Scaroth
- You may wish to consult
Carlos (disambiguation)
for other, similarly-named pages.
Scaroth, also known as Count Carlos Scarlioni and Captain Tancredi, was the last of the Jagaroth and planned to also become the saviour of his species. He was also the pilot of the Jagaroth ship that landed on Earth in prehistoric times and concurred to the rise of life on the planet; moreover, he claimed to have contributed to the technological development of the human race.
Biography[[edit] | [edit source]]
Original life[[edit] | [edit source]]
Roughly 400 million years BC, a Jagaroth ship piloted by Scaroth landed on Earth. Despite his ship's advice, he launched at Warp 3; the ship exploded, and in its control cabin, Scaroth was splintered in the time vortex. The explosion provided the radiation that the primordial soup needed for the human race to exist. (TV: City of Death [+]Loading...["City of Death (TV story)"])
Splintered[[edit] | [edit source]]
Twelve fragments of Scaroth were scattered across time, though they could communicate through telepathy, (TV: City of Death [+]Loading...["City of Death (TV story)"]) forming a shared consciousness they referred to as "the gestalt". Some splinters were so lost in their identities that the first gestalt manifestation was a shock to them. One splinter could only access the gestalt in dreams. (PROSE: City of Death [+]Loading...["City of Death (novelisation)"])
All of these incarnations, except for the Egyptian self, who appeared as a god on one occasion, disguised themselves as humans using a mask and skin into which he was able to fit himself. (TV: City of Death [+]Loading...["City of Death (TV story)"])
Throughout time, Scaroth's twelve selves pushed the development of the human race forward so that his twelfth self would have the technology to go back in time to the moment of take-off, preventing his splintering in time as well as the death of his race. (TV: City of Death [+]Loading...["City of Death (TV story)"]) The first splinter was referred to as the "Primary Fragment", and it was he who organised much of the activities of the splinters in his future by sending them messages. (PROSE: City of Death [+]Loading...["City of Death (novelisation)"])
Cretaceous Period[[edit] | [edit source]]
By one account, the earliest fragment of Scaroth appeared during the end of the Cretaceous Period. He was able to determine he had been split into twelve. He lived among the dinosaurs until he witnessed Briggs's freighter crash. (PROSE: Scaroth [+]Loading...["Scaroth (short story)"])
Palaeolithic Era[[edit] | [edit source]]
Another early fragment of Scaroth lived in the Palaeolithic Era. Early humans existed, and he decided he would need to influence their technology to find a means to save himself. He attempted to teach them to use fire and create tools to no avail. (PROSE: Scaroth [+]Loading...["Scaroth (short story)"])
By one account, the splinter known as the "first firemaker" was Scaroth's earliest splinter. He was also called the "Primary Fragment" due to having the most awareness of himself as Scaroth. It was he who organised the wider scheme among his various splinters. (PROSE: City of Death [+]Loading...["City of Death (novelisation)"])
Neolithic Era[[edit] | [edit source]]
Another fragment of Scaroth lived with the Tribe of Gum in the Neolithic Era. He tried to teach them to invent the wheel, but Za set it on fire. (PROSE: Scaroth [+]Loading...["Scaroth (short story)"])
By one account, the inventor of the wheel was the second splinter. He lived on the banks of the Euphrates. (PROSE: City of Death [+]Loading...["City of Death (novelisation)"])
Babylon[[edit] | [edit source]]
By one account, the third splinter was an astronomer in Babylon. (PROSE: City of Death [+]Loading...["City of Death (novelisation)"])
Egypt[[edit] | [edit source]]
Having taught humanity to map the heavens, a fragment of Scaroth lived in Egypt's Fourth Dynasty in Giza and led the construction of the pyramids. (PROSE: Scaroth [+]Loading...["Scaroth (short story)"]) His Egyptian self was actually manipulated by the Osirans to serve as a foreman in arranging the pyramids' construction. (PROSE: The Sands of Time [+]Loading...["The Sands of Time (novel)"]) The true Jagaroth form of Scaroth was worshipped as a god in Egypt. (TV: City of Death [+]Loading...["City of Death (TV story)"])
By one account, this was the fourth splinter. He was the architect of the Great Pyramid of Cheops. (PROSE: City of Death [+]Loading...["City of Death (novelisation)"])
Athens[[edit] | [edit source]]
By one account, the fifth splinter lived in Athens. He had his human mask made for him by Phidias. (PROSE: City of Death [+]Loading...["City of Death (novelisation)"])
Byzantium[[edit] | [edit source]]
One of the splinters was a senator in Byzantium. He later became the Holy Roman Emperor. (PROSE: City of Death [+]Loading...["City of Death (novelisation)"])
Ireland[[edit] | [edit source]]
One of the splinters lived in Medieval Ireland. The locals witnessed his true form and burned him at the stake for being an abomination. Echoes of this fragment's death sometimes wandered in the mind of Count Scarlioni, and he regretted that he had not been able to manipulate history to save his life. (PROSE: City of Death [+]Loading...["City of Death (novelisation)"])
Pope[[edit] | [edit source]]
One of the splinters was a Pope at an unknown point in time. (PROSE: City of Death [+]Loading...["City of Death (novelisation)"])
English nobleman[[edit] | [edit source]]
One of the splinters was an English nobleman who lived in Venice. He could only connect to the gestalt in his dreams. (PROSE: City of Death [+]Loading...["City of Death (novelisation)"])
Captain Tancredi[[edit] | [edit source]]
In Florence, Italy in 1505, Scaroth appeared as a human named Captain Tancredi. He convinced Leonardo da Vinci, a human painter, to paint six copies of his famous painting, the Mona Lisa. He stored them away for a later self to find. (TV: City of Death [+]Loading...["City of Death (TV story)"]) He discouraged Da Vinci from following plans for flying machines left by the Monk. (PROSE: Scaroth [+]Loading...["Scaroth (short story)"])
17th century splinter[[edit] | [edit source]]
Among the documents relating to William Shakespeare known to the Braxiatel Collection, there was a text referred to as the "Scarlioni Hamlet manuscript". (PROSE: Apocrypha Bipedium [+]Loading...["Apocrypha Bipedium (short story)"])
Cardinal Scarlath[[edit] | [edit source]]
In 1799, Cardinal Catilin showed Marielle Duquesne a set of Egyptian manuscripts, found by Cardinal Scarlath and kept in the Collection of Necessary Secrets, that described "a world built by one-eyed supernatural horrors". (PROSE: Christmas on a Rational Planet [+]Loading...["Christmas on a Rational Planet (novel)"])
Scarlett Valentin[[edit] | [edit source]]
One splinter of Scaroth was a popular Parisian female opera singer in the 1890s named Scarlett Valentin. She sometimes fought the Paternoster Gang. (PROSE: The Paternoster's Guide to London [+]Loading...["The Paternoster's Guide to London (feature)"])
Count Scarlioni[[edit] | [edit source]]
The twelfth splinter took the guise of Count Carlos Scarlioni, a well-known figure in the art world in 1979. Thanks to him, genuine art works that had been missing for centuries started showing up. He was married to Countess Scarlioni, who never knew who he really was, thanks to little gifts every now and then and a little "excitement". He also gave her a micromeson scanner and asked her to wear it always. (TV: City of Death [+]Loading...["City of Death (TV story)"]) By one account, he spent most of his life unaware of his true nature as a Scaroth splinter, instead being manipulated by his other splinters. (PROSE: City of Death [+]Loading...["City of Death (novelisation)"])
Thanks to his other selves, he used the artwork to fund his experiments with time, run by Professor Fyodor Nikolai Kerensky. Having found the other six Mona Lisas which were bricked up in his cellar, he planned to steal the one in the Louvre.
He would then sell them to the seven people in the world who would pay anything for the Mona Lisa, and since the one from the Louvre would be stolen, each would think he had the original, and Scaroth would make a hundred million dollars off each panting which would further fund his time experiments to a point where he could go back in time and prevent his past self's mistake.
He met the Fourth Doctor and Romana II when they tried to find the crack in time that his experiments had caused. Romana was captured and made to build a field interphase stabiliser to make the artificial time field Scaroth had created stable, allowing him to travel back in time, as he threatened to destroy Paris if she didn't comply.
Having been convinced by the Doctor, and having seen pictures of Scaroth's true form, the Countess turned against Scaroth. He used her bracelet to kill her. Scaroth travelled back in time to try to stop the explosion that splintered him across time; although Romana had sabotaged the field so that it would only take him into the past for two minutes, that would be enough time for him to avert his past mistake.
The Doctor got there first with Romana and Detective Duggan. After the Doctor failed to convince Scaroth to stand down on his own, Duggan knocked Scaroth unconscious. His time in the past then ended and he faded back to 1979. When his servant Hermann saw his true form, he threw a vase into the time field generator, destroying Scaroth along with his time field. With Scaroth's death, and history left unaltered, the Jagaroth became prematurely extinct. (TV: City of Death [+]Loading...["City of Death (TV story)"])
Legacy[[edit] | [edit source]]
The image of Scaroth was among the wealth of memories which the Thirteenth Doctor, while trapped by the Spy Master, used to overwhelm and break free from the Matrix in the ruins of the Capitol on Gallifrey. (TV: The Timeless Children [+]Loading...["The Timeless Children (TV story)"])
Personality[[edit] | [edit source]]
Scaroth was an extremely callous being who didn't seem to care for anyone but himself; when the Doctor asked him if he knew that putting his entire being back together and preventing the destruction of his ship would cause all life on Earth to have never existed, Scaroth's response was that he did know - he just didn't care. He was arrogant, sarcastic, manipulative and extremely sadistic. He despised humanity, believing them to be primitive and unintelligent, and even murdered his own henchmen on some occasions.
In keeping with his sadistic personality, Scaroth also had a remarkably cruel sense of humour, noting that the only reason he spared Duggan's life was because it was "unfortunately not possible to kill him twice" and joking about the Countess' death shortly after killing her. (TV: City of Death [+]Loading...["City of Death (TV story)"])