Goblin

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Goblin

Goblins, sometimes equated with kobolds, (PROSE: The Devil Goblins from Neptune [+]Loading...["The Devil Goblins from Neptune (novel)"]) were squat, mischievous being with a place in human folklore. The term was sometimes used in general terms to refer to a magical trickster, rather than to a specific trickster; in this figurative sense, the Doctor was sometimes compared to a "goblin", such as in the legend of the Pandorica. (TV: The Pandorica Opens [+]Loading...["The Pandorica Opens (TV story)"])

The Fifteenth Doctor faced a group of Goblins who appeared as grey-skinned and without noses. Creatures of coincidence who ate babies, they were Time Riders who "bimbled" across time aboard the goblin ship. When explaining them to Ruby Sunday, the Doctor repeatedly referred to them as "these goblins", acknowledging them as a specific subgroup of a wider species who might not have shared all these traits. (TV: The Church on Ruby Road [+]Loading...["The Church on Ruby Road (TV story)"]) In one account, the Doctor explained that the Toymaker had "brought his legions with him" when he entered the universe, implying that this subgroup were a part of his legions. The Doctor explained that, like the Toymaker, the Goblins' nature meant that they were "writing their own rules" of reality. (PROSE: The Church on Ruby Road [+]Loading...{"page":"100","chaptnum":"Thirteen","1":"The Church on Ruby Road (novelisation)"}) A different set of goblins had previously been used as minions by Krampus, another member of the Pantheon. (COMIC: Imaginary Enemies [+]Loading...["Imaginary Enemies (comic story)"])

Goblins also existed in the Slough of the Disunited Planets as a species of short, green-skinned humanoids with prominent noses and pointy ears. (COMIC: The Warkeeper's Crown [+]Loading...["The Warkeeper's Crown (comic story)"])

Another account indicated that the myth of Goblins was inspired by the Waro, with the Waro being seen by many as literally being goblins. (PROSE: The Devil Goblins from Neptune [+]Loading...["The Devil Goblins from Neptune (novel)"]) Harket believed that the alien Huldran were "fairies, imps, goblins". (AUDIO: Project Lazarus [+]Loading...["Project Lazarus (audio story)"]) A third account indicated goblins were connected to the fairies. (PROSE: The Shining Man [+]Loading...["The Shining Man (novel)"]) The Thirteenth Doctor once claimed to not believe in Goblins; however, she changed her mind upon momentarily reflecting on the matter. (PROSE: The Good Doctor [+]Loading...{"chaptnum":"3","1":"The Good Doctor (novel)"})

History[[edit] | [edit source]]

On Earth[[edit] | [edit source]]

Goblins from another reality of magic and mythical creatures were part of Witch-Queen Karolina's invasion of the UK. Coming from the sea, they ransacked several Irish villages, killing many. However, the reality of these goblins along with the rest of the invasion was rewritten by Liz Shaw such that they became creatures merely imagined by mass hypnosis and had never been real. (PROSE: The Science of Magic [+]Loading...["The Science of Magic (short story)"])

Noel Coward and Iris Wildthyme once shared an adventure with singing goblins in Las Vegas. (PROSE: The Dreadful Flap [+]Loading...["The Dreadful Flap (short story)"])

In the magical post-War universe, the Eighth Doctor once encountered "swamp goblins" known as Bogles in a Louisiana bayou. They nearly killed him, but he was rescued by Mrs Flood. (PROSE: The City of the Dead [+]Loading...["The City of the Dead (novel)"])

Mels Zucker tussles with one of Krampus's hench-goblins. (COMIC: Imaginary Enemies [+]Loading...["Imaginary Enemies (comic story)"])

During Amelia Pond's childhood in Leadworth, she, Rory Williams and Mels Zucker once faced Krampus, who had stepped through into the universe thanks to the crack in time, and brought with him three Christmas bauble out of which he summoned his henchfolks, goblins OttoLudwig and Siegfried. The three appeared as fairly tall, green-skinned humanoids in identical outfits, with clawed fingers and pointy noses and ears. They spoke in the same cod Austrian accent as their master. Krampus sent them to capture the children, but they failed, being roundly trounced by Mels using her superhuman strength. The goblins were subsequently sucked back out of the universe with Krampus after Amelia convinced Veronica Stackmore, the girl through whom Krampus had gained a foothold in the universe, to reject the Link. (COMIC: Imaginary Enemies [+]Loading...["Imaginary Enemies (comic story)"])

Goblins had a place in human culture and folklore. One of the props stored in an old pantomime theatre prop-room was a goblin costume; after the Thirteenth Doctor attempted to summon the "magic of pantomime" to life using a link she'd clicked on Spacebook, it turned out to be very literal, replacing the props with real versions of the various characters, "snatched" from their homes against their will. This included a sword-wielding goblin. Before long, however, the Doctor found and rubbed the now-real magic lamp and summoned a genie, using the first of her three wishes to get him to send away all the other, more dangerous fictional beings the Spacebook link had summoned. (COMIC: It's Behind You! [+]Loading...["It's Behind You! (comic story)"])

Coincidence-eating Goblins[[edit] | [edit source]]

Main article: Goblins (The Church on Ruby Road)
Janis Goblin. (PROSE: A Message from Janis Goblin [+]Loading...["A Message from Janis Goblin (short story)"])

One group of Goblins, among them Janis Goblin and her band, operated under the Goblin King out of their ship. (TV: The Church on Ruby Road [+]Loading...["The Church on Ruby Road (TV story)"]) According to one account, the Fifteenth Doctor believed them to be the Toymaker's "legacy", having only come into existence within the Doctor's universe after (PROSE: The Church on Ruby Road [+]Loading...{"name":"TCoRR","page":"100","chaptnum":"Thirteen","1":"The Church on Ruby Road (novelisation)"}) the Toymaker was able to break into the universe thanks to the actions of the Fourteenth Doctor at the edge of the universe, (TV: The Giggle [+]Loading...["The Giggle (TV story)"]) with "his legions" following him. (PROSE: The Church on Ruby Road [+]Loading...{"name":"TCoRR","page":"100","chaptnum":"Thirteen","1":"The Church on Ruby Road (novelisation)"}, TV: The Giggle [+]Loading...["The Giggle (TV story)"]) A prior account, however, had the Doctor entertaining Ruby's theory that these Goblins were the secret cause of "all accidents", casting doubt on the idea of them as recent intruders. At any rate, the Doctor stated that "these Goblins" were "Time Riders" who "bimble[d]" through time using their ship. The Fifteenth Doctor discounted their ways as being magic, instead describing it as a "different form of physics" and a "new science", (TV: The Church on Ruby Road [+]Loading...["The Church on Ruby Road (TV story)"]) much as the Toymaker followed his rules of play instead of the rules of the Doctor's universe. (TV: The Giggle [+]Loading...["The Giggle (TV story)"]) Using their form of science, the goblins would create bad luck around certain people both for fun and also as preparation for stealing babies that they wanted to eat, which apparently made them taste better. Their technology was mostly based around complex systems of rope and allowed them to make a flying wooden ship. (TV: The Church on Ruby Road [+]Loading...["The Church on Ruby Road (TV story)"])

Janis Goblin once thanked all the humans who had listened to "The Goblin Song", believing that the proceeds going to Children in Need would mean more children for her and her fellow goblins to eat. After realising this was not the case, she asked someone to pass her some twins. (PROSE: A Message from Janis Goblin [+]Loading...["A Message from Janis Goblin (short story)"]) These goblins attempted to steal Lulubelle on Christmas Eve of 2023, but were thwarted by the Fifteenth Doctor and Ruby Sunday. The goblins then stole Ruby on Christmas Eve of 2004, resulting in a "cracked timeline". The Doctor was able to thwart them using his intelligent gloves by weighing down their ship and impaling the Goblin King on a church spire, seemingly banishing them from the universe. This resulted in the timeline being restored. (TV: The Church on Ruby Road [+]Loading...["The Church on Ruby Road (TV story)"])

On other planets[[edit] | [edit source]]

Goblins, among many other alien creatures coincidentally resembling those found in Dungeons & Dragons, were present on a battlefield in the Slough of the Disunited Planets. The Tenth Doctor, Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart and Michael Yates comforted one mortally wounded goblin as he died. (COMIC: The Warkeeper's Crown)

As fantastical creatures in human folklore, goblins were brought into existence on Avalon by the nanobot system on the planet, which realised the fantasies of 22nd century human colonists. As such, goblins had an entry into the Avalonian Bestiary. Also in the book were bogies, which were described as shape-shifting goblins. (PROSE: The Sorcerer's Apprentice)

Goblins were among the fantastical residents of the planet Albert. (PROSE: Grimm Reality [+]Loading...["Grimm Reality (novel)"])

A Goblin was among the monsters seen in the paintings of Toulour Martinique which came alive on the Vega Station. (PROSE: Demontage [+]Loading...["Demontage (novel)"])

When the Monochrome Auteur edited the reality of Gendar into a whimsical Christmas wonderland, he added Goblins to the planet's cave systems. (PROSE: The Two Auteurs [+]Loading...["The Two Auteurs (short story)"]) The Evans siblings had an adventure in this version of Gendar which involved the Goblins of Gendar, who were menaced by the villainous Forces of Evil led by Sarkastik Bleach. (PROSE: The Goblin, the Witch, and the Kitchen Sink [+]Loading...["The Goblin, the Witch, and the Kitchen Sink (short story)"])

In mythology[[edit] | [edit source]]

According to legend, the Pandorica was the prison of a warrior or goblin who dropped out of the sky and tore the world apart until a "good wizard" tricked it and locked it up. River Song remarked that the good wizard had likely been the Doctor himself, though it later became clear that the trickster and warrior in the legend had actually been the Doctor, with the Pandorica Alliance of his worst enemies being the ones who were to seal him away. (TV: The Pandorica Opens) On the other hand, in his speech to the Clerics in which he told them that the Eleventh Doctor was a living breathing man, Colonel Manton said that the Doctor was not, among other things, a goblin. (TV: A Good Man Goes to War [+]Loading...["A Good Man Goes to War (TV story)"])

To the humans of the 13th century, the Sontaran Linx resembled a goblin. (PROSE: Doctor Who and the Time Warrior [+]Loading...["Doctor Who and the Time Warrior (novelisation)"])

Christina Rossetti's poem "Goblin Market" referred to goblins. Dee Dee Blasco quoted the poem.

"We must not look at goblin men,
We must not buy their fruits:
Who knows upon what soil they fed
Their hungry, thirsty roots?" (TV: Midnight [+]Loading...["Midnight (TV story)"])

Members of the Great Houses regarded the Sontarans as "goblins"; Larissa remembered the Sontaran invasion of Gallifrey as a "goblin infestation", (PROSE: Newtons Sleep) and in Mujun: The Ghost Kingdom the Seventy-Ninth Sontaran Assault Corps was represented by a "goblin-hoarde". (PROSE: The Book of the War, AUDIO: The Eleven Day Empire)

Goblin's Copse was a rural English village near Beaconsfield. (PROSE: Beautiful Chaos [+]Loading...["Beautiful Chaos (novel)"], TV: The Last Sontaran [+]Loading...["The Last Sontaran (TV story)"])

The Red Cap was a murderous goblin from mythology which the Sixth Doctor encountered in altered form in the Land of Fiction. (AUDIO: City of Spires [+]Loading...["City of Spires (audio story)"])