Persian Amulet | |
---|---|
Origin |
Unknown |
Type |
Necklace |
Effects |
User develops a high fever from the outside of their body as if being slowly burnt alive |
Downsides |
Effects |
Activation |
Touch |
Collected by |
Alexander the Great |
Section |
|
Aisle |
363-4828 |
Shelf |
384-444-9713 |
Date of Collection |
330 BC |
[Source] |
Background[]
This amulet was collected by Alexander the Great during one of his conquests. The artifact was created when a man was slowly burnt in a fire during a raid of Persia. The man's widow created this artifact through sorrow. This is what caused Alexander the Great's fever prior to his death; when he could no longer take it, he asked his advisors to poison him and tell no one about it.
Today[]
This artifact was passed down from Warehouse to Warehouse as the artifact that killed Alexander the Great and now resides in the Torture Room.