i regularly think about how pre-crisis jaybin stories could be adapted to work within post-crisis canon, and usually i just mentally scrub any circus mentions and fill it in with whatever else
HOWEVER, i suggest one small exception to this rule, that exception being the time jason ran away to the circus, simply because itd be funny as hell. i realize its a little ridiculous if he has no ties to the circus but the concept of tiny 10 year old post-crisis jason gathering all his little belongings in a sheet, scaling down the outside of wayne manor, and running away to the circus because bruce wont spend any time with him is just So fucking funny to me that i think its worth the absurdity. like imagine that, please itd be SO silly fun and whimsical
whats his motive for choosing the circus to run away to in this version? my first instinct was “hes 10 and little kids do crazy shit”, however, ive sat on this for a while and remembered that, at least in the pre-crisis timeline, DICK had just gotten back from his little “run away to the circus” moment (batman #337-339 & 341) around the same time jasons post-crisis timeline would put his introduction. therefore, i suggest that jason hears about dick’s escapade (directly or indirectly, both work) and THAT is where he gets the idea to run away to the circus
maybe you can even throw in some pre-crisis jaybin identity issues stuff with him trying to learn the acrobat experience to be more like dick so bruce will pay attention to him? i dunno, im not gonna go too far into that because this is a lighthearted post but you totally could. i do think itd be an interesting explanation for how he gets to be such a great acrobat despite training with only bruce for like, 6 months. idk im not too concerned about the logistics i just think itd be really funny. i like pre-crisis jason and his antics and i think post-crisis jason should get more of them, so let him run away to the circus despite…not being from the circus. definitely wouldnt be the craziest shit hes done
The annoying parts of the Gravity Falls timeline (how old is Shermie, when did Ford have time to get all those degrees, why does Stan say he’s pushing 70 when he’s early 60s at most) would be almost entirely solved by just adding an extra decade into the part of their life where Ford was studying and Stan was homeless, but sadly that is Not Canon so I can’t do that
I’m attempting to create a timeline of the history of my entire galaxy for The Wreckage so I have a better reference point and wow is this not at all cooperating. Anyone else ever struggle with timeline nonsense from before your story even takes place?
I see a lot of confusion about Jason's age in the fandom, which totally makes sense. I mean, DC timelines are infamously difficult to follow, and Jason, specifically, is a very old character; his continuity can be pretty hard to track unless you're deliberately trying to. Conveniently—or perniciously, at least for my personal well-being—I'm really into tracking timelines in comic books, and I deliberately try to track Jason Todd’s continuity within them. Yay.
Anyway, Jason's one of my favorite characters, so there's a ton of information in my brain about where he fits into DC’s overall timeline and his general continuity. I’ve been wanting to make a mega-post recounting everything I know in excruciating detail for a while now, so I figured I’d start off by providing a sort of walkthrough of how Jason’s age changes throughout canon.
Also, this post is really long, like absurdly so. Whatever length you just imagined based on that description, try doubling it—maybe tripling—and, unless you’re a freak like me who gets excited about this stuff, you’ll probably still be dragging your feet by the end of a full read-through. So…anticipate accordingly? I dunno. I warned you though!
Notes on Structure
Okay so, evidently, there’s a lot going on in this post, and—assuming everyone wasn’t just scared off by that last bit—it’s probably best if I supply a quick roadmap so you have some sort of idea of what you’re getting yourself into.
I’ll be focusing on post-Crisis on Infinite Earths (1985) (COIE) continuity. Personally speaking, it’s the era of DC continuity I know the most about, and the only one I feel comfortable enough to write something this exhaustive for. Moreover, modern DC continuity has mostly been restored to what it was post-Crisis, meaning pre-New 52 comics and events are generally safe to analyze through the lens of the timeline as it was pre-boot. Not to mention, the fandom tends to use post-Crisis continuity for character ages and timelines over post-New 52 retcons, and, at the end of the day, this is a fandom post, and I’m going to cater it to fandom discourse; it’s only natural.
Additionally, I’ll be separating post-Crisis continuity into pre- and post-Zero Hour: Crisis in Time! (1994); this is because Zero Hour was a time crisis. If you’re unfamiliar with the effects of DC’s various crises, Zero Hour reorganized the overall DC timeline to squeeze what was then the modern age into roughly ten years, which naturally affected Batman’s overall continuity—and thus Jason’s—pretty significantly.
The changes made to the timeline by Zero Hour are particularly relevant to Jason’s specific continuity, especially regarding his age. Given these discrepancies, I’ll be interpreting pre- and post-Zero Hour continuity independently, and this post will be divided into three parts. In Parts One and Two, I’ll cover any material and corresponding analysis related to pre- and post-Zero Hour continuity respectively. Subsequently, in Part Three, I’ll cover where these two continuities contradict one another, a few different ways these contradictions can be reconciled, and summarized versions of any timelines established in this post for quick reference.
Sources will be weighed roughly by their canonical and probative value: on-panel comic evidence first, then contemporary editorial statements, then contemporary external material, and finally later external publications. Also—before anyone else brings it up—I’d like to establish that I'm not going to use the death certificate from The Batman Files (2011), as, per the criteria I just outlined, it carries no real weight as a source. I'll come back to this at the end and provide a full explanation of this decision, but for right now I'm going to move on.
PART ONE: Pre-Zero Hour (1986–1994)
NOTE: If you're seeing this, then this post is still a WIP; only pre-Zero Hour continuity has been covered so far.
Age at Death + Starlin's Run
Every source I've found relating to pre-Zero Hour continuity points to the same conclusion: Jason was 12–13 years old when he died in Batman: A Death in the Family (ADITF). I know this sounds crazy and wrong, and probably goes against everything you've ever thought, but let me explain before you click off.
SOURCE ONE: Batman Annual (1940) #12
In The Back-Up, which was included in Batman Annual (1940) #12, Jason is explicitly stated to be a 7th grader. On that same page I linked, Jason references KGBeast—a character who did not exist until the storyline Batman: Ten Nights of the Beast (Batman #417–420)—meaning Batman Annual #12 must take place after Batman #417–420. From there, Jason runs away in Batman #426, and is dead by Batman #428. It's obvious that multiple years didn't pass from Batman #420 to Batman #426; neither the comics nor editorial give any reason to believe otherwise...but I promised a full walk-through, so here we go.
The in-universe timeline of Jim Starlin's entire run on Batman (Batman #414–430) can be tracked pretty easily. The goal of tracking Starlin's run is to demonstrate why it cannot take place over multiple years; if Jason is a 7th grader after the KGBeast arc, he cannot plausibly have aged into another grade by ADITF. Batman #414 begins Starlin's run as well as the "Dumpster Slasher" trilogy, which then continues in Batman #421 and concludes in Batman #422. On page two of Batman #421, we’re told that since Batman #414, the total number of victims has increased to ten, and that the killer has since developed a pattern of killing once a week, skipping the third. Subsequently, on page three of Batman #421, we're told that Kate Babcock was Victim #5. As we were shown another victim after Kate in Batman #414, we can derive that the pattern started with Victim #6 at the end of Batman #414, and we can simply follow the pattern therefrom:
Week 1: Victim #6 (end of Batman #414)
Week 2: Victim #7
Week 3: Skipped
Week 4: Victim #8
Week 5: Victim #9
Week 6: Skipped
Week 7: Victim #10
Week 8: Victim #11 (beginning of Batman #421)
As you may have noticed, I included a “Victim #11” despite earlier stating there were ten victims. This is because on page two of Batman #421, Bruce says to Gordon that there should have been an eleventh victim that week and is then informed that they haven’t found a body, yet. Read the issue if you want to know what I mean by that "yet", as it's not relevant for timeline stuff, but this tells us that everything from Batman #414–421 happens within two months, including Batman: Ten Nights of the Beast, which, as the name suggests, takes place over ten nights. Furthermore, the end of Batman #421 flows directly into the beginning of Batman #422, and in the middle of Batman #422, there's a 3-month time skip. Therefore, everything from the end of Batman #414 through the end of Batman #422 happens within ~5 months.
Unfortunately, after Batman #422, I've been unable to find anything that tells us how much time passes within Starlin's run, but I can estimate from looking at the art and the pacing of the actual story. I don’t think any significant amount of time passes from Batman #422–426, and then Batman #426–430 seems to take place over a few weeks, so, to err on the side of caution, I’m going to call it roughly 1–3 months. This means that Starlin's entire Batman run, excluding the last few issues where Jason is dead, takes place over roughly 6–8 months, but that's not all—I can also tell you what time of year it takes place.
Detective Comics (1937) #581 takes place around the 200th anniversary of the U.S. Constitution, which was signed on September 17th, 1787. The following issue, Detective Comics #582, is a direct tie-in to Batman #415, meaning we can reasonably assume Starlin's run begins in early fall; add 6–8 months, and we end up in the spring for ADITF (well, isn't that a satisfying coincidence?). From there, we can reason that Starlin's run takes place within one school year. Ergo, if Jason was in 7th grade in Batman Annual #12, which, as I've already established, takes place after Batman #420, then he must also have been a 7th grader when he died.
Jason didn't have a birthday in the 80's, so we can't pinpoint an exact age just off pre-Zero Hour continuity, but 7th graders are 12–13 years old, which means Jason was 12–13 years old when he died. This is an absurd level of detail to track a comic book timeline down to, but I didn't want to leave room for anyone to be like "Wait, but a summer could have passed, which would put him in 8th grade". So...there you go.
SOURCE TWO: Letter Columns of Batman (1940) #413
NOTE: Transcribed this one in case the links break, since I know finding letter columns can be a pain.
In the letter columns of Batman #413, a reader wrote in, asking about Jason’s age:
My one complaint about this otherwise excellent two-part story concerns the ambiguity of Jason’s age. The way Chris Warner drew him in #408, he looks to be about ten years old, which would be right if, as Denny O’Neil says, the story occurs about three years ago. But in #409, Jason looks like he could be thirteen. Tom Mandrake had him looking about fifteen or sixteen (see the portrait in WHO’S WHO). Klaus Janson did the same in DETECTIVE #568. And in BATMAN #402 he could be about eighteen or twenty. However, according to the tombstone at the end of DETECTIVE #571, he is twelve!
Let’s have a ruling. Once and for all, how old is Jason Todd?
I think a lot of people read the first couple of sentences of this question, skip straight to the answer, and then end up confused—cough, DC wiki—but the reader explicitly mentions that Batman #408 happens in the past, and then goes on to discuss comics that, at the time, were taking place in present continuity. It is pretty clear, at least to me, that what they’re confused about is the fact that Jason seemed to have multiple present-continuity-ages, and they couldn’t even estimate his then-current age based on what he looked like in Batman #408–409. In other words, it is more reasonable to assume the letter is asking “How old is Jason in present continuity?” rather than “How old is Jason meant to be in Batman #408–409?”. The response to the reader's question makes this interpretation difficult to dispute:
OK, I’m going to go right to the sensei on this one:
“Oh great Denny-lama, just how old is Jason Todd?”
“Ah, weed-hopper, he is 12. Now quit bowing to me and take that silly turban off your head!”
Whether or not you interpreted the reader's question as “How old is Jason in present continuity?”, I think it’s pretty clear the editors did. I don’t see a case for arguing that this is not an explicit answer for how old Jason was in present continuity at the time.
Alternatively, if that's not a good enough reason for you, we've established that Jason is a 7th grader in Batman Annual #12, which takes place after Batman #420, and that Batman #414–422 take place over ~5 months. In addition, we know that Batman #408–409 take place about 3 years before then-present continuity (see sources five and six for details). Therefore, to claim this response is stating that Jason was 12 in Batman #408 instead of present continuity, you must also claim that Batman #414–422 happened about 3 years in the past, which would be...untruthful.
Batman #413 directly precedes Batman #414, which means Jason was ~12 at the beginning of Starlin's run—the beginning of the school year—reaffirming Jason being in 7th grade throughout.
SOURCE THREE: Detective Comics (1937) #571
In Detective Comics #571, we're shown Jason's birth year (1974) and the current year (1986), which would put Detective Comics #571 in the year Jason turns 12. You might be wondering why I didn't list this source earlier, and that's because it's more difficult to place in overall continuity than Batman Annual #12. Mike W. Barr's run on Detective Comics ('TEC) was essentially responsible for reestablishing the dynamic duo in post-Crisis continuity. It was released alongside Batman: Year One (Batman #404–407) as well as Jason's origin retelling (Batman #408–411), and had a flashback story of its own, making those first few issues comparatively self-contained, given that they were the primary source for Batman and Robin's present continuity at the time.
They're still fully canon, but they're difficult to decisively place in Jason's overall post-Crisis timeline, so I think 'TEC #571 is best used as secondary, rather than primary, evidence to strengthen the claim made with the first and second sources.
SOURCE FOUR: DC TTRPG Card From 1989
This is a DC TTRPG card from 1989—right after Jason’s death—which lists Jason as 13 years old and deceased. 7th graders are usually 13 by the spring, so this card placing him at 13 makes sense and lines up with everything we've established so far. It should be noted that this is licensed by DC, rather than being from an actual comic, creator, or some other form of official material; thus, I wouldn't use it as a standalone source. However, since the card matches up with every other source from the time pretty nicely, I think it's useful as additional proof, much like the third source, as it makes the claim feel a bit more solid.
Meeting Bruce + Debuting as Robin
If you made it through the last section, this one should be easy. The evidence I have for this section is much more straightforward and easier to interpret, especially now that we've established Jason's age following COIE. From the information I've gathered, Batman #408–411 take place ~2.5–3 years before the fall of Jason's 7th grade year, meaning Jason was 9–10 years old when he met Bruce and became Robin. I'd ask you to hear me out again, but if I did my job right, then the last section should've been enough for you to already be doing that.
SOURCE FIVE: Batman (1940) #416
Batman #416 is a flashback set one year in the past from present continuity, which, as I just established in my explanation of source one, would at this point be the fall of Jason's 7th grade year—meaning he'd be ~12 in the "present", and ~11 in this flashback. This issue is a retelling of Dick and Jason's first meeting, as Jason's revised post-crisis origin story rendered the original story obsolete. On page ten of Batman #416, Bruce says to Dick that he hasn't heard from him in eighteen months, which we can assume is referencing when Dick was fired in Batman #408.
Bruce meets Jason in Batman #408 weeks after Dick leaves; since there's only "weeks" between Dick leaving and Jason popping up, I think it's acceptable to use ~18 months for how long it's been since Bruce met Jason as well. I mean, it's a comic book timeline, we're lucky if we can get it down to a specific season, let alone specific weeks.
Anyway, that means that, according to Batman #416, about ~2.5 years pass from when Jason meets Bruce in Batman #408 to the present of Batman #416, or the fall of Jason's 7th grade year. Therefore, if Jason is ~12 in the fall of his 7th grade year, we can derive Jason is about 9–10 years old when he meets Bruce in Batman #408.
SOURCE SIX: Letter Columns of Batman (1940) #412
NOTE: Again, transcribed this one in case the link breaks, since I know finding letter columns can be annoying.
In the letter columns of Batman #412, a reader wrote in, asking why Jason was getting an origin story when he already had one and had been Robin for years. An editor, Johnathan Peterson, replied:
The reason Jason Todd’s origin is being reintroduced, David, is because DC’s hit mini-series CRISIS ON INFINITE EARTHS completely wiped out his earlier origin, namely the one in BATMAN #368. Actually, a few people wrote in expressing their similar confusion over the situation. So, let’s set the record straight. The events in BATMAN #408-409 chronicle the one, true, post-CRISIS origin of Jason Todd in Batman continuity. Also, this story takes place about 3 years ago. Thus, we are not denying Dick Grayson quit Robin to become Nightwing. It's just that we're not chronicling in depth Dick's decision to leave and his subsequent solo adventures in our current run of stories.
This one kind of speaks for itself. I mean Peterson literally explicitly states that Batman #408–409 took place ~3 years ago, ergo, if Jason was ~12 in what was then present continuity, then Jason was ~9 when he met Bruce in Batman #408. I would've included this source first because it's so easy to follow, but it's from the letter columns so I figured I'd prioritize the comic-based evidence.
SOURCE SEVEN: Robert Greenberger's Guidebooks
NOTE: You guessed it. Transcribed for your convenience. Also, if you're wondering why I'm including a post-Zero Hour source in this section, it's because the book seems to use Jason's pre-Zero Hour timeline. I can elaborate on what I mean by this in the replies, but basically, it's a guide, not a comic, meaning it goes in the same section as the material it's based on.
In his book The Essential Batman Encyclopedia (2008), Robert Greenberger explicitly claims that Jason was 9 years old when he met Bruce:
In the wake of CRISIS ON INFINITE EARTHS, Batman was once again a loner after Dick Grayson moved out of the manor. While visiting CRIME ALLEY, he discovered nine-year-old Jason Todd in the process of stealing the BATMOBILE's tires. Batman was impressed by the youth's moxie and took him to MA GUNN's School for Boys. The facility, though, was a front for a criminal operation that used the boys as thieves. Once Batman and Jason helped put an end to the scheme, the Dark Knight realized that he could mold the impetuous boy and decided the time had come to take on a new partner.
Furthermore, in another of his books, Batman: 100 Greatest Moments: Highlights from the History of The Dark Knight (2019), Greenberger repeats this detail:
After the events of Crisis on Infinite Earths, it was decided to revamp Jason. Incoming writer Max Allan Collins made him a nine-year-old street urchin, first found in Crime Alley trying to rip off the Batmobile's tires. He explained that his criminal father was dead and he believed his mother was as well, so he had learned to fend for himself.
It should be noted that these excerpts are from guidebooks, meaning they aren't necessarily canon material or direct contemporary statements from the creators, and they serve best as secondary, rather than primary, evidence. For this very reason, I usually avoid guidebooks for continuity research; compiling decades of comic book history into one coherent narrative inevitably leads to errors. This is especially true for comic book timelines, which are infamously difficult to track, let alone when trying to balance multiple characters across various titles. However, it's important to look at evidence from every angle before you disregard it, and I think Greenberger has the history to make his word on this topic worth further consideration.
In 1984, Robert Greenberger was hired as an assistant editor to help Len Wein and Marv Wolfman. In case you're not particularly well-versed on the internal bureaucracy at DC, a core part of an editor's job description is maintaining continuity—it is literally their job to track the timelines, histories, and ages of characters across multiple titles.
I'd like to emphasize the fact that he worked alongside Len Wein and Marv Wolfman of all people, who were almost entirely responsible for coordinating and establishing post-Crisis continuity in the 80's. What's more, he's credited as both an editor and a writer for COIE and Who's Who, two projects that served as the foundation for post-Crisis continuity and characterization; his work during this period was so vital that he was promoted to editor only a year later in 1985. This guy is more than qualified to speak on continuity details from the mid-80's, especially for a character as integral to the DC mythos as Robin.
If that weren't enough, Greenberger wrote The Back-Up, which, in case you forgot, is literally the story in Batman Annual #12 that establishes Jason as a 7th grader. So he isn't just an accredited writer and editor who worked around the time Jason was Robin, he was directly involved with writing Jason Todd and the creator of one of the most straightforward sources for gauging Jason's age I've personally come across. If that doesn't make him worth listening to, then I don't know what else would.
Personally, I actually think it's really interesting that he claims Jason was 9 of all ages, since that's not necessarily the most intuitive option just going off the comics. From Batman #416 alone, you could easily argue that Jason was 10, while 9 only becomes the sole option if you exclusively go off Peterson's claim of "about 3 years" from source two. The fact that after twenty years, he included this age in his Batman encyclopedia, and then reaffirmed the detail ten years later in a second guidebook, makes me think it's an age for Jason editorial actually had written down somewhere and he personally remembered, rather than being something he independently pieced together years down the line.
Ultimately, I'm not going to claim these statements should be used as definitive sources, as, in any case, they're statements from guidebooks, rather than comic books, but I think they can tenably be used as additional evidence. Given that Greenberger's assertion fits perfectly within that 9–10-year-old range the previous two sources established, I think placing Jason at 9–10 years old when he met Bruce is more than reasonable when discussing pre-Zero Hour continuity.
SOURCE EIGHT: Batman (1940) #410
Batman #410—the first part of a two-part retelling of Jason's first outing as Robin—tells us on page one that it's been six months since Bruce took Jason in, ergo, six months pass between Jason meeting Bruce and his first Robin outing. Since, again, we didn't have a birthday for Jason in pre-Zero Hour continuity, there's no way for us to know if his birthday passed within those six months. Therefore, if Jason was 9–10 years old when he met Bruce, he was also 9–10 years old when he made his post-Crisis Robin debut.
On page two of Batman #410, we're told by the narration that Jason is a "fifth-grade dropout"; considering fifth-graders are 10–11 years old, this would expand the 9–10-year-old range the previous three sources established, making Jason 10–11 years old when he met Bruce in Batman #408. However, I think this source can reasonably be labeled as an outlier, as three sources (a comic, a contemporary editorial statement, and a repeated claim from a credible writer), should probably be taken over one source (a comic).
Moreover, I think it's important to remember the context in which these comics were being written. Batman #408–411 were released as countless changes were being made to the overall DC continuity, and they may not have yet fully established an internal Batman timeline for the new post-Crisis continuity; notably, this age lines up suspiciously well with the pre-Crisis Batman timeline, which makes me think this may have actually been the case.
Also, the actual phrasing of "fifth-grade dropout" is kind of vague. You could argue this phrasing implies he dropped out of fifth grade, but it could also be interpreted as Jason currently being a fifth grader, as well as a dropout, placing him much closer to 10, or even 9 years old, six months earlier when he met Bruce. I'm not saying either of these reasons are enough to completely disregard this source; what's most important is that there are more sources it contradicts than it affirms, but, like I said earlier, it's best to look at a source from every angle before deciding it should be disregarded.
Regardless of the contradictions, it's there in the text, and I feel the need to include it here so you guys get the full picture. Even so, when tracking comic book timelines, there are going to be places where you just have to choose something to use and something to lose. So, as much as I hate disregarding on-panel evidence, one piece of evidence isn't enough to outweigh the broader evidentiary pattern that's been established through the other three sources. Therefore, for the purpose of this post, I'm going to set this source aside and keep the cleaner 9–10-year-old range.
TL;DR
From what I can tell, the pre-Zero Hour consensus was that Jason was 9–10 years old when he met Bruce and debuted as Robin, and 12–13 years old when he died. I'm going to refrain from definitively narrowing those age ranges down to single ages, as without a canonical birthday for Jason in pre-Zero Hour continuity, I can't claim, with complete certainty, whether or not his birthday had passed before those three events took place.
If there's any piece of evidence relating to this topic and era of continuity that I didn't include, please let me know. There's always a chance I forgot something, didn't write it down, or just haven't personally seen it. Likewise, if there's something you noticed in this post—logic, reasoning, counterarguments, etc—that I didn't account for, tell me, and I'll try my best to adjust or clarify as needed.
Anyway, that's pretty much everything I have to discuss, like I've covered all the relevant material I know of, as well as the analysis attached to it. This era, specifically the 80's, has the most material regarding Jason's age and continuity as Robin, which makes it annoying to go through, but also probably the most comfortable since there are multiple sources to support each claim.
Following Zero Hour and even Flashpoint, the timeline gets compressed, stretched, and so on, changing Jason's ages with it, but these ages are, from what I can tell, what he was originally intended to be read as. Comic books in general don't have completely linear timelines. It's just the nature of the genre; you can't have reasonably paced stories while also keeping characters the ages you want them to be over decades of publishing.
In my opinion, you're better off reading characters as the age intended in whatever comic you're reading, rather than aging them up or down in accordance with later continuities and retcons, meaning you should use these ages for these events in Jason's life. However, I do understand the need to organize it all into one coherent timeline, evidently, which is why I'm going to go through different ways to do that after I go through post-Zero Hour. Still, I think you should at the very least keep these ages in the back of your head when reading material from the era, especially Jason's original Robin run. It's important context for meta-discussion, as well as the actual stories and Jason's characterization within them.
I'm leaving off here for now because I'm still working on the other parts. I was originally going to do one big post/reblog chain all at once, but lowkey, this is taking forever, and I needed the dopamine hit from posting something before I lost interest and "took a break" (gave up). The other parts will be shorter and less intense, cause there's just not as much stuff to go through, so you don't have to worry about this already long post getting that much longer. Ideally, they'll be posted in the next few days, so...yeah.
Next part is post-Zero Hour. Spoiler alert: there are fewer changes than you'd think! Not much else to add from me. I think I've finally out-yapped myself. There's a first time for everything, I guess.
so tired of seeing ppl use the way jason's drawn in ADITF to say he was ~15. like that’s just how jim aparo drew children, idk what to tell you 😭, but also it's not necessarily true that aparo drew jason as older than 12–13 years old.
first, look at how aparo drew jason confronting bruce abt two face murdering his father, compared to the OG scene:
Batman (1940) #411 & #428
he just drew little kids weird guys, idk. i think what’s more important are the heights jason's drawn at, cause you’ll notice he drew jason as being up to bruce’s waist/chest in the flashbacks of ADITF, which is also how he was drawn in the actual issues:
Batman (1940) #408, #409, #410, #411, #428 (x2)
we all know aparo drew jason similarly older-looking in the present of ADITF, however, if, again, you focus on the height jason was drawn as, you'll notice he's around shoulder height on bruce throughout ADITF:
Batman (1940) #426 (x3) & #427 (x2)
this matches how he was drawn in TDS, in which he was canonically in 7th grade—as i explain in this post—and, more importantly, didn’t look like he paid alimony:
Batman (1940) #424 (x5)
what i think is particularly interesting, is that pre-crisis jason, who we’re explicitly told multiple times was 12 years old and was, famously, very adorable, was also about shoulder height on bruce:
what's more, tim says he’s 13 in his first appearance, and he was drawn roughly up to bruce’s shoulders at the time as well:
Batman (1940) #441, #442, #444, #467, #468
if pre-crisis jason (who we know was 12 at his introduction) was drawn as around shoulder height on bruce, and tim (who we know was 13 at his introduction) was also drawn as around shoulder height on bruce, then i think it’s fair to say that “roughly up to bruce’s shoulder” was 12–13-year-old height in Batman comics at the time. jason was drawn at that same height throughout starlin’s run, specifically ADITF, which lines up with all the timeline tracking i did in this post that places starlin’s entire run—Batman (1940) #414–430—in jason’s 7th-grade year.
in other words, even the art supports the interpretation that jason was originally a 7th-grader (12–13 years old) in ADITF!!!
every time i think i've figured out a solid interpretation of the pre-flashpoint timeline and jason's ages specifically, i realize something new that messes it up and have to start over. i realize this is a futile effort, but atp i'm in too deep to just give up, so here are my current thoughts and many many woes relating to how old jason was. this is lowkey a cry for help but also continue on if you have any thoughts to add or are at all interested in DC timeline bullshit 🤞
alright so, starting off, afaik the first reference we get to jason's age post-crisis is in TEC #571, in which we find out jason is turning 12 that same year. i am 90% sure that COIE took place in mid-late summer, and since TEC #572 took place around christmas, we know jason turned 12 in the same year and therefore around the same time as COIE. from there, since we know dick turned 20 right after COIE in november, dick and jason must be 8 years apart in age
but then also, according to o'neil in the letters column of batman #412 and the math we get in batman #416 (~1 year in the past + ~18 months = ~2.5 years), batman #412 took place ~3 years after batman #408 & #409, which, if jason turned 12 the same year as COIE, would put batman #408 & #409 absurdly far back in the timeline and make literally no sense. however, we could ignore TEC #572’s xmas setting since it’s mostly irrelevant, and just say TEC #571 happened after the new year, which would fix the issue i just described and make more sense given he was still 12 in batman annual #12. this would make jason's 11th birthday around the same time as COIE and stretch his age gap with dick up to 9 years
but then also, TEC #790 shows jason's 18th birthday which took place in the same year as tim's 16th birthday in robin #116, making their age gap 2 years, and then, if jason turned 11 around COIE and was 12 in batman annual #12, then he really couldn't have been older than 12 when he died, which would mean 2 years would have to have passed from ADITF to ALPOD
BUT THEN ALSO, dick was at most 21 in deathstroke the terminator annual #1, which was definitely after tim's introduction, and if jason was 12 in ADITF then dick was 21, which would make tim and jason the same age instead of 2 years apart
but then alsoooo, even if you ignore TEC #790, jason is pretty clearly intended to be somewhat older than tim, and, more importantly, everything from ADITF -> deathstroke annual #1 happening between april (when jason dies) to dick’s birthday (which i'm like 90% sure was in october atp but it might've still been november actually i can’t remember) is fucking insane. so ADITF must have taken place the previous year, which would make dick 20 when jason died, knocking dick and jason's age gap back to 8 years and tim and jason's age gap up to 1 year
but then also. if dick and jason's age gap is 8 years then jason's 12th birthday is back to being around COIE, which just reintroduces the same issue of batman #408 & #409 being absurdly early in the timeline from before, unless we ignore the ~3 year gap from batman #408 & #409 to batman #412 given by batman #412 & #416
But Then Also, jason's death date was never actually stated in the 80's, so you could argue ADITF happened earlier in jason's 7th grade year, which would give ADITF -> deathstroke annual #1 enough room to breathe, while still letting batman #408 & #409 be ~3 years before batman #412, making jason and dick's age gap 9 years again
but then also...you could argue the same thing for jason's birthday because if they were just thinking of him as a 7th grader he could’ve actually been 13 when he died, which would actually make sense because of that one game card from the 80’s that said he was 13. and if jason's birthday isn't in august then...i don't know lol
something has to give obviously, i dunno what, and there's probably still like 40 different things i'm forgetting right now that will only be remembered once i think i've finally decided what i want to give up on. this is also completely ignoring vibes because if you factor those in everything gets more confusing, and everything i just said sucks. i realize there’s literally never going to be an exact answer and i just need to pick what i think should stay and go, but i don't know what to pick so someone please tell me i’ve made an extremely obvious error in logic and reasoning that fixes everything 😭😭
thinking about how Technically, jasons post crisis age and origin retcon would introduce him earlier in the tl than pre crisis, meaning one could argue, in a world without the firing retcon, that jason would be Around while dick was at gothamU. like walk with me here guys, briskly. do you also see the vision or am i alone in this
i use 18 for like broader fandom analysis posts as jason’s age during UtH since it’s easier to back up but i actually think ~4.5 years instead of ~5.5 makes more sense as the gap between ADITF and UtH. it doesn’t stretch the 80s timeline as much as zero hour did but it also still allows for the entire lost days timeline without really compressing anything. it also makes jason 1 year older than tim instead of 2 which imo is a better fit because there’s enough room within 80’s canon for their OG age difference to have been almost a year (they were both in 7th grade but jason didn’t have a birthday back then so you can argue he was one of the older kids in his class), and then you still keep jason being a (slightly) older kid for 2000s comics
this would make him 17 in UtH which i know some ppl already use cause he was freshly 18, and then you subtract the 6 months dead, but i do think him just being 17, like chronologically, makes more sense. this fandom already frankensteins the timeline so much which like sure fine i agree 2 years between ADITF and ALPOD is stupid, but i still don’t think you should butcher jason’s entire continuity to fix that. his age was established multiple times throughout his robin run, even if you’re just counting his post-crisis run, and i feel like it should be a pretty concrete part of the timeline. so, ~4.5 years instead of ~3.5 (what i see most ppl use) or ~5.5 (what was canon at the time) avoids the 80s over-stretching we all hate (it still stretches it a bit but not as absurdly imo) while keeping jason’s original 80’s ages, keeping room for lost days, and keeping jason older than tim since that’s…somewhat relevant i guess
anyway i’m not saying jason was canonically 17 in UtH, cause he wasn’t, the canon at the time was ~5.5 years, ergo he was 18. all i’m saying is that, imo, if you’re going to frankenstein the timeline (which ppl usually do), ~4.5 years between ADITF and UtH, and 17 in UtH makes more sense to me and contradicts the least amount of canon material, to my knowledge at least. like please do not reply to this with TEC #790 or the deathstroke annual i am well aware this would contradict those, but unless you’re going to stick to just one continuity (which no one does), something has to give, and i think those are better pieces of canon to give up than jason’s entire robin and lost days timeline 😭😭
use what you want ofc like room for personal interpretation but i see so many people that are like “well if he’s 18 here then 14 when he died makes the most sense” and it’s like. No please 🥀. there are like 4 separate sources just from his post-crisis robin run that put him at 12-13 when he died, also ntm in the zero hour timeline, which iirc is what TEC #790 would’ve been based on, jason was still 12-13 when he died. why would we take one comic based in a continuity we’re not using (post-zero hour or ~5.5 year gap) instead of 2 comics, 1 letters page response, and 1 piece of licensed material from his OG post-crisis robin run. like it just doesn’t make sense to me why would 1 beat 4 🙁 you’re already splicing stuff together if you’re ignoring the 2 year gap between ADITF and ALPOD that was canon at the time so like. why splice it like That. why would 1 beat 4 🙁