A timeline of known and extrapolated dates for the events of Within the Wires. "~" indicates a date is calculated from other dates and may be marginally inaccurate. "~~" indicates a date is speculatory.
Approx | Year | Event | Source |
---|---|---|---|
1792 | The Saucy Noggin pub opens in Ballinroche, Ireland | [1] | |
~ | 1880 | Rónán Lynch is born in Ballinroche, Ireland | [2] |
1886 | Gráinne Lynch is born in Ballinroche, Ireland | [3] | |
1892 | Rubin's Bakery is established in Prague, Bohemia, by Hannah Rubin | [4] | |
1899 | Beginning of the Second Boer War between the British Empire and South Africa | [5] | |
~ | ↳ | Rónán Lynch dies | [2] |
1900s | |||
1902 | End of the Second Boer War between the British Empire and South Africa | [5] | |
1908-11 | Approximated year of Miriam Gregory's birth (possibly in Poland), on January 10 | [6] | |
1910s | |||
1910 | Nora Bostwick begins working and studying at Temple University, Philadelphia USA | [7] | |
↳ | Hannah Rubin's daughter, Sarah, moves the family bakery to New York City, USA. | [4] | |
1912 | July marks recognised beginning of the Great Reckoning as riots start in Ghent, Belgium | [6] | |
1913 | Clervaux, Luxembourg is badly damaged by heavy artillery and abandonned | [8] | |
↳ | Oisín and Conor Lynch enlist in the army | [1] | |
1914 | USA officially declares war | [9] | |
1915 | Outbreak of malaria and influenza in Brooklyn, NYC | [10] | |
↳ | Most of Europe puts conscription of able-bodied men aged 18-45 into effect by the end of the year | [11] | |
1916 | In autumn, first reported outbreak of "cobbler's flu" (H4N2 influenza) in Salisbury, England, dying down by the end of 1917 | [12] | |
1917 | German army occupies Belgium | [11] | |
↳ | Nora Bostwick leaves Temple University to find work in Europe | [7] | |
↳ | Somebody with the surname Lynch dies of natural causes in Ballinroche, Ireland | [1] | |
1918 | In summer, President Taft of the United States is assassinated | [9] | |
↳ | Riots and civil war starting in Philadelphia lead to the Battle of the Bell two weeks over Christmas | [9] | |
1919 | Catastrophic bombing of Edinburgh, Scotland | [13] | |
↳ | Oxford University, England, is bombed | [7] | |
1920s | |||
~ | 1920 | Toxic air and large scale bombing begin to be used on a massive scale for the rest of the decade | [14] |
1921 | Resurgence of cobbler's flu | [12] | |
↳ | Eruption of Mount Etna | [15] | |
↳ | Plagued rats deliberately released in biological attack of Rome, Italy | [13] | |
↳ | Nora Bostwick establishes a farmstead commune near Malbrouck Castle, France, which would later become the Arboretum | [16] | |
1922 | Miriam Gregory is arrested on 21 March for wilful trade of military secrets and intelligence and interred at Gevangenis van Antwerpen | [11] | |
↳ | Mercenary spy Josef Hinter is executed by Austrian government in June for wilful trade of military secrets and intelligence | [13] | |
1923 | Mini-eruption of Yellowstone | [15] | |
1924 | Resurgence of cobbler's flu | [12] | |
↳ | Miriam Gregory is involved in a prison brawl or riot at Gevangenis van Antwerpen | [11] | |
↳ | Ballinroche, Ireland and its surrounding area is heavily bombed with airstrikes over three months, and Gráinne Lynch's village is almost completely flattened except for her house. | [1] | |
1925 | Miriam Gregory escapes Gevangenis van Antwerpen on 14 September | [11] | |
1927 | Volcanic winter caused by Etna and Yellowstone eruptions ends | [15] | |
~ | ↳ | Claudia Atieno is born in Tanzania | [17] |
~~ | ↳ | Vivienne Torrance is born | |
~~ | ↳ | Michael Witten is born | |
1928-9 | Ellis Island and Liberty Island, NYC, are destroyed by bombing | [18] | |
1930s | |||
1931 | The Gevangenis van Antwerpen detention facility in north Belgium is bombed | [11] | |
↳ | Nora Bostwick leaves the Arboretum | [19] | |
1932 | German occupation of Belgium ends | [11] | |
↳ | George Washington Bridge, NYC, is partially destroyed | [20] | |
↳ | Ballinroche, Ireland experiences the first of three straight years of summer droughts and autumn floods | [1] | |
1935 | Claudia Atieno draws 'Childhood Home' | [17] | |
↳ | Inner Harbor Fire of Baltimore, USA which takes two months to fully extinguish | [21] | |
~ | 1936 | Edgar Hartley is born in Memphis, USA | [22] |
~~ | ↳ | Tony Tollinger is born (under a different name) | [23] |
~ | 1937 | Roimata Mangakāhia is born in Aotearoa | [24] |
1938 | [CONTRADICTORY INFORMATION] The Mutual Compromise is signed, officially ending the Great Reckoning | [25] | |
~~ | ↳ | Greg is born (approximately) | [26] |
1939 | The New Society is formed and Tanzania is dissipated along with other countries | [27] | |
1940s | |||
~ | 1940 | Claudia Atieno is separated from her birth parent(s) and taken to a Programming Centre | [17] |
1941 | Nora Bostwick is elected to the German Provisional Government | [16] | |
↳ | Miriam Gregory boarded SS Conte di Savoia on 27 October in Trieste, Italy, and docked in New York, USA on 22 November | [28] | |
1942 | Claudia Atieno draws 'Childhood Home, Left' | [17] | |
↳ | First global ceasefires are signed (three attempts made before First Peace) | [29] | |
1943 | Great Reckoning officially ends as final ceasefire signed and Day of First Peace declared on 21 April | [29] | |
↳ | The New Society Records Department is formed | [6] | |
1944 | The United American Continent is established, until it is subsumed into the Society ten months later | [30] | |
↳ | The Department of Childhood Development is established | [31] | |
1945 | The Global Council is established, and Nora Bostwick joins | [16] | |
↳ | Anand Balakrishnan is elected Global Council Chief | [32] | |
↳ | Edith Marshall is appointed the first Secretary of Education for the Society | [33] | |
1946 | Former site of Arboretum is rediscovered | [34] | |
↳ | Rohaan Youssuf begins formation of the Internal Investigations Division | [35] | |
~~ | ↳ | Michael Witten meets Vivienne Torrance in South Sioux City | [36] |
1947 | Initial draft of the Age Ten Laws is proposed to the Societal Council by Gustav Morgan | [37] | |
↳ | Riots over Age Ten Laws take place in Sydney, Bangkok, and Johannesburg, causing casualties | [38] | |
~~ | ↳ | Michael Witten meets Vivienne Torrance again and they begin dating | [36] |
1948 | Claudia Atieno begins working on her painting 'The Charcoal Dish' | [25] | |
↳ | Laura Halstead leads the Baton Rouge Uprising | [39] | |
↳ | The Age Ten Laws are passed with supporting votes from Nora Bostwick and Ekaterina Yelchin | [37] | |
↳ | Repopulation Initiative begins | [40] | |
1949 | Freya is born in former-France, inspiring Brigette and Louis to begin the Cradle | [41] | |
↳ | The position Secretary of Education becomes Secretary of the Department of Childhood Development | [33] | |
↳ | The Internal Investigations Division is established | [42] | |
1950s | |||
1950 | Military power is removed from all nations | [36] | |
↳ | Anand Balakrishnan retires as Global Council Chief for his declining health | [32] | |
↳ | Miriam Gregory meets Edgar Hartley for the first time | [22] | |
↳ | Rolls Royce Silver Wraith is produced | [27] | |
~~ | ↳ | Hannah Rubin's granddaughter, Rachel, moves the family bakery from NYC to Miami, Florida. | [4] |
1951 | The Citizen Espionage Act (1951) is passed | [27] | |
↳ | Rebuilding of George Washington Bridge, NYC, is completed | [20] | |
↳ | In autumn, Edgar Hartley dies and Miriam Gregory leaves Gateway for Baltimore | [43] | |
1952 | The abolition of nations (including flags, anthems, and structures of power) | [44] | |
↳ | Karen Roberts testifies against Vishwathi Ramadoss for espionage | [45] | |
1953 | Bernice Jones helps to organise a performance of a controversial play by Niamh Connolly with the support of Michael Witten | [36] | |
↳ | Michael Witten begins the New Conversion Project to renovate Capitol Hill buildings in Washington DC | [46] | |
~ | ↳ | Roimata Mangakāhia sketches 'Rowboat' | [24] |
↳ | Miriam Gregory and Teresa Moyo meet in Baltimore | [43] | |
↳ | Miriam Gregory publishes A Farewell to Trauma | [47] | |
~ | ↳ | Elena Jiménez is born | [4] |
1954 | Michael Witten is framed for illegal surveillance by Vishwathi Ramadoss | [39] | |
↳ | Nell is born to Vivienne Torrance in Chicago, in September | [48] | |
↳ | On 7 September, 12 members of the original Cradle are killed in a raid by the IID in the woods near Sundsvall, including Louis, and Brigette is arrested | [41] | |
↳ | Michael Witten becomes the Chief Policy Administrator for the Society | [49] | |
↳ | Miriam Gregory publishes Watercolor Memories | [50] | |
↳ | Miriam Gregory and Teresa Moyo are married on 23 November | [35] | |
~ | 1955 | Brigette reunites with Freya in Stockholm and they reform the Cradle in central former France | [41] |
↳ | Family Dissolution Act (1955) is passed | [27] | |
↳ | Nora Bostwick wins a third term on the Societal Council | [35] | |
~ | ↳ | Roimata Mangakāhia sketches 'Damselfly' | [24] |
1956 | Rose Haverstock works as a consultant for the Department of Corrections in Manitoba, Former Canada | [51] | |
↳ | Rose Haverstock founds the Seattle Addiction Intervention Home | [52] | |
~ | ↳ | "Brian" is enrolled in Haverstock University in Baltimore | [53] |
1958 | Oleta is born to Vivienne Torrance in Toronto | [49] | |
~ | ↳ | Hester Wells is born, 4 months and 27 days after Oleta | [54] |
~ | ↳ | Roimata Mangakāhia sketches 'Portrait of Young Woman' | [24] |
~ | ↳ | Roimata Mangakāhia begins travelling the world | [24] |
↳ | Vishwathi Ramadoss is tried for espionage and goes free | [49] | |
1959 | Vishwathi Ramadoss speaks to the Board of Governance at a summit and congratulates Sima Choudary, Sarah Chisholm, and Michael Witten for their work on the New Conversion Project. | [49] | |
↳ | The deconstruction of Buckingham Palace begins | [44] | |
1960s | |||
1960 | Buckingham Palace is relocated in Somerset and made into a museum of former-English history | [44] | |
↳ | Children are now required to be raised by the state | [40] | |
↳ | Miriam Gregory publishes The Contradictions of the Self | [55] | |
~ | ↳ | Teresa Moyo gives birth to her daughter | [56] |
↳ | The Societal Council begins the Golden Globe Awards as part of an initiative to revitalise the arts in the Society | [57] | |
↳ | Bettina Chou becomes Education Secretary for North America | [58] | |
↳ | Brian graduates from Haverstock University in Baltimore | [53] | |
~~ | ↳ | Kat Waterford and Claire work on an audiobook written by Chinara Ogunbowale | [59] |
1961 | Amy Castillo drafts a plan for the Institute to fill the Washington buildings and her proposal is rejected by the government. She goes to a private corporation instead. | [49] | |
↳ | Bernice Jones commissions Claudia Atieno for a portrait of Vivienne Torrance and her cat, presumably the painting that would become known as 'Self-Portrait with Cat' | [49] | |
↳ | Legislation is passed to compensate people who contribute to the repopulation effort | [60] | |
↳ | Donatella Griffin proposes amendment to the Age Ten Laws that includes genetic siblings and other close relatives to prohibited contacts | [61] | |
1962 | Claudia Atieno gains international critical attention for her art for the first time with 'Still Life with Orchid' while working as the resident artist of Berkshire Museum. | [25] | |
↳ | Claudia Atieno paints 'Still Life with Tomato Plant and Sword' | [62] | |
↳ | Shelley Winters wears a Moyo dress to the 3rd Golden Globes | [57] | |
~ | 1963 | Claudia Atieno travels with Cassandra Reza, including to Kota Tua, Jakarta, in the former Dutch East Indies. | [44] |
~ | ↳ | Claudia Atieno paints 'The Arising' | [44] |
↳ | Roimata Mangakāhia sees Vanessa Nguyen's in progress work 'Women Alone' in her studio in Cardiff | [63] | |
~ | ↳ | Vanessa Nguyen describes the concept of 'Women Alone' to Claudia Atieno when they meet at an exhibition in Munich | [63] |
~ | ↳ | Claudia Atieno sketches 'untitled artists at work' | [27] |
↳ | Nora Bostwick retires from politics | [16] | |
↳ | Rose Haverstock stops consulting for the Department of Corrections in Manitoba | [51] | |
1964 | Nell has her memories erased at age 10 | [64] | |
~ | ↳ | Roimata Mangakāhia possibly travels from London to Providence, North America by cargo ship, although there is no record of travel; she paints 'Providence' | [24] |
1965 | Claudia Atieno meets Pavel Zubov in St Petersburg | [62] | |
↳ | Claudia Atieno paints 'Marketplace, Summer Afternoon' | [62] | |
~~ | ↳ | Teresa Moyo gives birth to her son, Moses, on October 5. | [65] |
↳ | Gareth Revere is elected Minister for Fisheries in New Orleans, Louisiana | [58] | |
1967 | Claudia Atieno paints 'Fingers. Together.' | [62] | |
↳ | Claudia Atieno's painting 'The Three Sisters' debuts at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago | [63] | |
↳ | Lupe Alvarez begins working as a staff writer at the Washington Post | [66] | |
1968 | Oleta and Hester Wells have their memories erased at age 10 | [54] | |
↳ | Claudia Atieno paints 'Stapler' | [62] | |
↳ | Claudia Atieno paints 'Sunshine Afternoon' | [62] | |
↳ | Claudia Atieno's painting 'The Parade in Paris' debuts | [44] | |
~ | ↳ | Vanessa Nguyen's career is ruined by the accusation that she plagiarised 'Women Alone' from Claudia Atieno's 'The Three Sisters' | [63] |
1969 | Roimata Mangakāhia opens the Karikari Contemporary Gallery as its only employee with an exhibit on Claudia Atieno | [67] | |
↳ | [CONTRADICTORY INFORMATION] Claudia Atieno shows Roimata Mangakāhia her painting 'Lamp' and she spends 20 minutes praising it, and opens a bottle of Cabernet she had been saving for a special occasion. Claudia responds by hiding the painting away and telling her it was destroyed. | [68] | |
1970s | |||
1970 | Roimata Mangakāhia meets Claudia Atieno for the first time to discuss her work on behalf of the Tate Modern | [25] | |
↳ | Claudia Atieno paints 'Woman in Bath' | [25] | |
↳ | Roimata Mangakāhia paints 'Self-Portrait' | [24] | |
↳ | Claudia Atieno visits Roimata Mangakāhia's apartment in Plymouth and takes, among others, 'Kea and Rope' to copy into her own version, 'untitled parrot and rope' | [27] | |
1971 | The Tate Modern hosts Claudia Atieno's work in the Remembrance Wing with commentary by Roimata Mangakāhia, funded by Archie MacPherson | [25] | |
↳ | Roimata Mangakāhia returns to Cornwall to stay with Claudia Atieno | [62] | |
↳ | Claudia Atieno paints the 'Rubbish' collection; #15 is from October | ||
↳ | Pavel Zubov finds 'Sunshine Afternoon' in his basement | [62] | |
1972 | Claudia Atieno begins 'Self-Portrait with Cat (unfinished)' | [62] | |
↳ | Roimata Mangakāhia paints 'Cornwall Cliffs' | [24] | |
↳ | Claudia Atieno paints 'Guests' in March | [14] | |
↳ | Claudia Atieno disappears; last seen alive either at the end of March, or in October | [62][14] | |
↳ | Pavel Zubov reports Claudia missing on April 16 | [14] | |
↳ | Clíodhna Byrne graduates from nursing school | [69] | |
↳ | Bettina Chou retires as Education Secretary for North America | [58] | |
1973 | The Ulster Museum hosts Claudia Atieno's work in their 'Red Love' exhibit with commentary by Roimata Mangakāhia | [62] | |
↳ | The unfinished Claudia Atieno sketches from the Bardo Museum's 1975 exhibit are discovered, allegedly in a previous unknown crawlspace in the Cornwall House | [27] | |
↳ | Roimata Mangakāhia paints 'Fingers Together' | [24] | |
↳ | On 22 October, Clíodhna Byrne arrives at Gráinne Lynch's home as her care-at-home nurse. She proceeds to have a very bad ten days. | [69] | |
↳ | Elena Jiménez meets Rose Torres at a concert at the White Cat in Miami, Florida | ||
1974 | El Museo de Arte Contemporáneo in Lima hosts Claudia Atieno's work with commentary by Roimata Mangakāhia | [44] | |
↳ | Roimata Mangakāhia paints 'Claudia Atieno with Cat' | [24] | |
↳ | Archie MacPherson dies of heart failure | [27] | |
↳ | Sigrid is born to Freya | [41] | |
↳ | Elena Jiménez and Rose Torres spend several months in Aotearoa, starting Christmas 1973 and ending April 1974 | [70] | |
~~ | ↳ | Mexico City becomes the Society Capital Hub | [71] |
~~ | ↳ | Indra is born | |
1975 | The Bardo Museum hosts Claudia Atieno's work in their 'Unfinished Nightmares' exhibit with commentary by Roimata Mangakāhia | [27] | |
↳ | Miriam Gregory is reported missing by her wife Teresa Moyo | [72] | |
1977 | The Van Gogh Museum hosts Claudia Atieno's childhood works with commentary by Roimata Mangakāhia | [17] | |
~~ | ↳ | "Mandatory pregnancy laws" are abolished | [73] |
~~ | ↳ | Tony Tollinger sends personalised leadership seminar tapes to Brian | [26] |
1978 | Hester Wells meets Roimata Mangakāhia for an interview during her studies | [24] | |
↳ | The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts hosts Claudia Atieno's work in their 'Small Items, Big Picture' exhibit with commentary by Roimata Mangakāhia | [14] | |
↳ | Brigette dies | [41] | |
↳ | Pieces of bone and clothing later confirmed to be Claudia Atieno's wash up on St Agnes Island | [68] | |
↳ | Lupe Alvarez stops working at the Washington Post | [66] | |
1979 | The Sree Chitra Art Gallery hosts Claudia Atieno, Roimata Mangakāhia, and Vanessa Nguyen's work in their 'Reflections' exhibit, with commentary by Roimata | [63] | |
↳ | Roimata Mangakāhia paints 'The Bodies' | [24] | |
1980s | |||
1980 | Hester Wells is working at the Institute | [24] | |
~ | ↳ | Oleta meets Nell and her memory is partially triggered | [74] |
~ | ↳ | Hester Wells meets Oleta and her memory is partially triggered | [54] |
↳ | Claudia Atieno's torso and teeth are found by an eight-year-old girl under some mud on a rocky beach, and an impact is determined to have caused the death; the girl is then admitted to the Institute. | [68] | |
↳ | The Ohara Museum of Art hosts Claudia Atieno's work in their 'The Work of the Late Claudia Atieno' exhibit with commentary by Roimata Mangakāhia | [68] | |
↳ | Roimata Mangakāhia moves back to the town she was born in | [24] | |
↳ | Gareth Revere retires as Minister for Fisheries in New Orleans, Louisiana | [58] | |
↳ | Elena Jiménez and Rose Torres spend two months in Jakarta, former Indonesia, and Rose becomes pregnant | [71] | |
1981 | The Metropolitan Museum of Art hosts Claudia Atieno's work in their 'Claudia Atieno: A Memorium' exhibit with commentary by Roimata Mangakāhia | [75] | |
~ | ↳ | Hester Wells makes contact with Oleta, but she does not remember her | [74] |
~ | ↳ | Oleta is admitted to the Institute for knowingly contacting her sibling | [76] |
~ | ↳ | Roimata Mangakāhia begins her 'Horopito' series | [24] |
↳ | In March, Anita is born to Rose Torres | [77] | |
1982 | Hester Wells begins her plan to help Oleta escape from the Institute | [24] | |
↳ | Teresa Moyo dies of breast cancer | [78] | |
↳ | Rose Torres and Elena Jiménez travel to Adelaide and stay for several months before taking a trip to Arusha and climbing Kilimanjaro, followed by a trip to Venice | [79][73] | |
~ | 1983 | Roimata Mangakāhia dies | [24] |
~ | ↳ | Nell helps Hester Wells get Oleta out of the Institute | [80] |
~ | ↳ | Under a fake name "Georgia", Hester Wells begins making her way to Aotearoa with the help of the Pilot and Paloma on the 3rd (unknown month) flying from Philadelphia to Portland, then on the 15th fly from Portland to Chicago. In Portland, she stays in Munjoy hill with a theatre group consisting of Kathy, Leah, Tekera. In Chicago, Jen smuggles Hester by truck | [10] |
↳ | The "Punk's Opera" artist collective in Somerset is forcibly disbanded. | [81] | |
1984 | The Pilot is separated from Hester Wells. He follows a trail to Houston in March but does not find her. | [82] | |
~~ | ↳ | The Pilot finds his wife and daughter in a Cradle, and is shortly after reunited with Hester by Paloma. Coleen and Sam's Cradle is broken up by the IID and the Pilot returns to pick up Sam. | [83] |
~ | 1985 | Hester Wells is reunited with Oleta at a cottage in Aotearoa; they get married | [24] |
↳ | Hester Wells recovers Roimata Mangakāhia's paintings from her vacant cottage. She attempts to feed Roimata's cat; it scratches her and runs away | [24] | |
1986 | Hester Wells reopens the Karikari Contemporary Gallery and hosts an exhibit dedicated to Roimata Mangakāhia | [24] | |
1987 | Lupe Alvarez dies | [66] | |
1990s | |||
1993 | Freya leaves Sigrid in charge of the Hedmark Cradle in the wake of her arrest in spring | [84] | |
↳ | Freya meets Melissa and begins to make contact with other Cradles across North America. She starts work on a manifesto for the movement | [41] | |
1994 | Freya meets La Palma in Mexico and decides to adopt their spirituality into the Cradle | [85] | |
↳ | Freya meets with Usman in Bangalore, who puts her in contact with Jure, who she agrees to show the Hedmark Cradle to | [86] | |
↳ | Mexico City's term as the Society's Capital Hub ends. Jakarta is passed over to be the new Hub in favour of Oslo | [71] | |
1995 | Jure visits the Hedmark Cradle in February and is poorly recieved. The Cradlers drive him out - Lisette may have been heading this action | [87] | |
↳ | Hurricane Kelvin hits Miami, Florida, wrecking the White Cat ballroom on Northeast 6th | [4] | |
1996 | The Sunday Island Cradle wards off an IID raid without a single casualty | [88] | |
~ | ↳ | Freya finishes drafting the first volume of her manifesto and names it The Hand | [88] |
↳ | Miriam Gregory dies, while living under a false name | [89] | |
↳ | The manuscript of Miriam Gregory's memoir is found beneath the floorboards of an attic room in Stockholm | [89] | |
1997 | In March, Gwen Nettles attends a performance of A Mother's Doorway by Gorgeous Watkins with her colleague Horatio, assuming the names Nancy and David for their investigation. | [81] | |
↳ | Indra meets Nan after the A Mother's Doorway performance and drunkenly leaves her several voicemails at 4am | [81] | |
↳ | A Cradle deputy in North America decided to go public and paid to both advertise for themselves and against the Society on television, organising their Cradles for demonstrations and protests. Freya swiftly replaced the responsible people with others she felt would stay true to her own vision | [90] | |
↳ | In May, Indra puts on a production of King Lear with elements derived from the uncensored version of the play. | [91] | |
↳ | In July, Gwen Nettles proposes a 90-day probationary period on the programme that taps employees' home phones, citing inefficiency. | [92] | |
↳ | In October, Indra puts on a production of My Brother, The State. Gwen Nettles makes calls about replacing monitoring equipment for an ongoing investigation that has been damaged. | [93] | |
↳ | Jure tells Freya that three KR Development board members have gained seats on the Societal Council and convinces her that under KR's management, the Institute will be a place that helps families | [94] | |
~ | ↳ | Someone in the Hedmark Cradle leaks some of Freya's tapes to the Western European police | [94] |
~ | ↳ | Rose Torres retires from writing out of fatigue | [95] |
1998 | Members of the Hedmark Cradle become increasingly afraid of folkloric creatures stealing from and attacking the camp. Freya shuts these concerns down | [96] | |
~~ | 1999 | Indra and Nan move in together. | [97] |
↳ | In July, Gwen Nettles asks to meet with Director Torres regarding policy and protocol about cohabiting with subjects of closed investigations. | [97] | |
↳ | The IID plans a raid on the Hedmark Cradle. Freya tells Sigrid to have everyone stand their ground and fight with the weapons that KR Development is sending them. The IID finds no evidence of the Cradle at the target site of the raid | [98][99] | |
↳ | Rose Torres and Elena Jiménez travel to Glasgow in pursuit of an experimental treatment, and Rose spends the millennium celebrations in hospital. | [100] | |
2000s | |||
~ | 2000 | After a Gorgeous Watkins performance, the group plus Nan and Trish go out drinking, and Liv attempts to steal the motorcycle of a Society bodyguard | [99] |
2001 | In September, Gwen Nettles advises her colleague, Jonathan, to refer Director Torres to her if he continues asking him questions, as the director had been attempting to undermine her because of a report several years prior. | [101] | |
~ | ↳ | Gwen Nettles is involved in a successful sting operation in London. | [102] |
~ | ↳ | Rose Torres dies | [4] |
2002 | In January, Indra takes a job workshopping a play in Bath, in order to spend time away from Nan after finding out the IID was observing her. | [103] | |
↳ | In March, Indra and Nan break up. Around the same time, Chunhua and Tina get engaged, Sophie moves to Essex, and Gorgeous Watkins disbands. | [102] | |
2003 | Around August, Liv suddenly leaves the city, disconnecting her phone and vacating her flat. She goes to Oslo in search of the Cradle | [104][99] | |
↳ | While packing up her flat to move to Norwich in September, Indra finds some of Nan's things and phones Artie, Rachel, Beverly, and finally Nan to return them | [104] | |
↳ | In September Gwen Nettles suggests organising a presentation to encourage IID agents to stop smoking | [104] | |
~ | ↳ | One of the co-owners of Morning Pages, Zahara, dies. Within months, Ana also passes. | [105] |
~ | 2005 | Gwen Nettles leaves the Internal Investigations Division | [99] |
↳ | Elena Jiménez sets up a scavenger hunt for Anita to tell her about her mother, Rose Torres | [4] | |
~ | ↳ | Some months after beginning the scavenger hunt, Elena Jiménez, still alive, hears that Anita has completed at least part of it | [105] |
2008 | In March, Indra unexpectedly catches up with Trish and later calls Nan about the encounter | [99] | |
2014 | Projected year for the Society's Capital Hub to change | [71] |
References[]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Season 6, Episode #7: Sunday 28 October 1973
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Season 6, Episode #10: Samhain
- ↑ Season 6, Episode #5: Friday 26 October 1973
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 Season 7, Episode #2: Miami
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.217
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.8
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.77
- ↑ You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.67
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.76
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 Black Box Cassette #1: PHL to PWM
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 11.4 11.5 11.6 You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.39-40
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 12.2 You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.12
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 13.2 You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.35
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 14.2 14.3 14.4 Season 2, Cassette #6: Montreal Museum of Fine Art (1978)
- ↑ 15.0 15.1 15.2 You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.66
- ↑ 16.0 16.1 16.2 16.3 You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.75
- ↑ 17.0 17.1 17.2 17.3 17.4 Season 2, Cassette #5: Van Gogh Museum (1977)
- ↑ You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.127
- ↑ You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.96
- ↑ 20.0 20.1 You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.188
- ↑ You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.223
- ↑ 22.0 22.1 You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.164
- ↑ Season 8, Cassette #10: Learn from Your Mistakes!
- ↑ 24.00 24.01 24.02 24.03 24.04 24.05 24.06 24.07 24.08 24.09 24.10 24.11 24.12 24.13 24.14 24.15 24.16 24.17 24.18 24.19 Season 2, Cassette #10: Karikari Contemporary Gallery (1986)
- ↑ 25.0 25.1 25.2 25.3 25.4 25.5 Season 2, Cassette #1: Tate Modern (1971)
- ↑ 26.0 26.1 Season 8, Cassette #2: Inspiration, Aspiration, Actualization!
- ↑ 27.0 27.1 27.2 27.3 27.4 27.5 27.6 27.7 27.8 Season 2, Cassette #4: Bardo Museum (1975)
- ↑ You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.119
- ↑ 29.0 29.1 You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.127
- ↑ You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.147
- ↑ You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.185
- ↑ 32.0 32.1 You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.108
- ↑ 33.0 33.1 You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.149
- ↑ You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.135
- ↑ 35.0 35.1 35.2 You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.227
- ↑ 36.0 36.1 36.2 36.3 Season 3, Reel #4: February 15, 1954
- ↑ 37.0 37.1 You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.158
- ↑ You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.162
- ↑ 39.0 39.1 Season 3, Reel #7: March 29, 1954
- ↑ 40.0 40.1 You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.161
- ↑ 41.0 41.1 41.2 41.3 41.4 41.5 Season 4, Cassette #2: Autumn 1993
- ↑ You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.196
- ↑ 43.0 43.1 You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.205
- ↑ 44.0 44.1 44.2 44.3 44.4 44.5 44.6 Season 2, Cassette #3: El Museo de Arte Contemporaneo (1974)
- ↑ Season 3, Reel #2: August 13, 1953
- ↑ Season 3, Reel #3: November 26, 1953
- ↑ You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.206
- ↑ Season 3, Reel #9: September 13, 1954
- ↑ 49.0 49.1 49.2 49.3 49.4 49.5 Season 3, Reel #10: June 21, 1961
- ↑ You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.214
- ↑ 51.0 51.1 You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.257
- ↑ You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.273
- ↑ 53.0 53.1 Season 8, Cassette #6: It's All About Balance!
- ↑ 54.0 54.1 54.2 Season 1, Cassette #6: for Oleta
- ↑ You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.237
- ↑ You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.237-40
- ↑ 57.0 57.1 You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.241
- ↑ 58.0 58.1 58.2 58.3 You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.307
- ↑ Season 9, Cassette #10: Finding Your True Voice
- ↑ You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.242-3
- ↑ You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.282
- ↑ 62.00 62.01 62.02 62.03 62.04 62.05 62.06 62.07 62.08 62.09 62.10 Season 2, Cassette #2: Ulster Museum (1973)
- ↑ 63.0 63.1 63.2 63.3 63.4 Season 2, Cassette #7: Sree Chitra Art Gallery (1979)
- ↑ Season 1, Cassette #2: Anxiety, Stomach
- ↑ You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.241-52
- ↑ 66.0 66.1 66.2 You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.315
- ↑ Season 2, Cassette #0, Karikari Contemporary (1969)
- ↑ 68.0 68.1 68.2 68.3 Season 2, Cassette #8: Ohara Museum of Art (1980)
- ↑ 69.0 69.1 Season 6, Episode #1: Monday 22 October 1973
- ↑ Season 7, Episode #3: Tekapo
- ↑ 71.0 71.1 71.2 71.3 Season 7, Episode #4: Jakarta
- ↑ You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.2
- ↑ 73.0 73.1 Season 7, Episode #7: Venice
- ↑ 74.0 74.1 Season 1, Cassette #8: Awareness, Eyes
- ↑ Season 2, Cassette #9: Metropolitan Museum of Art (1981)
- ↑ Season 1, Cassette #5: Focus, Nose
- ↑ Season 7, Episode #1: Amarillo
- ↑ You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.367
- ↑ Season 7, Episode #6: Arusha
- ↑ Season 1, Cassette #10: Horopito
- ↑ 81.0 81.1 81.2 Season 5, Episode #10: March 1997
- ↑ Black Box Cassette #5: HOU to LAX
- ↑ Black Box Cassette #10: ABQ to SCL, LIT to ???
- ↑ Season 4, Cassette #1: Spring 1993
- ↑ Season 4, Cassette #3: Summer 1994
- ↑ Season 4, Cassette #4: Winter 1994-95
- ↑ Season 4, Cassette #5: Winter 1995
- ↑ 88.0 88.1 Season 4, Cassette #6: Summer 1996
- ↑ 89.0 89.1 You Feel It Just Below the Ribs, p.1
- ↑ Season 4, Cassette #7: Spring 1997
- ↑ Season 5, Episode #9: May 1997
- ↑ Season 5, Episode #8: July 1997
- ↑ Season 5, Episode #7: October 1997
- ↑ 94.0 94.1 Season 4, Cassette #8: Winter 1997-98
- ↑ Season 7, Episode #5: Adelaide
- ↑ Season 4, Cassette #9: Autumn 1998
- ↑ 97.0 97.1 Season 5, Episode #6: July 1999
- ↑ Season 4, Cassette #10: Autumn 1999
- ↑ 99.0 99.1 99.2 99.3 99.4 Season 5, Episode #1: March 2008
- ↑ Season 7, Episode #8: Glasgow
- ↑ Season 5, Episode #5: September 2001
- ↑ 102.0 102.1 Season 5, Episode #3: March 2002
- ↑ Season 5, Episode #4: January 2002
- ↑ 104.0 104.1 104.2 Season 5, Episode #2: September 2003
- ↑ 105.0 105.1 Season 7, Episode #10: Palo Duro