The Lion man of the Hohlenstein Stadel | |
---|---|
Origin |
Stadel-Hohle im Holenstein, Swabian Alps |
Type |
Statue |
Effects |
Transforms animals and humans into hybrids |
Downsides |
The transformation will be permanent if not neutralized in time |
Activation |
Touch |
Collected by |
|
Section |
|
Aisle |
586036-51189 |
Shelf |
485396-2185-607 |
Date of Collection |
January 21, 1965 |
[Source] |
Origin[]
This roughly foot-tall statue, carved from ivory and presumed to have been created some 40,000 years ago, was found in the Stadel-Hohle im Holenstein, in the Lonetal (lone valley, translated), in the Swabian Alps in Germany in 1939. One of the oldest statues in existence, it is not known what this figure is supposed to represent - an anthropomorphic representation of a cave lion or perhaps a deity - or even if the statue is a Lion 'man' at all. However, it is one of the oldest statues to date and one of the first documented cases of zoomorphism, or an animal shaped form.
This inspired the Disney animated movie “Robin Hood."
Effects[]
This artifact, when physically touched, will render the user into a human-animal hybrid. The animals the people resemble when they transform seem to reside in their personality. The artifact can also affect non-human animals.
Should the artifact not be neutralized in a timely manner, the afflicted with transform completely into the form they had been combined with.
Trivia[]
Embarrassingly, this artifact is often accredited for the George Langelaan's science fiction phenomena, The Fly, which simply isn't true - the disintegrator-reintegrators are stored in the Warehouse, after all.