Tunnel house (Alice in Wonderland) Papercraft by Karamomo Chiaki / UPLIFT
Alice in Wonderland is one of the many European fairy tales known to the world community.
This fairy tale tells of a miracle that happened to a girl named Alice.
The beginning of the story begins, when he accidentally falls asleep under a tree during the day.
But when she woke up, Alice had turned into a small stature and could enter the rabbit hole.
After successfully getting into the rabbit hole, Alice finds many other magical things in Wonderland or Wonderland.
There he can talk to many animals, meet the Queen and her card warrior, and have a tea party with the Wonderland.
Friends, do you know who the author of this fairy tale is?
If not, let's find out the unique facts of this magical Alice in Wonderland fairy tale!
1. The Story is 150 Years Old
The fairy tale Alice in Wonderland was first written on July 4, 1862.
The author is named Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, a man from Oxford, England.
Who would have thought, the author of the fairy tale Alice in Wonderland is a mathematics lecturer.
After successfully creating a story about a brave little girl named Alice, Dodgson's story was published in Alice's Adventure Underground.
It is known that at that time Mr. Dodgson liked to play with children, one of whom was named Alice.
Because for Mr. Dodgson, Alice is a special child, a story about Alice was made.
However, Mr. Dodgson is better known by the name Lewis Carroll which is a name change with a pun.
He changed Charles Lutwidge to Ludovic Carolus and changed him again to Lewis Carroll.
Starting from when it was first published, the story of Alice in Wonderland is already 159 years old in 2021.
2. Alice's Character Inspiration
Many people wonder, how did Mr. Dodgson find the idea and inspiration for the Alice in Wonderland story?
It turned out that the story was made when Mr. Dodgson was on a rowboat with the children.
The children are Edith, Lorina, and Alice. They are young and love to play.
Now and then Mr. Dodgson would take the three girls to tea and tell them stories.
There was a time when Mr. Dodgson, the Reverend Robinson Duckworth, and these three women headed for the Thames in a rowboat.
On the way, Alice asked Mr. Dodgson to tell the magical stories he had told.
Then, Mr. Dodgson spontaneously recounted the magical adventures of a girl named Alice.
Because the story was interesting, Alice asked Mr. Dodgson to write it down and publish it in a book.
After the story was successfully published, many people liked it until it sold 160,000 copies.
Since then the story of Alice in Wonderland is known almost all over the world, until now hundreds of years later.
3. Made the name of the disease
Because this story is so famous, Alice in Wonderland was also used as a name for the disease.
The disease is called Alice in Wonderland Syndrome, which is also known as Todd's syndrome or dysmetropsia.
A person who has this syndrome can suddenly feel the body or parts of his body become smaller or larger.
Or feel the location of an object to be very far or very close, when in fact it is not so.
The exact cause of Alice in Wonderland syndrome is still unknown. However, this syndrome is thought to be associated with several diseases such as the following.
Headaches, disorders of the brain, such as stroke or brain tumors, infectious diseases, to psychiatric disorders.
Generally, Alice in Wonderland syndrome occurs because of migraines, or some headaches experienced by adults.
While in children, this condition is often caused by infectious diseases.
Download Tunnel house (Alice in Wonderland) Papercraft
Download Tunnel house (Alice in Wonderland) Papercraft designed by Karamomo Chiaki / UPLIFT below:
Tunnel house (Alice in Wonderland) Papercraft