A Suggestive Correlation of The Cressida Manuscripts with other Anomalous Texts of the Pre-Animarian Era as proposed for Collective Consideration was an academic publication by Historiographic Speculator Anctloddoton.
As explained by Anctloddoton in the introduction, it was their attempt to "draw suggestive parallels between some of the Problem Texts of the humanoid cultures" through a selection and placement of various extracts from the literature of the extinct worlds. Anctloddoton noted that conclusions drawn from the surviving evidence by necessity had to remain speculative due to the records of those times being so fragmentary and that as it was impossible to know what evidence was missing the linking of events put forward by their presentation of the documents was a "tentative hypothesis at best". Specifically, the publication attempted to present a united account of the visit of the Eighth Doctor, Charlotte Pollard and a young William Shakespeare to Anatolia in 1183 BC and their encounter with the Doctor's former companion Vicki, who had adopted the name Cressida in her married life with Troilus.
Sources drawn from included the personal accounts of the Doctor, Charley, Vicki and Shakespeare, as well as the version of events recorded by the TARDIS logs as curated by Flavia. In full, these were The Primary Cressida Document - Suppressed Texts of the Vatican Library, Not Necessarily the Way I Do It! The True Confessions of a Ka Faraq Gatri not just written for the money when trapped on a primitive planet and needing cash to buy parts, the Elgin decorruption of The Dairy of an Edwardian Adventuress, The Pseudo-Shackspur - works attributed to William Shakespeare with particular focus on The Noble Troyan Woman of Troy, Tales from the Matrix - True Stories from TARDIS Logs Retold for Time Tots, The Secondary Cressida document - Even More Suppressed Texts of the Vatican Library, and a document from the Shakespearean Ephemera wing of the Braxiatel Collection. (PROSE: Apocrypha Bipedium [+]Loading...["Apocrypha Bipedium (short story)"])