Apocrypha (fanzine)

From Tardis Wiki, the free Doctor Who reference
Revision as of 19:34, 7 April 2023 by TheChampionOfTime (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Real world}} '''Apocrypha''' was a fanzine devoted to "The Alternate Worlds of Doctor Who" and edited by Adrian Middleton which published three issues from 1993 to 1995. The zine contained Doctor Who universe "alternative chronologies" (issues 1 & 2 explored Gallifreyan history and issue 3 explored Cyberman history), supplemental scenarios for the RPG ''Time Lord (role playing book)'', and the Audio Visuals. ''Apocrypha'' had the first publis...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
RealWorld.png

Apocrypha was a fanzine devoted to "The Alternate Worlds of Doctor Who" and edited by Adrian Middleton which published three issues from 1993 to 1995. The zine contained Doctor Who universe "alternative chronologies" (issues 1 & 2 explored Gallifreyan history and issue 3 explored Cyberman history), supplemental scenarios for the RPG Time Lord, and the Audio Visuals.

Apocrypha had the first published appearance of several of Middleton's Who concepts which were later referenced in official fiction. Quantum mnemonics would play a central role in Craig Hinton's novel Millennial Rites, whose afterword gave thanks to Middleton. Tegorak and Pengallia are namedropped in Lance Parkin's The Infinity Doctors; additionally, Parkin cited Apocrypha as a source for A History of the Universe and drew on its synthesis of obscure Gallifreyan history in the depiction of the Time Lords in The Infinity Doctors (e.g. the novel's mentions of Gosolus, Rigel, and Varnax align with Apocrypha's contents). Additionally, Daniel O'Mahony's depictions of the Killer Cat of Gin-Seng align with Apocrypha's theory that they were telepathic pre-Pythian rulers of the planet who were exiled to South Gallifrey, eventually developed teleportation skills, and fled Gallifrey to become the Cheetah People.

Gallery

to be added