The Crusade
0 sources
The Crusade
Summary
The Crusade is a Doctor Who serial[1]. It draws 247 Wikipedia views per month (doctor_who_serial category, ranking #30 of 158).[2]
Key Facts
- The Crusade authored David Whitaker[3].
- The Crusade's instance of is recorded as Doctor Who serial[4].
- The Crusade was directed by Douglas Camfield[5].
- David Whitaker wrote the screenplay for The Crusade[6].
- The Crusade was published by Target Books[7].
- The Crusade followed The Web Planet[8].
- The Crusade was followed by The Space Museum[9].
- A cast member of The Crusade was Jacqueline Hill[10].
- A cast member of The Crusade was William Russell[11].
- A cast member of The Crusade was Maureen O'Brien[12].
- The Crusade was produced by Verity Lambert[13].
- The Crusade's part of the series is recorded as Doctor Who[14].
- The original language of The Crusade was English[15].
- The Crusade comprises The Lion[16].
- The Crusade comprises The Knight of Jaffa[17].
- The Crusade comprises The Wheel of Fortune[18].
- The Crusade comprises The Warlords (P)[19].
- 1973 marks the founding of The Crusade[20].
- The Crusade was published on March 27, 1965[21].
- The Crusade's characters is recorded as First Doctor[22].
- The Crusade's characters is recorded as Barbara Wright[23].
- The Crusade's characters is recorded as Ian Chesterton[24].
- The Crusade's characters is recorded as Vicki[25].
- The Crusade's cover art by is recorded as Chris Achilleos[26].
- The Crusade's narrative location is recorded as Palestine[27].
Product Details
The following facts are restated verbatim from public-domain and CC0 open-data sources — every line is independently verifiable against the named source's catalog.
MusicBrainz — CC0 open music encyclopedia
- MusicBrainz ID: d3c72ab6-f45d-4f9d-a714-5e50b1193638[28]
Body
Designation and Status
The Crusade's instance of is recorded as Doctor Who serial[4].
History and Context
1973 marks the founding of The Crusade[20].
Why It Matters
The Crusade draws 247 Wikipedia views per month (doctor_who_serial category, ranking #30 of 158).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[29]