Thread:Prof. Draco/@comment-30644608-20170218002528/@comment-5782071-20170218010847

I'll go ahead and mention now that when it comes to Alice in Wonderland, the Warehouse has a... special relationship with it. According to the show, young Alice Liddell was having a tea party with Charles Dodgson (Lewis Carrol) and her mother. While at his house, she happened to find a gun and accidentally shot her mother in front of a large mirror. It is believed that this event caused the mirror to become an artifact. As Alice grew older she became a psycopathic murderer, and Carrol chronicled her descent into madness. At some point she had a run in with agents of Warehouse 12 and killed one of them, but was somehow trapped within her mirror (the exact reasons how were not specified given the rules of the mirror, but that's besides the point). After collecting the mirror the agents of Warehouse 12 decided to use Carrol's notes and they were the ones who wrote the 2 Alice books, using artifacts as inspiration (for example, King George III's Crown, which causes madness, was the inspiration for the Mad Hatter).

We on this wiki have taken it upon ourselves to include multiple artifacts that inspired one character (i.e. multiple artifacts for the White Rabbit, multiple artifacts for the Hatter, etc) using both clever connections and irl references, such as the people who inspired the illustrations of John Tenniel in the book.

As for Mary Poppins, I'm not sure how she might fit in, or whether or not she's even fictional. Artie's Bag, which he uses to pull out any object he might need even if it's slightly large (I think) is argued to either be Mary Poppin's or created from the scraps of a bag from an Arabian story about a magic bag that from which one could retrieve any particular object they needed. There are multiple reasons for and against both sides.