Artifacts of Misfortune. Folklore. True-Case Hauntings.Across history, certain objects have been removed from circulation, sealed away, buried, destroyed-or displayed behind glass with warnings no one likes to explain.The Encyclopedia of Cursed Objects is an extensive, sober examination of those items.This is not a book of campfire stories or shock-value paranormal tales. It is a study of material folklore: the point at which human grief, fear, devotion, obsession, and belief attach themselves to physical objects-and refuse to let go.Inside, you'll find documented cases involving: Ritual objects and tools created for protection, punishment, or powerJewelry and personal items tied to promises, identity, and lossReligious artifacts whose meanings fractured over timeArt, writing, and media that behave like vessels rather than recordsDomestic objects-mirrors, furniture, dolls, toys-where the familiar turns hostileEach entry examines: The object's origin and constructionIts cultural and historical contextRecorded patterns of misfortune or disturbanceEyewitness accounts and modern documentationSkeptical explanations alongside persistent anomaliesWhat emerges is not proof of the supernatural-but something stranger: consistency.Independent owners report similar symptoms.Misfortune clusters.Objects resist disposal.Warnings appear after harm has already begun.Whether these forces are psychological, cultural, environmental, or something less easily named is left deliberately open. What matters is that the effects persist.This encyclopedia does not tell you what to believe.It shows you what repeats.And repetition, as history reminds us, is rarely accidental.