The Phoenix in the Tardis (feature)

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This is a work of non-fiction.

Unlike other fictional universes, the Doctor Who universe is created solely by fiction. To us, this is not a valid source. Information from this source can only be used in "behind the scenes" sections, or on pages about real world topics.

The Phoenix in the TARDIS was a non-fictional article in the 1968 Doctor Who Annual. It was significant for being the first written explanation in a licensed product of the transformation between the first and second Doctors. As such, it was the first "non-fictional" account of regeneration.

The article sent mixed signals on what the process was to be called. In one passage, it refers to "Dr. Who before rejuvenation", thereby using the word that had been promulgated in The Power of the Daleks. But it later called Troughton's Doctor "regenerated".

The article claimed, just to further confuse the issue of the Doctor's age, that the Doctor was 900 years old at the time of Hartnell's departure.

Primarily, though, the article tried to give a description of the second Doctor, and contrast him with the first. Most of these observations about the second Doctor fairly matched what had been seen on television throughout Troughton's earliest serials. However, a few passages seemed to describe another man altogether — such as when he was described as being "just as irritable and touchy as [the first Doctor]".