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===Afterlife===
===Afterlife===
Like all [[human]]s and human-descended life, Holmes was reborn into the [[City of the Saved]] but, thanks to the [[Remembrance Tank]] technology of [[The Remote]], multiple versions of him were created by the populace, most based on film and television versions of the character rather than on the historical figure himself. Many of these Holmes iterations joined together to establish the [[Great Detective Agency]] ([[FP]]: ''[[Of the City of the Saved...]]'').
Like all [[human]] and human-descended life, Holmes was reborn into the [[City of the Saved]] but, thanks to the [[Remembrance Tank]] technology of [[The Remote]], multiple versions of him were created by the populace, most based on film and television versions of the character rather than on the historical figure himself. Many of these Holmes iterations joined together to establish the [[Great Detective Agency]] ([[FP]]: ''[[Of the City of the Saved...]]'').


==Other information==
==Other information==

Revision as of 21:48, 15 May 2008

Sherlock Holmes was a male Human detective from 19th century England often partnered with John Watson. As a fictional character, he passed into folklore and legend. He was on several occasions involved in the adventures of the Doctor and Bernice Summerfield and in the affairs of Faction Paradox.

Profile

Holmes had several relatives: Siger, Mycroft and Sherringford.

Early in his career, a murder investigation led Holmes to become involved with the intrigues of Faction Paradox and the Celestis (FP: Erasing Sherlock).

The Doctor lived for a year as practically a neighbor of Holmes as he abided in a house at 107 Baker Street in Victorian London (BFA: The Haunting of Thomas Brewster).

In 1887, Holmes and Watson assisted the Doctor in battling Azathoth (NA: All-Consuming Fire). At least in the Doctor's only timeline, the Doctor had met Holmes before (NA: Timewyrm: Revelation). Later that year, Holmes and Watson travelled to Cheldon Bonniface 2010 to attend the wedding of Bernice Summerfield and Jason Kane, uncovering the schemes of the Master during the festivities (NA: Happy Endings). Bernice's further adventures would eventually reaquaint her with Holmes's family (BFBS: The Adventure of the Diogenes Damsel).

Afterlife

Like all human and human-descended life, Holmes was reborn into the City of the Saved but, thanks to the Remembrance Tank technology of The Remote, multiple versions of him were created by the populace, most based on film and television versions of the character rather than on the historical figure himself. Many of these Holmes iterations joined together to establish the Great Detective Agency (FP: Of the City of the Saved...).

Other information

Holmes' status as fiction

Different accounts attribute disparate levels of "reality" to Holmes, variously suggesting that he existed as -

  • A real person named Sherlock Holmes.
  • A fictionalized version of a real person, not named Sherlock Holmes. This account holds that while Holmes and his friend John Watson were authentic historical figures, Holmes and Watson were not their real names, but that Watson rendered his experiences with the great detective into fiction and published them through his literary agent Arthur Conan Doyle (NA: All-Consuming Fire). To further disguise the identity of his clients, Conan Doyle instructed his illustrators to dress 'Holmes' in the deerstalker and cape the Doctor had been wearing when the writer met him in 1880 (MA: Evolution). In accordance with this, the most substantial information regarding Holmes' encounters with the Doctor and his companions has been provided in the subjective form of diary entries written by Bernice Summerfield and 'Watson' (NA: All-Consuming Fire, Happy Endings).

While specificlly discussing Holmes, The Doctor has hinted (NA: Timewyrm: Revelation, EDA: The Gallifrey Chronicles) that no clear boundary between "fiction" and "reality" exists.

Behind the Scenes

A further connection between the Doctor Who Universe and Holmesian fiction exists in that the Cold (TN: Time and Relative) reappears in one of Kim Newman's Diogenes Club short stories.

See also

Sherlock Holmes