Time Lord
The Time Lords (sometimes called "Lords of Time") were the oligarchic rulers of the planet Gallifrey. They possessed the power and technology to travel through both time and space in their TARDISes. Time Lords may also be referred to as Gallifreyans, though it is not certain if all Gallifreyans were Time Lords, or the Time Lords were only an elite echelon of Gallifreyan society.
History and Politics
Also see: Time Lord history
One of the oldest and most powerful civilisations in the Universe, the Time Lords possessed absolute power for some ten million years, tracing back to the days of Rassilon and Omega ("The Mysterious Planet"). Even before that time, Gallifrey was an ancient and advanced world, having perfected the transmat beam when the Universe was less than half its present size ("Genesis of the Daleks"), as well as developing tachyonics before abandoning that field in favor of warp matrix engineering (" The Leisure Hive"). Time Lords also experimented with hyperspace, but finally abandoned it as a theoretical absurdity two thousand years before the Doctor's time ("The Stones of Blood").
Time Lord civilisation had its beginnings in the temporal and stellar engineering experiments conducted by Rassilon, Omega, and the Other. The period prior to this is generally referred to as "the Old Time" ("The Three Doctors," "The Deadly Assassin," et al). Omega detonated a nearby star, creating a black hole from which the Time Lords drew the enormous power they needed for their TARDISes. Omega was himself cast through the black hole into an anti-matter universe and was presumed dead for millenia. Rassilon later retrieved the Eye of Harmony and stored it in a vault beneath the Time Lord capitol as a source of power. Generally the Eye of Harmony is considered to be a different black hole than the one created by Omega, as that one exploded into a supernova due to the actions of the first three Doctors in Omega's universe. Rassilon's reign saw the end of the Death Zone games, as well as the war with the Vampires ("The Five Doctors," "State of Decay").
Some one hundred thousand years ago, the Time Lords encountered the Minyans, a primitive humanoid race which worshipped them as gods. Flattered, the Time Lords augmented the Minyans' technological development. This, however, led to a nuclear war which destoyed Minyos and sent the survivors into exile searching for a new home world. As a result, Time Lords developed a strict non-intervention policy, instead being content to observe and gather knowledge ("Underworld").
Time Lord society was governed by the High Council, consisting of cardinals representing several elctoral colleges, with an Inner Council comprising of the Castellan, Chancellor, and President. The President had near absolute authority, and used a link to the Matrix, a vast computer network containing the knowledge and experiences of all past generations of Time Lords, to set Time Lord policy and remain alert to potential threats from lesser civilisations. The Castellan was in charge of security, while the Chancellor in turn oversaw the Castellan's actions and acted as the President's second. Security and law were enforced by the Chancellory Guard.
During the Doctor's lifetime several crises occurred which brought to light the vulnerabilities of the once omnipotent Time Lords. Testimony at the Second Doctor's malfeasance tribunal revealed the many marauding races which had emerged in the Universe after the Time Lords adopted their isolationsit policy. The Time Lords were easily rendered helpless when Omega began draining energy from Gallifrey, and were only saved by the intervention of the Doctor's first three incarnations. The ease with which the Master was able to alter records contained within the Archives and manipulate the Matrix was due largely to the fact that the technology behind the Matrix's panotropic net had been surpassed on other worlds, such that on those worlds the technology would, according to the Doctor, be considered "prehistoric junk." The Vardan invasion, itself a front for an invasion by the Sontarans, exposed chinks in Gallifrey's defenses. The Ravolox affair showed a level of corruption within the High Council that exceeded even the misdeeds of individual council members such as Chancellor Goth, Lord Hedin, and even President Borusa. Centuries of isolation, combined with the Eye of Harmony's effect of causing things on Gallifrey to "neither flux, nor whither, nor chnage in any state" had induced a complacency among Time Lords which caused their technology and power to stagnate even as other races became more powerful and dangerous.
The Time Lords eventually met their end in the last of the Time Wars, as the Dalek fleet attacked their world. The Doctor succeeded in destoying the Daleks, - or so he believed at the time, - but Gallifrey and the Time Lords were caught in the conflagration and were detsroyed as well. The guilt and trauma resulting from this haunted the Doctor throughout his ninth incarnation ("The End of the World," "Dalek," et al).
Physiology
Externally, Time Lords are identical to humans. However, whereas Earth humans have a diverse range of ethnicities, Time Lords appear to have a mostly Eurasian appearance.
Two Hearts
In contrast to their external similarities, the internal anatomy of Time Lords and presumably all Gallifreyans differs radically from that of humans. Chief among these is the presence of two hearts, "one for casual, one for best" as Romana once quipped. Time Lords can stop these hearts at will, feigning death ("Destiny of the Daleks"). This binary circulatory system may contribute to the Gallifreyan mean body temperature of 60 degrees on the Earth Farenheidt scale, as well their ability to survive the subzero temperatures of space for a limited time or place themselves in a trance state which reduces the need for oxygen ("Four to Doomsday"). (See the "Expanded Universe" section below for additional information on the Time Lord circulatory system.)
The Brain
The Time Lord brain is much more complex than that of humans. They are telepathically linked to one another and are even capable of joining the entire Time Lord intellgentsia as one ("The Invisible Enemy"). In times of stress Time Lords may even enter a self-induced coma. The telepathic link Time Lords have with their TARDISes can enable them and their non-Gallifreyan companions to understand different languages ("The Masque of Mandragora," "The End of the World"), although exceptions do exist, as when the Doctor was unable to understand the Formasi government agent on Argolis. This gift also evidently only works with organic life-forms, as the Doctor was also unable to understand the aborigine Kurkutji and relied on his Australian companion Tegan Jovanka to translate, unaware at the time that Kurkutji was in fact an android programmed by the Urbankan Monarch with the organic original's memories and personality ("Four to Doomsday").
Regeneration
Time Lords have the ability to regenerate, renewing their bodies in case of mortal illness or injury, advanced old age, or even at will. This process allows them to live for centuries, even millenia. (See the article on regeneration for more information on this process.) They apparently also age at a much slower rate than humans, as, barring accidents, a single incarnation may last for decades or even centuries before another regeneration becomes necessary.
Miscellany
- Time Lords have a respiratory bypass system, which allows them to survive strangulation. ("Pyramids of Mars").
- The cellular structure of Time Lords is marked by symbiotic nuclei, also known as the "Rassilon Imprimatur", which bonds a Time Lord to his TARDIS and allows him to withstand the molecular stresses of time travel ("The Invisible Enemy," "The Two Doctors"). It may also be tied in with a Time Lord's ability to regenerate.
- Time Lords are susceptible to the intoxicating effects of alcohol, as the Sixth Doctor's reminiscence with his old friend Azmael suggested ("The Twin Dilemma"). They are also susceptible to certain toxic gases and sleep-inducing drugs. However, unlike humans, they are immune to the voice-altering effects of helium ("The Robots of Death").
Society
Time Lord society was generally complacent in nature, owing to their policy of non-intervention. This led to a stagnation which may have contributed to the decision by the Doctor and certain other Time Lords to leave Gallifrey. It probably also contributed to the demise of the Time Lords in the last Time War.
Culture and Tradition
Time Lords appreciated music, as indicated by such artifacts as the Harp of Rassilon and the use of nursery rhymes to entertain children ("The Five Doctors"). They also appreciated art, although painting on Gallifrey was done by computer ("City of Death"). The drinking of tea was practiced by Time Lords, perhaps introduced by Time Lord research teams returning from Earth ("The Invasion of Time").
Science and Technology
People
Time Lords in the Expanded Universe
History and Politics
- Several of the Missing Adventure novels identitfy the Doctor's more powerful foes, such as the Nestene Consciousness, the Great Intelligence, and the Animus, as being survivors of a race of Time Lords which existed in the previous Universe before this one. Shunting themselves into our Universe, they found that its different physical laws afforded them godlike powers.
- "Cat's Cradle: Time's Crucible" details much of Gallifrey's early history, stating that it was once the center of a vast intergalactic empire. Gallifrey in time came under the rule of the Pythias, a matriarchal order of seers under whom the Gallifreyans fell under the sway of superstition and mysticism, although it was under the reign of the last Pythia that the Time Scathe, a TARDIS precursor, was developed. The last Pythia was overthrown by the triumvirate of Rassilon, Omega, and the Other, cursing Gallifrey in her last breath with sterility. Rasslion instituted the creation of genetic looms to enable the Gallifreyan race to reproduce. The surviving members of the Pythian order fled to Karn, where they evolved into the Sisterhood. The looms are once again mentioned in "Lungbarrow," which also identifies the Other as the Doctor in a previous existence.
- In the BBC Eighth Doctor novel, "The Ancestor Cell," Gallifrey is destroyed not in a war with the Daleks, but with Faction Paradox. Russell T. Davies has stated that the different scenarios for the destruction of Gallifrey given in this novel and in the new television series are unrelated.
Physiology
- The Missing Adventure novel "Managra" suggested that Time Lords may be able to survive with only one heart, should the other be punctured or destroyed.
- "The Man in the Velvet Mask" suggests that Time Lords acquire their second heart during their first regeneration. This may be an attempt to address the discrepancy suggested in early television stories of the First Doctor apparently having only one heart.
Appearances
Television stories
- The War Games
- Colony in Space
- The Three Doctors
- The Deadly Assassin
- The Invasion of Time
- Arc of Infinity
- The Five Doctors
- The Mysterious Planet
- Mindwarp
- Terror of the Vervoids
- The Ultimate Foe
(Time Lord messengers visit the Doctor in "Terror of the Autons" and "Genesis of the Daleks," and a signal is received from the Time Lords at the conclusion of "Meglos" which is revealed in the opening scene of "Full Circle" as an order to return Romana to Gallifrey. The Time Lords also play active parts behind the scenes in "The Mutants," "Planet of the Daleks," "The Brain of Morbius," "Attack of the Cybermen," and "The Two Doctors," although they do not appear on screen.)
Missing Adventure novels