Real-Life Parallels

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"I saw it! Ask anyone! ...except her. Don't ask her."

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"There are some things we were not meant to know, they say. But you wouldn't be down here if you took that seriously."

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Dr. Schlomo, better known as Freud.

More so than any of the other games in this setting, Fallen London features an array of characters whom the astute player might recognize from somewhere else...

Historical Figures

  • As we all can tell quite easily, the Empress and her Consort are Queen Victoria and Prince Albert.
  • The Widow is Shirin (or Cheren), daughter of Mongke Khan.
  • The exact identity of the Duchess is disputed, as there are conflicts between different segments of Fallen London, but she is one of the daughters of the pharaoh Akhenaten. His other surviving daughters are now known as the Obstinate Adoratrice, the Mother Superior of Abbey Rock, and the Roseate Queen of Arbor.
  • Mr. Huffam, of Doubt Street fame, is none other than Charles John Huffam Dickens.
  • The Epigrammatic Irishman, the deceased lover of the Wilted Dandy, is Oscar Wilde. The Dandy himself may be Robbie Ross, Wilde's literary executor.
  • Dr. Schlomo, the Interpreter of Dreams, is Sigmund Schlomo Freud. Freud in real life had a great interest in dreams, believing them to be a path to the knowledge of the unconscious. In fact, he published a book on the subject, called The Interpretation of Dreams.
  • The painter William Holman Hunt appears in the game as the Ginger-Haired Painter.
  • Sir Stamford Raffles, mentioned in reference to the Labyrinth of Tigers and the Correspondence, is indeed the founder of the British colony of Singapore, the Zoological Society of London, and the London Zoo. His son, Leopold, also survived and is now Pirate-King of the Isle of Cats.
  • March of the Calendar Council - until he was murdered by the Haunted Doctor, at least - was temperance campaigner and author John Cassell, who also sold coffee.
  • Georges Auguste Couthon was guillotined in the French Revolution in real life, but the similarities between Couthon and the Jovial Contrarian seem to be no coincidence. For instance, Couthon's legs were paralyzed due to what was believed to be meningitis, and he was eventually compelled to rely on a wheelchair; the Contrarian, likewise, is a wheelchair user.
  • The Great Game used to be a power struggle in Central Asia but now spans the world.
  • The Dusty Ornithologist is most likely Charles Darwin, who based his theory of evolution on finches from the Galapagos islands.
  • The Illuminating Futurist, featured in the Exceptional Story A Bright Future, is Nikola Tesla.

References to Fiction