During his career Ibis the Invincible, a Fawcett Comics superhero with magical powers, has met many foes. Here are some of them.
Apollyon is the character who appeared in Whiz Comics #117 and is based on the homonymous demon in Christian lore. A demon who is summoned by a student called Brane who has found his magic book, he killed Professor Hertz who had it and used the magic to destroy his body. Ibis finds the Professor has disappeared, but is able to summon up his spirit and learn what has happened. Apollyon is summoned up and tries to crush Ibis with his tail, but Taia turns it to straw. Finally he falls to the deepest fiery pit of Hades with the student and book taking Ibis with him, but Taia summons Ibis back to the world with the Ibistick and seals the pit. On another occasion he gave someone who loved Taia another Ibistick in exchange for his soul. The man died protecting Taia, but Ibis rescued his soul from Apollyon.
A thuggish criminal who was hanged three hundred years before the story for brutal crimes. Karnok brings him back after stealing Charon's boat with Ra-Tuth and he stops Taia from getting the Ibistick when Ra-Tuth attacks Ibis. He tries using his great strength to kill Ibis, but Taia strikes him with lightning using the Ibistick, and his other associates are soon killed.
Black Pharaoh is a sorcerous uncle of Ibis revived by the Sons of Set. The evil Pharaoh wanted to marry Taia, but could not as she was under the protection of Osiris, 'God of Justice'. An evil Priest who had been banished for using evil magic summoned the Underworld God Set who summoned up an army of demons to take over Egypt. Ibis rebelled and was imprisoned, but his uncle gave him the Ibistick. He used it to bring food, then escape. Ibis slew the Black Pharaoh when he tried to take Taia, but his love was wounded by an arrow she took for Ibis and put in a deep sleep that would last centuries.
First appearing in Whiz Comics #89, The Cat is a being of great power who has a cult. The High priest of the Cult of the Great Cat has nine lives. Ibis first encounters the Cult when he meets a member who deserted the Cult. They are attacked by Cats, and despite Ibis summoning Cerberus to chase them away the man is killed. Ibis sees the dead cats become men. The Cat orders the High Priest to kill Ibis. The Priest dies when his knife turns to his heart in a fight with Ibis, but returns to life. He is killed again with the knife, but returns in Whiz Comics #89, swearing never to rest 'until Prince Ibis is eternally dead'. Ibis realises his nine lives after reading a book in Sanskrit, but is then attacked by a Jaguar, which he consumes with flame using the Ibistick, but it gives a human cry. The Great Cat tells him not to squander his lives and he makes another attack, getting into the apartment while Ibis and Taia are asleep using a rope to swing between buildings, where he covers Taia's mouth with his hand, then kidnaps her. Ibis discovers her missing and transports himself to who kidnapped her. He meets an old man who throws a cat at him, enabling him to snatch the Ibistick, with which he tries to blow Ibis to atoms, not realising its effects reverse if someone tries to destroy Ibis. Ibis transports himself to the Temple of the Cat in an equatorial jungle where Taia is about to be sacrificed to the Great Cat, and cat-like humanoids are present. He destroys the Temple and every living thing in it except for Taia and himself. The Great Cat, revealing itself as no mere monument, attacks them but Ibis turns it to ice and it starts melting. As the Great Cat has been destroyed, Cat-Man is also dead, as he drew his life from the Great Cat.
Charon is a boatman of the river Styx. In Whiz Comics #96 he is shown as an Old Man who is neither a hero nor villain. In #119 he is shown as a well-built middle-aged man. The story starts when a river bursts out next to a village, which washes two men away. The District Commissioner tells Ibis the locals won't use it, so Ibis should persuade them as he is a known master of white magic. Ibis gets there, but Taia sees the waters are black and the Ibistick vibrates, which it does in the presence of evil. Ibis worries about things coming out. Later that night, some boats sail along and from them emerge some figures, which include a three-headed dog, Cerberus. One of them reveals himself to be Charon, saying that Ibis sealed many of the entrances to his master's world, meaning he has made a new entrance. Ibis is disarmed and forced down by Cerberus, but Taia gets the Ibistick. However her mouth is covered by Charon before she can use it, and Charon orders two men to throw her into the river. Ibis is able to defeat Cerberus, using a long tree-branch to knock all its three heads out. Charon says he knows Ibis cannot be directly hurt with the Ibistick, so he uses it to give himself the strength of a thousand men and tries to crush Ibis with a tree. Ibis is able to regain his Ibistick, restores Charon to normal, then binds him and Cerberus in unbreakable chains, before rescuing Taia. He then tells Charon to close this entrance off, and restore all those they had taken unlawfully. He then makes the river flow the other way, meaning the village can use it.
The sorcerer of the Pharaoh who was stealing from the Pharaoh's treasury. When Ibis was charged by the Pharaoh to discover the thief and found him by making one of the swords lead him to the thief, he escaped to the Cavern of the Seven Statues and cast a spell to turn him into a stone statue, allowing him to fool Ibis who does not bother to count them. He is then sealed in there by an avalanche, while Ibis gets out with the stolen treasure. 4000 years later, the Seven Statues are discovered, although the archaeologist is curious as to why there are eight. He takes them to a museum and calls Ibis who is an expert on Egyptology, but Dalaghar escapes, causing Ibis to suspect him. Dalaghar feels cramped and is arrested for disturbing the peace by disrupting traffic, but escapes next day by becoming a statue, which is thrown out. Ibis finds him, but he takes the Ibistick and commands it to hit Ibis with a giant hammer, which instead hits him, breaking him like stone. Ibis reveals he was stone for so many years he was slowly turning to stone. Taia says that his death finally caught up with him after many years.
Based on the Gorgons Stheno and Euryale of Greek myth. Ibis goes to a town as apparently the Gorgons live in a cave nearby. He hears Henry Jones has disappeared while looking for his son who went into the cave, which the locals think is haunted. Ibis goes into the cave with a ball of string as it is a Labyrinth. The lamp goes out, so Ibis commands the Ibistick to glow like a beacon. They find a man turned to stone, however Taia is then turned to stone. The Gorgon tries to turn Ibis to stone, but Ibis creates magic spectacles to ward of her gaze. He then summons up the sword of Perseus, who killed one of the Gorgons centuries ago, and slays the snake the Gorgon, who calls herself Stheno, sets on him. He then throws the sword and kills Stheno, who calls on her sister to avenge her. A beautiful woman then appears and tells Ibis she was freed from the Gorgon's curse by it being killed. She then smashes the spectacles and her gaze starts turning Ibis to stone. Ibis is able to squeeze out some syllables, causing lightning to strike him and restore him to normal. He then commands the cave walls to close in on Euryale, crushing her to death. When the last Gorgon dies, her victims are restored to normal.
Only appearing in Whiz Comics #3, Hamed is a local leader of bandits. After his men see Ibis create a new Thebes in Egypt, he decides to get the Ibistick. His men kidnap Taia. Ibis gets to the camp and turns the men into geese. He gets into Hamed's tent where Taia is bound and gagged. He turns Hamed into a pig, then returns with Taia.
First appearing in Whiz Comics #90, Karnok is Master of Evil and leader of the School of Sorcerers. After they complete the Ninth Ritual, he tells them to bring a sacrifice to Fa-Lij, the God of Sorcerers. If it fails to please him the Offender will die. His most brilliant student Leku decides to bring Ibis killing him with a magic magnifying glass that focuses the sun's heat, but Ibis uses the Ibistick to cool the room and follows the offender. Karnok in anger casts a spell on Leku that will shrivel the flesh from his bones. His men seize the Ibistick and Karnok uses his magic to chain Ibis, planning to sacrifice him, cutting his heart out allowing Fa-Lij to claim his soul for Eternity. However, Leku in anger at Karnok and close to death throws the Ibistick to Ibis, who frees himself, stops the knife, and destroys the school, though Karnok escapes using his magic to transport himself away.
He next appears in #96, trying to bring people back from the dead, but fails, claiming he was planning to bring back Ra-Tuth and Black Rufe. He is attacked by Ibis whose Ibistick vibrates in the presence of evil. He kicks Ibis to slow him down, then runs away but is hit by a car and transported to the Underworld, where he knocks Charon out with his oar. He then takes Ra-Tuth and Black Rufe back in Charon's boat and they attack Ibis, but they are all killed and Ibis causes his Ibistick to make a pit that sends Karnok to 'the deepest pit of Hades'.
Thousands of years ago they competed with humanity for mastery of Earth, but lost and were banished to the Moon. Coincidentally Taia goes with Professor Letter (who has heard of them) to the Moon on a rocket ship the professor invented. Ibis transports himself to the ship and gives himself the power to survive in the vacuum of space. They find what appear to be statues of huge men made of white stone, but the Professor says these are the creatures, frozen, though the Iibistick vibrates in their presence. Some statues are taken back to the ship and revive, attacking the humans and killing Letter, but the ship crashes from friction, and the Moon-Men are killed in the fire.
A crook who with other crooks takes over Boytown, a place for orphans, and forces them to work on Munitions to sell to the Axis Powers. Ibis receives a message that Boytown is in danger, so creates an airship called the Ibiship and travels there. He defeats the gang and creates a jail for Boytown, where Malone is imprisoned. However Malone escapes. He binds and gags Taia and escapes in the Ibiship with her. Ibis creates another airship to follow them and finds the plane has crashed. He gets to Malone's base, where Taia is bound to a chair, but Ibis loses the Ibistick when attacked by Malone's henchmen and is handcuffed. Malone tries to use the Ibistick to turn Ibis into a toad but becomes one himself. Ibis then turns the other crooks into toads and leaves with Taia.
An Egyptian Sorcerer who was brought back from the dead by Karnok with Black Rufe. He casts a spell which makes the Spirit of the Sphinx attack Ibis. Hearing Taia is being attacked by Black Rufe he uses the Ibistick to turn the Sphinx to stone. Black Rufe is killed and Ibis casts a spell which makes Karnok and Ra-Tuth fall to the Underworld. Soon they are doomed to wander for Eternity the bleak shores of the land of the dead.
Trug is oriental criminal who seeks magical powers, first by stealing the Ibistick. He becomes a recurring foe of Ibis. He wears a turban and suit but with stereotypical middle eastern features. He debuted in Whiz Comics #13.
Baron Ornzy and his sister Maryani are the vampire twins, debuting in Whiz Comics #101. While travelling on an ocean liner, their kills attract the attention of Prince Ibis and Taia. The Baron is killed when they try to kill Ibis and Taia (who sleep in separate rooms). The following issue, Maryani tries to avenge the death of her brother and calls forth an evil primeval spirit in the form of a great bat and briefly manages to get Ibis under her sway. However, she is slain when she tries to use the Ibistick against Ibis (she commands it to turn him into dust) and the spell is rebounded against her. Ibis then commands the stick to consume the bat in flame. A little curious about the name as it's very close to that of Baroness Orczy, the creator of the Scarlet Pimpernel.
Shazam is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by both Fawcett Comics and DC Comics.
Captain Marvel, also known as Shazam, is a fictional superhero appearing in American comics originally published by Fawcett Comics, and currently published by DC Comics. Artist C. C. Beck and writer Bill Parker created the character in 1939. Shazam first appeared in Whiz Comics #2, published by Fawcett Comics. He is the alter ego of Billy Batson, a boy who, by speaking or thinking the magic word "SHAZAM!", can transform himself into a costumed adult with the powers of superhuman strength, speed, flight and other abilities. The character battles an extensive rogues' gallery, most of them working in tandem as the Monster Society of Evil, including primary archenemies Doctor Sivana, Black Adam, and Mister Mind. Billy often shares his powers with other children, primarily his sister Mary Batson and their best friend/foster brother Freddy Freeman, who also transform into superheroes and fight crime with Billy as members of the Marvel Family, also known as the Shazam Family.
Black Adam (Teth/Theo-Adam) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. Created by Otto Binder and C. C. Beck, the character is one of the archenemies of the superhero Captain Marvel and the nemesis of the Marvel Family. Black Adam first appeared as a one-time villain for the first issue of Fawcett Comics' The Marvel Family comic book. However, Black Adam was revived as a recurring character after DC Comics first licensed and then acquired the Fawcett characters and began publishing Shazam Family stories under the title Shazam! in the 1970s.
The Marvel Family, also known as the Shazam Family, are a group of superheroes who originally appeared in books published by Fawcett Comics and were later acquired by DC Comics. Created in 1942 by writer Otto Binder and artist Marc Swayze, the team was created as an extension of Fawcett's Captain Marvel franchise, and included Marvel's sister Mary Marvel, their friend Captain Marvel Jr., and, at various times, a number of other characters as well.
Eclipso is a supervillain in the DC Comics Universe. The character is the incarnation of the Wrath of God and the Angel of Vengeance that turned evil and was replaced by the Spectre.
The Squadron of Justice was a name used by two superhero teams of characters who originated from Fawcett Comics. Each team only made one appearance in a single story.
Felix Faust is a supervillain who appears in stories published by DC Comics. The character first appeared in 1962 as an adversary of the Justice League of America.
Day of Vengeance is a six-issue comic book limited series written by Bill Willingham, with art by Justiniano and Walden Wong, published in 2005 by DC Comics.
The Power of Shazam! is a 1994 hardcover graphic novel, written and painted by Jerry Ordway for DC Comics. The 96-page story, depicting the revamped origins of former Fawcett Comics superhero Captain Marvel, was followed by an ongoing series, also titled The Power of Shazam!, which ran from 1995 to 1999.
Doctor Thaddeus Bodog Sivana is a fictional supervillain appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. Created by Bill Parker and C. C. Beck, the character is a recurring enemy of the superhero Captain Marvel/Shazam, both of whom first appeared in Whiz Comics #2 by Fawcett Comics. A mad scientist and inventor bent on world domination, Sivana was soon established as Captain Marvel's main archenemy during the Golden Age, appearing in over half of the Fawcett Captain Marvel stories published between 1939 and 1953.
Ibis the Invincible is a fictional character originally published by Fawcett Comics in the 1940s and then by DC Comics beginning in the 1970s. Like many magician superheroes introduced in the Golden Age of Comics, Ibis owes much to the popular comic strip character Mandrake the Magician. A second Ibis, successor of the first, was introduced in 2007.
Timothy Hunter is a fictional character, a comic book sorcerer published by DC Comics. He first appeared in The Books of Magic #1, and was created by Neil Gaiman and John Bolton.
Circe is a fictional character appearing in DC Comics publications and related media. Based upon the Greek mythological figure of the same name who imprisoned Odysseus in Homer's Odyssey, she is a wicked sorceress and major adversary of the superhero Wonder Woman.
Mister Atom is a fictional comic book supervillain, a radioactive robot who is regularly seen as an enemy of Captain Marvel. The character first appeared in Captain Marvel Adventures #78 in November 1947. Along with other members of Captain Marvel's rogues' gallery, Mister Atom was recruited by Mister Mind to be part of the second Monster Society of Evil in 1973.
King Kull is a supervillain appearing in American comic book published by DC Comics. Created by Otto Binder and C.C. Beck, he now appears as a foe of Captain Marvel.
The Gorgon is a fictional supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Charon: A Dragon at the Gate is a science fiction novel by American writer Jack L. Chalker, the third book in the Four Lords of the Diamond. First published as a paperback in 1982. It continues the saga started in Lilith: A Snake in the Grass and Cerberus: A Wolf in the Fold and is concluded by the fourth and last book called, Medusa: A Tiger by the Tail.
Oggar, the World's Mightiest Immortal, is a fictional character from the publisher Fawcett Comics, whose publication rights were acquired by DC Comics in the 1970s. Oggar was a villain of Captain Marvel chronology in Pre-Crisis; he made no Post-Crisis appearances. He first appeared in Captain Marvel Adventures # 61. His first appearance in DC Comics was in World's Finest Comics # 264.
Medusa is a fictional character appearing in DC Comics publications and related media. Based upon the Greek mythological figure of the same name, she is one of the three snake-haired Gorgons and an adversary of the super-hero Wonder Woman. She is not to be confused with Myrra Rhodes, a member of the Creature Commandos who calls herself Dr. Medusa.