Wicked Bible

Origins
The Wicked Bible was published in 1631 by the royal printers Robert Barker and Martin Lucas. It was supposed to be a reprint of the King James Bible; however, there was a grave typo in all of the bibles published. One of the ten commandments reads "Thou shalt not commit adultery"; however, the bibles published read "Thou shalt commit adultery". When the typo was discovered a year later, a mass burning of the "Wicked Bibles" commenced. Very few survived the burning (only nine known copies), and the royal printers were found guilty. They were also fined £300, and their printing license removed, with the entire print run of the offending text called in, and the majority destroyed.

Effects
Those who read the Bible commit adultery. If the reader is not married, they will proceed to go out and find someone to commit adultery with. The effects will continue so long as they read the Bible.

Collection
The first of the Wicked Bibles was collected in 1830 by Warehouse 12. In the north of Scotland, there were reports of a town where the people were caught in sin. Warehouse 12 agents went to the town, where they found a church. Searching the building, they found that the Bible on the altar was an old version of the King James Bible, published in 1631. Realizing that this must be the artifact, the agents snagged and bagged the artifact.

Almost two centuries later in 2015, Artie sent Agents Megan Wilcoxson and Steve Jinks to an auction in London to buy what he knew was another copy of the Wicked Bible, which he believed was also an artifact. They were able to buy the Bible for £31,250 (US$ 44,947), and they discovered that the Bible was, indeed, an artifact.

Trivia

 * According to current Warehouse records, only two of the Wicked Bibles are artifacts, both of which have now been collected.
 * The Warehouse Library also has a copy of this bible that isn't an artifact.