Rassilon
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Doctor Who character | |
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Lord Rassilon |
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Rassilon | |
Affiliated with | Time Lords |
Race | Time Lord |
Home planet | Gallifrey |
Home era | Gallifrey era |
First appearance | The Deadly Assassin (named only) |
Last appearance | The Five Doctors |
Portrayed by | Richard Mathews Don Warrington in audio spin-offs |
Rassilon is a fictional character in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who. In the backstory of the programme, he was the founder of Time Lord society on the planet Gallifrey. After the original television series ended in 1989, Rassilon's character and history were further developed in books and other media.
[edit] Character history
There are many contradictory legends about Rassilon. It is known that he developed the technology for time travel that made his people lords of time in the distant past together with his colleague Omega. Omega, a solar engineer, was presumed killed by the supernova that created the black hole later known as the Eye of Harmony, and Rassilon harnessed the nucleus of the black hole to provide the energy that powers time travel. Rassilon then took control of Gallifrey and became the first Lord President. The official history is that he was a benevolent ruler who ruled his people wisely. However, there are other accounts which paint Rassilon as an opportunistic, ambitious and cruel dictator who seized power in the wake of his friend's death (for which some suggest he may have been deliberately responsible).
Rassilon's contributions to Time Lord culture and society were immense, and his name both reverberates and is honoured throughout Time Lord history. The Rassilon Imprimatur is the name given to the symbiotic nuclei that allow Time Lords to withstand the molecular stresses of time travel and grant them a link to their TARDIS time machines (compare with the Ancient Technology Activation gene from Stargate). The Seal of Rassilon is also a common motif in Time Lord design.
Other Time Lord artifacts named for him include the Sash of Rassilon, the Rod or Great Key of Rassilon, the Crown of Rassilon, the Coronet of Rassilon and the Harp of Rassilon. These artifacts are not mere relics, but are also technological devices that have uses beyond the ceremonial.
The Sash, for example, allows the wearer to control the Eye of Harmony, and the Crown of Rassilon gives full access to the Matrix, the computer network that is the repository of all Time Lord knowledge. The Key of Rassilon (not to be confused with the Great Key) also allows access to the Matrix. Confusingly, another Great Key is part of the demat gun, a weapon of mass destruction. The Coronet gives the user the ability to dominate another's will, and the Harp is a musical key that unlocks a secret room within the High Council chambers.
Rassilon is also given credit, variously, for creating the Time Scoop, which can pluck individuals out of their timestreams; TARDIS technology; the living metal and superweapon validium; and the transduction barriers that protect Gallifrey. How much of this is true and how much of it is propaganda and good public relations is not certain.
(In Doctor Who fandom, the remarkable number of artifacts attributed to Rassilon is often parodied, especially in unofficial merchandising. Convention goers have seen memorabilia ranging anywhere from the Coffee Mug of Rassilon to the Shopping Bag of Rassilon.)
The Tomb, or Tower of Rassilon, also known as the Dark Tower, stands in the middle of the Death Zone on Gallifrey. The Death Zone – a blasted, barren plain – was used, in a period of Gallifrey's history known as the Dark Time, as an arena that pitted time-displaced warriors of various alien species against each other in gladiatorial games. It was rumored that Rassilon, who lived during this time, had been deposed by Time Lords rebelling against his rule. It was also claimed Rassilon had discovered the secret of immortality and was still alive in the Tower, sleeping.
In the 20th Anniversary special The Five Doctors, Time Lord President Borusa wanted Rassilon's secret for himself, describing Rassilon's imortality as "perpetual bodily regeneration". Borusa used the Time Scoop to transport the Doctor in all his regenerations (along with various companions) to the Death Zone, using them to clear the way to the Tower. However, Rassilon's promise to share immortality with whoever overcame the obstacles in the Tower and solved the Game of Rassilon was actually a trap designed for would-be dictators. Borusa was granted immortality by being transformed into a living statue. In that story, Rassilon (played by Richard Mathews) appeared as a disembodied image floating above his own sepulchre, but whether this was a telepathic projection or an interactive recording of some sort is unclear.
If Rassilon continued to exist in some form after his apparent death, the recent destruction of Gallifrey in the Time War renders his current status even more uncertain.
[edit] Other appearances
Rassilon's rise to power was explored in the Virgin New Adventures novel Cat's Cradle: Time's Crucible. It is revealed in the novel that Ancient Gallifrey was ruled by the Pythia. Rassilon led a revolution against the Pythia, eventually causing her to kill herself and send her followers to the planet Karn. However, before she died she cursed Rassilon and all future Time Lords to sterility. In later New Adventures we are introduced to the concept of the genetic Looms, from which new Time Lords were created.
In the Doctor Who audio plays produced by Big Finish Productions, Rassilon appears (off-stage) in Seasons of Fear, and is voiced by Don Warrington in Neverland and Zagreus. In those plays, he was shown to continue to exist in the Matrix. He is also portrayed, not as a benevolent figure, but a master manipulator willing to preserve Time Lord history and society as he knew it at all costs.
At the end of Zagreus, the Doctor was exiled to the Divergents' universe. He eventually tracked down Rassilon in that universe, and discovered that he had been manipulating an entity called the Kro'Ka to observe and control the Doctor and Charley's actions. At the end of the events of The Next Life, the Doctor and his companions escaped the timeless Divergent universe, but Rassilon and the Kro'Ka remained trapped.
In the spin-off novels, the partnership of Rassilon and Omega in Time Lord history is rounded off by the shadowy figure of the Other. The canonicity of the spin-off media is uncertain.