Planet (An Unearthly Child)

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Revision as of 15:41, 14 January 2023 by Jack (talk | contribs) (T:BRENG)
This page should be merged.

It should be relocated at The Doctor's home because This is, as pointed out on the talk page, a rather speculative concatenation of various accounts of the Doctor's home planet, primarily from the 60s television stories and EDA novels, speculative because the only thing actually linking them together is the "49th Century" line being in "The Pilot Episode" and Unnatural History, the former of which this wiki does not consider to be a VALID in-universe source. Due to all this, I feel this information would be far better served in the "homeworld" section of that page.
Talk about it here or check the revision history for additional comments.

The original home planet of the Doctor and Susan in the 49th century was one of many potential origins due to the Doctor's shifting timelines and alterations to their biodata.

References

When Barbara Wright asked if the TARDIS was Susan's home, Susan replied: "yes… well, at least, it's the only home I have now." (PROSE: Doctor Who and an Unearthly Child) Later in the same conversation, Susan told Ian and Barbara of her and the Doctor's origins, saying "[she] was born in another time, another world". (TV: An Unearthly Child, PROSE: Doctor Who and an Unearthly Child)

According to one account, the Doctor told Ian Chesterton and Barbara Wright that he and Susan were wanderers who were cut off from their planet and separated from it by millions upon millions of years. Later, Ian wondered if the planet that the Doctor and Susan came from practised customs such as marriage, after contemplating what would happen if Susan would stop travelling in the Tardis in favour of marriage. (PROSE: Doctor Who in an Exciting Adventure with the Daleks)

Susan later mentioned that her and the Doctor's home planet was similar to Earth, but at night the sky was a burnt orange and the trees had silver leaves; (TV: "A Desperate Venture") Susan even wished to return to her home eventually. (PROSE: The Sensorites) Later accounts, however, identified this planet as Gallifrey. (TV: Gridlock, The Sound of Drums, et al.)

When Steven Taylor stormed out of the TARDIS after learning that the Doctor did not take an opportunity to spare Anne Chaplet from the St Bartholomew's Day massacre, the Doctor suggested to himself that, having lost so many of his travelling companions, that he should return to his home planet, but acknowledged that he could not. (TV: "Bell of Doom")

Whilst a prisoner of the Daleks on Skaro during Operation Human Factor, the Second Doctor briefly mused that he could take Jamie McCrimmon, Victoria and Edward Waterfield, and Theodore Maxtible with him to his home planet. At this point, the Daleks believed that the Doctor had become "more than human" as a result of having "travelled too much through time". (TV: The Evil of the Daleks)

After the Eighth Doctor made a deal with a boy of Faction Paradox, a memory for a memory, so that the Doctor could locate Griffin, he realised that the boy had not only taken a memory, but altered his biodata. The boy, alongside various versions of himself from the relative future, mocked the Doctor for his shifting past. (PROSE: Unnatural History)

Maybe you didn't use to have a father. Maybe you're living in the middle of a time war. Maybe there's an Enemy out there who's rewriting you when you're not looking! Maybe you weren't always half human. But now you've become always half human. Maybe you weren't always a Time Lord. But now you’ve always been a Time Lord. Maybe you originally came from some planet in the forty-ninth century. Fleeing from the Enemy who'd overrun your home and you've just been written and rewritten and overwritten, ever since.The boy [Unnatural History (novel) [src]]

After the Eighth Doctor lost his memories of the Time Lords and Gallifrey, he theorised that he may have been an exile from the forty-ninth century. (PROSE: Escape Velocity)

Other universes

In a parallel universe, Martin Bannister was uncertain whether or not to make it explicit that Doctor Who and Susan Who came from Venus in the 49th century. (AUDIO: Deadline)

Behind the scenes

The unnamed planet in the 49th century, the home of Dr. Who and Susan, was first mentioned in The Pilot Episode, where it was explicitly mentioned as the origin of the characters; in the the televised story, this line is less specific.[1] The First and Second Doctors' eras contained several vague allusions to the Doctor's home, typically inferring that he and Susan were simply humans from another planet, until the "Time Lord" backstory was established in TV: The War Games and developed in the Third Doctor's era.

Since then, despite the Doctor having numerous origins being an accepted and oft-mentioned part of the character's backstory, this origin has been very rarely referenced, with the only two references to it outside of the First and Second Doctor's eras being PROSE: Unnatural History and PROSE: Escape Velocity (though the planet was referenced in AUDIO: Deadline, which isn't set in the "main" Doctor Who universe), even then only entertaining it as a possibility as opposed to directly confirming it as a backstory. Other stories, such as PROSE: Doctor Who in an Exciting Adventure with the Daleks usually play with the general idea, albeit a different take upon it.

One of Anthony Coburn's early scripts would have established that Susan had been a princess on her home planet, which would have been different than Doctor Who's world.[2] Thereafter, Susan was envisioned as a fugitive from the Doctor's home planet. Coburn later altered the character to be the Doctor's granddaughter, to avoid having a biologically unrelated female teenager travelling with an old man.[3]

In TV: The Sensorites, Susan's description of her home planet was reminiscent of Venus, albeit with a science-fiction spin. Venus being the homeworld Susan and the Doctor was later referenced in AUDIO: Deadline. However, this description was later retroactively applied to Gallifrey, becoming part of the well known design as seen in the post-2005 of Doctor Who. Due to how the concept of this planet was changed to become Gallifrey, it is quite reminiscent of Jewel.

In the unaired 1960s audio drama Journey into Time starring Peter Cushing, that version of the Doctor mentions that his civilisation was actually Earth, but three thousand years in Mike's future (who came from the mid-twentieth century).

A behind the scenes note on the Second Doctor had this to say about his origin:

He is the eternal fugitive with a horrifying fear of the past horrors he has endured. (These horrors were experienced during the galactic war and account for his flight from his own planet.)49th century on the Fringes of War, Nate Bumber's Tumblr

Footnotes