: The King of Golden Death)

The Second Doctor believed in destiny, telling Ben and Polly that the TARDIS' seemingly random journeys were controlled by destiny and that, "if [they] just obey[ed] destiny blindly, all [would] be well". (PROSE: Only a Matter of Time) He also believed that logic "merely enable[d] one to be wrong with authority." (TV: The Wheel in Space) He did not, however, believe in luck, (COMIC: The Forgotten) or yetis. (PROSE: Dr. Second)

The "enemy [he] fear[ed] most" were the Cybermen, (COMIC: The Coming of the Cybermen) and he was also frightened of vampires. (PROSE: The Murder Game)

A more serious side of the Doctor. (TV: The Krotons)

While he "never held that the end[s] [justified] the means", (TV: The Evil of the Daleks) the Second Doctor was aware that there were times that risking the lives of a few people was necessary to protect everyone else, (TV: The Evil of the Daleks, The Ice Warriors, The Wheel in Space) or to at least allow "a little injustice" to prevent a "wholesale slaughter", (TV: The Power of the Daleks) though he did not like having such a philosophy. (TV:The Enemy of the World)

In his more ruthless moments, the Doctor wired the Cyber-Tombs' doors to fatally electrocute anyone trying to open them, (TV: The Tomb of the Cybermen) pursued the Kraals into extinction, (COMIC: Freedom by Fire) ensured that a relatively helpless party of Daleks would all die, (COMIC: Bringer of Darkness) steered an Ice Warrior fleet into the sun, (TV: The Seeds of Death) and used a ray gun he had invented to kill a giant spider while shouting, "Die, hideous creature... Die!" (COMIC: Master of Spiders) He also appeared unfazed to Ramón Salamander's fate in the Time Vortex. (TV: The Web of Fear) However, when he was about to take a risk, he would warn others to leave if they felt unsafe. (TV: The Tomb of the Cybermen)

While he "care[d] about life", (TV: The Evil of the Daleks) the Doctor knew that there were situations with "no time for mercy" (COMIC: The Coming of the Cybermen) and was unafraid to resort to violence by brutalising a person if it was beneficial to his plans, (TV: The Highlanders) nor did he fear launching himself at an unaware opponent to stop their evil plans, (COMIC: Space War Two, Operation Wurlitzer, Action in Exile) and was even ready to arm himself with a knife if he believed it was the best way to defend himself. (TV: The Two Doctors) However, he saw crests that glorified combat as "romantic piffle", (TV: The Highlanders) and would seek all forms of justice that were not personal executions, as he did not believe anyone had the right to kill. (TV: The Enemy of the World) Indeed, he would regret it if he himself killed someone when trying to only incapacitate them. (PROSE: A Comedy of Terrors)

He also claimed to hate computers, (TV: The Invasion) and would only use them when he had no alternative. (TV: The Ice Warriors) He similarly dismissed robots as machines "built to obey", (COMIC: Robot King) as he considered machines to be a preferable form of slavery. (COMIC: The Tests of Trefus)

While the Second Doctor preached in keeping the stability of the Space-Time continuum intact, (TV: The Two Doctors) he was willing to indulge in "bending [the Laws of Time] a little" when he could. (TV: The Five Doctors)

Not above playing mind games with his enemies, the Doctor would pretend to agree with them to allow their egos to expose their madness, (TV: The Tomb of the Cybermen) or would purposely annoy them to trick them into showing their lack of self-control. (TV: The Three Doctors)

The Second Doctor had a noticeably antagonistic relationship with the Third Doctor, their personalities so different that they seemed incapable of working together without the authoritative presence of the First Doctor, (TV: The Three Doctors) whom the Second Doctor was slightly afraid of. (WC: Doctors Assemble!) While combating Adam Mitchell's Autons, the Second Doctor associated himself with his first and seventh incarnations, combining with them to think of a solution to the situation. (COMIC: Endgame)

While the Sixth Doctor considered his second incarnation to be an "antediluvian fogey" for apparently being captured by the Sontarans, (TV: The Two Doctors) the Eighth Doctor remembered the Second Doctor as a "gentle little fellow who had sacrificed his own freedom so that others might be free". (PROSE: The Eight Doctors)

The Second Doctor was highly defensive of his TARDIS, (TV: The Moonbase) thinking it as the "most valuable thing in the world" (COMIC: Egyptian Escapade) and describing it as "a magnificent machine" and "utterly reliable", trusting it would bring him to where his help was needed. (PROSE: Dr. Second)

By the time he fought Side, the Doctor considered Jamie to be the most reliable friend that he had ever had. (AUDIO: The Jigsaw War) The Sixth Doctor even told his companion, Peri Brown, that he was "always very fond of Jamie." When Chessene of the Franzine Grig informed him that Jamie had most likely been killed in a Sontaran attack, the Doctor began going into a grief-stricken rage until he was restrained. (TV: The Two Doctors)

Wanting to have his revenge on them, (COMIC: The Doctor Strikes Back) the Doctor saw the Daleks as nothing more than "a living plague of hatred and fear", and felt justified in destroying them, with Victoria unsettled by how his voice "[carried] such hatred" as he spoke of them. (COMIC: Bringer of Darkness) He even took glee in tricking the Daleks into destroying each other. (COMIC: The Doctor Strikes Back)

Samantha Briggs believed the Second Doctor was a "weirdy", though Jamie McCrimmon defended his intelligence, (TV: The Faceless Ones) with the Brigadier recognising that the Doctor had "an incredible knack of being one jump ahead of everyone." (TV: The Invasion) Victoria Waterfield saw the Second Doctor as a beacon of "kindness, compassion, wisdom, [and] great knowledge", (AUDIO: Power Play) with Zoe Heriot considering the Doctor to be a "lovely little man" who was "fun to be with" (PROSE: One Small Step...) as he was "old, clever and kind." (AUDIO: The Five Dimensional Man)

The Tremas Master described the Second Doctor as "the comedian", but noted he was "not quite the clown he look[ed]". (GAME: Destiny of the Doctors) River Song found the Second Doctor "fun, but [she] wouldn't trust him as far as [she] could throw him". (GAME: The Eternity Clock) When the Eighth Doctor had a tarot card reading, the Second Doctor was identified as "the Hermit". (PROSE: The City of the Dead)

When sentenced to a forced regeneration by the Time Lords, the Doctor was initial concern was his next incarnation's appearance, though he rejected the faces offered to him, maintaining that he alone had the right to decide what he looked like. Once the Time Lords decided to start to begin the regeneration, however, the Doctor quickly protested how unfairly he was being treated, and continued protesting in the void, (TV: The War Games) until the Celestial Intervention Agency intervened. (PROSE: World Game) When the regeneration was finally triggered after he was shot by the Time Lords' animated scarecrows, the Doctor used his dying breath to reassure Farmer Glenlock-Hogan, who had been ridiculed for seeing his scarecrows come to life, that the phenomenon would not happen again after the night was over. (COMIC: The Night Walkers) As he entered his final moments, the Second Doctor thought of his companions, and, though afraid, felt excitement by the feeling of renewal, as he continued to feel justified by his violation of the non-interference policy. (PROSE: Timewyrm: Apocalypse)

Habits and quirks

The Second Doctor developed a habit of running away from danger when inappropriately prepared, often instructing his companions to retreat with a variation of "when I say run, run." (TV: The Power of the Daleks, The Faceless Ones, The Tomb of the Cybermen, The Abominable Snowmen)

He also began many of his phrases with an, "oh", such as "Oh, dear", (TV: The Evil of the Daleks, The Web of Fear, The Wheel in Space, The Dominators, The Mind Robber, The Invasion, The Space Pirates, The War Games, The Three Doctors, The Five Doctors) "Oh, my giddy aunt!", (TV: The Krotons, The Three Doctors, The Two Doctors) and retorting with, "oh, no, no, no", when he disagreed with a statement. (TV: The Power of the Daleks, The Moonbase, The Tomb of the Cybermen, The Dominators, The Invasion, The Space Pirates, The War Games, The Three Doctors)

He was prone to exclaiming, "Oh, my word!", when startled, (TV: The Ice Warriors, Fury from the Deep, The Dominators) analysing, (TV: The Web of Fear, The Space Pirates, The War Games) alleviated, (TV: The Dominators, The Seeds of Death) amazed, (TV: The Mind Robber, The Invasion, The Seeds of Death) intrigued, (TV: The Mind Robber) baffled, (TV: The Invasion, The Space Pirates, The War Games, The Three Doctors, The Two Doctors) or annoyed. (TV: The Seeds of Death) Another favoured exclamation of his was, "Ah ha", which he would say in moments of gleeful realisation or when celebrating a positive outcome. (TV: The Power of the Daleks, The Abominable Snowmen, The Dominators)

Other favoured phrases of his to yell in surprise were, "Great powers", (COMIC: The Monsters from the Past, The Faithful Rocket Pack, The Witches, Attack of the Daleks, Dr. Who and the Space Pirates, Masquerade, Invasion of the Quarks, Ice Cap Terror, The Electrodes, Father Time, The Duellists, Eskimo Joe, Peril at 60 Fathoms, Test Flight, The Entertainer, Action in Exile) and, "By the planets!". (COMIC: The Coming of the Cybermen, The Faithful Rocket Pack, The Witches, Cyber-Mole, The Sabre-Toothed Gorillas, The Jokers, Jungle of Doom, The Time Museum, Peril at 60 Fathoms)

The Doctor exclamates his point. (COMIC: Pursued by the Trods)

A fidgety incarnation, it was rare for the Second Doctor to go long without continuously wringing and interlocking his hands together. (TV: The Power of the Daleks, The Highlanders, The Space Pirates) However, he was known to stand with his hands simply crossed in front of him, (TV: The Macra Terror, The Evil of the Daleks, The Tomb of the Cybermen, The Abominable Snowmen, The Ice Warriors, The Mind Robber, The Invasion, The Seeds of Death, The War Games, The Three Doctors, The Five Doctors) and occasionally held behind his back. (TV: The Underwater Menace, The War Games, The Three Doctors, The Five Doctors)

He was also known to stand with his hands on hips, (TV: The Power of the Daleks, The Moonbase, The Faceless Ones, The Ice Warriors, The Wheel in Space, The Dominators, The Mind Robber, The Invasion, The Three Doctors, The Five Doctors) dither his hands in front of his lapels, (TV: The Underwater Menace, The Macra Terror, The Faceless Ones, The Abominable Snowmen, The Web of Fear, The Mind Robber, The Seeds of Death, The War Games) and twiddle his fingers in his hand. (TV: The Evil of the Daleks, The Tomb of the Cybermen, The Ice Warriors, The Enemy of the World, The Web of Fear, The Dominators, The Invasion, The Krotons, The War Games, The Three Doctors, The Five Doctors)

When in contemplation, the Doctor would scratch his chin or mouth, (TV: The Power of the Daleks, The Underwater Menace, The Moonbase, The Faceless Ones, The Abominable Snowmen, The Ice Warriors, The Dominators, The Mind Robber, The Invasion, The Krotons, The Space Pirates, The War Games, The Three Doctors) chew on his index finger, (TV: The Underwater Menace, The Faceless Ones, The Tomb of the Cybermen, The Ice Warriors, The Enemy of the World, The Web of Fear, The Mind Robber, The Krotons, The Three Doctors, The Five Doctors, The Two Doctors) or cusp his chin and lower mouth in his hand. (TV: The Underwater Menace, The Enemy of the World, The Web of Fear, The Seeds of Death, The Three Doctors, The Five Doctors)

He would also pat himself with his handkerchief after moments of intensity. (TV: The Underwater Menace, The Ice Warriors, The Enemy of the World, The Dominators, The Seeds of Death, The War Games)

He would sometimes carry food on his person to snack on during his adventures, such as sherbet lemon, (TV: The Wheel in Space) jelly babies, (TV: The Dominators, The Three Doctors, The Five Doctors) and an apple. (TV: The Five Doctors)

The Doctor possessed a recorder, which he played when he needed to pass the time, (TV: The Power of the Daleks, The Underwater Menace, The Abominable Snowmen, The Web of Fear) to raise morale in a dire situation, (TV: The Highlanders) to help him to concentrate, (TV: The Evil of the Daleks, The Three Doctors) or simply as a tool to make him seem less suspicious. (TV: The Macra Terror) He could also use his recorder as an effective tool, having a separate mouthpiece that turned it into a spyglass, (TV: The Wheel in Space, The Invasion) and improvise it into a blowgun. (TV: The Underwater Menace) Because his companions disliked the instrument, (COMIC: The Forgotten) the Doctor took to carrying spares, (PROSE: Twin Piques, The Avant Guardian) as playing them helped him to think. (TV: The Three Doctors) He displayed a fondness of music in other ways besides the recorder, such as telling Jamie he could travel in the TARDIS in return for teaching him to play the bagpipes. (TV: The Highlanders)

It was during his second incarnation that the Doctor began to regularly carry a sonic screwdriver. (TV: Fury from the Deep, The Dominators, The War Games) He also carried a magnifying glass on his person, and would utilise it for investigation purposes, (TV: The Highlanders, The Faceless Ones, The Tomb of the Cybermen, The Web of Fear, The Invasion) and made use of a utility belt to hold his various gadgets. (COMIC: Egyptian Escapade, The Witches, The Cyber Empire, The Dyrons)

The Doctor was prone to saying, "I wonder...", when thinking aloud,[source needed] or when stating his disbelief in a statement. (TV: TV: The Wheel in Space) He would also utter, "shush", when needed his friends to be silent.[source needed] As with his previous incarnation, he would say, "come along", when instructing people to follow him.[source needed]

Skills

The Doctor in disguise. (TV: The Underwater Menace)

The Second Doctor had a gift for diplomacy and winning others over to his side, enabling him to fool his enemies into thinking they had an advantage over him, (TV: The Evil of the Daleks, The Web of Fear, The Wheel in Space) trick others into doing what he wished, (TV: The Faceless Ones, The Three Doctors) and convince people into trusting him against their initial judgment, (TV: The Enemy of the World, The War Games) The Third Doctor even acknowledged that his second incarnation was better with people than he was. (TV: The Three Doctors)

Instinctively knowing whom to trust from what he deduced of their character, (TV: The Enemy of the World) the Doctor was highly deductive, able to tell if he had fooled someone by observing their reactions to his actions, and could tell someone was hiding information from noticing absences in their behaviour or inconsistencies in their appearance. (TV: The Power of the Daleks, The Evil of the Daleks, The Invasion) He could also triangulate a person's birthplace by studying their accent, (TV: The Enemy of the World) and notice and decipher hidden codes in anagrams and acronyms, though it could take some time. (TV: The Power of the Daleks)

The Doctor disguises himself as a Cyberman. (COMIC: Masquerade)

He was also a convincing actor, (TV: The Highlanders, The Evil of the Daleks, The Enemy of the World, The War Games) easily donning disguises without self-consciousness to age, gender, or even dignity. (TV: The Highlanders, The Underwater Menace, The War Games)

Physically younger than his predecessor, the Second Doctor was able to outrun various pursuers, (TV: The Underwater Menace, The Seeds of Death) and avoid weapon ammunition fired at him. (TV: The Invasion) He proved adept at skiing, (COMIC: Eskimo Joe) and also learned the arts of Venusian aikido on Venus. (AUDIO: Year of the Drex Olympics)

He proved a crack shot with a pistol, having the accuracy to disable an armed opponent by shooting the weapon out of their hand, and was also effective with a whip. (COMIC: The Duellists)

The Doctor puts Vana in a hypnotic trance. (TV: The Krotons)

The Second Doctor possessed strong telepathic abilities, such as being able to use telepathy via mental projection to show Zoe Heriot one of his battles with the Daleks, (TV: The Wheel in Space) though he found the process tiring. (TV: The Dominators) He could also restore erased memories by placing his hands on someone's head. (AUDIO: Tales from the Vault) He had a strong resistance to other telepaths trying to intrude into his mind, (TV: The Mind Robber, The Two Doctors) and was even able to lock his mind in battle with the Great Intelligence long enough for his friends to act against it. (TV: The Abominable Snowmen)

He was also shown to be adept with hypnosis, (TV: The Abominable Snowmen, The Krotons) being able to overpower the hypnotism of the Zagbor and then spend days releasing the hypnotised humans, (COMIC: The Zombies) and was able to reverse the hypnotism of the Master. (PROSE: The Dark Path) He could even use hypnotism to induce amnesia. (PROSE: The Roundheads)

The Second Doctor was a talented tinkerer, (TV: The Web of Fear) and a "dab hand at mechanics". (COMIC: Death Race) He was able to create a glass harmonica out of a water glass to pick the sonic lock in his prison cell on Vulcan, (TV: The Power of the Daleks) construct the pedal-copter, (COMIC: Attack of the Daleks) fix Isobel Watkins' camera, (TV: The Invasion) design and manufacture effective vehicles, (COMIC: Return of the Witches, Car of the Century) and build a series of robots to do chores for him. (COMIC: Barnabus, Martha the Mechanical Housemaid)

While he lacked a medical degree, (TV: The Krotons) he did have some medical training, (TV: The Moonbase) and could provide basic first aid when needed. (TV: The Highlanders, The Moonbase, Fury from the Deep, The Krotons, The Space Pirates)

He could quickly assess the nature of new environments by analysing oxygen and temperature, and could tell if his surroundings were radioactive. (TV: The Power of the Daleks)

While the Doctor could pilot a helicopter with only minimal success, (TV: Fury from the Deep) he was more successful when driving a car, (TV: The War Games) even being able to maneuver around dinosaurs while driving backwards, (COMIC: The Monsters from the Past) or a motorbike. (COMIC: Action in Exile) He could also ride a horse, (COMIC: The Duellists) and was able to commandeer the Dart to engage the Cybermen in an aerial fight that emerged victorious from. (COMIC: Test Flight)

While he preferred to use English, the Doctor could speak French, (TV: The Mind Robber) and also read Old High Gallifreyan. (TV: The Five Doctors)

The Doctor had an encyclopaedic knowledge of various laws, and could map the night sky, (TV: The Highlanders) create a fire with two sticks, (COMIC: Freedom by Fire) pick a lock with his tie-pin, (COMIC: Action in Exile) and donate indefinitely large amounts of blood. (PROSE: Heart of TARDIS) He was instinctively able to keep track of time, even without a way to measure its passing. (PROSE: The Murder Game)

Appearance

This section's awfully stubby.

Info about the Doctor's facial features needs to be added

The Doctor glares at Omega. (TV: The Three Doctors)

With a height of "five foot nine", (TV: The Underwater Menace) the Second Doctor resembled a man in his mid-forties. (PROSE: The Nameless City) He was physically identical to the dictator Ramón Salamander. (TV: The Enemy of the World)

He had blue eyes, (TV: The Three Doctors) though one account described his eyes as being "soft chestnut brown", (PROSE: Pluto) while another depicted them as bright green. (COMIC: Bazaar Adventures) A fourth account claimed his eyes appeared to change colour several times, alternating between blue, grey, and green. (PROSE: Invasion of the Cat-People) According to his war incarnation, the Second Doctor was colour-blind. (PROSE: The Day of the Doctor)

By the time of his exile on Earth, the Doctor had the mark of Blenhim on his chest due to an encounter with the alien race. (COMIC: The Mark of Terror)

The Doctor took pride in his unkept appearance, and was visibly uncomfortable when attempts were made to tidy him up. (TV: The Macra Terror, The Enemy of the World)

Liz Shaw told her mother that the Doctor resembled a "geography teacher" when he first encountered UNIT. (AUDIO: The Last Post) Polly Wright described him as looking like "an unmade bed" to Jamie, (PROSE: The Nameless City) and "a bit sartorially challenged" to the Brigadier. (AUDIO: The Three Companions) Madame Razetskia described the Second Doctor as a "funny little clown", (PROSE: Endgame) while William Blake saw him as "a middle aged man with a mop of black hair" when Legion took on the appearance of the Second Doctor. (PROSE: The Pit)

Steven Jenkins described the Second Doctor as "a scruffy-looking man [of] medium-height", (TV: The Faceless Ones) while Samantha Briggs called him "a short man, with a mournful face and dishevelled clothing." She also noted that he had a "blurred" English accent, which defied description, and seemed to be extremely knowledgeable on a wide variety of subjects. (PROSE: Who Killed Kennedy) Paul Magrs thought he looked like Patrick Troughton. (PROSE: Bafflement and Devotion)

The First Doctor called his second incarnation "a clown" due to his scruffy appearance, (TV: The Three Doctors) whilst the Third Doctor labelled him a "scarecrow", (TV: The Five Doctors) and the Fifth Doctor described him as a "hobo". (PROSE: Five Card Draw) Being a body that was was "not what [he] would have wished for," (AUDIO: The Power of the Daleks) the Fourth Doctor described him as having "a moptop and chequed trousers". (AUDIO: The Fate of Krelos) The Eighth Doctor recalled his second incarnation as being "a comic little man with a flute". (PROSE: Escape Velocity)

When Affinity took on the Second Doctor's appearance, the Twelfth Doctor noted that his second incarnation was "a rather scruffy gentleman, [with] dark, unruly hair" and was "clad in a jacket that seemed several sizes too big and to have been slept in." (PROSE: Silhouette) He also described him as "[an] annoying bumbler" with "big trousers". (PROSE: Twice Upon a Time)

Hair and grooming

The Second Doctor had longish, rumpled black hair, (TV: The Tenth Planet) though, after going on a stressful mission for the Time Lords, (PROSE: World Game) his hair briefly turned grey. (TV: The Two Doctors)

Polly compared his hairstyle to those worn by the Beatles, (AUDIO: The Three Companions) as did John Benton, (AUDIO: The Hexford Invasion) Isobel Watkins, (PROSE: Who Killed Kennedy) Ace, (AUDIO: The Light at the End) and Jo Grant. (AUDIO: The Defectors)

Clothing

Main attire

The Second Doctor dressed similarly to his previous incarnation, though in far more clustered fashion, with his trousers held up rather high, his coats many sizes too large, and his bow ties often worn at a crooked angle under an outstretched shirt collar. (TV: The Power of the Daleks) His unkempt attire led to the Doctor being mistaken for a hobo by witnesses to his adventures, (PROSE: The Dogs of War) to the point that the British Army came to know him as the "Cosmic Hobo". (PROSE: Beast of Fang Rock)

The Doctor wore a battered old black frock coat, (TV: The Power of the Daleks) which had pockets within the inner lining large enough to carry the TARDIS' Time Vector Generator, (TV: The Wheel in Space) and a pocket sewn behind the outer breast pocket that he kept a magnet in. (TV: The Invasion) The Doctor often kept a stylised handkerchief in the coat's breast pocket. (TV: The Highlanders)

Under his frock coat, he wore a plain shirt with a polka-dotted bow tie coloured in blue (TV: The Power of the Daleks) or red. (COMIC: The Faithful Rocket Pack) His shirt colours varied from a dull or bright blue. (TV: The Power of the Daleks, The Three Doctors) He also wore black ankle boots with brown-themed baggy tartan trousers, (TV: The Power of the Daleks) brown houndstooth trousers, (TV: The Underwater Menace) large plain grey trousers, (TV: The Three Doctors) grey-themed tartan trousers, (TV: The Two Doctors) yellow tartan trousers with green stripes, (COMIC: Comic Relief Comic) or black-and-white checked trousers, (PROSE: The Nameless City) all of which were kept up with either red braces with yellow patterns (TV: The Power of the Daleks) white braces with a red flowers pattern, (TV: The Three Doctors) yellow braces with dark, vertical lines, (TV: The Five Doctors) or yellow braces with a flower pattern between two yellow and black vertical lines. (TV: The Two Doctors) Occasionally, he would wear a waistcoat. (PROSE: Daleks Invade Zaos, Golem)

When in colder environments, the Doctor would wear a cloak, (TV: The Highlanders, The Underwater Menace, The Tomb of the Cybermen) or an oversized fur coat. (TV: The Abominable Snowmen, The Ice Warriors, The Five Doctors, The Name of the Doctor)

The Fourth Doctor though that his second incarnation's attire was "unacceptable" for a Time Lord. (AUDIO: The Power of the Daleks)

The Second Doctor expressed a liking for hats, stating that he "would like a hat like that" when he spotted new headgear, (TV: The Power of the Daleks, The Highlanders; PROSE: A Comedy of Terrors) however, he was not afraid to part with them if the situation called for it. (COMIC: Time & Time Again) His most prominent hat was a stovepipe hat, (TV: The Power of the Daleks, The Underwater Menace) but he also wore a British Army tricorn while in Scotland, (TV: The Highlanders) happily accepted a ceremonially hat from the colony controlled by the Macra, (TV: The Macra Terror) and once wore a blue beanie when on a cold beach. (TV: Fury from the Deep)

Other costumes

While in Paris on a mission for the Celestial Intervention Agency, the Doctor wore white breeches, a neatly-tailored long-tailed black coat with a frilled shirt and cravat, gleaming black boots and a short travelling cloak, and wore a Bregeut watch. Before visiting the palace, he changed into a black coat, black breeches, and a frilly white shirt with an elaborate black cravat.

For the Battle of Waterloo, the Doctor donned black breeches, a black evening coat, a frilled white shirt, and a white waistcoat. (PROSE: World Game)

When his first incarnation was placed on trial in 1963 London as a result of killing a werewolf with a silver bullet, the Second Doctor dressed in an ill-fitting suit. (PROSE: The Juror's Story)

Behind the scenes

  • Rupert Davies, Valentine Dyall, Michael Hordern and Brian Blessed were all approached for the role of the Second Doctor. All declined, as they didn't want to commit to a long-running series. Peter Cushing was also offered the role, but declined and later regretted his decision.[source needed]
  • Matt Smith, in preparation for his role as the Eleventh Doctor, watched the Troughton serial The Tomb of the Cybermen, and fell in love with it. He describes Troughton as "rather wonderful" and as being his favourite Doctor. Smith's costume and mannerisms are reminiscent of Troughton's.
  • Almost half of the episodes from the Second Doctor's era have been lost, leaving only seven of Patrick Troughton's 21 TV stories still fully intact (excluding his appearances in multi-Doctor specials). Five further incomplete stories have been released commercially, with specially-created material to bridge the missing episodes. Surviving "orphan" episodes and footage have been released on the Lost in Time DVD collection.
  • The Second Doctor was the first incarnation to directly work with four of his other selves on television, though that turned out to be a number also attained by the Fifth Doctor by virtue of Time Crash. While the Third and Sixth Doctors likewise appeared with at least four other selves via Dimensions in Time, there was no actual "interaction" between Doctors in Dimensions.
  • Until Time Crash, the Second Doctor was the only incarnation to appear in all televised multi-Doctor stories. As of 2013, Troughton holds the record for working with the highest number of other incarnations, having directly interacted with four other Doctors: the First, Third, Fifth, and Sixth Doctors. Taking into account all performed media, however, the record-holder is Peter Davison. His appearances on audio with the Sixth, Seventh, and Eighth Doctors add to his totals from The Five Doctors and Time Crash, to give a grand total of eight other Doctors.
  • The Second Doctor was the first incarnation to have his face integrated into the Doctor Who title sequence, beginning with The Macra Terror.
  • The Second Doctor is the first incarnation who was forced to regenerate, though the regeneration isn't seen in The War Games, and was confirmed he didn't regenerate until The Night Walkers, the only story to actually show the Second Doctor's regeneration properly.
    • Uniquely the Second Doctor is the only incarnation who didn't regenerate at the end of his last regular appearance, instead his regeneration was shown in the comic story The Night Walkers, also making the Second Doctor the only incarnation to regenerate outside of the television series.
    • For many decades following The War Games the Second Doctor was the only incarnation forced into regenerating, until 2022 saw the Thirteenth Doctor forced to regenerate and then degenerate in The Power of the Doctor.
  • Although not seen during the regeneration, the Second Doctor was the first incarnation to emerge from his regeneration with a different set of clothes, as opposed to future incarnations who would have to find a new set of clothes after changing out of the clothes worn by their previous incarnation. For decades the Second Doctor would remain the only incarnation to have held this distinction until in 2022 the Fourteenth Doctor would emerge from his regeneration with a completely different set of clothes rather than his predecessor's.
  • The role of the Second Doctor in the Big Finish plays has been portrayed by close friend and fellow Who actor Frazer Hines, as Patrick Troughton had died 12 years prior to the company's first Who audio. He has also been portrayed in various media by Patrick's sons David Troughton and Michael Troughton, making him the only Doctor to be played by multiple members of the same family.
  • Patrick Throughton initially wanted to have a Harpo Marx-like wig, but Anneke Wills convinced him not to and combed his hair in his Beatles-like style.[1]

External links

Footnotes