List of Doctor Who Episodes (1963–1989)

From Iwe

This article is about the 1963–1989 episodes and 1996 film. For the episodes starting from 2005, see List of Doctor Who episodes (2005–present).

Doctor Who is a British science fiction television programme produced by the BBC. As of 23 November 2013, 799 individual episodes, including one television movie of Doctor Who, have been aired, encompassing 240 stories. Additionally, four charity specials and two animated serials have also been aired. The show's high episode count resulted in Doctor Who holding the world record for the highest number of episodes for a science-fiction programme.

Doctor Who ceased airing in 1989 and began again in 2005. Each story in the original series (1963–89) is a multi-episode serial, with two exceptions: the 1965 cutaway episode "Mission to the Unknown" and the 20th anniversary story The Five Doctors. The characters in the column after the serial titles indicate the code used by the production team to designate the serial, where applicable, and are followed either by the titles of the individual episodes where given or by the number of episodes otherwise. Unless otherwise noted, episodes in this period are 25 minutes long. During the early seasons of the programme most serials were linked together and one would usually lead directly into the next. Starting with the 2005 revival, the production team abandoned the traditional serial format for a largely self-contained episodic format with occasional multi-part stories and loose story arcs.

Due to the BBC's 1970s junking policy, 97 episodes from the 1960s are missing, with the result that 26 serials are incomplete, although all of these still exist as audio recordings, and some have been reconstructed. In the first two seasons and most of the third, each episode of a serial had an individual title; no serial had an overall on-screen title until The Savages. The serial titles given below are the most common title for the serials as a whole, used in sources such as the Doctor Who Reference Guide and the BBC's classic episode guide, and are generally those used for commercial release. The practice of individually titled episodes resurfaced with the show's 2005 revival, when Doctor Who's serial nature was abandoned in favour of an episodic format.

The three-digit story numbers are not official designations but are merely to serve as a guide to where the story stands in the overall context of the programme. There is some dispute about, for example, whether to count Season 23's The Trial of a Time Lord as one or four serials, and whether the uncompleted Shada should be included. The numbering scheme used here reflects the current internal practice of describing "Planet of the Dead (2009) as the 200th story, used in the official magazine's 407th issue. Other sources, such as the Region 1 DVDs of classic Doctor Who serials, use different numbering schemes which diverge after the 108th story, The Horns of Nimon (1979/80).

Contents

The following table dictates the season or series in question; singular specials are not included in episode counts or viewer totals.

Regular seasons

Season /
Series
Doctor Serials Episodes Originally aired Viewers (millions) Average AI
First aired Last aired
Classic era
Season 1 First Doctor 8 42 23 November 1963 12 September 1964 8.08 59
Season 2 9 39 31 October 1964 24 July 1965 10.46 54
Season 3 10 45 11 September 1965 16 July 1966 8.65 49
Season 4[a] Second Doctor 9 43 10 September 1966 1 July 1967 6.05 49
Season 5 7 40 2 September 1967 1 June 1968 7.23 53
Season 6 7 44 10 August 1968 21 June 1969 6.38 54
Season 7 Third Doctor 4 25 3 January 1970 20 June 1970 7.17 59
Season 8 5 25 2 January 1971 19 June 1971 7.96
Season 9 5 26 1 January 1972 24 June 1972 8.30
Season 10 5 26 30 December 1972 23 June 1973 8.87
Season 11 5 26 15 December 1973 8 June 1974 8.78 60
Season 12 Fourth Doctor 5 20 28 December 1974 10 May 1975 10.00 56
Season 13 6 26 30 August 1975 6 March 1976 10.14 57
Season 14 6 26 4 September 1976 2 April 1977 11.08 59
Season 15 6 26 3 September 1977 11 March 1978 8.98 62
Season 16[b] 6 26 2 September 1978 24 February 1979 8.61 64
Season 17 5[c] 20 1 September 1979 12 January 1980 11.21 65
Season 18 7 28 30 August 1980 21 March 1981 5.82 63
Season 19 Fifth Doctor 7 26 4 January 1982 30 March 1982 9.24
Season 20 6 22 3 January 1983 16 March 1983 7.03 67
Season 21[d] 7 24 5 January 1984 30 March 1984 7.14 65
Season 22 Sixth Doctor 6 13 5 January 1985 30 March 1985 7.12 64
Season 23[f] 1 14 6 September 1986 6 December 1986 4.81 69
Season 24 Seventh Doctor 4 14 7 September 1987 7 December 1987 4.94 60
Season 25 4 14 5 October 1988 4 January 1989 5.34 68
Season 26 4 14 6 September 1989 6 December 1989 4.15 68
Revived era
Series 1 Ninth Doctor 10 13 March 2005 18 June 2005 7.95 82
Series 2 Tenth Doctor 10 13 15 April 2006 8 July 2006 7.71 84
Series 3 9 13 31 March 2007 30 June 2007 7.55 85
Series 4 10 13 5 April 2008 5 July 2008 8.05 88
Series 5 Eleventh Doctor 10 13 3 April 2010 26 June 2010 7.73 86
Series 6 11 13 23 April 2011 1 October 2011 7.52 86
Series 7 13 13 1 September 2012 18 May 2013 7.44 86
Series 8 Twelfth Doctor 11 12 23 August 2014 8 November 2014 7.26 83
Series 9 9 12 19 September 2015 5 December 2015 6.03 82
Series 10 11 12 15 April 2017 1 July 2017 5.46 83
Series 11 Thirteenth Doctor 10 10 7 October 2018 9 December 2018 7.96 81
Series 12 10 8 1 January 2020 1 March 2020 5.40 80
Series 13 6 1 31 October 2021 5 December 2021 4.88 77

Episodes

First Doctor

The first incarnation of the Doctor was portrayed by William Hartnell. During Hartnell's tenure, the episodes were a mixture of stories set on Earth of the future with extraterrestrial influence, on alien planets, and in historical events without extraterrestrial influence, such as Marco Polo, one of the lost serials. In his last story, The Tenth Planet, the Doctor gradually grew weaker to the point of collapsing at the end of the fourth episode, leading to his regeneration.

Season 1 (1963–1964)

Main article: Doctor Who (season 1)

Verity Lambert was producer with David Whitaker serving as script editor.

Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Production
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

^† Episodes are missing

Season 2 (1964–1965)

Main article: Doctor Who (season 2)

Dennis Spooner replaced David Whitaker as script editor after The Dalek Invasion of Earth, and edited the remainder of the season apart from The Time Meddler, which was edited by Donald Tosh.

Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Production
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

^† Episodes are missing

Season 3 (1965–1966)

Main article: Doctor Who (season 3)

John Wiles replaced Verity Lambert as producer after Mission to the Unknown. Innes Lloyd, in turn, replaced Wiles after The Ark. Donald Tosh continued as script editor until The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve, which was also script-edited by his replacement, Gerry Davis. The practice of giving each individual episode a different title was abandoned after The Gunfighters, near the end of the season.

Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Production
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Season 4 (1966–1967)

Main article: Doctor Who (season 4)
Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Production
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Second Doctor

The Second Doctor was portrayed by Patrick Troughton, whose serials were more action-oriented than those of his predecessor. Additionally, after The Highlanders, stories moved away from the purely historical ones that featured during William Hartnell's tenure; instead, any historical tales also included a science fiction element. Patrick Troughton retained the role until the last episode of The War Games when members of the Doctor's race, the Time Lords, put him on trial for breaking the laws of time and forced him to regenerate.

Season 4 (1966–1967) continued

Peter Bryant joined as associate producer for The Faceless Ones, and replaced Gerry Davis as script editor for the last four episodes of The Evil of the Daleks.

Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Production
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Season 5 (1967–1968)

Main article: Doctor Who (season 5)

Victor Pemberton was script editor for The Tomb of the Cybermen, with Peter Bryant as producer. After this, Bryant resumed the role of script editor, with Innes Lloyd returning as producer, until The Web of Fear when Bryant took over from Lloyd as producer. Derrick Sherwin replaced Bryant as script editor at the same time.

Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Production
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Season 6 (1968–1969)

Main article: Doctor Who (season 6)

Terrance Dicks took over from Derrick Sherwin as script editor from The Invasion, with Sherwin resuming the role for The Space Pirates. Derrick Sherwin took over as producer from Peter Bryant for The War Games.

Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Production
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Third Doctor

The Third Doctor was portrayed by Jon Pertwee. Sentenced to exile on Earth and forcibly regenerated at the end of The War Games, the Doctor spent his time working for UNIT. After The Three Doctors, the Time Lords repealed his exile; however, the Doctor still worked closely with UNIT from time to time. The Third Doctor regenerated into his fourth incarnation as a result of radiation poisoning in the last moments of Planet of the Spiders.

Season 7 (1970)

Main article: Doctor Who (season 7)

Barry Letts took over as producer from Derrick Sherwin after Spearhead from Space. From this season onwards the programme was produced in colour. To accommodate the new production methods the number of episodes in a season was cut: season 6 has 44 episodes; season 7 has 25 episodes. The seasons would continue to have between 20 and 26 episodes until season 22.

Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Production
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Season 8 (1971)

Main article: Doctor Who (season 8)

This season forms a loose arc with the introduction of the Master, the villain in each of the season's storylines, and introduces the companion Jo Grant.

Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Production
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Season 9 (1972)

Main article: Doctor Who (season 9)
Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Production
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Season 10 (1972–1973)

Main article: Doctor Who (season 10)
Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Production
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Season 11 (1973–1974)

Main article: Doctor Who (season 11)

This season introduces the companion Sarah Jane Smith.

Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Production
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Fourth Doctor

The Fourth Doctor was portrayed by Tom Baker. He is, to date, the actor who has played the Doctor for the longest time, having held the role for seven seasons.

Season 12 (1974–1975)

Main article: Doctor Who (season 12)

Barry Letts served as producer for Robot, after which he was succeeded by Philip Hinchcliffe. Robert Holmes took over from Terrance Dicks as script editor. All serials in this season continue directly one after the other, tracing one single problematic voyage of the TARDIS crew. Despite the continuity, each serial is considered its own standalone story. This season also introduced the character of Harry Sullivan as a companion; this character was intended to undertake action scenes, during the period prior to Tom Baker being cast, when it was unclear how old the actor playing the new Doctor would be.

Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Production
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Season 13 (1975–1976)

Main article: |Doctor Who (season 13)

During this season, Ian Marter (Harry Sullivan) left after Terror of the Zygons, but returned for a guest appearance in The Android Invasion. Terror of the Zygons also saw the last semi-regular appearance of Nicholas Courtney (Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart) who would not return until Season 20 in Mawdryn Undead.

Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Production
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Season 14 (1976–1977)

Main article: Doctor Who (season 14)

Elizabeth Sladen (Sarah Jane Smith) left the series this season and was replaced by Louise Jameson (Leela). The season also saw the first story in which the Doctor did not have a companion, The Deadly Assassin.

Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Production
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Season 15 (1977–1978)

Main article: Doctor Who (season 15)

Graham Williams took over as producer from Philip Hinchcliffe. Robert Holmes was replaced as script editor by Anthony Read during The Sun Makers.

Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Production
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Season 16 (1978–1979)

Main article: Doctor Who: The Key to Time

Douglas Adams took over as script editor from Anthony Read for The Armageddon Factor. Season 16 consists of one long story arc encompassing six separate, linked stories. This season is referred to by the umbrella title The Key to Time and has been released on DVD under this title.

Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Production
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Season 17 (1979–1980)

Main article: Doctor Who (season 17)
Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Production
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Season 18 (1980–1981)

Main article: Doctor Who (season 18)

John Nathan-Turner replaced Graham Williams as producer. Barry Letts returned, as executive producer, for just this season. Christopher H. Bidmead replaced Douglas Adams as script editor. In a return to the format of early seasons, virtually all serials from Seasons 18 through 20 are linked together, often running directly into each other.

Season 18 forms a loose story arc dealing with the theme of entropy. Full Circle, State of Decay, and Warriors' Gate trace the Doctor's adventures in E-Space; they were released in both VHS and DVD boxsets with the umbrella title The E-Space Trilogy.

Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Production
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Fifth Doctor

The Fifth Doctor was portrayed by Peter Davison.

Season 19 (1982)

Main article: Doctor Who (season 19)

Antony Root took over from Bidmead as script editor for Four to Doomsday and The Visitation, after which he was replaced by Eric Saward. The show moved from its traditional once-weekly Saturday broadcast to being broadcast twice-weekly primarily on Monday and Tuesday, although there were regional variations to the schedule.

Castrovalva, together with the previous two serials, The Keeper of Traken and Logopolis, form a trilogy involving the return of the Master. They were released on DVD under the banner title New Beginnings.

Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Prod.
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Season 20 (1983)

Main article: Doctor Who (season 20)

To commemorate the twentieth season, the stories in this season involve the return of previous villains. Mawdryn Undead, Terminus and Enlightenment involve the Black Guardian's plot to kill the Doctor; they were released individually on VHS and as a set on DVD as parts of The Black Guardian Trilogy. This season was broadcast twice weekly on Tuesday and Wednesday evenings on BBC1.

Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Prod.
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Season 21 (1984)

Main article: Doctor Who (season 21)

Episodes were broadcast twice weekly on Thursday and Friday evenings, with Resurrection of the Daleks broadcast on two consecutive Wednesday nights.

Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Prod.
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Sixth Doctor

The Sixth Doctor was portrayed by Colin Baker.

Season 21 (1984) continued

Main article: Doctor Who (season 21)

Episodes were broadcast twice weekly on Thursday and Friday evenings, with Resurrection of the Daleks broadcast on two consecutive Wednesday nights.

Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Prod.
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Season 22 (1985)

Main article: Doctor Who (season 22)

The series moved back to once-weekly Saturday broadcasts. All episodes were 45 minutes long, though they also exist in 25-minute versions. Although there were now only 13 episodes in the season, the total running time remained approximately the same as in previous seasons since the episodes were almost twice as long.

Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Prod.
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Season 23 (1986)

Main article: The Trial of a Time Lord

After an 18-month production hiatus, the series returned. Eric Saward was script editor up to part eight, when Nathan-Turner unofficially took over script editing the remainder of the season because of Saward's departure. The whole season is titled as The Trial of a Time Lord, and is split into four segments. The segments are commonly referred to by their working titles (listed below) but the season was broadcast as one fourteen-part story and the working titles did not appear on screen. Episode length returned to 25 minutes, but with only fourteen episodes in the season, making the total running time of this season (and subsequent seasons) just over half of the previous seasons, going back to season 7.

Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Prod.
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Seventh Doctor

The Seventh Doctor was portrayed by Sylvester McCoy.

Season 24 (1987)

Main article: Doctor Who (season 24)

Andrew Cartmel took over as script editor. This season was moved to a Monday schedule.

Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Prod.
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Season 25 (1988–89)

Main artlce: Doctor Who (season 25)

The series was moved to Wednesdays.

Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Prod.
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Season 26 (1989)

Main article: Doctor Who (season 26)

The final season continued to push the series towards a darker approach, focusing this time more on Ace's personal life as well as The Doctor's past and manipulations. This season set the tone for the Virgin New Adventures novels that followed.

Story Serial Title Directed by Written by Original air date Prod.
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI

Eighth Doctor

The Eighth Doctor was portrayed by Paul McGann. The movie is the only television appearance of this Doctor during his tenure. The only production title held by this story was Doctor Who. However, producer Philip Segal later suggested Enemy Within as an alternative title. Lacking any other specific name, many fans have adopted this to refer to the movie. Fan groups have also used other informal titles. The DVD release is titled Doctor Who: The Movie. In 2013, Paul McGann returned for the second television appearance of the Eighth Doctor in the minisode titled, "The Night of the Doctor".

Television movie (1996)

Main article: Doctor Who (film)
Story Title Directed by Written by Original air date Prod.
code
UK viewers
(million)
AI
156 Doctor Who Geoffrey Sax Matthew Jacobs 12 May 1996 (Canada)
14 May 1996 (USA)
27 May 1996 (UK)
TVM 9.08 75
{{#ifeq:|yes||}}{{#ifeq:|yes||{{#if: |}}}}{{#ifeq:|yes||{{#if: | }}}}{{#ifeq:|yes||{{#if: | }}}}{{#if:Message box
meta-templates |{{#ifeq:|yes|| }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if:
  • {{{{#if: |subst:}}ambox{{#if: ||{{{2}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{3}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{4}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{5}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{6}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{7}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{8}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{9}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{10}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{11}}}}}{{#if: ||}}}} (t)
  • {{{{#if: |subst:}}cmbox{{#if: ||{{{2}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{3}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{4}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{5}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{6}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{7}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{8}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{9}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{10}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{11}}}}}{{#if: ||}}}} (t)
  • {{{{#if: |subst:}}imbox{{#if: ||{{{2}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{3}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{4}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{5}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{6}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{7}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{8}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{9}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{10}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{11}}}}}{{#if: ||}}}} (t)
  • {{{{#if: |subst:}}mbox{{#if: ||{{{2}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{3}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{4}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{5}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{6}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{7}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{8}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{9}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{10}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{11}}}}}{{#if: ||}}}} (t)
  • {{{{#if: |subst:}}ombox{{#if: ||{{{2}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{3}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{4}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{5}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{6}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{7}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{8}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{9}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{10}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{11}}}}}{{#if: ||}}}} (t)
  • {{{{#if: |subst:}}tmbox{{#if: ||{{{2}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{3}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{4}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{5}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{6}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{7}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{8}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{9}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{10}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{11}}}}}{{#if: ||}}}} (t)
  • {{{{#if: |subst:}}asbox{{#if: ||{{{2}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{3}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{4}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{5}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{6}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{7}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{8}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{9}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{10}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{11}}}}}{{#if: ||}}}} (t)
  • {{{{#if: |subst:}}dmbox{{#if: ||{{{2}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{3}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{4}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{5}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{6}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{7}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{8}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{9}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{10}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{11}}}}}{{#if: ||}}}} (t)
  • {{{{#if: |subst:}}fmbox{{#if: ||{{{2}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{3}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{4}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{5}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{6}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{7}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{8}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{9}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{10}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{11}}}}}{{#if: ||}}}} (t)|
}}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#if: | }}{{#ifeq:|yes||{{#switch: |none |off= |#default=}}
{{{outertitle}}}
{{{topimage}}}{{#if: |
{{{topcaption}}}
}}
{{{pretitle}}}
}}Message box
meta-templates
{{{image}}}{{#if: |
{{{caption}}}
}}
{{{above}}}
{{{heading1}}}
  • {{{{#if: |subst:}}ambox{{#if: ||{{{2}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{3}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{4}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{5}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{6}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{7}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{8}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{9}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{10}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{11}}}}}{{#if: ||}}}} (t)
  • {{{{#if: |subst:}}cmbox{{#if: ||{{{2}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{3}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{4}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{5}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{6}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{7}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{8}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{9}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{10}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{11}}}}}{{#if: ||}}}} (t)
  • {{{{#if: |subst:}}imbox{{#if: ||{{{2}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{3}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{4}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{5}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{6}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{7}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{8}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{9}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{10}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{11}}}}}{{#if: ||}}}} (t)
  • {{{{#if: |subst:}}mbox{{#if: ||{{{2}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{3}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{4}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{5}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{6}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{7}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{8}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{9}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{10}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{11}}}}}{{#if: ||}}}} (t)
  • {{{{#if: |subst:}}ombox{{#if: ||{{{2}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{3}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{4}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{5}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{6}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{7}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{8}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{9}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{10}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{11}}}}}{{#if: ||}}}} (t)
  • {{{{#if: |subst:}}tmbox{{#if: ||{{{2}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{3}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{4}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{5}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{6}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{7}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{8}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{9}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{10}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{11}}}}}{{#if: ||}}}} (t)
  • {{{{#if: |subst:}}asbox{{#if: ||{{{2}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{3}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{4}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{5}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{6}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{7}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{8}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{9}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{10}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{11}}}}}{{#if: ||}}}} (t)
  • {{{{#if: |subst:}}dmbox{{#if: ||{{{2}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{3}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{4}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{5}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{6}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{7}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{8}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{9}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{10}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{11}}}}}{{#if: ||}}}} (t)
  • {{{{#if: |subst:}}fmbox{{#if: ||{{{2}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{3}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{4}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{5}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{6}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{7}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{8}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{9}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{10}}}}}{{#if: ||{{{11}}}}}{{#if: ||}}}} (t)
{{{heading2}}}
{{{content2}}}
{{{heading3}}}
{{{content3}}}
{{{heading4}}}
{{{heading5}}}
{{{content5}}}
{{{heading6}}}
{{{content6}}}
{{{heading7}}}
{{{content7}}}
{{{heading8}}}
{{{content8}}}
{{{heading9}}}
{{{content9}}}
{{{heading10}}}
{{{content10}}}
{{{heading11}}}
{{{content11}}}
{{{heading12}}}
{{{content12}}}
{{{heading13}}}
{{{content13}}}
{{{heading14}}}
{{{content14}}}
{{{heading15}}}
{{{content15}}}
{{{heading16}}}
{{{content16}}}
{{{heading17}}}
{{{content17}}}
{{{heading18}}}
{{{content18}}}
{{{heading19}}}
{{{content19}}}
{{{heading20}}}
{{{content20}}}
{{{heading21}}}
{{{content21}}}
{{{heading22}}}
{{{content22}}}
{{{heading23}}}
{{{content23}}}
{{{heading24}}}
{{{content24}}}
{{{heading25}}}
{{{content25}}}
{{{heading26}}}
{{{content26}}}
{{{heading27}}}
{{{content27}}}
{{{heading28}}}
{{{content28}}}
{{{heading29}}}
{{{content29}}}
{{{heading30}}}
{{{content30}}}
{{{heading31}}}
{{{content31}}}
{{{heading32}}}
{{{content32}}}
{{{heading33}}}
{{{content33}}}
{{{heading34}}}
{{{content34}}}
{{{heading35}}}
{{{content35}}}
{{{below}}}
{{#switch: mbox templates

|table={ class="wikitable" !Comenius OSM and Tourism !Sl: Life Long Learning Mapping Project !Ro: Life Long Learning Mapping Project !Pt:Life Long Learning Mapping Project !Tr: Life Long Learning Mapping Project !DE: Life Long Learning Mapping Project }

|line=

|small=Template:Navigation bar

| #default =Template:Navigation bar }}


}}

See also

References

Sources

External links

Template:Doctor Who

Personal tools