Lobus Caecilius

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Revision as of 02:04, 27 October 2016 by 104.193.167.53 (talk) (Multiple corrections were made mostly regarding the name the character the article is about.)

Lobus Caecilius (A.K.A. Lucius Caecilius Iucundus) was a man who lived in Pompeii before Vesuvius erupted on 24 August 79, whose appearance was unwittingly taken by the Doctor in his twelfth incarnation.

Biography

Husband of Metella and father to Evelina and Quintus, Caecilius was a marble trader with political ambitions; it was to impress the augur Lucius Petrus Dextrus, that he bought the Tenth Doctor's TARDIS at the market, intending to display it as "modern art".

While initially planning to leave them to suffer the horrors that history had planned for them, the Tenth Doctor was convinced by Donna Noble to intervene and save Caecilius along with his family. As history would not record their survival, the Doctor thus did technically not change history. By early 80, Caecilius and his family had resettled in Rome, and adopted the Tenth Doctor and Donna as their household gods. (TV: The Fires of Pompeii)

Legacy

The Doctor remembers where he has seen his face before. (TV: The Girl Who Died)

The Doctor later took on the face of Caecilius when he regenerated into his twelfth incarnation. (TV: The Time of the Doctor) Although unsure why his new face appeared familiar at first (TV: Deep Breath), he came to realise that it was to remind himself that his purpose as the Doctor was to always save people — no matter how impossible or "wrong" it might seem. (TV: The Girl Who Died)

Behind the scenes

Caecilius is notable for being one of the three characters played by Peter Capaldi within televised Doctor Who media, along with the Twelfth Doctor and John Frobisher. In the Torchwood Declassified episode Cracking Children of Earth, Russell T Davies suggested that, since they are played by the same actor, John Frobisher may be a descendant of Lobus.

The name game

This character's surname was — by Russell T Davies' admission in The Italian Job — derived from books in the Cambridge Latin Course, elementary Latin books about real, historical people. For this reason, it is frequently asserted that this character is meant to be a "celebrity historical character" in the vein of Charles Dickens or Agatha Christie. It is believed by most people, including at least one official merchandise licensee, believe that this character is supposed to be the historical Lucius Caecilius Iucundus. This also backed by the fact that that Lucius Caecilius Iucundus is the name used by the IMDB description of the character. Despite this many people still believe the name is Lobus Caecilius because it is the named used in the original episode's script.

Topps got the name wrong — really wrong. They think the name is Lucius Caecilius Lucundus, with an L.

Finally, careful attention to The Italian Job reveals that the production team merely nicked the names from Cambridge Latin Course books. As Phil Collinson confirmed, "It's all in [the Cambridge Latin Course] — in terms of the names". But it was not the authorial intent that this character or his family be an attempt at recreation of historical figures. Instead, Davies characterised the use of the name "Caecilius" as a gag, supporting the many other broad Latin gags in the episode, similar to those found in his beloved Asterix comics.

Other matters

  • For the German broadcast, Caecilius was dubbed by voice actor Gregor Höppner.