In the first two cases, Susan is completely a Time Lady. The rest of her genealogy would depend on whether the Doctor's child married a pure human, pure Time Lord, or a mix.
Yes she was the Doctor's granddaughter and as I recall in the very first episode that the doctor tells Susan's teachers that the two of them were cut off their own planet and their own people.
As it has been stated in many episodes, not all Gallifreians are Time Lords. Time Lords are a ruling class, that children of Gallifrey must be initiated into. While Time Lord and Gallifreyan are used interchangeably alot, the doctor makes the differentiation often.
The latest proof was nu-who season 8 episode listen. The Doctor, pre-initiation, was crying in bed. His parents or school attendants? Talked about the options. It was a choice to become a time lord. So to the question, nothing has indicated that Susan Foreman is a Time Lady, and her status as a full blooded Gallifreyan is also questionable as we don't know the pedigree of Susan's grandmother, father or mother.
But one thing that has never been put into question is that the doctor has always called her his granddaughter. Something I noticed recently is that the founder or head of a Gallifreyan House is titled "grandfather" now im not saying that it means anything, but when you add that Susan simply "recognised" the Doctor as her grandfather along with the alluded-to link between the Doctor and the Other.
Not to mention in recent years his marriage to River, the creation of Jenny The Doctor's affinity towards earth while convenient to the story, obviously is sort of in question a bit, but and I'm not saying it means anything but what if the human race is detined to become the Time Lords? Okay, so its something that should never actually be said on the show, but it's a little idea that's been rattling in my head.
I believe she is his actual biological granddaughter. She is the only companion to call The Doctor her grandfather. However I don't believe River Song could be her mother. Remember that River and The Doctor have personal timelines that work in reverse of each other. River meets the 12th and 11th reincarnations but her life ends during that of the Tenth Doctor David Tennant so she would never have met the first incarnation William Hartnell. Hence The Doctor has been married at least twice and Susan is the granddaughter of some other earlier wife of his.
I'm also reluctant to believe that beings of two different species can reproduce. This goes against one of the fundamental laws of biology. A human and a chimpanzee can't reproduce even though they share very common DNA. Hence a Gallifreyan and a human should not be able to reproduce.
I know this occurs a lot in Sci-Fi esp. Star Trek but goes against biology. In the newest season, Peter Capaldi's doctor states that he once convinced the Master he was half human, indicating the 8th doctor's movie. I believe the 8th doctor said he is half human. Biologically, she is a mixed breed if indeed she is his grand daughter. I've never heard the mother hypothesis previously.
For what it's worth, I believe she is, otherwise the doctor's "lost" family would still have to be identified at some point anyway. Of course it's possible that Susan is River Song's daughter with one of the Doctors, but how Moffatt would explain how the first doctor didn't recall River One Doctor had his memory partially wiped by the time lords, didn't he? As for why Earth is so special in the universe: aside from being the planet where the series is filmed. Ok, remember the episode set 5 billion years in the future on a space station orbiting near Earth?
Humans had genetically engineered many creatures, including themselves, and sent them all over the Galaxy and beyond? The Daleks were heavily genetically modified Khaleds, humanoid relatives of the Thraals who had almost exterminated them in a nuclear war. This and Davros's mad scientist syndrome go a long way to explaining their psychopathic paranoia. Time lords look suspiciously humanoid too. So I suggest that over 5 billion years in the future, genetically modified humans are sent to the planet Gallifrey.
Gallifrey itself time travels, notice that? I further suggest that many species of aliens we repeatedly encounter were settled on their worlds in the distant past, by primitive time-travelling post-humans: our own descendants.
The Time Lords merely rediscovered skills their ancestors had used to plant them on Gallifrey. Either that, or perhaps they are the post-humans who did all the scattering of species. Susan was offered the chance to travel with the Doctor again, but refused. The eventual fate of Susan Foreman is also contradicting. Whether or not he was including Susan is left up to speculation as there is still a debate over Susan being the biological granddaughter of the Doctor.
Unfortunately, the television series has yet to give reference to Susan, though some fans believe that the Doctor will indeed go back for Susan in the upcoming 50th Anniversary or feel that she should be included in the special in some way. So without any television references, the bits and pieces from the various media may be used to conceive a coherent aftermath for Susan Foreman.
Personally I am against the Legacy of the Daleks approach as I count both the television series and the Big Finish stories as canon first before expanding into other media. Therefore, I accept that Susan had a child named Alex. As for her fate, I cannot be sure. Although this author believes that this theory would probably enrage some I mean a lot of fans. What do you think happened?
Novel or Audio? Time War or The Forgotten? Thank you for reading. But in a flash she could demonstrate her otherworldly qualities, idly discussing societies on distant planets or chatting about time travel as though it was as normal as catching a bus. Little wonder she aroused the curiosity of two teachers who followed her home and triggered a series of incredible adventures….
Susan would invariably look to the Doctor for guidance and usually sided with him in any argument. But just as he looked after her, she was fiercely protective of him and would often act as a peacemaker when his waspish personality stung others into hostility. Their bond was a firm one but the Doctor knew that one day, she must find her own way….
During a battle with the Daleks on Earth in the 22nd Century, she fell in love with the brave resistance fighter, David Campbell.
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