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ranier-layarte · 5 years
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LONG Character Survey: Ranier Leveilleur
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BASICS.
FULL NAME: Ranier Kyran Layarte Leveilleur
NICKNAME: Ran, Raven
AGE: 21-25 (depending on expac)
BIRTHDAY: 1st Sun of the 2nd astral moon
ETHNIC GROUP: Au ra (Xaela)
NATIONALITY: Eorzean – From Ul'dah
LANGUAGE(S): Eorzean,
SEXUAL ORIENTATION: No
ROMANTIC ORIENTATION: Isn't this the same as the above?
RELATIONSHIP STATUS: Married
CLASS: Weapon Master
• Proficient in almost all martial weapons.
• Tends to carry multiple weapons at all times.
• Prefers Axes out of all the bladed weaponry
HOMETOWN / AREA: Ul'dah
CURRENT HOMETOWN/ AREA: Shirogane Mansion
PROFESSION(S): WoL, Scion, Machinist, Businessman, Crafter
PHYSICAL: Extremely fit, exercises daily. Muscular build
HAIR: Black/Dark Blue
EYES: Crimson
NOSE: Average, straight, roman-esque
FACE: Straight essentially a greek nose. (At least if I had to try and describe it)
LIPS: A bit on the thinner side, very lightly pink.
COMPLEXION: A mix of Fair and Medium?
BLEMISHES: None
SCARS: Scar on left thigh from stab wound, Scar on left midsection, and upper right thigh.
TATTOOS: WoL tattoo on the palm of his right hand. (Working on giving him another)
HEIGHT: 7'4
WEIGHT: 330 LBS/ 150kg
BUILD: Tall, Muscular, Fit,
FEATURES: None
ALLERGIES: None, at least not yet.
USUAL HAIRSTYLE: Long hair parted in the middle framing the face. Pulled into a ponytail and held with a silver bead big enough for the tail.
USUAL FACE LOOK: Around 40% expressionless, 30% Scowling, 20% Reflective, 10% happy.
USUAL CLOTHING: Higher end clothing generally a mix of casual with formal preferring long pants and a short sleeved shirt. Boots of some kind and armor of some kind at all times. Either under or over the clothes having a preference for the bulkier armors.
PSYCHOLOGY.
FEAR(S): Dying and thereby becoming unable to prevent future deaths and incidents. A fear of the unknown. (Which is part of why he tries to prepare for so many things)
ASPIRATION(S): Being able to amass enough wealth to live comfortably and to continue making the lives of the less fortunate easier. Helping create a better society for all.
POSITIVE TRAITS: Empathetic, Compassionate, Humanitarian, Perseverance, Fairness, Courageous, Loving, Self discipline, Reliable, Thoughtful, Patient
NEGATIVE TRAITS: Bossy, Jealous, Secretive, Grumpy, Harsh, Aloof, Stubborn, Cruel (Only to enemies but that doesn't really matter to people does it?) Arrogant (In some things though less now)
ZODIAC: Pisces
TEMPERAMENT: Mix of choleric and melancholic.
SOUL TYPE(S):  King, Warrior, Server (In that order)
ANIMALS: Raven, Bear
VICE HABIT(S): Training, Fixing machines, Drinking, Rubbing Chin, 
FAITH: The Twelve (Loosely)
GHOSTS?: I mean if you've seen them you can't deny them.
AFTERLIFE?: With everything we see there has to be right?
REINCARNATION?: Yes, it's clear there is.
ALIENS?: Yes.
POLITICAL ALIGNMENT: Leftist
ECONOMIC PREFERENCE: Prosperous, everyone has what they need. Along with the means to go beyond that if they are willing and able.
SOCIO POLITICAL POSITION: I think there’s enough to go on.
EDUCATION LEVEL: Higher end of the spectrum, attended sharlayan schooling for a few years of his life. (Around three) Was home taught and by other teachers. Extensive knowledge in numerous subjects such as Machinery, Technology, Gunsmithing, Gemology, Business. Holding the equivalent of a mixture of Graduate or Masters in the subjects.
FAMILY.
FATHER: Kyran Layarte
MOTHER: Sahar Layarte
SIBLINGS: Kyari Layarte
EXTENDED FAMILY:
NAME MEANING(S): Ranier (Rainier with out the first I Meaning Wise army apparently)Kyran (Beam of Light) Sahar (Early morning or Dawn) Kyari (???)
HISTORICAL CONNECTION?: My families connection to history? My connection? My father was one of the survivors of the hotgo tribe also. Does fighting in the Calamity among all the other events count?
FAVORITES.
BOOK: Whatever has his current interest, it can very.
MOVIE PLAY: Does this mean Movie or Play?
5 SONGS:
• “Shock me” Baroness
• “Up In The Air” Thirty Seconds To Mars
• “Rise” League of Legends, Glitch Mob, The Word Alive
• “Unbreakable” Of Mice and Men
• “Drown” Bring Me The Horizon
DEITY: Halone
HOLIDAY: Valentione's day
MONTH: March
SEASON: Fall
PLACE: Beside his wife or workshop.
WEATHER: Light rain
SOUND: The turning of pages, the sound of rain, metal moving against each other.
SCENT(S): Smoke, Metal, Old books, and sweat
TASTE(S):  Dulcet, Spicy,
FEEL(S): Rocks, Silk, Smooth metals,
ANIMAL(S): This was listed before.
NUMBER: 1? I don't know.
COLORS: Black, Blue, Red, Gold, Silver
EXTRA.
TALENTS: Metalworking, Singing, Sewing, Gem Cutting, Technology, Smithing, Machinery, Dexterous.
BAD AT: Getting rest even now, Not over exerting himself, Not overthinking potential scenarios that may never happen. Dealing with almost all animals, Even now sometimes talking about what bothers him too well, but he’s gotten much better over the years/expansions.
TURN ONS: Caring, Helpful, Courageous, Educated, Aggressive. Listening, Reliable, 
TURN OFFS: Selfishness, Boastful, Belligerent, Cruelty, Intolerant, Racism, Weak willed, Careless,
HOBBIES: Creating new things be it machines, armor, clothes, weapons, tools, etc. Working on the same as before. Reading, Exercising, Cooking. Shopping.
TROPES: Pragmatic Hero, Bad ass boast, Big Fancy House, Chekhov's Gun, Determinator, Don't You Dare Pity Me, Genius Bruiser, Heroic Build, It's All My Fault, No Challenge Equals No Satisfaction, Super toughness, Friend to All Children, The Chosen One, The Ace, Ain't Too Proud To Beg, Always Save The Girl, Berserk Button, Death glare, Excuse me while I multi task, Game face, Hypocrite, Lady and Knight, Not So Stoic, Not So Invincible After all, Red Eyes, Take Warning, Stern Teacher, Undying Loyalty, The Power of Love
AESTHETIC TAGS: Workshops, Tools, Kitchens, Weaponry, Guns, Armor, Fine Clothes, Rain, Feathers, Azure Skies, Romance.
VOICE CLAIM(S): Keith Silverstein, (Speaking voice) John Rzeznik (Singing) John Baizley (Singing)
FC INFO.
MAIN  FC(S): Free company? Azure Talons.
ALT FC(S): What?
OLDER FC(S): What?
YOUNGER  FC(S): What?
GENDERBENT FC(S): What the fuck?
MUN QUESTIONS.
Q1: IF YOU COULD WRITE YOUR CHARACTER YOUR WAY IN THEIR OWN MOVIE, WHAT WOULD IT BE CALLED, WHAT STYLE WOULD IT BE FILMED IN, AND WHAT WOULD IT BE ABOUT?:
• I genuinely don’t know. Something with the grandeur of lord of the rings maybe? But with the ability to add comedy and romance in the proper way. I'm all for serious movies but I enjoy the ability to add a well executed joke or sweet moment. It also would probably not just be a single film. Taking the general events and using my fics as material would probably be fine.
I’d have to think about it a lot more than I will right now
As for the name, well, I don't really have many options. But, probably something with Final Fantasy XIV as the main title. Give it a JRPG title I suppose as a sub title. Sort of like Warriors Dissonance or Uncovered Stories.
Q2: WHAT WOULD THEIR SOUNDTRACK / SCORE SOUND LIKE?:
• Ambient, switching to full of energy, able to convey emotion. Again mentioning LOTR, the score by Howard shore is really great and able to accompany many scenes in such a fantastic manner. As for the other bits perhaps the addition of artist tracks such as from favorite bands and those songs that have meaning to him. Like the ones listed above. 
Q3: WHY DID YOU START WRITING THIS CHARACTER?:
• As a way to work on and show that, a character doesn't just have to be overly reliant on tropes and cliches. That those are good as part of them but not as defining traits of them. Along with breaking some of those. Like how all protagonists always have dead parents, what's up with that? I enjoy seeing characters that try to break their molds and be more than that.
Q4: WHAT FIRST ATTRACTED YOU TO THIS CHARACTER?:
• My general thing in any game where you can create your own character has always been. To make who you'd want to be in this universe. I did that and then worked on it and reworked things until I got what I have now. So also, yes, he was a self insert.
Q5: DESCRIBE THE BIGGEST THING YOU DISLIKE ABOUT YOUR MUSE:
• Hard one I suppose but. I'd say how he is capable of doing so much. Even though I work with it as it is a key part of him, it's still hard to make him feel right, feel human when he's got these clear incredible strengths. He's very proficient at so many things some would maybe say he's a mary sue type of character. I make an effort to work on how he became that way to offset it. So it's a lot of extra work than if I had him being a more archetypal hero of his type. I may dislike this the most but I also like it. Love hate relationship you know?
Q6: WHAT DO YOU HAVE IN COMMON WITH YOUR MUSE?:
• A good part of our attitudes and personality though on his end they are greater generally. Along with our want to be as best as we can at certain things. 
Q7: HOW DOES YOUR MUSE FEEL ABOUT YOU?:
• Honestly, and in my current state. He would probably be very upset with me and to just know me or the hand I have in his creation and self.
Q8: WHAT CHARACTERS DOES YOUR MUSE HAVE INTERESTING INTERACTIONS WITH?
• Alisaie Leveilleur – She is the main one being his main love interest, girlfriend, and wife later. Though overall he sees her as an equal and a partner, which is part of the reason their relationship grows as much as it does. Along with giving someone who he can trust in and rely on, and vice versa.
• Finn Hogveart - Who harasses Ranier often enough especially with his pet and regarding moogles.
• Alphinaud Leveilleur - and him sometimes get along strangely due to Ranier's relationship with his sister. For a long time he tried to spy on Ranier and make sure he was good for his sister even though he knew he was a good person.
•  Cid Garlond - Ranier sees him as a mentor of sorts, along with someone that he can bounce ideas off of and work with on projects leading to a solid relationship between the two. The two sometimes bicker regarding their work but it's always just them being passionate for the projects.
• Gerolt Blackthorn – Similar to cid in some ways. Ranier looks up to Gerolt and his ability to continue making such amazing creations. Wanting to learn more regarding the processes means Ranier visits him when possible, bringing some drinks for him when he does. Almost having a relationship like bros. Ranier also sometimes has gone to try and sway Rowena on his behalf to lower his debt.
There are more but I don’t want to make this too much longer.
Q9: WHAT GIVES YOU INSPIRATION TO WRITE YOUR MUSE?
• I do not control the write, also Alisaie.
Q10: HOW LONG DID THIS TAKE YOU TO COMPLETE?:
Uhhhh maybe an hour all together. Over the course of three hours.
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Tagged by: @amandafullmetal​ @lyllyan-weiss
Tagging: @heyafinney​ @anikisbox​ and anyone who wants to do it that sees this.
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tardisgirlepic · 7 years
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Ch. 2: “The Empress of Mars” Analysis Doctor Who S10.9: Friday, Odin & the Doctor; Missy’s 2 Faces; Etc.
Apologies for getting these 3 chapters for “The Empress of Mars” out after the airing of “The Eaters of Light.”  I post first on Archive Of Our Own, which I did before the 10th episode.  With photos, it takes more time to post here.
If you missed the 1st chapter, check it out Ch. 1: Fastballs, Mars-Not-Mars, Rassilon References, Etc.
NOTE:
TPEW = “The Pyramid at the End of the World” TRODM = “The Return of Doctor Mysterio” THORS = “The Husbands of River Song” CAL = Charlotte Abigail Lux, the little girl from the Library TOS = The Original Series of Star Trek TNG = Star Trek: The Next Generation
Norse Mythology & Vikings Have a Big Role
Roman and Egyptian mythology aren’t the only mythological references in “The Empress of Mars.” Norse Mythology, for example, has a huge role in the episode, as well as other Viking references.
Egil & Eagle
At NASA, we see a sign “EGIL” in front of the Doctor in the image below, which refers to Egill Skallagrímsson (Anglicized as Egil Skallagrimsson).  The Doctor, The Ghost, is associated here with Egil.  At first we see the sign without the Doctor.
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According to Wikipedia, Egil “was a Viking-Age poet, warrior and farmer. He is also the protagonist of the eponymous Egil's Saga. Egil's Saga historically narrates a period from approximately 850 to 1000 CE and is believed to have been written between 1220 and 1240 CE.”
Egill was born in Iceland, the son of Skalla-Grímr Kveldúlfsson and Bera Yngvarsdóttir, and the grandson of Kveld-Úlfr ("Night Wolf"). His ancestor, Hallbjorn, was Norwegian-Sami.
Here’s another wolf reference, where the Doctor-mirror is the grandson of a metaphorical wolf.
When Grímr arrived in Iceland, he settled at Borg, the place where his father's coffin landed. Grímr was a respected chieftain and mortal enemy of King Harald Fairhair of Norway.
OK, the term “Borg” automatically conjures thoughts of several Star Trek: TNG episodes where alien cyborgs known as the Borg show up to assimilate people, turning them into Borg and absorbing them into the collective. They first show up in the episode “Q Who?”  Um… I never thought about this before, but wow, just change Q to Doctor!  Captain Picard gets converted to a Borg in “The Best of Both Worlds.”  Part 1 was the finale to Season 3, while Part 2 was the premiere of Season 4.
Egill composed his first poem at the age of three years. He exhibited berserk behaviour, and this, together with the description of his large and unattractive head, has led to the theory that he might have suffered from Paget's disease. As professor Byock explains in his Scientific American article, Paget's disease causes a thickening of the bones and may lead eventually to blindness. The poetry of Egill contains clues to Paget's disease, and this is the first application of science, with the exclusion of archaeology, to the Icelandic sagas.
Here’s a reference to blindness.
Egil had a very bloody history.  At times, he was marked for death, but his epic poetry, fit for kings, saved him. So words saved him, just like they have saved the Doctor time and time again.
“Egil” is another overloaded word, as its homophone is “eagle.”  The Doctor is either a bird, being a proxy of Zeus, or Zeus, himself. Zeus’s Roman equivalent is Jupiter. In Norse mythology, Odin is the chief god.  He’s not a one-to-one correspondence, though, to Zeus and Jupiter, like the typical Greek and Roman gods are to each other.  Odin, among other things, is also a god of war like Mars.  He’s a tyrannical leader who is not concerned with justice, and this sounds like Morbius, who may be the possessed Doctor. 
Odin, too, was a shape-shifter and turned himself into an eagle.  It’s one of his many disguises.
Valkyrie Has Multiple Meanings
The Martian probe Valkyrie, while probing the Martian ice caps, is named for multiple references.
Operation Valkyrie & “Let’s Kill Hitler”
Operation Valkyrie was a German plan during WWII to assassinate Hitler, take control of German cities, disarm the SS, and arrest the Nazi leadership.  Although the participants made lengthy preparations, the plot failed.  Of course, this also refers to the 11th Doctor episode “Let’s Kill Hitler,” where River was engineered to kill the Doctor.  Of course, that lengthy plot failed, too, at least for the time being.
In “The Lie of the Land,” we saw the Doctor involved in a totalitarian government with the Truth logo, which looked like it could be a type of Nazi logo with an SS (mirrored Ss). Interestingly, Daleks were created as symbols of the Nazis.
Valkyries of Norse Mythology
In Norse mythology, valkyries are female figures who decide the fate of those who die in battle. 
According to Wikipedia:
Selecting among half of those who die in battle (the other half go to the goddess Freyja's afterlife field Fólkvangr), the valkyries bring their chosen to the afterlife hall of the slain, Valhalla, ruled over by the god Odin. There, the deceased warriors become einherjar (Old Norse "single (or once) fighters"). When the einherjar are not preparing for the events of Ragnarök, the valkyries bear them mead. Valkyries also appear as lovers of heroes and other mortals, where they are sometimes described as the daughters of royalty, sometimes accompanied by ravens and sometimes connected to swans or horses.
Ravens and horses are certainly significant.  In fact, ravens are indirectly referenced at least 4 times in the current story.  We’ll examine more about the raven in a few minutes.  And we’ll look at them in more depth in regards to Clara and the Doctor in the next chapter.
Valkyries today tend to be romanticized in a way, but in heathen times, they were more sinister and sound like they have a connection to the 12 Monks.  According to Norse-Mythology.org:
The meaning of their name, “choosers of the slain,” refers not only to their choosing who gains admittance to Valhalla, but also to their choosing who dies in battle and using malicious magic to ensure that their preferences in this regard are brought to fruition. Examples of valkyries deciding who lives and who dies abound in the Eddas and sagas. The valkyries’ gruesome side is illustrated most vividly in the Darraðarljóð, a poem contained within Njal’s Saga. Here, twelve valkyries are seen prior to the Battle of Clontarf, sitting at a loom and weaving the tragic destiny of the warriors (an activity highly reminiscent of the Norns). They use intestines for their thread, severed heads for weights, and swords and arrows for beaters, all the while chanting their intentions with ominous delight. The Saga of the Volsungs compares beholding a valkyrie to “staring into a flame.”
The Norns sound very similar to the 3 Fates, which we examined in my analysis in TPEW, where I likened the Monks to weaving a tapestry and compared them to the 3 Fates who weave destinies.  It seems likely then that the 12 Monks may symbolize the 12 Valkyries, who are weaving the tragic destiny to come.
Valhalla & the Cloister Wraiths
Valhalla is a the hall where the dead are deemed worthy of dwelling with Odin, and it’s located on Asgard, which brings in the references to the Doctor and River picnicking on Asgard. This picnic entry in River’s diary came up in “Silence in the Library,” as well as “The Husbands of River Song.”
Wolves guard Valhalla’s gates, and eagles fly above it.
According to Norse-Mythology.org:
Odin presides over Valhalla, the most prestigious of the dwelling-places of the dead. After every battle, he and his helping-spirits, the valkyries (“choosers of the fallen”), comb the field and take their pick of half of the slain warriors to carry back to Valhalla. (Freya then claims the remaining half.)
According to Norse-Mythology.org:
The dead who reside in Valhalla, the einherjar, live a life that would have been the envy of any Viking warrior. All day long, they fight one another, doing countless valorous deeds along the way. But every evening, all their wounds are healed, and they are restored to full health. They surely work up quite an appetite from all those battles, and their dinners don’t disappoint. Their meat comes from the boar Saehrimnir (Old Norse Sæhrímnir, whose meaning is unknown), who comes back to life every time he is slaughtered and butchered. For their drink they have mead that comes from the udder of the goat Heidrun (Old Norse Heiðrun, whose meaning is unknown). They thereby enjoy an endless supply of their exceptionally fine food and drink. They are waited on by the beautiful Valkyries.
But the einherjar won’t live this charmed life forever. Valhalla’s battle-honed residents are there by the will of Odin, who collects them for the perfectly selfish purpose of having them come to his aid in his fated struggle against the wolf Fenrir during Ragnarök – a battle in which Odin and the einherjar are doomed to die.
From what we’ve seen in “Hell Bent,” the Cloister Wraiths are, at least in one way, like the dead who reside in Valhalla.  As the Doctor said, they are the dead manning the battlements.  We may be experiencing the unreality of the symbolic Valhalla right now.  The relative calm before the Ragnarök storm.
The Ice Queen Mirroring a Valkyrie or Odin
The Ice Queen, Iraxxa, decided who died and who lived, especially when it came to Colonel Godsacre. (God’s acre actually means “a churchyard or a cemetery, especially one adjacent to a church.”)  Therefore, Iraxxa is mirroring a Valkyrie or even Odin, given her position of leader of the hive. 
Odin, Ravens & the Valkyries
According to Wikipedia,
In Germanic mythology, Odin is a widely revered god.  In Norse mythology, from which stems most of the information about the god, Odin is associated with healing, death, royalty, the gallows, knowledge, battle, sorcery, poetry, frenzy, and the runic alphabet, and is the husband of the goddess Frigg. In wider Germanic mythology and paganism, Odin was known in Old English as Wōden, in Old Saxon as Wōdan, and in Old High German as Wuotan or Wōtan, all stemming from the reconstructed Proto-Germanic theonym wōđanaz.
BTW, WOTAN is a reference to a 1st Doctor story called “The War Machines.”  According to the TARDIS Wikia, “WOTAN was one of the first artificial intelligences created on Earth by Professor Brett. Its name stood for Will Operating Thought ANalogue.”  It goes on to say, “Deciding to conquer the world, WOTAN ordered the construction of mobile, armed computers which were designated War Machines. These were constructed in locations across London.”
Anyway, according to WizardRealm.com:
Odin (or, depending upon the dialect Woden or Wotan) was the Father of all the Gods and men.  Odhinn is pictured either wearing a winged helm or a floppy hat, and a blue-grey cloak. He can travel to any realm within the 9 Nordic worlds.  His two ravens, Huginn and Munin (Thought and Memory) fly over the world daily and return to tell him everything that has happened in Midgard.  He is a God of magick, wisdom, wit, and learning. He too is a psychopomp; a chooser of those slain in battle.  In later times, he was associated with war and bloodshed from the Viking perspective, although in earlier times, no such association was present.
Interestingly, Odin has ravens.  And this is another example of how “The Empress of Mars” has quite a few indirect references to ravens.  Because Clara is associated with a raven, it brings up a reference to her, too. However, there are very pointed Clara references, which we’ll examine in the next chapter.
Being the god of magic, wisdom, wit, and learning, Odin has a lot in common with Merlin.  Odin actually disguises himself as an old man and travels Midgard (Earth) looking for heroes for the coming of Ragnarök.
According to WizardRealm.com:
If anything, the wars fought by Odhinn exist strictly upon the Mental plane of awareness; appropriate for that of such a mentally polarized God.  He is both the shaper of Wyrd and the bender of Orlog; again, a task only possible through the power of Mental thought and impress.  It is he who sacrifices an eye at the well of Mimir to gain inner wisdom, and later hangs himself upon the World Tree Yggdrasil to gain the knowledge and power of the Runes.  All of his actions are related to knowledge, wisdom, and the dissemination of ideas and concepts to help Mankind.  Because there is duality in all logic and wisdom, he is seen as being duplicitous; this is illusory and it is through his actions that the best outcomes are conceived and derived.  Just as a point of curiosity:  in no other pantheon is the head Deity also the God of Thought and Logic.  It's interesting to note that the Norse/Teutonic peoples also set such a great importance upon brainwork and logic.  The day Wednesday (Wodensdaeg) is named for him.
It’s really interesting that Odin’s wars are fought on the “Mental plane of awareness.”  This corresponds to the Doctor being a creature of pure thought through the Great Work.  This also corresponds to him being a mirror of CAL, who is also a being of pure thought in a mental plane of awareness.
Odin & the Doctor
In “The Girl Who Died,” the Doctor pretended to be Odin when the Vikings took him and Clara captive. We then saw another extraterrestrial claiming to be Odin, shown below.  His helmet is obviously symbolic in some ways of a bird.  Are the wings those of an eagle or a raven?  There are symbolic feathers on the top of the helmet, too, but that’s where the similarities to a bird end.  
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The crest looks more like something a Roman soldier would wear on his helmet.  And then there’s the weird part covering his forehead that looks like 2 eyes and a nose.  Is the representation supposed to be 2 faces in One?  The symbolic eyes are empty, perhaps, representing The Ghost.  Odin is a dark mirror of the Doctor, and it seems to me from the symbolism that Odin represents the possessed Doctor, who has an augmented eye.  That could be a reference to the Eye of Harmony.
The Doctor actually does more than just pretend to be Odin in this episode.  Like Odin in mythology, the Doctor decides life and death here. He assumes Odin’s role.  Ashildr dies, and the Doctor literally brings her back to life, another signal of the coming of Ragnarök.  Clara represents a valkyrie, the Doctor’s helping spirit. 
But this isn’t all. Extraterrestrial (ET) Odin in “The Girl Who Died” has a connection to the “Robot of Sherwood.”  The sheriff’s boar emblem looks very much like ET Odin’s helmet when placed behind someone’s head.  Check out this image below of the arrow bearer in this perfectly centered camera shot where the emblem of the boar’s ears (yellow arrow) now looks like the wings on Odin’s helmet.
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In fact, the sheriff looks a lot like Odin without the helmet.
Interestingly, we have seen a character in TRODM, Lucy Fletcher, whose name means arrow maker or to furnish (an arrow) with a feather.  Through all the mirrors we’ve examined, she connects to Amy, who connects to River.  Susan connects to River, too.  And River may connect to Missy.  We know Missy has been controlling the Doctor through Clara, and she’s running a con game now. 
Who’s Behind Controlling the TARDIS?
Check out the image below in the darkened TARDIS when Nardole goes to get some gear to help Bill after she falls into the pit.  The bookcase is lit, which is very abnormal.  And it’s only one bookcase in particular.  This indicates it’s River.
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In fact, interestingly, Missy has 2 faces when we first see her at the end of “The Empress of Mars.”  The blue arrow points to her face that looks like it’s inside the TARDIS, while the yellow arrow points to her other face.  The TARDIS symbolizes the Doctor’s wife and the Doctor’s mind.
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The Doctor is being controlled by his wife is what part of the subtext is pointing to.  We saw in “The Lie of the Land” analysis that with the 2nd Doctor story “The Mind Robber,” where the Master was the author who controlled things in the same way River controlled things in “The Angels Take Manhattan” with her novel.  We know River is one of the architects of the rescue plan.
Friday Has a Norse Connection
Of course, the name Friday comes from Robinson Crusoe.  However, given the plot along with Friday’s name, appearance, and references, there are other allusions intended, too, making Friday a brilliant name with overloaded meanings.
Friday & Odin
“Friday,” as the actual day of the week, is named after Odin’s wife.  In Old English, her name is Frīge, so it’s "Frīge's day."  Other spellings, according to Wikipedia, are Frigg (Old Norse), Frija (Old High German), and Frea (Langobardic).
So the character Friday automatically has a connection to Odin and can represent Odin’s wife.  However, there’s more. 
Like Friday, Odin has one eye.
In fact, according to Norse-Mythology.org:
Odin’s quest for wisdom is never-ending, and he is willing to pay any price, it seems, for the understanding of life’s mysteries that he craves more than anything else. On one occasion, he hanged himself, wounded himself with his spear, and fasted from food and drink for nine days and nights in order to discover the runes.
On another occasion, he ventured to Mimir’s Well – which is surely none other than the Well of Urd – amongst the roots of the world-tree Yggdrasil. There dwelt Mimir, a shadowy being whose knowledge of all things was practically unparalleled among the inhabitants of the cosmos. He achieved this status largely by taking his water from the well, whose waters impart this cosmic knowledge.
When Odin arrived, he asked Mimir for a drink from the water. The well’s guardian, knowing the value of such a draught, refused unless the seeker offered an eye in return. Odin – whether straightaway or after anguished deliberation, we can only wonder – gouged out one of his eyes and dropped it into the well. Having made the necessary sacrifice, Mimir dipped his horn into the well and offered the now-one-eyed god a drink.
Odin’s story of trading an eye for a different type of perception and knowledge meshes with the concepts of the Eye of Harmony and the Matrix.  We’ve examined how the Matrix gives the gift of prophecy.
ENGIN: Yes. Trillions of electrochemical cells in a continuous matrix. The cells are the repository of departed Time Lords. At the moment of death, an electrical scan is made of the brain pattern and these millions of impulses are immediately transferred to the DOCTOR: Shush. I understand the theory. What's the function?
ENGIN: Well, to monitor life in the Capitol. We use all this combined knowledge and experience to predict future developments.
And the Eye of Harmony from TRODM clearly has to do with the Matrix.  The Eye, as the 8th Doctor said in the movie, is his.
DOCTOR: Lee, this is my Tardis. This is my Eye and I'm in my own body. The Master has run out of all his lives. Now he plans to steal mine. That's the truth!
Anyway, in Friday’s case, because he defers to Iraxxa, he symbolically could represent Odin in disguise as an old man.  After all, he did tell the Doctor:
DOCTOR: Why have you really come back? FRIDAY: (sigh) I am old and tired and spent.
The reversed roles of the queen and Friday could also possibly be explained through the gender change.
Friday & The Vikings
After the Doctor and Bill discuss the Ice Warrior, Bill mentions a movie and an eye gouging when Friday is present, tying the movie to Friday.
DOCTOR: Yes. The indigenous species. An ancient reptilian race. They built themselves a sort of bio-mechanical armour for protection. The creature within is at one with its carapace. The Ice Warriors. They could build a city under the sand, yet drench the snows of Mars with innocent blood. They could slaughter whole civilisations, yet weep at the crushing of a flower. BILL: Like The Vikings. DOCTOR: Yes. Yes, very much. BILL: Yeah, Kirk Douglas and Tony Curtis. Oh, the theme tune is amazing! There's this brilliant bit where his eye gets gouged out (Friday stops and Bill notices the missing eye.)
Friday’s missing eye resembles that of Kirk Douglas’ character in the 1958 movie The Vikings. 
Wikipedia says
The King of Northumbria is killed during a Viking raid led by the fearsome Ragnar (Ernest Borgnine). Because the king had died childless, his cousin Aella (Frank Thring) takes the throne. The king's widow, however, is pregnant with what she knows is Ragnar's child because he had raped her during that fateful raid, and to protect the infant from her cousin-in-law's ambitions, she sends him off to Italy. By a twist of fate, the ship is intercepted by the Vikings, who are unaware of the child's kinship, and enslave him.
BTW, the queen sends the child with the monks.
Many years later, we see that the boy has grown into a young man named Erik (Tony Curtis), who is still a slave.  After some events take place, Erik in retaliation orders his falcon to attack Einar (Kirk Douglas), Ragnar's legitimate son and heir.  The falcon gouges out Einar’s left eye. 
The enmity between the half brothers is exacerbated when they both fall in love with the same woman, Princess Morgana, who is to marry King Aella but gets captured in a raid.  In a way, this is like the 11th and 12th Doctors with River. BTW, I forgot to mention this, but the Doctor in Missy’s execution scene in “Extremis” and in the scenes in “The Lie of the Land” wears an old raggedy coat, which would represent the 11th Doctor.  In fact, the 11th Doctor’s theme music does play in the latter episode.
Anyway, at one point Aella captures Ragnar and, according to Wikipedia, “orders the Viking leader bound and thrown into a pit filled with starved wolves. To give Ragnar a Viking's death (so that he can enter Valhalla), Erik, who is granted the honour of forcing him into the pit, cuts the prisoner's bonds and gives him his sword. Laughing, Ragnar jumps to his death. In response to Erik's "treason", Aella cuts off his left hand, puts him back on his ship and casts him adrift.”
(Amy cuts off Rorybot’s hands in “The Girl Who Waited.”  Rorybot is sentient.  So is this movie scene significant to the story?)
In the end, Erik and Einar fight for Morgana, and Erik mortally wounds Einar. Wikipedia says, “Echoing the scene with Ragnar, Erik gives Einar a sword, so that he too can enter Valhalla. In the final scene, Einar is given a Viking funeral: his body is placed on a longship, which is set on fire by flaming arrows.”
Friday not only represents Einar with his eye gouged out, but also Erik, as a servant.
Erik is a hybrid, half-Northumbrian and half-Viking, mirroring the hybrid nature of the Doctor.
Also, it’s interesting that Erik and Einar are half brothers because I’ve wondered for quite some time if the Master and Doctor were brothers (as was originally planned in Classic Who) or half brothers.  The idea that the Doctor has a half brother has come up in the subtext before. In fact, it most likely relates to Castor and Pollux, which we’ll look at below.
The idea of Valhalla and a Viking funeral for the Doctor is important for several reasons.  The first is that Rory gave the Doctor a Viking funeral in “The Impossible Astronaut” after River killed him.  (Interestingly, though, there is a hidden face of the Doctor’s in the reflection in River’s helmet.  Things didn’t quite happen the way they appeared.)
The ideas of Valhalla and a Viking funeral lead to redemption for the Doctor and his fate. We’ll look at this more in the next chapter when we examine the Victorians.
The First Time We See Friday
The first time we see Friday, something curious takes place.  The Ice Warrior comes toward the Doctor in a threatening manner.  However, the Doctor diffuses the situation with an Ice Warrior greeting. 
DOCTOR: I know your people of old. I was once an Honorary Guardian of the Tythonian Hive.
(A rifle bolt is moved.)
However, we then hear Godsacre’s voice, and he says and does something curious.
GODSACRE: Don't move. I'll sort this beggar out.
(A red-coat with white pith helmet is pointing what ought to be a Martini-Henry breech loading rifle at them.)
DOCTOR: No, no, no, no! You don't understand. This creature is no threat. He may look like a monster to you
(A rifle shot at the Doctor's feet makes him jump back.)
GODSACRE: I wasn't talking to you. Are you all right, Friday?
The Doctor is portrayed as the monster here, not Friday.  To make that clear, the Doctor even says, “He may look like a monster to you…”
This really is interesting behavior, especially since the Doctor looks human here in this altered reality.  What does he really look like?
Friday, the Doctor & Shakespeare’s Henry V
Since the Doctor is metaphorically Shakespeare, it seems as though there may be another connection with both the Doctor, Friday, and Henry V. Since they can be a symbol of Odin, walking through Midgard in disguise, they could also symbolically be King Henry V, who disguises himself as a commoner and walks around camp, where nobody recognizes him as the king.
Actually, we already saw this type of thing with Queen Liz 10 in “The Beast Below,” where she walked around with her mask on, not wanting to be recognized. Therefore, we should expect that something like this is happening now.
If the Doctor has been possessed, mind controlled, or some other type of usurpation, then there is a disguise of sorts going on.
Castor & Pollux: The Master/Missy & the Doctor?
Are the Master/Missy and the Doctor mirrors of Castor and Pollux from Greek and Roman mythology? The references have come up in the subtext before, and it seems appropriate to consider this since the plan in Classic Who was to have the Master and the Doctor be brothers. However, once Roger Delgado, the 1st Master, died in a car crash, the plans never came to fruition. In fact, the 3rd Doctor, Jon Pertwee, who was good friends with Delgado, left DW because of Delgado’s death.
Anyway, there are multiple versions of the Castor and Pollux myth, where they could be brothers or half brothers, depending on the version.  Since The Vikings refers to half brothers, I’ll concentrate on that version.
Castor and Pollux were twin brothers, together known as the Dioscuri or Dioskouroi.  According to Wikipedia:
Their mother was Leda, but they had different fathers; Castor was the mortal son of Tyndareus, the king of Sparta, while Pollux was the divine son of Zeus, who seduced Leda in the guise of a swan. Though accounts of their birth are varied, they are sometimes said to have been born from an egg, along with their twin sisters or half-sisters Helen of Troy and Clytemnestra.
In Latin the twins are also known as the Gemini or Castores. When Castor was killed, Pollux asked Zeus to let him share his own immortality with his twin to keep them together, and they were transformed into the constellation Gemini. The pair were regarded as the patrons of sailors, to whom they appeared as St. Elmo's fire, and were also associated with horsemanship.
There was a common belief that one child would live among the gods, while the other was among the dead. That’s interesting since the Doctor is associated in multiple ways with ghosts.
Anyway, here’s yet another reference to Zeus.  We know the Doctor has been cast as either a proxy to Zeus or Zeus, himself.  However, there are multiple versions of the Doctor. Is one the father and one the son while a third is a ghost?  Like in the Trinity?
We also see other important references.  We know horses are important.  Sailors could also possibly refer to space and time travelers.  And the topic of eggs comes up a lot.  For example, we saw the moon as an egg in “Kill the Moon.” Missy, too, mentioned that Nardole looks like and egg in “The Lie of the Land”:
MISSY: You haven't been to see me in six months. No-one has! Not even that bald bloke who looks like an egg.
However, eggs also come up in other episodes, like the 9th Doctor episode, “The End of the World,” which we looked at in the analysis of “The Lie of the Land.”  And there’s an indirect reference to eggs in “The Empress of Mars” where the Doctor mentions “Tythonian Hive” when he meets Friday.
DOCTOR: By the moons, I honour thee. I'm the Doctor. What is your name? (The Ice Warrior growls. He has one eye missing and a scrape across the helmet nose guard.) DOCTOR: I know your people of old. I was once an Honorary Guardian of the Tythonian Hive. (A rifle bolt is moved.)
The Tythonian Hive reference, BTW, makes no sense when relating it to Ice Warriors.  The term refers to the 4th Doctor episode “The Creature from the Pit.”  However, there are other important pieces of information in that episode.  For example, it also refers to a pit, which Bill happens to fall into in “The Empress of Mars.” 
“The Creature from the Pit,” the Egg & the Y symbol
I had never seen “The Creature from the Pit” before, so I was surprised when I watched it that there were no hives or references to Ice Warriors.  I haven’t seen this happen before with a reference that didn’t make sense, but obviously, we are supposed to get other things out of that reference.
When it comes to this episode, many things don’t make sense.  There is a giant structure that looks like a flat wall, but the Doctor calls it an egg and eggshell and says it’s alive:
ADRASTA: Yes. My huntsman heard you say that the shell was alive. DOCTOR: Alive and screaming in pain. ADRASTA: The shell? Then why can no one hear it? DOCTOR: Because it can only be detected on very low frequency wavelengths. ADRASTA: What's the shell screaming about? DOCTOR: Ah. More to the point, for whom is it screaming? Its mummy? By the pyramids, imagine the size of its mummy.
Not only is it an egg, but here’s something once again that is looking possibly for it’s mummy, like “The Empty Child.”  Also, it’s screaming but can’t be heard like the Star Whale in “The Beast Below.” Both the Empty Child and the Star Whale are metaphors for the Doctor.
Nardole is associated with an egg, just like the Doctor is with the moon as an egg concept.  And Nardole is an unactualized mirror for the Doctor.  The egg also symbolizes going back to the beginning.  This meshes with other things we’ve examined like how the universe was only 23 million years old in “The Pilot.”  Also, the Doctor’s timeline is going backwards, and we see that in the opening credits.
In “The Creature from the Pit,” there’s also a pit, of course, with a creature in it.  The Doctor actually jumps into the pit, like the 10th Doctor jumped into the pit in “The Satan Pit.”  Both find gigantic creatures.  Bill falls into the pit in “The Empress of Mars” and finds a gigantic hive and the sinister Captain Catchlove.
However, the 4th Doctor calls the creature a giant brain.  Um… this doesn’t make sense, either.
Here’s what the TARDIS Wikia says
The Tythonians were massive, blob-like organisms, sometimes hundreds of feet long. They were glowing green and had an outer membrane that was deeply creased. They had no true limbs, but had two large pseudopods. One pseudopod was shaped like the letter Y, while the other was simply a large tube. They had no vocal cords and communicated with the aid of Tythonian communicators. Tythonians could live for forty thousand years.  
The Y shape refers to a plague of deaths.  The humanoids throw people down into the pit for the creature to eat.
While this all is important, I also see the whole pit and creature reference important, which refer back to “The Satan Pit” and the war for freedom from slavery.  The 4th Doctor does help free the creature in the pit, who actually doesn’t eat people.
Therefore, this episode is hugely symbolic of what is happening in Season 10; however, not by the Tythonian Hive reference.
Living Underground As a Theme
Not only do the Ice Warriors live underground, but the Silurians do too, as we saw in the 11th Doctor episodes “The Hungry Earth” and “Cold Blood.”  In the 1st Dalek story, “The Daleks,” the Daleks also live underground.  The creature in “The Creature from the Pit” and the Beast in “The Satan Pit” also live underground. 
In all these cases, it’s not really by choice.  They are forced to live underground because conditions on the surface are problematic, or the creatures are imprisoned underground.
It’s interesting that on Gallifrey everything looks dead, as far as the landscape is concerned.  The Doctor and Master talked about how it used to be beautiful with grass, trees, etc.  While people live in the doomed city, where do they get their food from?  Of course, we are only seeing a small portion of the planet, but it still makes me wonder.
Skaro looks much the same.
Tunnels & The Thing
Interestingly, Bill mentions the movie The Thing, tunnels, and how the Doctor would like the movie because everyone dies.  The latter seems really odd for the Doctor we know, unless we consider the Doctor as the mirror to alternate-Donna in “Turn Left.”  Both have to die, along with the parallel world. The Master, Morbius, the Valeyard, and some others would also like to see everyone die.
BILL: (walking away) Oh, it's like the underground tunnels in The Thing. DOCTOR: The what? BILL: It's a movie. You'd like that one too. Everybody dies.
There are several movie versions of The Thing.  In the 1982 version, the setting is in Antarctica, which fits the Ice Warriors.  Where is the ice for the Ice Warriors anyway?  The setting is reminiscent of “The Planet of the Ood” and the large brain found on the ice. Also, it also is the setting of “The Seeds of Doom,” another 4th Doctor usurpation story that we looked at.
The creature from a crashed spaceship can perfectly duplicate other beings, like “The Zygon Invasion” and “The Zygon Inversion.”  This creates a very similar situation that we saw in “Midnight,” where at first Skye got possessed and people freaked out.  The being then possessed the Doctor, and they freaked out even more. It was mob mentality and a witchhunt, just like the movie.  And they turned on each other.
This also brings in the idea of “Love & Monsters,” the 10th Doctor episode where Victor Kennedy/The Abzorbaloff, absorbs people into his body.
Here are more themes that are being repeated.
The Next Chapter
In the next chapter, we’ll examine the Victorians and how Clara fits in in multiple ways, along with the ravens.  I’ll show you what I call collective symbolism vs. individual symbolism.
Go to next chapter => Ch. 3: Clara, Ravens, Victoria(ns), Oh My!
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