Mary Daniel: Difference between revisions

From 118Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "'''Mary Daniel''' is a fictional holonovel character ==Real-life inspiration== ==Fictional biography== ==Sentience and co-existence with Tina Kuppasoop== ==Demes II and af...")
 
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Mary Daniel''' is a fictional holonovel character
:''This article is about the fictional holonovel character.  For the Human Starfleet officer whose body is now inhabited by Daniel's consciousness, see [[Tina Kuppasoop]].
[[File:TinaKuppasoop.jpg|thumb|200px|[[Tina Kuppasoop]], whose consciousness was switched with that of Mary Daniel in 2398.]]
'''Mary Daniel''' is a fictional holonovel character whose consciousness was switched with that of [[Tina Kuppasoop]], a Human Starfleet officer, in late 2398.


==Real-life inspiration==
==Real-life inspiration==
The holonovel character of Mary Daniel is based upon a real person of the same name.  The historical Mary Daniel was born on Earth in c. 1673 and lived in the English colony of Massachusetts Bay.  Not much is known of her life except that she was a convert to Puritanism, having been baptized in 1691, and was possibly the servant of Edward Payson, the minister of the town of Rowley, Massachusetts.  In August 1692, during the {{ma|Salem_witch_trials|Salem witch trials}}, Daniel gave testimony accusing Margaret Scott of witchcraft.  Daniel claimed that Scott appeared to her as an apparition, pinched her "very much," and caused her to temporarily lose the ability to speak.  Scott was found guilty of witchcraft and executed by hanging on 22 September 1692.  Mary Daniel disappears from the historical record after the trials.


==Fictional biography==
==Fictional biography==
The fictional Mary Daniel appeared as a central character in the historical fiction holonovel ''Terrifying Secrets of the Salem Witch Trials'' by Human novelist Augusta Freckling-Doot.  The


==Sentience and co-existence with Tina Kuppasoop==
==Sentience and co-existence with Tina Kuppasoop==
Line 10: Line 14:




[[Category:Characters]][[[[Category:Stennes]][[Category:Excalibur-A NPCs]]
[[Category:Characters]][[Category:Stennes]][[Category:Excalibur-A NPCs]]
 
 
Just before leaving 224, Tina got a hold of a holoprogram which claimed to be “the most shocking and thrilling work of fiction” based on the Salem trials ever published, and promised to “shed compelling new light” on some of the lesser known historical characters, including Mary Daniel.

Revision as of 22:32, 12 April 2022

This article is about the fictional holonovel character. For the Human Starfleet officer whose body is now inhabited by Daniel's consciousness, see Tina Kuppasoop.
Tina Kuppasoop, whose consciousness was switched with that of Mary Daniel in 2398.

Mary Daniel is a fictional holonovel character whose consciousness was switched with that of Tina Kuppasoop, a Human Starfleet officer, in late 2398.

Real-life inspiration

The holonovel character of Mary Daniel is based upon a real person of the same name. The historical Mary Daniel was born on Earth in c. 1673 and lived in the English colony of Massachusetts Bay. Not much is known of her life except that she was a convert to Puritanism, having been baptized in 1691, and was possibly the servant of Edward Payson, the minister of the town of Rowley, Massachusetts. In August 1692, during the Salem witch trials, Daniel gave testimony accusing Margaret Scott of witchcraft. Daniel claimed that Scott appeared to her as an apparition, pinched her "very much," and caused her to temporarily lose the ability to speak. Scott was found guilty of witchcraft and executed by hanging on 22 September 1692. Mary Daniel disappears from the historical record after the trials.

Fictional biography

The fictional Mary Daniel appeared as a central character in the historical fiction holonovel Terrifying Secrets of the Salem Witch Trials by Human novelist Augusta Freckling-Doot. The

Sentience and co-existence with Tina Kuppasoop

Demes II and aftermath


Just before leaving 224, Tina got a hold of a holoprogram which claimed to be “the most shocking and thrilling work of fiction” based on the Salem trials ever published, and promised to “shed compelling new light” on some of the lesser known historical characters, including Mary Daniel.