He was the thing of children's nightmares, outcast by a Victorian society unable to comprehend his grotesque deformities, but was later immortalised in theatre and cinema.
Joseph Merrick, better known as the Elephant Man, is one of medical history's enigmas: 122 years after his death, no one knows exactly what caused his extreme disfigurement. But scientists will try to solve the puzzle next month by extracting DNA from his bones for analysis.
Merrick came to the attention of the medical profession in the 1880s. Ever since, scientists have struggled to explain the huge growths that caused him to be first shunned and then celebrated by society - by the end of his life his courage and humility had, at last, been recognised.
Merrick became a folk hero for speaking up for others who were similarly afflicted.
It was initially thought that he suffered from elephantiasis, a parasitic infection characterised by the thickening and enlargement of skin and tissue, hence his nickname.