Fabula
Location
Location
Rural Farmyard
Farmyard

Rouvray Farmyard and Hay Loft

Dust settles over the open yard at Rouvray Farm in rural revolutionary France, where soldiers raided the dilapidated farmhouse and torched it with a flaming torch into the hay loft. Flames crackled through the night, leaving charred debris and lingering smoke across the farmyard and hay loft. The Doctor stirs on the rough dirt of the farmyard after a soldier's blow knocks him out, while Jean-Pierre kneels to aid his recovery and shares news of Barbara and Susan's capture. Boots crunched here earlier as troops mustered in the farmyard, lined up prisoners against the wall, and mocked the fallen amid defiant musket fire. The hay loft became a roaring inferno after the Sergeant hurled a burning torch into the dry hay bales, trapping the Doctor inside and turning refuge into a blazing threat. Together, the farmyard and hay loft serve as the raid battleground, execution threat zone, and solemn launch for the Doctor's solo rescue into Paris.
8 events
8 rich involvements

Detailed Involvements

Events with rich location context

S1E37 · A Land of Fear
The Doctor Opens the Farmhouse Door

The farmyard serves as the staging ground for the group’s inspection of the farmhouse, its dust-choked open space amplifying the tension and uncertainty of their predicament. The courtyard’s abandoned and neglected state—evidenced by the grimy window and the Doctor’s initial assessment of the farmhouse as ‘uninhabited’—creates an atmosphere of unease. The location’s role is functional, providing a space for the group to gather and assess their options, but it also carries symbolic weight, representing the broader instability and danger of revolutionary France. The farmyard’s isolation and the farmhouse’s unlocked door together form a narrative tension: a place that seems abandoned but may hide unseen threats or opportunities.

Atmosphere

Tense and uncertain, with a sense of abandonment and potential danger lurking beneath the surface. The dust-choked air and the farmhouse’s neglected state contribute to a mood of unease, while the unlocked door introduces a glimmer of hope—or foreboding.

Functional Role

Staging ground for the group’s inspection and decision-making, serving as a transitional space between their journey and their next move (entering the farmhouse).

Symbolic Significance

Represents the group’s broader predicament in revolutionary France: a place that appears safe but may conceal greater dangers. The farmyard’s isolation mirrors their vulnerability as outsiders in a hostile environment.

Access Restrictions

Open and unrestricted, but the farmhouse’s unlocked door introduces a new variable—who else might have access, and what might they find inside?

Dust-choked air, suggesting neglect and abandonment. Grimy window, obscuring the view of the farmhouse’s interior. Unlocked door, inviting entry but also raising questions about who might have left it open.
S1E37 · A Land of Fear
Lieutenant Orders a Prolonged Siege

The farmyard is the staging ground for the Lieutenant's cruel delay and the Sergeant's frustrated obedience. It is a dust-choked open space surrounded by the dilapidated farmhouse, where the soldiers muster under the Lieutenant's orders. The tension in the air is palpable as the soldiers encircle the building, their rifles ready. The farmyard's open expanse amplifies the sense of exposure and vulnerability for the royalists inside, while also serving as a platform for the Lieutenant's sadistic control over the situation. The atmosphere is thick with anticipation and the promise of violence.

Atmosphere

Tension-filled with whispered orders and the crunch of boots on dirt. The air is thick with anticipation, cruelty, and the promise of impending violence. The farmyard feels like a stage for the Lieutenant's sadistic performance, where every movement of the soldiers is calculated to maximize the royalists' suffering.

Functional Role

Staging area for the soldiers' encirclement of the farmhouse and the Lieutenant's psychological torture of the royalists. It serves as a barrier, preventing escape and trapping the fugitives inside.

Symbolic Significance

Represents the revolutionary forces' relentless pursuit of the royalists, as well as the Lieutenant's personal vendetta against them. The farmyard symbolizes the inescapable nature of the Reign of Terror, where even the illusion of safety is a trap.

Access Restrictions

Restricted to the revolutionary soldiers and their officers. The royalists inside the farmhouse are cut off from escape, and the companions are trapped within the building, unable to leave without being captured.

Dust-choked open space surrounded by the farmhouse. Soldiers' boots crunching on dirt as they take positions. Rifles clicking into position, ready for action. Whispered orders and laughter from the soldiers, amplifying the tension.
S1E37 · A Land of Fear
Rouvray’s Last Stand and D’Argenson’s Execution

The farmyard serves as a brutal battleground and execution site, its dust-choked open space surrounded by a dilapidated farmhouse. The location is stark and unforgiving, with no cover or escape for the royalists. The farmyard’s isolation amplifies the sense of inevitability—there is no help coming, and the revolutionaries’ violence goes unchecked. The farmhouse, though unlocked and initially a potential refuge, becomes a backdrop to the executions, its windows and doors offering no protection. The farmyard’s atmosphere is one of tension and violence, where the Revolution’s terror is enforced without witnesses or consequences.

Atmosphere

Tension-filled and oppressive, with the weight of impending violence hanging in the air. The dust and dilapidation of the farmyard reflect the decay of the old order and the brutality of the new.

Functional Role

Battleground and execution site, where the revolutionaries assert their dominance over the royalists. The farmyard’s openness ensures there is no escape, and its isolation guarantees no interference.

Symbolic Significance

Represents the collapse of the old world (the farmhouse as a symbol of rural life under the monarchy) and the rise of the Revolution’s terror. The farmyard is a microcosm of the broader conflict, where loyalty and defiance are met with bullets.

Access Restrictions

Open to the revolutionary forces, who have surrounded the area. The royalists have no means of escape, and the TARDIS crew’s fate is similarly sealed as the Lieutenant turns his attention to them.

Dust-choked air, obscuring vision and adding to the sense of chaos. Dilapidated farmhouse, its unlocked door offering false hope of refuge. Encircling soldiers, their uniforms and muskets stark against the rural backdrop. The crack of gunfire, echoing across the open yard as Rouvray and D’Argenson are executed.
S1E37 · A Land of Fear
Lieutenant seizes control over prisoners

The farmyard is mentioned as the next destination for the prisoners, where they will be marched outside under the Lieutenant's orders. While not the primary location of this event, its looming presence underscores the group's impending exposure and vulnerability. The dust-choked open yard surrounds the dilapidated farmhouse, serving as a transition zone where the revolutionaries can more easily control and transport their captives. The courtyard's role in this event is to further isolate the prisoners, removing them from the relative shelter of the farmhouse and exposing them to the revolutionaries' full authority.

Atmosphere

Exposed and perilous, with the open yard offering no cover or escape. The dust and debris swirl in the air, symbolizing the chaos and uncertainty of the prisoners' fate.

Functional Role

Transition zone and new containment area, where the prisoners will be even more exposed and vulnerable to the revolutionaries' control.

Symbolic Significance

Represents the prisoners' loss of agency and the revolutionaries' ability to move them at will, reinforcing their status as captives in revolutionary France.

Access Restrictions

Heavily guarded by the revolutionaries; the prisoners will have no opportunity to escape or seek help once moved outside.

The dust-choked air, swirling with debris and the remnants of the revolutionaries' violence. The rough, uneven ground of the courtyard, offering no comfort or shelter for the prisoners. The distant sounds of the revolutionaries' encampment, a reminder of the larger forces at play in this deadly landscape. The flickering torchlight or moonlight casting eerie shadows, emphasizing the prisoners' isolation and the revolutionaries' dominance.
S1E37 · A Land of Fear
Doctor awakens to isolation and capture

The farmyard serves as a transition zone where the prisoners are marched outside under the soldiers’ control. Its dust-choked, open space amplifies the prisoners’ exposure and vulnerability, while also symbolizing the revolutionary forces’ dominance over the landscape. The farmyard’s role as a staging area for the prisoners’ removal underscores the escalating peril they face and the inescapable nature of their predicament.

Atmosphere

Tense and oppressive, with the dust-choked air and the soldiers’ presence creating a sense of inevitability and danger.

Functional Role

Transition zone for the prisoners’ removal and a staging area for the soldiers’ control over the situation.

Symbolic Significance

Represents the prisoners’ loss of agency and the revolutionary forces’ dominance over the landscape.

Access Restrictions

Restricted to the soldiers and prisoners; the Doctor remains isolated upstairs, unaware of the events unfolding below.

Dust-choked air, amplifying the sense of oppression. Soldiers’ boots thudding against the ground, reinforcing their control. The prisoners’ forced march, highlighting their vulnerability.
S1E37 · A Land of Fear
Lieutenant Orders Paris Transport

The farmhouse hay loft is the ignition point for the fire that consumes the building. Dry hay bales fill the upper level, catching fire instantly when the Sergeant throws a burning torch into the loft. The hay loft's role is purely destructive, symbolizing the revolutionaries' ruthless efficiency and the irreversible escalation of the companions' peril. The fire traps the Doctor inside, turning the farmhouse from a potential refuge into a roaring inferno, underscoring the revolution's destructive power.

Atmosphere

Chaotic and destructive (the crackling fire and billowing smoke)

Functional Role

Ignition point for the farmhouse fire, trapping the Doctor inside

Symbolic Significance

Represents the revolution's destructive efficiency and the companions' deepening peril

Access Restrictions

Restricted to the revolutionaries (the Doctor is trapped inside)

Dry hay bales filling the upper level Burning torch thrown by the Sergeant Crackling fire and billowing smoke
S1E38 · Guests of Madame Guillotine
Doctor learns of companions' capture

The farmyard is a liminal space, caught between the chaos of the revolution and the quiet desperation of rural life. It is here that the Doctor regains consciousness, the ground beneath him still warm from the flames that consumed the farmhouse. The air is thick with the acrid smell of smoke, and the crackling embers of the burning structure cast flickering shadows over the scene. This is a place of transition—where survival gives way to sacrifice, where warnings are issued and vows are made. The farmyard is not just a setting but a character in its own right, its desolation mirroring the Doctor’s internal conflict and the stakes of his mission. It is a place of loss, yet also of resolve, where the Doctor’s journey into Paris begins.

Atmosphere

Tense and smoldering, with an undercurrent of urgency. The farmyard is bathed in the eerie glow of the burning farmhouse, casting long shadows that seem to stretch toward Paris. The air is thick with the scent of smoke and the weight of unspoken fears. It is a place where hope and despair coexist, where every sound—the crackling of flames, the distant cry of a bird—feels charged with meaning.

Functional Role

A transitional space where the Doctor regains his bearings and makes the decisive choice to rescue his friends. It serves as a launching point for his journey into Paris, a place where warnings are heeded but ultimately overridden by duty.

Symbolic Significance

Represents the threshold between safety and danger, between the past (the burning farmhouse) and the future (the Doctor’s mission to Paris). It is a microcosm of the revolution itself—a place where old worlds are destroyed and new ones must be forged.

Access Restrictions

Open to those who dare to traverse it, but the path to Paris is fraught with peril, and the farmyard itself is a reminder of the violence that awaits.

The smoldering ruins of the farmhouse, its flames casting an orange glow over the scene The dusty, uneven ground of the farmyard, where the Doctor lies and Jean-Pierre kneels The distant cry of a bird, a stark contrast to the silence of the smoldering wreckage The faint scent of water from the cup Jean-Pierre offers, a fleeting moment of relief
S1E38 · Guests of Madame Guillotine
Doctor’s Solemn Departure for Paris

The farmyard is the physical and emotional epicenter of this event, a space still smoldering from the soldiers' raid. Its charred remnants—the burned farmhouse, the scattered debris, the lingering smoke—serve as a grim backdrop to the Doctor's awakening and Jean-Pierre's warnings. The location is both a battleground (where the raid unfolded) and a launching point (for the Doctor's rescue mission), its isolation amplifying the stakes of the conversation. The dust settling over the yard mirrors the temporary lull in violence, a fleeting moment of respite before the Doctor's perilous journey begins. The farmyard's mood is tense and somber, its atmosphere thick with the weight of recent violence and the unspoken fear of what lies ahead in Paris.

Atmosphere

Tense and somber, with the acrid scent of smoke lingering in the air and the distant echoes of the raid's violence still fresh. The stillness is deceptive, masking the urgency of the Doctor's mission and the boy's conflicted heart.

Functional Role

A transitional space—where the Doctor regains consciousness, receives critical information, and commits to his rescue mission. It serves as both a refuge (temporarily) and a launchpad for danger.

Symbolic Significance

Represents the revolution's destructive reach, even in rural areas, and the fragile humanity that persists despite it. The farmyard's ruins symbolize the collapse of normalcy, while the Doctor's presence hints at the possibility of defiance.

Access Restrictions

Open but perilous—soldiers could return at any moment, and the path to Paris is fraught with danger.

The smoldering ruins of the farmhouse, its timbers blackened and collapsing Dust swirling in the air, catching the light as it settles over the yard The distant cawing of crows, a stark reminder of the violence that unfolded The rough, uneven ground where the Doctor lies, still disoriented

Events at This Location

Everything that happens here

8
S1E37 · A Land of Fear
The Doctor Opens the Farmhouse Door

The group approaches the abandoned farmhouse with cautious optimism, the Doctor leading the way while Ian and Barbara exchange skeptical glances. After a brief inspection through a grimy window, the …

S1E37 · A Land of Fear
Lieutenant Orders a Prolonged Siege

The Sergeant and his soldiers surround the farmhouse, where royalist fugitives are suspected to be hiding. The Lieutenant, driven by ideological vengeance, deliberately delays the raid to intensify the royalists' …

S1E37 · A Land of Fear
Rouvray’s Last Stand and D’Argenson’s Execution

In a desperate act of defiance, Rouvray intervenes to shield D’Argenson from capture, seizing a musket from a soldier and hurling it aside while positioning himself between the terrified royalist …

S1E37 · A Land of Fear
Lieutenant seizes control over prisoners

The Lieutenant consolidates power over the captured TARDIS crew after the executions of Rouvray and d'Argenson. Ian, who had been searching for the Doctor, is forcibly silenced and disarmed by …

S1E37 · A Land of Fear
Doctor awakens to isolation and capture

The Doctor regains consciousness in a locked upstairs room of the farmhouse, unaware of the immediate danger unfolding below. Meanwhile, Ian is forcibly dragged away by soldiers after being caught …

S1E37 · A Land of Fear
Lieutenant Orders Paris Transport

Ian, Barbara, and Susan stand against a wall, moments from execution by a revolutionary firing squad. The Sergeant prepares the muskets, but the Lieutenant intervenes, halting the immediate killing. He …

S1E38 · Guests of Madame Guillotine
Doctor learns of companions' capture

The Doctor regains consciousness in a French farmyard after being struck unconscious during the soldiers' raid. Jean-Pierre, a young boy who witnessed the attack, informs him that Barbara and Susan …

S1E38 · Guests of Madame Guillotine
Doctor’s Solemn Departure for Paris

The Doctor, regaining consciousness in a French farmyard after being struck unconscious during the soldiers' raid, learns from Jean-Pierre that Barbara and Susan have been captured and are being held …