Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Crisis_(DC_Comics)> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 35 of
35
with 100 items per page.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) abstract "A crisis in the DC Universe is an event with potentially great consequences, often involving multiple universes and sometimes even threatening their existence.From 1963 to 1985 the term "crisis" was used to describe the annual events in which the Justice League of America of Earth-One and the Justice Society of America of Earth-Two met and worked together, usually in an incident involving one or more of the parallel worlds of the DC Multiverse. This usage culminated in 1985's year-long Crisis on Infinite Earths, in which the Multiverse was eliminated. After several years of disuse, the term "crisis" was applied to several events with either "universal" stakes or substantial character consequences, such as Zero Hour: Crisis in Time!, Identity Crisis, Infinite Crisis, and Final Crisis.In the two decades after 1985, "Crisis" by itself came to refer specifically to Crisis on Infinite Earths, especially when used in house pre-Crisis and post-Crisis.Characters in the DC Universe sometimes use the term "crisis" in the same sense, referring either to any great threat, or as "the Crisis" in reference to the events of Crisis on Infinite Earths, either as they happened or as they were commonly remembered in the revised history after the fact. With the publication of Identity Crisis, Infinite Crisis, and Final Crisis, the use of the term within the DC Universe has shifted. The Crisis on Infinite Earths is sometimes referred to as "the first Crisis". The Infinite Crisis has occasionally been referred to as simply "the crisis", and a character from the 31st century called it "the middle Crisis"".
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) wikiPageExternalLink JLA-JSAindex.htm.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) wikiPageExternalLink www.crisis2crisis.com.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) wikiPageExternalLink gallery.php?site=dc&seriesid=2786.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) wikiPageExternalLink gallery.php?site=dc&seriesid=599.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) wikiPageID "11166194".
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) wikiPageRevisionID "604418426".
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) hasPhotoCollection Crisis_(DC_Comics).
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) originalResearch "August 2009".
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) primarysources "August 2009".
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) subject Category:DC_Comics_dimensions.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) subject Category:DC_Comics_storylines.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) type Abstraction100002137.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) type Attribute100024264.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) type Communication100033020.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) type DCComicsDimensions.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) type DCComicsStorylines.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) type Dimension105093581.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) type Fiction106367107.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) type LiteraryComposition106364329.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) type Magnitude105090441.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) type Plot106373314.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) type Property104916342.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) type Story106369829.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) type Storyline106373645.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) type Writing106362953.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) type WrittenCommunication106349220.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) comment "A crisis in the DC Universe is an event with potentially great consequences, often involving multiple universes and sometimes even threatening their existence.From 1963 to 1985 the term "crisis" was used to describe the annual events in which the Justice League of America of Earth-One and the Justice Society of America of Earth-Two met and worked together, usually in an incident involving one or more of the parallel worlds of the DC Multiverse.".
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) label "Crisis (DC Comics)".
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) sameAs m.02r27hp.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) sameAs Q5185942.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) sameAs Q5185942.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) sameAs Crisis_(DC_Comics).
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) wasDerivedFrom Crisis_(DC_Comics)?oldid=604418426.
- Crisis_(DC_Comics) isPrimaryTopicOf Crisis_(DC_Comics).