Gallifreyan (language)

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Gallifreyan was a Gallifreyan language used by the Time Lords. There were several forms of written Gallifreyan. By the time of the Doctor, the archaic Old High Gallifreyan language used in the days of Rassilon had changed considerably. (TV: The Five Doctors) TARDISes' translation circuits translated neither Old High Gallifreyan nor Gallifreyan written in the Doctor's time. (TV: The Time of Angels, A Good Man Goes to War)

Old High Gallifreyan

Old High Gallifreyan was the ancient language of the Time Lords. It was not known by many; by the Doctor's era, it was virtually extinct, superseded by modern Gallifreyan. The Eleventh Doctor claimed that Old High Gallifreyan once possessed immense power when correctly harnessed, such as raising empires or destroying gods. (TV: The Time of Angels)

The written form of Old High Gallifreyan resembled, to human eyes, a mixture of Greek letters and mathematical symbols.

Inside the Tomb of Rassilon in the Death Zone on Gallifrey, an old rhyme was written in "Old High Gallifreyan," which explained the outcome of the "Game of Rassilon". (TV: The Five Doctors)

This text included the letters δ³Σx², which was given as the Doctor's name in the 1972 behind-the-scenes book The Making of Doctor Who by Terrance Dicks and Malcolm Hulke.

Within the Doctor's rooms on the Gallifrey of one universe, there was a painting of a woman holding a scroll with the words "Death is but a door" written in High Gallifreyan. (PROSE: The Infinity Doctors)

The First Doctor wrote his Five Hundred Year Diary in High Gallifreyan to make sure no one else could read it. (PROSE: The Power of the Daleks)

River Song could write in Old High Gallifreyan. (TV: The Time of Angels)

The word "valeyard" was said to mean "learned court prosecutor." (TV: The Trial of a Time Lord)

"Mi’en Kalarash" translated as "Blue Fire." (AUDIO: House of Blue Fire)

Modern Gallifreyan

An example of Gallifreyan script written by the Fourth Doctor. (TV: The Deadly Assassin)

While Old High Gallifreyan was the original language of the Time Lords, it had evolved into a different form by the time of the Doctor. (TV: The Five Doctors)

Circular Gallifreyan

Starting with Series 1 in 2005, a new form of Gallifreyan text was used on the TARDIS monitor and the Doctor's own handwriting. This Gallifreyan consisted on multiple interlocking circles, hexagons and lines which presumably made up text, coordinates and numbers in Base seven. Starting in Series 5 this version of Gallifreyan underwent a major revision, but largely returned to its Series 1-4 style in the Doctor's new TARDIS interior in The Snowmen.

An example of the interlocking/overlapping circles. (TV: Utopia)
Series 1-4 styled text on the TARDIS Monitor in (TV: The Snowmen

).

Behind the scenes

  • The number system in circular Gallifreyan, as seen in the chapter headings of the New Series Adventures, was in base seven.

External links