Necronomicon

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
m (General Comments)
Line 13: Line 13:
 
Some of its information came directly from the [[Silurians|Silurian]] race. The [[Master (Doctor Who)|Master]] owned a copy of the text.
 
Some of its information came directly from the [[Silurians|Silurian]] race. The [[Master (Doctor Who)|Master]] owned a copy of the text.
  
==General Comments==
+
==Comments==
 
Contrary to the beliefs of some, the ''Necronomicon'' is not and was never a real text- it was completely an invention of H.P. Lovecraft, and he openly said so to anyone who asked. However, several faux-''Necronomicons'' have been created since Lovecraft's time.
 
Contrary to the beliefs of some, the ''Necronomicon'' is not and was never a real text- it was completely an invention of H.P. Lovecraft, and he openly said so to anyone who asked. However, several faux-''Necronomicons'' have been created since Lovecraft's time.
  
===Doctor Who (Novels) Comments===
 
 
The history of the book changed several times in the ''Doctor Who'' novels. In Lance Parkin's ''A History of the Universe'', he states that the ''Necronomicon'' was written by the Silurians, but in the ''Doctor Who'' novel ''White Darkness'', only portions of the book included information written in the Silurians' language. The later novel ''The Banquo Legacy'' re-established the more traditional history for the book.
 
The history of the book changed several times in the ''Doctor Who'' novels. In Lance Parkin's ''A History of the Universe'', he states that the ''Necronomicon'' was written by the Silurians, but in the ''Doctor Who'' novel ''White Darkness'', only portions of the book included information written in the Silurians' language. The later novel ''The Banquo Legacy'' re-established the more traditional history for the book.
  

Revision as of 14:45, 11 February 2006

For other uses of this name, see Necronomicon (disambiguation).


The Necronomicon is an extensive source of forbidden knowledge, including information on the Great Old Ones.

Contents

History

Originally titled the Kitab al-Azif, it was written around 730 by the "mad Arab" Abdul Alhazred. The dark book has been copied since into many languages other than the original Arabic, including Duriac (an obscure Middle Eastern dialect), Greek (which was when it was retitled to Necronomicon), Bulgarian, French, Latin, Russian (two different ones, one made for Stalin), Spanish, English (four different attempts, one of which became the Sussex Manuscript), Gothic (the language of an ancient Germanic tribe; this version is believed to lack the allegory and obscurity of other versions, making it more easily used- and much more dangerous), German, and an unknown glyphic language of the Dreamlands. Various copies of the tome’s translations have passed from person to person, but only the original is known to be totally complete.

Real Ghostbusters

An English translation of the Necronomicon was used to summon Cthulhu.

Doctor Who (Novels)

Some of its information came directly from the Silurian race. The Master owned a copy of the text.

Comments

Contrary to the beliefs of some, the Necronomicon is not and was never a real text- it was completely an invention of H.P. Lovecraft, and he openly said so to anyone who asked. However, several faux-Necronomicons have been created since Lovecraft's time.

The history of the book changed several times in the Doctor Who novels. In Lance Parkin's A History of the Universe, he states that the Necronomicon was written by the Silurians, but in the Doctor Who novel White Darkness, only portions of the book included information written in the Silurians' language. The later novel The Banquo Legacy re-established the more traditional history for the book.

Personal tools
Namespaces
Variants
Actions
Navigation
Toolbox