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Werewolf

In folklore, a werewolf[a] (from Old English werwulf 'man-wolf'), or occasionally lycanthrope[b] (from Ancient Greek λυκάνθρωπος, lukánthrōpos, 'wolf-human'), is an individual that can shapeshift into a wolf (or, especially in modern film, a therianthropic hybrid wolf-like creature), either purposely or after being placed under a curse or affliction (often a bite or the occasional scratch from another werewolf) with the transformations occurring on the night of a full moon.[c] Early sources for belief in this ability or affliction, called lycanthropy,[d] are Petronius (27–66) and Gervase of Tilbury (1150–1228).

Werewolf
Woodcut of a werewolf attack by Lucas Cranach der Ältere, 1512
GroupingMythology
Other name(s)Lycanthrope

The werewolf is a widespread concept in European folklore, existing in many variants, which are related by a common development of a Christian interpretation of underlying European folklore developed during the medieval period. From the early modern period, werewolf beliefs also spread to the New World with colonialism. Belief in werewolves developed in parallel to the belief in witches, in the course of the Late Middle Ages and the early modern period. Like the witchcraft trials as a whole, the trial of supposed werewolves emerged in what is now Switzerland (especially the Valais and Vaud) in the early 15th century and spread throughout Europe in the 16th, peaking in the 17th and subsiding by the 18th century.

The persecution of werewolves and the associated folklore is an integral part of the "witch-hunt" phenomenon, albeit a marginal one, accusations of lycanthropy being involved in only a small fraction of witchcraft trials.[e] During the early period, accusations of lycanthropy (transformation into a wolf) were mixed with accusations of wolf-riding or wolf-charming. The case of Peter Stumpp (1589) led to a significant peak in both interest in and persecution of supposed werewolves, primarily in French-speaking and German-speaking Europe. The phenomenon persisted longest in Bavaria and Austria, with persecution of wolf-charmers recorded until well after 1650, the final cases taking place in the early 18th century in Carinthia and Styria.[f]

After the end of the witch-trials, the werewolf became of interest in folklore studies and in the emerging Gothic horror genre; werewolf fiction as a genre has pre-modern precedents in medieval romances (e.g. Bisclavret and Guillaume de Palerme) and developed in the 18th century out of the "semi-fictional" chapbook tradition. The trappings of horror literature in the 20th century became part of the horror and fantasy genre of modern popular culture.

Names

The Modern English werewolf descends from the Old English werewulf, which is a cognate (linguistic sibling of the same origin) of Middle Dutch weerwolf, Middle Low German werwulf, Middle High German werwolf, and West Frisian waer-ûl(e). These terms are generally derived from a Proto-Germanic form reconstructed as *wira-wulfaz ('man-wolf'), itself from an earlier Pre-Germanic form *wiro-wulpos.[1][2][3] An alternative reconstruction, *wazi-wulfaz ('wolf-clothed'), would bring the Germanic compound closer to the Slavic meaning,[1] with other semantic parallels in Old Norse úlfheðnar ('wolf-skinned') and úlfheðinn ('wolf-coat'), Old Irish luchthonn ('wolf-skin'), and Sanskrit Vṛkājina ('Wolf-skin').[4]

The Norse branch underwent taboo modifications, with Old Norse vargúlfr (only attested as a translation of Old French garwaf ~ garwal(f) from Marie's lay of Bisclavret) replacing *wiraz ('man') with vargr ('wolf, outlaw'), perhaps under the influence of the Old French expression leus warous ~ lous garous (modern loup-garou), which literally means 'wolf-werewolf'.[5][6] The modern Norse forms varulv (Danish, Norwegian) and varulf (Swedish) were either borrowed from Middle Low German werwulf,[6] or else derived from an unattested Old Norse *varulfr, posited as the regular descendant of Proto-Germanic *wira-wulfaz.[2] An Old Frankish form *werwolf is inferred from the Middle Low German variant and was most likely borrowed into Old Norman garwa(l)f ~ garo(u)l, with regular GermanicRomance correspondance w- / g- (cf. William / Guillaume, Wales / Galles, etc.).[7][6]

The Proto-Slavic noun *vьlko-dlakь, meaning 'wolf-haired' (cf. *dlaka, 'animal hair, fur'),[1] can be reconstructed from Serbian vukòdlak, Slovenian vołkodlȃk, and Czech vlkodlak, although formal variations in Slavic languages (*vьrdl(j)ak, *vьlkdolk, *vьlklak) and the late attestation of some forms pose difficulties in tracing the origin of the term.[8][9] The Greek Vrykolakas and Romanian Vîrcolac, designating vampire-like creatures in Balkan folklores, were borrowed from Slavic languages.[10][11] The same form is also found in other non-Slavic languages of the region, such as Albanian vurvolak and Turkish vurkolak.[11] Bulgarian vьrkolak and Church Slavonic vurkolak may be interpreted as back-borrowings from Greek.[9] The name vurdalak (вурдалак; 'ghoul, revenant') first appeared in Russian poet Alexander Pushkin's work Pesni, published in 1835. The source of Pushkin's distinctive form remains debated in scholarship.[12][11]

A Proto-Celtic noun *wiro-kū, meaning 'man-dog', has been reconstructed from Celtiberian uiroku, the Old Brittonic place-name Viroconium (< *wiroconion, 'place of man-dogs, i.e. werewolves'), the Old Irish noun ferchu ('male dog, fierce dog'), and the medieval personal names Guurci (Old Welsh) and Gurki (Old Breton). Wolves were metaphorically designated as 'dogs' in Celtic cultures.[13][3]

The modern term lycanthropy comes from Ancient Greek lukanthrōpía (λυκανθρωπία), itself from lukánthrōpos (λυκάνθρωπος), meaning 'wolf-man'. Ancient writers used the term solely in the context of clinical lycanthropy, a condition in which the patient imagined himself to be a wolf. Modern writers later used lycanthrope as a synonym of werewolf, referring to a person who, according to medieval superstition, could assum the form of wolves.[14]

History

Indo-European comparative mythology

 
Dolon wearing a wolf-skin. Attic red-figure vase, c. 460 BC.

The European motif of the devilish werewolf devouring human flesh harks back to a common development during the Middle Ages in the context of Christianity, although stories of humans turning into wolves take their roots in earlier pre-Christian beliefs.[15][16]

Their underlying common origin can be traced back to Proto-Indo-European mythology, where lycanthropy is reconstructed as an aspect of the initiation of the kóryos warrior class, which may have included a cult focused on dogs and wolves identified with an age grade of young, unmarried warriors.[3] The standard comparative overview of this aspect of Indo-European mythology is McCone (1987).[17]

Classical antiquity

A few references to men changing into wolves are found in Ancient Greek literature and mythology. Herodotus, in his Histories,[18] wrote that the Neuri, a tribe he places to the north-east of Scythia, were all transformed into wolves once every year for several days, and then changed back to their human shape. This tale was also mentioned by Pomponius Mela.[19]

 
Zeus turning Lycaon into a wolf, engraving by Hendrik Goltzius.

In the second century BC, the Greek geographer Pausanias related the story of King Lycaon of Arcadia, who was transformed into a wolf because he had sacrificed a child in the altar of Zeus Lycaeus.[20] In the version of the legend told by Ovid in his Metamorphoses,[21] when Zeus visits Lycaon disguised as a common man, Lycaon wants to test if he is really a god. To that end, he kills a Molossian hostage and serve his entrails to Zeus. Disgusted, the god turns Lycaon into a wolf. However, in other accounts of the legend, like that of Apollodorus' Bibliotheca,[22] Zeus blasts him and his sons with thunderbolts as punishment.

Pausanias also relates the story of an Arcadian man called Damarchus of Parrhasia, who was turned into a wolf after tasting the entrails of a human child sacrificed to Zeus Lycaeus. He was restored to human form 10 years later and went on to become an Olympic champion.[23] This tale is also recounted by Pliny the Elder, who calls the man Demaenetus quoting Agriopas.[24] According to Pausanias, this was not a one-off event, but that men have been transformed into wolves during the sacrifices to Zeus Lycaeus since the time of Lycaon. If they abstain of tasting human flesh while being wolves, they would be restored to human form nine years later, but if they don’t abstain they will remain wolves forever.[20]

Lykos (Λύκος) of Athens was a wolf-shaped herο, whose shrine stood by the jurycourt, and the first jurors were named after him.[25]

Pliny the Elder likewise recounts another tale of lycanthropy. Quoting Euanthes,[26] he mentions that in Arcadia, once a year a man was chosen by lot from the Anthus' clan. The chosen man was escorted to a marsh in the area, where he hung his clothes into an oak tree, swam across the marsh and transformed into a wolf, joining a pack for nine years. If during these nine years he refrained from tasting human flesh, he returned to the same marsh, swam back and recovered his previous human form, with nine years added to his appearance.[27] Ovid also relates stories of men who roamed the woods of Arcadia in the form of wolves.[28][29]

Virgil, in his poetic work Eclogues, wrote about a man called Moeris, who used herbs and poisons picked in his native Pontus to turn himself into a wolf.[30] In prose, the Satyricon, written circa AD 60 by Gaius Petronius Arbiter, one of the characters, Niceros, tells a story at a banquet about a friend who turned into a wolf (chs. 61–62). He describes the incident as follows, "When I look for my buddy I see he'd stripped and piled his clothes by the roadside... He pees in a circle round his clothes and then, just like that, turns into a wolf!... after he turned into a wolf he started howling and then ran off into the woods."[31]

Early Christian authors also mentioned werewolves. In The City of God, Augustine of Hippo gives an account similar to that found in Pliny the Elder. Augustine explains that "It is very generally believed that by certain witches spells men may be turned into wolves..."[32] Physical metamorphosis was also mentioned in the Capitulatum Episcopi, attributed to the Council of Ancyra in the 4th century, which became the Church's doctrinal text in relation to magic, witches, and transformations such as those of werewolves.[33] The Capitulatum Episcopi states that "Whoever believes that anything can be...transformed into another species or likeness, except by God Himself...is beyond doubt an infidel.'[33]

In these works of Roman writers, werewolves often receive the name versipellis ("turnskin"). Augustine instead uses the phrase "in lupum fuisse mutatum" (changed into the form of a wolf) to describe the physical metamorphosis of werewolves, which is similar to phrases used in the medieval period.

Middle Ages

There is evidence of widespread belief in werewolves in medieval Europe. This evidence spans much of the Continent, as well as the British Isles. Werewolves were mentioned in Medieval law codes, such as that of King Cnut, whose Ecclesiastical Ordinances inform us that the codes aim to ensure that "…the madly audacious werewolf do not too widely devastate, nor bite too many of the spiritual flock."[34] Liutprand of Cremona reports a rumor that Bajan, son of Simeon I of Bulgaria, could use magic to turn himself into a wolf.[35] The works of Augustine of Hippo had a large influence on the development of Western Christianity, and were widely read by churchmen of the medieval period; and these churchmen occasionally discussed werewolves in their works. Famous examples include Gerald of Wales's Werewolves of Ossory, found in his Topographica Hibernica, and in Gervase of Tilbury's Otia Imperiala, both written for royal audiences.

Gervase reveals to the reader that belief in such transformations (he also mentions women turning into cats and into snakes) was widespread across Europe; he uses the phrase "que ita dinoscuntur" when discussing these metamorphoses, which translates to "it is known". Gervase, who was writing in Germany, also tells the reader that the transformation of men into wolves cannot be easily dismissed, for "...in England we have often seen men change into wolves" ("Vidimus enim frequenter in Anglia per lunationes homines in lupos mutari…").[36] Further evidence of the widespread belief in werewolves and other human-animal transformations can be seen in theological attacks made against such beliefs. Conrad of Hirsau, writing in the 11th century, forbids the reading of stories in which a person's reason is obscured following such a transformation.[37] Conrad specifically refers to the tales of Ovid in his tract. Pseudo-Augustine, writing in the 12th century, follows Augustine of Hippo's argument that no physical transformation can be made by any but God, stating that "...the body corporeally [cannot], be changed into the material limbs of any animal.'[38]

Marie de France's poem Bisclavret (c. 1200) is another example, in which the eponymous nobleman Bisclavret, for reasons not described, had to transform into a wolf every week. When his treacherous wife stole his clothing needed to restore his human form, he escaped the king's wolf hunt by imploring the king for mercy and accompanied the king thereafter. His behavior at court was gentle, until his wife and her new husband appeared at court, so much so that his hateful attack on the couple was deemed justly motivated, and the truth was revealed. This lai (a type of Breton sung-poem) follows many themes found within other werewolf tales - the removal of clothing and attempting to refrain from the consumption of human flesh can be found in Pliny the Elder, as well as in the second of Gervase of Tilbury's werewolf stories, about a werewolf by the name of Chaucevaire. Marie also reveals to us the existence of werewolf belief in Breton and Norman France, by telling us the Franco-Norman word for werewolf: garwulf, which, she explains, are common in that part of France, where "...many men turned into werewolves".[39] Gervase also supports this terminology when he tells us that the French use the term "gerulfi" to describe what the English call "werewolves".[40] Melion and Biclarel are two anonymous lais that share the theme of a werewolf knight being betrayed by his wife.[41]

The German word werwolf is recorded by Burchard von Worms in the 11th century, and by Bertold of Regensburg in the 13th, but is not recorded in all of medieval German poetry or fiction. While Baring-Gould argues that references to werewolves were also rare in England, presumably because whatever significance the "wolf-men" of Germanic paganism had carried, the associated beliefs and practices had been successfully repressed after Christianization (or if they persisted, they did so outside of the sphere of literacy available to us), we have sources other than those mentioned above.[42] Such examples of werewolves in Ireland and the British Isles can be found in the work of the 9th century Welsh monk Nennius; female werewolves appear in the Irish work Tales of the Elders, from the 12th century; and Welsh werewolves in the 12th to 13th century work, Mabinogion.

 
Vendel period depiction of a warrior wearing a wolf-skin (Tierkrieger).

Germanic pagan traditions associated with wolf-men persisted longest in the Scandinavian Viking Age. Harald I of Norway is known to have had a body of Úlfhednar (wolf-coated [men]), which are mentioned in the Vatnsdœla, Haraldskvæði, and the Völsunga saga, and resemble some werewolf legends. The Úlfhednar were fighters similar to the berserkers, though they dressed in wolf hides rather than those of bears and were reputed to channel the spirits of these animals to enhance effectiveness in battle.[43] These warriors were resistant to pain and killed viciously in battle, much like wild animals. Úlfhednar and berserkers are closely associated with the Norse god Odin.

The Scandinavian traditions of this period may have spread to Kievan Rus', giving rise to the Slavic "werewolf" tales. The 11th-century Belarusian Prince Vseslav of Polotsk was considered to have been a werewolf, capable of moving at superhuman speeds, as recounted in The Tale of Igor's Campaign:

Vseslav the prince judged men; as prince, he ruled towns; but at night he prowled in the guise of a wolf. From Kiev, prowling, he reached, before the cocks crew, Tmutorokan. The path of Great Sun, as a wolf, prowling, he crossed. For him in Polotsk they rang for matins early at St. Sophia the bells; but he heard the ringing in Kiev.

The situation as described during the medieval period gives rise to the dual form of werewolf folklore in Early Modern Europe. On one hand the "Germanic" werewolf, which becomes associated with the witchcraft panic, and on the other hand the "Slavic" werewolf or vlkolak, which becomes associated with the concept of the revenant or "vampire". The "eastern" werewolf-vampire is found in the folklore of Central and Eastern Europe, including Hungary, Romania and the Balkans, while the "western" werewolf-sorcerer is found in France, German-speaking Europe and in the Baltic.

Being a werewolf was a common accusation in witch trials throughout their history, and it featured even in the Valais witch trials, one of the earliest such trials altogether, in the first half of the 15th century.[44] Likewise, in the Vaud (Switzerland), child-eating werewolves were reported as early as 1448.[citation needed]

In 1539, Martin Luther used the form beerwolf to describe a hypothetical ruler worse than a tyrant who must be resisted.[45]

Early modern history

There were numerous reports of werewolf attacks – and consequent court trials – in 16th-century France. In some of the cases there was clear evidence against the accused of murder and cannibalism, but no association with wolves. In other cases people have been terrified by such creatures, such as that of Gilles Garnier in Dole in 1573, who was convicted of being a werewolf.[citation needed]

 
In Geneva a man killed 16 children when he had changed himself into a wolf; he was executed on 15 October 1580. Coloured pen drawing, Johann Jakob Wick, Sammlung von Nachrichten zur Zeitgeschichte aus den Jahren. 1560–1587

A peak of attention to lycanthropy came in the late 16th to early 17th century, as part of the European witch-hunts. A number of treatises on werewolves were written in France during 1595 and 1615. Werewolves were sighted in 1598 in Anjou, and a teenage werewolf was sentenced to life imprisonment in Bordeaux in 1603. Henry Boguet wrote a lengthy chapter about werewolves in 1602. In the Vaud, werewolves were convicted in 1602 and in 1624. A treatise by a Vaud pastor in 1653, however, argued that lycanthropy was purely an illusion. After this, the only further record from the Vaud dates to 1670: it is that of a boy who claimed he and his mother could change themselves into wolves, which was, however, not taken seriously. At the beginning of the 17th century witchcraft was prosecuted by James I of England, who regarded "warwoolfes" as victims of delusion induced by "a natural superabundance of melancholic".[46] After 1650, belief in Lycanthropy had mostly disappeared from French-speaking Europe, as evidenced in Diderot's Encyclopedia, which attributed reports of lycanthropy to a "disorder of the brain",[47] although there were continuing reports of extraordinary wolflike beasts but they were not considered to be werewolves. One such report concerned the Beast of Gévaudan which terrorized the general area of the former province of Gévaudan, now called Lozère, in south-central France; from the years 1764 to 1767, it killed upwards of 80 men, women, and children. The part of Europe which showed more vigorous interest in werewolves after 1650 was the Holy Roman Empire. At least nine works on lycanthropy were printed in Germany between 1649 and 1679. In the Austrian and Bavarian Alps, belief in werewolves persisted well into the 18th century.[48] In any case, as late as in 1853, in Galicia, northwestern Spain, Manuel Blanco Romasanta was judged and condemned as the author of a number of murders, but he claimed to be not guilty because of his condition of lobishome, werewolf.

Until the 20th century, wolf attacks on humans were an occasional, but still widespread, feature of life in Europe.[49] Some scholars have suggested that it was inevitable that wolves, being the most feared predators in Europe, were projected into the folklore of evil shapeshifters. This is said to be corroborated by the fact that areas devoid of wolves typically use different kinds of predator to fill the niche; werehyenas in Africa, weretigers in India,[43] as well as werepumas ("runa uturuncu")[50][51] and werejaguars ("yaguaraté-abá" or "tigre-capiango")[52][53] in southern South America.

An idea is explored in Sabine Baring-Gould's work The Book of Werewolves is that werewolf legends may have been used to explain serial killings. Perhaps the most infamous example is the case of Peter Stumpp (executed in 1589), the German farmer, and alleged serial killer and cannibal, also known as the Werewolf of Bedburg.[54]

Asian cultures

Common Turkic folklore holds a different, reverential light to the werewolf legends in that Turkic Central Asian shamans after performing long and arduous rites would voluntarily be able to transform into the humanoid "Kurtadam" (literally meaning Wolfman). Since the wolf was the totemic ancestor animal of the Turkic peoples, they would be respectful of any shaman who was in such a form.

Lycanthropy as a medical condition

Some modern researchers have tried to explain the reports of werewolf behaviour with recognised medical conditions. Dr Lee Illis of Guy's Hospital in London wrote a paper in 1963 entitled On Porphyria and the Aetiology of Werewolves, in which he argues that historical accounts on werewolves could have in fact been referring to victims of congenital porphyria, stating how the symptoms of photosensitivity, reddish teeth and psychosis could have been grounds for accusing a sufferer of being a werewolf.[55] This is however argued against by Woodward, who points out how mythological werewolves were almost invariably portrayed as resembling true wolves, and that their human forms were rarely physically conspicuous as porphyria victims.[43] Others have pointed out the possibility of historical werewolves having been sufferers of hypertrichosis, a hereditary condition manifesting itself in excessive hair growth. However, Woodward dismissed the possibility, as the rarity of the disease ruled it out from happening on a large scale, as werewolf cases were in medieval Europe.[43]

People suffering from Down syndrome have been suggested by some scholars to have been possible originators of werewolf myths.[56] Woodward suggested rabies as the origin of werewolf beliefs, claiming remarkable similarities between the symptoms of that disease and some of the legends. Woodward focused on the idea that being bitten by a werewolf could result in the victim turning into one, which suggested the idea of a transmittable disease like rabies.[43] However, the idea that lycanthropy could be transmitted in this way is not part of the original myths and legends and only appears in relatively recent beliefs. Lycanthropy can also be met with as the main content of a delusion, for example, the case of a woman has been reported who during episodes of acute psychosis complained of becoming four different species of animals.[57]

Folk beliefs

Characteristics

 
A German woodcut from 1722

The beliefs classed together under lycanthropy are far from uniform, and the term is somewhat capriciously applied. The transformation may be temporary or permanent; the were-animal may be the man himself metamorphosed; may be his double whose activity leaves the real man to all appearance unchanged; may be his soul, which goes forth seeking whomever it may devour, leaving its body in a state of trance; or it may be no more than the messenger of the human being, a real animal or a familiar spirit, whose intimate connection with its owner is shown by the fact that any injury to it is believed, by a phenomenon known as repercussion, to cause a corresponding injury to the human being.

Werewolves were said in European folklore to bear tell-tale physical traits even in their human form. These included the meeting of both eyebrows at the bridge of the nose, curved fingernails, low-set ears and a swinging stride. One method of identifying a werewolf in its human form was to cut the flesh of the accused, under the pretense that fur would be seen within the wound. A Russian superstition recalls a werewolf can be recognized by bristles under the tongue.[43] The appearance of a werewolf in its animal form varies from culture to culture, though it is most commonly portrayed as being indistinguishable from ordinary wolves save for the fact that it has no tail (a trait thought characteristic of witches in animal form), is often larger, and retains human eyes and a voice. According to some Swedish accounts, the werewolf could be distinguished from a regular wolf by the fact that it would run on three legs, stretching the fourth one backwards to look like a tail.[58] After returning to their human forms, werewolves are usually documented as becoming weak, debilitated and undergoing painful nervous depression.[43] One universally reviled trait in medieval Europe was the werewolf's habit of devouring recently buried corpses, a trait that is documented extensively, particularly in the Annales Medico-psychologiques in the 19th century.[43]

Becoming a werewolf

Various methods for becoming a werewolf have been reported, one of the simplest being the removal of clothing and putting on a belt made of wolfskin, probably as a substitute for the assumption of an entire animal skin (which also is frequently described).[59] In other cases, the body is rubbed with a magic salve.[59] Drinking rainwater out of the footprint of the animal in question or from certain enchanted streams were also considered effectual modes of accomplishing metamorphosis.[60] The 16th-century Swedish writer Olaus Magnus says that the Livonian werewolves were initiated by draining a cup of specially prepared beer and repeating a set formula. Ralston in his Songs of the Russian People gives the form of incantation still familiar in Russia. In Italy, France and Germany, it was said that a man or woman could turn into a werewolf if he or she, on a certain Wednesday or Friday, slept outside on a summer night with the full moon shining directly on his or her face.[43]

In other cases, the transformation was supposedly accomplished by Satanic allegiance for the most loathsome ends, often for the sake of sating a craving for human flesh. "The werewolves", writes Richard Verstegan (Restitution of Decayed Intelligence, 1628),

are certayne sorcerers, who having annoynted their bodies with an ointment which they make by the instinct of the devil, and putting on a certayne inchaunted girdle, does not only unto the view of others seem as wolves, but to their own thinking have both the shape and nature of wolves, so long as they wear the said girdle. And they do dispose themselves as very wolves, in worrying and killing, and most of humane creatures.

The phenomenon of repercussion, the power of animal metamorphosis, or of sending out a familiar, real or spiritual, as a messenger, and the supernormal powers conferred by association with such a familiar, are also attributed to the magician, male and female, all the world over; and witch superstitions are closely parallel to, if not identical with, lycanthropic beliefs, the occasional involuntary character of lycanthropy being almost the sole distinguishing feature. In another direction the phenomenon of repercussion is asserted to manifest itself in connection with the bush-soul of the West African and the nagual of Central America; but though there is no line of demarcation to be drawn on logical grounds, the assumed power of the magician and the intimate association of the bush-soul or the nagual with a human being are not termed lycanthropy.

The curse of lycanthropy was also considered by some scholars as being a divine punishment. Werewolf literature shows many examples of God or saints allegedly cursing those who invoked their wrath with lycanthropy. Such is the case of Lycaon, who was turned into a wolf by Zeus as punishment for slaughtering one of his own sons and serving his remains to the gods as a dinner. Those who were excommunicated by the Roman Catholic Church were also said to become werewolves.[43]

The power of transforming others into wild beasts was attributed not only to malignant sorcerers, but to Christian saints as well. Omnes angeli, boni et Mali, ex virtute naturali habent potestatem transmutandi corpora nostra ("All angels, good and bad, have the power of transmutating our bodies") was the dictum of St. Thomas Aquinas. St. Patrick was said to have transformed the Welsh King Vereticus into a wolf; Natalis supposedly cursed an illustrious Irish family whose members were each doomed to be a wolf for seven years. In other tales the divine agency is even more direct, while in Russia, again, men supposedly became werewolves when incurring the wrath of the Devil.

A notable exception to the association of Lycanthropy and the Devil, comes from a rare and lesser known account of an 80-year-old man named Thiess. In 1692, in Jürgensburg, Livonia, Thiess testified under oath that he and other werewolves were the Hounds of God.[61] He claimed they were warriors who descended into hell to battle witches and demons. Their efforts ensured that the Devil and his minions did not carry off the grain from local failed crops down to hell. Thiess was ultimately sentenced to ten lashes for idolatry and superstitious belief.

Remedies

Various methods have existed for removing the werewolf form. In antiquity, the Ancient Greeks and Romans believed in the power of exhaustion in curing people of lycanthropy. The victim would be subjected to long periods of physical activity in the hope of being purged of the malady. This practice stemmed from the fact that many alleged werewolves would be left feeling weak and debilitated after committing depredations.[43]

In medieval Europe, traditionally, there are three methods one can use to cure a victim of lycanthropy; medicinally (usually via the use of wolfsbane), surgically, or by exorcism. However, many of the cures advocated by medieval medical practitioners proved fatal to the patients. A Sicilian belief of Arabic origin holds that a werewolf can be cured of its ailment by striking it on the forehead or scalp with a knife. Another belief from the same culture involves the piercing of the werewolf's hands with nails. Sometimes, less extreme methods were used. In the German lowland of Schleswig-Holstein, a werewolf could be cured if one were to simply address it three times by its Christian name, while one Danish belief holds that merely scolding a werewolf will cure it.[43] Conversion to Christianity is also a common method of removing lycanthropy in the medieval period; a devotion to St. Hubert has also been cited as both cure for and protection from lycanthropes.

Connection to revenants

Before the end of the 19th century, the Greeks believed that the corpses of werewolves, if not destroyed, would return to life in the form of wolves or hyenas which prowled battlefields, drinking the blood of dying soldiers. In the same vein, in some rural areas of Germany, Poland and Northern France, it was once believed that people who died in mortal sin came back to life as blood-drinking wolves. These "undead" werewolves would return to their human corpse form at daylight. They were dealt with by decapitation with a spade and exorcism by the parish priest. The head would then be thrown into a stream, where the weight of its sins was thought to weigh it down. Sometimes, the same methods used to dispose of ordinary vampires would be used. The vampire was also linked to the werewolf in East European countries, particularly Bulgaria, Serbia and Slovenia. In Serbia, the werewolf and vampire are known collectively as vulkodlak.[43]

Hungary and Balkans

In Hungarian folklore, the werewolves used to live specially in the region of Transdanubia, and it was thought that the ability to change into a wolf was obtained in the infant age, after the suffering of abuse by the parents or by a curse. At the age of seven the boy or the girl leaves the house, goes hunting by night and can change to a person or wolf whenever he wants. The curse can also be obtained when in the adulthood the person passed three times through an arch made of a Birch with the help of a wild rose's spine.

The werewolves were known to exterminate all kind of farm animals, especially sheep. The transformation usually occurred during the winter solstice, Easter and a full moon. Later in the 17th and 18th century, the trials in Hungary not only were conducted against witches, but against werewolves too, and many records exist creating connections between both kinds. Also the vampires and werewolves are closely related in Hungary, being both feared in the antiquity.[62]

Among the South Slavs, and also among the ethnic Kashubian people in present-day northern Poland, there was the belief that if a child was born with hair, a birthmark or a caul on their head, they were supposed to possess shapeshifting abilities. Though capable of turning into any animal they wished, it was commonly believed that such people preferred to turn into a wolf.[63]

Serbian vukodlaks traditionally had the habit of congregating annually in the winter months, when they would strip off their wolf skins and hang them from trees. They would then get a hold of another vulkodlak's skin and burn it, releasing from its curse the vukodlak from whom the skin came.[43]

Caucasus

According to Armenian lore, there are women who, in consequence of deadly sins, are condemned to spend seven years in wolf form.[64] In a typical account, a condemned woman is visited by a wolfskin-toting spirit, who orders her to wear the skin, which causes her to acquire frightful cravings for human flesh soon after. With her better nature overcome, the she-wolf devours each of her own children, then her relatives' children in order of relationship, and finally the children of strangers. She wanders only at night, with doors and locks springing open at her approach. When morning arrives, she reverts to human form and removes her wolfskin. The transformation is generally said to be involuntary, but there are alternate versions involving voluntary metamorphosis, where the women can transform at will.

Americas and Caribbean

The Naskapis believed that the caribou afterlife is guarded by giant wolves which kill careless hunters venturing too near. The Navajo people feared witches in wolf's clothing called "Mai-cob".[56] Woodward thought that these beliefs were due to the Norse colonization of the Americas.[43] When the European colonization of the Americas occurred, the pioneers brought their own werewolf folklore with them and were later influenced by the lore of their neighbouring colonies and those of the Natives. Belief in the loup-garou present in Canada (thence Acadiana[citation needed]), the Upper and Lower Peninsulas of Michigan[65] and upstate New York, originates from French folklore influenced by Native American stories on the Wendigo. In Mexico, there is a belief in a creature called the nagual. In Haiti, there is a superstition that werewolf spirits known locally as Jé-rouge (red eyes) can possess the bodies of unwitting persons and nightly transform them into cannibalistic lupine creatures. The Haitian jé-rouges typically try to trick mothers into giving away their children voluntarily by waking them at night and asking their permission to take their child, to which the disoriented mother may either reply yes or no. The Haitian jé-rouges differ from traditional European werewolves by their habit of actively trying to spread their lycanthropic condition to others, much like vampires.[43]

Modern reception

Werewolf fiction

 
The Were-Wolf by Clemence Housman

Most modern fiction describes werewolves as vulnerable to silver weapons and highly resistant to other injuries. This feature appears in German folklore of the 19th century.[66] The claim that the Beast of Gévaudan, an 18th-century wolf or wolflike creature, was shot by a silver bullet appears to have been introduced by novelists retelling the story from 1935 onwards and not in earlier versions.[67][68][69] English folklore, prior to 1865, showed shapeshifters to be vulnerable to silver. "...till the publican shot a silver button over their heads when they were instantly transformed into two ill-favoured old ladies..."[70] c. 1640 the city of Greifswald, Germany was infested by werewolves. "A clever lad suggested that they gather all their silver buttons, goblets, belt buckles, and so forth, and melt them down into bullets for their muskets and pistols. ... this time they slaughtered the creatures and rid Greifswald of the lycanthropes."[71]

The 1897 novel Dracula and the short story "Dracula's Guest", both written by Bram Stoker, drew on earlier mythologies of werewolves and similar legendary demons and "was to voice the anxieties of an age", and the "fears of late Victorian patriarchy".[72] In "Dracula's Guest," a band of military horsemen coming to the aid of the protagonist chase off Dracula, depicted as a great wolf stating the only way to kill it is by a "Sacred Bullet".[73] This is also mentioned in the main novel Dracula as well. Count Dracula stated in the novel that legends of werewolves originated from his Szekely racial bloodline,[74] who himself is also depicted with the ability to shapeshift into a wolf at will during the night but is unable to do so during the day except at noon.[75]

The 1928 novel The Wolf's Bride: A Tale from Estonia, written by the Finnish author Aino Kallas, tells story of the forester Priidik's wife Aalo living in Hiiumaa in the 17th century, who became a werewolf under the influence of a malevolent forest spirit, also known as Diabolus Sylvarum.[76]

The first feature film to use an anthropomorphic werewolf was Werewolf of London in 1935. The main werewolf of this film is a dapper London scientist who retains some of his style and most of his human features after his transformation,[77] as lead actor Henry Hull was unwilling to spend long hours being made up by makeup artist Jack Pierce.[78] Universal Studios drew on a Balkan tale of a plant associated with lycanthropy as there was no literary work to draw upon, unlike the case with vampires. There is no reference to silver nor other aspects of werewolf lore such as cannibalism.[79]

A more tragic character is Lawrence Talbot, played by Lon Chaney Jr. in 1941's The Wolf Man. With Pierce's makeup more elaborate this time,[80] the movie catapulted the werewolf into public consciousness.[77] Sympathetic portrayals are few but notable, such as the comedic but tortured protagonist David Naughton in An American Werewolf in London,[81] and a less anguished and more confident and charismatic Jack Nicholson in the 1994 film Wolf.[82] Over time, the depiction of werewolves has gone from fully malevolent to even heroic creatures, such as in the Underworld and Twilight series, as well as Blood Lad, Dance in the Vampire Bund, Rosario + Vampire, and various other movies, anime, manga, and comic books.

Other werewolves are decidedly more willful and malevolent, such as those in the novel The Howling and its subsequent sequels and film adaptations. The form a werewolf assumes was generally anthropomorphic in early films such as The Wolf Man and Werewolf of London, but a larger and powerful wolf in many later films.[83]

Werewolves are often depicted as immune to damage caused by ordinary weapons, being vulnerable only to silver objects, such as a silver-tipped cane, bullet or blade; this attribute was first adopted cinematically in The Wolf Man.[80] This negative reaction to silver is sometimes so strong that the mere touch of the metal on a werewolf's skin will cause burns. Current-day werewolf fiction almost exclusively involves lycanthropy being either a hereditary condition or being transmitted like an infectious disease by the bite of another werewolf. In some fiction, the power of the werewolf extends to human form, such as invulnerability to conventional injury due to their healing factor, superhuman speed and strength and falling on their feet from high falls. Also aggressiveness and animalistic urges may be intensified and more difficult to control (hunger, sexual arousal). Usually in these cases the abilities are diminished in human form. In other fiction it can be cured by medicine men or antidotes.

Along with the vulnerability to the silver bullet, the full moon being the cause of the transformation only became part of the depiction of werewolves on a widespread basis in the twentieth century.[84] The first movie to feature the transformative effect of the full moon was Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man in 1943.[85]

The video game The Quarry greatly altered the transformation process of the werewolf. In the game, a character infected by a werewolf will eventually transform instantly into a werewolf as their body seems to explode. At the end of the full moon night, they will revert to their human form in a similar manner.

Werewolves are typically envisioned as "working-class" monsters, often being low in socio-economic status, although they can represent a variety of social classes and at times were seen as a way of representing "aristocratic decadence" during 19th century horror literature.[86][87][88]

Nazi Germany

Nazi Germany used Werwolf, as the mythical creature's name is spelled in German, in 1942–43 as the codename for one of Hitler's headquarters. In the war's final days, the Nazi "Operation Werwolf" aimed at creating a commando force that would operate behind enemy lines as the Allies advanced through Germany itself.

Two fictional depictions of "Operation Werwolf"—the US television series True Blood and the 2012 novel Wolf Hunter by J. L. Benét—mix the two meanings of "Werwolf" by depicting the 1945 diehard Nazi commandos as being actual werewolves.[89]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Also spelled werwolf. Usually pronounced /ˈwɛərwʊlf/ WAIR-wuulf, but also sometimes /ˈwɪərwʊlf/ WEER-wuulf or /ˈwɜːrwʊlf/ WUR-wuulf.
  2. ^ Pronounced /ˈlkənθrp/ LY-kən-throhp.
  3. ^ "... the motif of the full moon is a modern invention, since historical sources do not mention it as an instigator of metamorphosis." (de Blécourt 2015, pp. 3–4).
  4. ^ Pronounced /lˈkænθrəpi/ ly-KAN-thrə-pee.
  5. ^ Lorey (2000) records 280 known cases; this contrasts with a total number of 12,000 recorded cases of executions for witchcraft, or an estimated grand total of about 60,000, corresponding to 2% or 0.5% respectively. The recorded cases span the period of 1407 to 1725, peaking during the period of 1575–1657.
  6. ^ Lorey (2000) records six trials in the period 1701 and 1725, all in either Styria or Carinthia; 1701 Paul Perwolf of Wolfsburg, Obdach, Styria (executed); 1705 "Vlastl" of Murau, Styria (verdict unknown); 1705/6 six beggars in Wolfsberg, Carinthia (executed); 1707/8 three shepherds in Leoben and Freyenstein, Styria (one lynching, two probable executions); 1718 Jakob Kranawitter, a mentally retarded beggar, in Rotenfel, Oberwolz, Styria (corporeal punishment); 1725: Paul Schäffer, beggar of St. Leonhard im Lavanttal, Carinthia (executed).

Citations

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  4. ^ West 2007, p. 450.
  5. ^ de Vries 1962, p. 646.
  6. ^ a b c DEAF G:334–338.
  7. ^ FEW 17:569.
  8. ^ Nichols 1987, p. 170.
  9. ^ a b Butler 2005, pp. 237–238.
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References

Secondary sources

Primary sources

  • Wolfeshusius, Johannes Fridericus. De Lycanthropia: An vere illi, ut fama est, luporum & aliarum bestiarum formis induantur. Problema philosophicum pro sententia Joan. Bodini ... adversus dissentaneas aliquorum opiniones noviter assertum... Leipzig: Typis Abrahami Lambergi, 1591. (In Latin; microfilm held by the United States National Library of Medicine)
  • Prieur, Claude. Dialogue de la Lycanthropie: Ou transformation d'hommes en loups, vulgairement dits loups-garous, et si telle se peut faire. Louvain: J. Maes & P. Zangre, 1596.
  • Bourquelot and Jean de Nynauld, De la Lycanthropie, Transformation et Extase des Sorciers (Paris, 1615).
  • Summers, Montague, The Werewolf London: K. Paul, Trench, Trubner, 1933. (1st edition, reissued 1934 New York: E. P. Dutton; 1966 New Hyde Park, N.Y.: University Books; 1973 Secaucus, N.J.: Citadel Press; 2003 Mineola, N.Y.: Dover, with new title The Werewolf in Lore and Legend). ISBN 0-7661-3210-2

Further reading

  • Baring-Gould, Sabine (1865). The Book of Werewolves: Being an Account of a Terrible Superstition. London: Smith, Elder & Co. Google Books
  • Grimm, Deutsche Mythologie, 4, ii. and iii.
  • Hertz, Der Werwolf (Stuttgart, 1862)
  • Leubuscher, Über die Wehrwölfe (1850)
  • O'Donnell, Elliot (1912). Werewolves.
  • Sconduto, Leslie A. Metamorphoses of the werewolf: a literary study from antiquity through the Renaissance.
  • Stewart, Caroline Taylor (1909). The origin of the werewolf superstition. University of Missouri Studies. ISBN 9780524023778.
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Werwolf" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.

External links

werewolf, several, terms, redirect, here, other, uses, disambiguation, wolf, disambiguation, lycanthrope, disambiguation, lycanthropy, disambiguation, folklore, werewolf, from, english, werwulf, wolf, occasionally, lycanthrope, from, ancient, greek, λυκάνθρωπο. Several terms redirect here For other uses see Werewolf disambiguation Wolf man disambiguation Lycanthrope disambiguation and Lycanthropy disambiguation In folklore a werewolf a from Old English werwulf man wolf or occasionally lycanthrope b from Ancient Greek lykan8rwpos lukanthrōpos wolf human is an individual that can shapeshift into a wolf or especially in modern film a therianthropic hybrid wolf like creature either purposely or after being placed under a curse or affliction often a bite or the occasional scratch from another werewolf with the transformations occurring on the night of a full moon c Early sources for belief in this ability or affliction called lycanthropy d are Petronius 27 66 and Gervase of Tilbury 1150 1228 WerewolfWoodcut of a werewolf attack by Lucas Cranach der Altere 1512GroupingMythologyOther name s LycanthropeThe werewolf is a widespread concept in European folklore existing in many variants which are related by a common development of a Christian interpretation of underlying European folklore developed during the medieval period From the early modern period werewolf beliefs also spread to the New World with colonialism Belief in werewolves developed in parallel to the belief in witches in the course of the Late Middle Ages and the early modern period Like the witchcraft trials as a whole the trial of supposed werewolves emerged in what is now Switzerland especially the Valais and Vaud in the early 15th century and spread throughout Europe in the 16th peaking in the 17th and subsiding by the 18th century The persecution of werewolves and the associated folklore is an integral part of the witch hunt phenomenon albeit a marginal one accusations of lycanthropy being involved in only a small fraction of witchcraft trials e During the early period accusations of lycanthropy transformation into a wolf were mixed with accusations of wolf riding or wolf charming The case of Peter Stumpp 1589 led to a significant peak in both interest in and persecution of supposed werewolves primarily in French speaking and German speaking Europe The phenomenon persisted longest in Bavaria and Austria with persecution of wolf charmers recorded until well after 1650 the final cases taking place in the early 18th century in Carinthia and Styria f After the end of the witch trials the werewolf became of interest in folklore studies and in the emerging Gothic horror genre werewolf fiction as a genre has pre modern precedents in medieval romances e g Bisclavret and Guillaume de Palerme code fra promoted to code fr and developed in the 18th century out of the semi fictional chapbook tradition The trappings of horror literature in the 20th century became part of the horror and fantasy genre of modern popular culture Contents 1 Names 2 History 2 1 Indo European comparative mythology 2 2 Classical antiquity 2 3 Middle Ages 2 4 Early modern history 2 5 Asian cultures 3 Lycanthropy as a medical condition 4 Folk beliefs 4 1 Characteristics 4 2 Becoming a werewolf 4 3 Remedies 4 4 Connection to revenants 4 5 Hungary and Balkans 4 6 Caucasus 4 7 Americas and Caribbean 5 Modern reception 5 1 Werewolf fiction 5 2 Nazi Germany 6 See also 7 Notes 8 Citations 9 References 9 1 Secondary sources 9 2 Primary sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksNamesThe Modern English werewolf descends from the Old English werewulf which is a cognate linguistic sibling of the same origin of Middle Dutch weerwolf Middle Low German werwulf Middle High German werwolf and West Frisian waer ul e These terms are generally derived from a Proto Germanic form reconstructed as wira wulfaz man wolf itself from an earlier Pre Germanic form wiro wulpos 1 2 3 An alternative reconstruction wazi wulfaz wolf clothed would bring the Germanic compound closer to the Slavic meaning 1 with other semantic parallels in Old Norse ulfhednar wolf skinned and ulfhedinn wolf coat Old Irish luchthonn wolf skin and Sanskrit Vṛkajina Wolf skin 4 The Norse branch underwent taboo modifications with Old Norse vargulfr only attested as a translation of Old French garwaf garwal f from Marie s lay of Bisclavret replacing wiraz man with vargr wolf outlaw perhaps under the influence of the Old French expression leus warous lous garous modern loup garou which literally means wolf werewolf 5 6 The modern Norse forms varulv Danish Norwegian and varulf Swedish were either borrowed from Middle Low German werwulf 6 or else derived from an unattested Old Norse varulfr posited as the regular descendant of Proto Germanic wira wulfaz 2 An Old Frankish form werwolf is inferred from the Middle Low German variant and was most likely borrowed into Old Norman garwa l f garo u l with regular Germanic Romance correspondance w g cf William Guillaume Wales Galles etc 7 6 The Proto Slavic noun vlko dlak meaning wolf haired cf dlaka animal hair fur 1 can be reconstructed from Serbian vukodlak Slovenian volkodlȃk and Czech vlkodlak although formal variations in Slavic languages vrdl j ak vlkdolk vlklak and the late attestation of some forms pose difficulties in tracing the origin of the term 8 9 The Greek Vrykolakas and Romanian Vircolac designating vampire like creatures in Balkan folklores were borrowed from Slavic languages 10 11 The same form is also found in other non Slavic languages of the region such as Albanian vurvolak and Turkish vurkolak 11 Bulgarian vrkolak and Church Slavonic vurkolak may be interpreted as back borrowings from Greek 9 The name vurdalak vurdalak ghoul revenant first appeared in Russian poet Alexander Pushkin s work Pesni published in 1835 The source of Pushkin s distinctive form remains debated in scholarship 12 11 A Proto Celtic noun wiro ku meaning man dog has been reconstructed from Celtiberian uiroku the Old Brittonic place name Viroconium lt wiroconion place of man dogs i e werewolves the Old Irish noun ferchu male dog fierce dog and the medieval personal names Guurci Old Welsh and Gurki Old Breton Wolves were metaphorically designated as dogs in Celtic cultures 13 3 The modern term lycanthropy comes from Ancient Greek lukanthrōpia lykan8rwpia itself from lukanthrōpos lykan8rwpos meaning wolf man Ancient writers used the term solely in the context of clinical lycanthropy a condition in which the patient imagined himself to be a wolf Modern writers later used lycanthrope as a synonym of werewolf referring to a person who according to medieval superstition could assum the form of wolves 14 HistoryIndo European comparative mythology Dolon wearing a wolf skin Attic red figure vase c 460 BC The European motif of the devilish werewolf devouring human flesh harks back to a common development during the Middle Ages in the context of Christianity although stories of humans turning into wolves take their roots in earlier pre Christian beliefs 15 16 Their underlying common origin can be traced back to Proto Indo European mythology where lycanthropy is reconstructed as an aspect of the initiation of the koryos warrior class which may have included a cult focused on dogs and wolves identified with an age grade of young unmarried warriors 3 The standard comparative overview of this aspect of Indo European mythology is McCone 1987 17 Classical antiquityA few references to men changing into wolves are found in Ancient Greek literature and mythology Herodotus in his Histories 18 wrote that the Neuri a tribe he places to the north east of Scythia were all transformed into wolves once every year for several days and then changed back to their human shape This tale was also mentioned by Pomponius Mela 19 Zeus turning Lycaon into a wolf engraving by Hendrik Goltzius In the second century BC the Greek geographer Pausanias related the story of King Lycaon of Arcadia who was transformed into a wolf because he had sacrificed a child in the altar of Zeus Lycaeus 20 In the version of the legend told by Ovid in his Metamorphoses 21 when Zeus visits Lycaon disguised as a common man Lycaon wants to test if he is really a god To that end he kills a Molossian hostage and serve his entrails to Zeus Disgusted the god turns Lycaon into a wolf However in other accounts of the legend like that of Apollodorus Bibliotheca 22 Zeus blasts him and his sons with thunderbolts as punishment Pausanias also relates the story of an Arcadian man called Damarchus of Parrhasia who was turned into a wolf after tasting the entrails of a human child sacrificed to Zeus Lycaeus He was restored to human form 10 years later and went on to become an Olympic champion 23 This tale is also recounted by Pliny the Elder who calls the man Demaenetus quoting Agriopas 24 According to Pausanias this was not a one off event but that men have been transformed into wolves during the sacrifices to Zeus Lycaeus since the time of Lycaon If they abstain of tasting human flesh while being wolves they would be restored to human form nine years later but if they don t abstain they will remain wolves forever 20 Lykos Lykos of Athens was a wolf shaped hero whose shrine stood by the jurycourt and the first jurors were named after him 25 Pliny the Elder likewise recounts another tale of lycanthropy Quoting Euanthes 26 he mentions that in Arcadia once a year a man was chosen by lot from the Anthus clan The chosen man was escorted to a marsh in the area where he hung his clothes into an oak tree swam across the marsh and transformed into a wolf joining a pack for nine years If during these nine years he refrained from tasting human flesh he returned to the same marsh swam back and recovered his previous human form with nine years added to his appearance 27 Ovid also relates stories of men who roamed the woods of Arcadia in the form of wolves 28 29 Virgil in his poetic work Eclogues wrote about a man called Moeris who used herbs and poisons picked in his native Pontus to turn himself into a wolf 30 In prose the Satyricon written circa AD 60 by Gaius Petronius Arbiter one of the characters Niceros tells a story at a banquet about a friend who turned into a wolf chs 61 62 He describes the incident as follows When I look for my buddy I see he d stripped and piled his clothes by the roadside He pees in a circle round his clothes and then just like that turns into a wolf after he turned into a wolf he started howling and then ran off into the woods 31 Early Christian authors also mentioned werewolves In The City of God Augustine of Hippo gives an account similar to that found in Pliny the Elder Augustine explains that It is very generally believed that by certain witches spells men may be turned into wolves 32 Physical metamorphosis was also mentioned in the Capitulatum Episcopi attributed to the Council of Ancyra in the 4th century which became the Church s doctrinal text in relation to magic witches and transformations such as those of werewolves 33 The Capitulatum Episcopi states that Whoever believes that anything can be transformed into another species or likeness except by God Himself is beyond doubt an infidel 33 In these works of Roman writers werewolves often receive the name versipellis turnskin Augustine instead uses the phrase in lupum fuisse mutatum changed into the form of a wolf to describe the physical metamorphosis of werewolves which is similar to phrases used in the medieval period Middle Ages There is evidence of widespread belief in werewolves in medieval Europe This evidence spans much of the Continent as well as the British Isles Werewolves were mentioned in Medieval law codes such as that of King Cnut whose Ecclesiastical Ordinances inform us that the codes aim to ensure that the madly audacious werewolf do not too widely devastate nor bite too many of the spiritual flock 34 Liutprand of Cremona reports a rumor that Bajan son of Simeon I of Bulgaria could use magic to turn himself into a wolf 35 The works of Augustine of Hippo had a large influence on the development of Western Christianity and were widely read by churchmen of the medieval period and these churchmen occasionally discussed werewolves in their works Famous examples include Gerald of Wales s Werewolves of Ossory found in his Topographica Hibernica and in Gervase of Tilbury s Otia Imperiala both written for royal audiences Gervase reveals to the reader that belief in such transformations he also mentions women turning into cats and into snakes was widespread across Europe he uses the phrase que ita dinoscuntur when discussing these metamorphoses which translates to it is known Gervase who was writing in Germany also tells the reader that the transformation of men into wolves cannot be easily dismissed for in England we have often seen men change into wolves Vidimus enim frequenter in Anglia per lunationes homines in lupos mutari 36 Further evidence of the widespread belief in werewolves and other human animal transformations can be seen in theological attacks made against such beliefs Conrad of Hirsau writing in the 11th century forbids the reading of stories in which a person s reason is obscured following such a transformation 37 Conrad specifically refers to the tales of Ovid in his tract Pseudo Augustine writing in the 12th century follows Augustine of Hippo s argument that no physical transformation can be made by any but God stating that the body corporeally cannot be changed into the material limbs of any animal 38 Marie de France s poem Bisclavret c 1200 is another example in which the eponymous nobleman Bisclavret for reasons not described had to transform into a wolf every week When his treacherous wife stole his clothing needed to restore his human form he escaped the king s wolf hunt by imploring the king for mercy and accompanied the king thereafter His behavior at court was gentle until his wife and her new husband appeared at court so much so that his hateful attack on the couple was deemed justly motivated and the truth was revealed This lai a type of Breton sung poem follows many themes found within other werewolf tales the removal of clothing and attempting to refrain from the consumption of human flesh can be found in Pliny the Elder as well as in the second of Gervase of Tilbury s werewolf stories about a werewolf by the name of Chaucevaire Marie also reveals to us the existence of werewolf belief in Breton and Norman France by telling us the Franco Norman word for werewolf garwulf which she explains are common in that part of France where many men turned into werewolves 39 Gervase also supports this terminology when he tells us that the French use the term gerulfi to describe what the English call werewolves 40 Melion and Biclarel are two anonymous lais that share the theme of a werewolf knight being betrayed by his wife 41 The German word werwolf is recorded by Burchard von Worms in the 11th century and by Bertold of Regensburg in the 13th but is not recorded in all of medieval German poetry or fiction While Baring Gould argues that references to werewolves were also rare in England presumably because whatever significance the wolf men of Germanic paganism had carried the associated beliefs and practices had been successfully repressed after Christianization or if they persisted they did so outside of the sphere of literacy available to us we have sources other than those mentioned above 42 Such examples of werewolves in Ireland and the British Isles can be found in the work of the 9th century Welsh monk Nennius female werewolves appear in the Irish work Tales of the Elders from the 12th century and Welsh werewolves in the 12th to 13th century work Mabinogion Vendel period depiction of a warrior wearing a wolf skin Tierkrieger Germanic pagan traditions associated with wolf men persisted longest in the Scandinavian Viking Age Harald I of Norway is known to have had a body of Ulfhednar wolf coated men which are mentioned in the Vatnsdœla Haraldskvaedi and the Volsunga saga and resemble some werewolf legends The Ulfhednar were fighters similar to the berserkers though they dressed in wolf hides rather than those of bears and were reputed to channel the spirits of these animals to enhance effectiveness in battle 43 These warriors were resistant to pain and killed viciously in battle much like wild animals Ulfhednar and berserkers are closely associated with the Norse god Odin The Scandinavian traditions of this period may have spread to Kievan Rus giving rise to the Slavic werewolf tales The 11th century Belarusian Prince Vseslav of Polotsk was considered to have been a werewolf capable of moving at superhuman speeds as recounted in The Tale of Igor s Campaign Vseslav the prince judged men as prince he ruled towns but at night he prowled in the guise of a wolf From Kiev prowling he reached before the cocks crew Tmutorokan The path of Great Sun as a wolf prowling he crossed For him in Polotsk they rang for matins early at St Sophia the bells but he heard the ringing in Kiev The situation as described during the medieval period gives rise to the dual form of werewolf folklore in Early Modern Europe On one hand the Germanic werewolf which becomes associated with the witchcraft panic and on the other hand the Slavic werewolf or vlkolak which becomes associated with the concept of the revenant or vampire The eastern werewolf vampire is found in the folklore of Central and Eastern Europe including Hungary Romania and the Balkans while the western werewolf sorcerer is found in France German speaking Europe and in the Baltic Being a werewolf was a common accusation in witch trials throughout their history and it featured even in the Valais witch trials one of the earliest such trials altogether in the first half of the 15th century 44 Likewise in the Vaud Switzerland child eating werewolves were reported as early as 1448 citation needed In 1539 Martin Luther used the form beerwolf to describe a hypothetical ruler worse than a tyrant who must be resisted 45 Early modern history Further information Werewolf witch trials and Wolfssegen There were numerous reports of werewolf attacks and consequent court trials in 16th century France In some of the cases there was clear evidence against the accused of murder and cannibalism but no association with wolves In other cases people have been terrified by such creatures such as that of Gilles Garnier in Dole in 1573 who was convicted of being a werewolf citation needed In Geneva a man killed 16 children when he had changed himself into a wolf he was executed on 15 October 1580 Coloured pen drawing Johann Jakob Wick Sammlung von Nachrichten zur Zeitgeschichte aus den Jahren 1560 1587 A peak of attention to lycanthropy came in the late 16th to early 17th century as part of the European witch hunts A number of treatises on werewolves were written in France during 1595 and 1615 Werewolves were sighted in 1598 in Anjou and a teenage werewolf was sentenced to life imprisonment in Bordeaux in 1603 Henry Boguet wrote a lengthy chapter about werewolves in 1602 In the Vaud werewolves were convicted in 1602 and in 1624 A treatise by a Vaud pastor in 1653 however argued that lycanthropy was purely an illusion After this the only further record from the Vaud dates to 1670 it is that of a boy who claimed he and his mother could change themselves into wolves which was however not taken seriously At the beginning of the 17th century witchcraft was prosecuted by James I of England who regarded warwoolfes as victims of delusion induced by a natural superabundance of melancholic 46 After 1650 belief in Lycanthropy had mostly disappeared from French speaking Europe as evidenced in Diderot s Encyclopedia which attributed reports of lycanthropy to a disorder of the brain 47 although there were continuing reports of extraordinary wolflike beasts but they were not considered to be werewolves One such report concerned the Beast of Gevaudan which terrorized the general area of the former province of Gevaudan now called Lozere in south central France from the years 1764 to 1767 it killed upwards of 80 men women and children The part of Europe which showed more vigorous interest in werewolves after 1650 was the Holy Roman Empire At least nine works on lycanthropy were printed in Germany between 1649 and 1679 In the Austrian and Bavarian Alps belief in werewolves persisted well into the 18th century 48 In any case as late as in 1853 in Galicia northwestern Spain Manuel Blanco Romasanta was judged and condemned as the author of a number of murders but he claimed to be not guilty because of his condition of lobishome werewolf Until the 20th century wolf attacks on humans were an occasional but still widespread feature of life in Europe 49 Some scholars have suggested that it was inevitable that wolves being the most feared predators in Europe were projected into the folklore of evil shapeshifters This is said to be corroborated by the fact that areas devoid of wolves typically use different kinds of predator to fill the niche werehyenas in Africa weretigers in India 43 as well as werepumas runa uturuncu 50 51 and werejaguars yaguarate aba or tigre capiango 52 53 in southern South America An idea is explored in Sabine Baring Gould s work The Book of Werewolves is that werewolf legends may have been used to explain serial killings Perhaps the most infamous example is the case of Peter Stumpp executed in 1589 the German farmer and alleged serial killer and cannibal also known as the Werewolf of Bedburg 54 Asian cultures See also Asena and Itbarak Common Turkic folklore holds a different reverential light to the werewolf legends in that Turkic Central Asian shamans after performing long and arduous rites would voluntarily be able to transform into the humanoid Kurtadam literally meaning Wolfman Since the wolf was the totemic ancestor animal of the Turkic peoples they would be respectful of any shaman who was in such a form Lycanthropy as a medical conditionSee also Hypertrichosis and Clinical lycanthropy Some modern researchers have tried to explain the reports of werewolf behaviour with recognised medical conditions Dr Lee Illis of Guy s Hospital in London wrote a paper in 1963 entitled On Porphyria and the Aetiology of Werewolves in which he argues that historical accounts on werewolves could have in fact been referring to victims of congenital porphyria stating how the symptoms of photosensitivity reddish teeth and psychosis could have been grounds for accusing a sufferer of being a werewolf 55 This is however argued against by Woodward who points out how mythological werewolves were almost invariably portrayed as resembling true wolves and that their human forms were rarely physically conspicuous as porphyria victims 43 Others have pointed out the possibility of historical werewolves having been sufferers of hypertrichosis a hereditary condition manifesting itself in excessive hair growth However Woodward dismissed the possibility as the rarity of the disease ruled it out from happening on a large scale as werewolf cases were in medieval Europe 43 People suffering from Down syndrome have been suggested by some scholars to have been possible originators of werewolf myths 56 Woodward suggested rabies as the origin of werewolf beliefs claiming remarkable similarities between the symptoms of that disease and some of the legends Woodward focused on the idea that being bitten by a werewolf could result in the victim turning into one which suggested the idea of a transmittable disease like rabies 43 However the idea that lycanthropy could be transmitted in this way is not part of the original myths and legends and only appears in relatively recent beliefs Lycanthropy can also be met with as the main content of a delusion for example the case of a woman has been reported who during episodes of acute psychosis complained of becoming four different species of animals 57 Folk beliefsFurther information Therianthropy Characteristics A German woodcut from 1722The beliefs classed together under lycanthropy are far from uniform and the term is somewhat capriciously applied The transformation may be temporary or permanent the were animal may be the man himself metamorphosed may be his double whose activity leaves the real man to all appearance unchanged may be his soul which goes forth seeking whomever it may devour leaving its body in a state of trance or it may be no more than the messenger of the human being a real animal or a familiar spirit whose intimate connection with its owner is shown by the fact that any injury to it is believed by a phenomenon known as repercussion to cause a corresponding injury to the human being Werewolves were said in European folklore to bear tell tale physical traits even in their human form These included the meeting of both eyebrows at the bridge of the nose curved fingernails low set ears and a swinging stride One method of identifying a werewolf in its human form was to cut the flesh of the accused under the pretense that fur would be seen within the wound A Russian superstition recalls a werewolf can be recognized by bristles under the tongue 43 The appearance of a werewolf in its animal form varies from culture to culture though it is most commonly portrayed as being indistinguishable from ordinary wolves save for the fact that it has no tail a trait thought characteristic of witches in animal form is often larger and retains human eyes and a voice According to some Swedish accounts the werewolf could be distinguished from a regular wolf by the fact that it would run on three legs stretching the fourth one backwards to look like a tail 58 After returning to their human forms werewolves are usually documented as becoming weak debilitated and undergoing painful nervous depression 43 One universally reviled trait in medieval Europe was the werewolf s habit of devouring recently buried corpses a trait that is documented extensively particularly in the Annales Medico psychologiques in the 19th century 43 Becoming a werewolf Various methods for becoming a werewolf have been reported one of the simplest being the removal of clothing and putting on a belt made of wolfskin probably as a substitute for the assumption of an entire animal skin which also is frequently described 59 In other cases the body is rubbed with a magic salve 59 Drinking rainwater out of the footprint of the animal in question or from certain enchanted streams were also considered effectual modes of accomplishing metamorphosis 60 The 16th century Swedish writer Olaus Magnus says that the Livonian werewolves were initiated by draining a cup of specially prepared beer and repeating a set formula Ralston in his Songs of the Russian People gives the form of incantation still familiar in Russia In Italy France and Germany it was said that a man or woman could turn into a werewolf if he or she on a certain Wednesday or Friday slept outside on a summer night with the full moon shining directly on his or her face 43 In other cases the transformation was supposedly accomplished by Satanic allegiance for the most loathsome ends often for the sake of sating a craving for human flesh The werewolves writes Richard Verstegan Restitution of Decayed Intelligence 1628 are certayne sorcerers who having annoynted their bodies with an ointment which they make by the instinct of the devil and putting on a certayne inchaunted girdle does not only unto the view of others seem as wolves but to their own thinking have both the shape and nature of wolves so long as they wear the said girdle And they do dispose themselves as very wolves in worrying and killing and most of humane creatures The phenomenon of repercussion the power of animal metamorphosis or of sending out a familiar real or spiritual as a messenger and the supernormal powers conferred by association with such a familiar are also attributed to the magician male and female all the world over and witch superstitions are closely parallel to if not identical with lycanthropic beliefs the occasional involuntary character of lycanthropy being almost the sole distinguishing feature In another direction the phenomenon of repercussion is asserted to manifest itself in connection with the bush soul of the West African and the nagual of Central America but though there is no line of demarcation to be drawn on logical grounds the assumed power of the magician and the intimate association of the bush soul or the nagual with a human being are not termed lycanthropy The curse of lycanthropy was also considered by some scholars as being a divine punishment Werewolf literature shows many examples of God or saints allegedly cursing those who invoked their wrath with lycanthropy Such is the case of Lycaon who was turned into a wolf by Zeus as punishment for slaughtering one of his own sons and serving his remains to the gods as a dinner Those who were excommunicated by the Roman Catholic Church were also said to become werewolves 43 The power of transforming others into wild beasts was attributed not only to malignant sorcerers but to Christian saints as well Omnes angeli boni et Mali ex virtute naturali habent potestatem transmutandi corpora nostra All angels good and bad have the power of transmutating our bodies was the dictum of St Thomas Aquinas St Patrick was said to have transformed the Welsh King Vereticus into a wolf Natalis supposedly cursed an illustrious Irish family whose members were each doomed to be a wolf for seven years In other tales the divine agency is even more direct while in Russia again men supposedly became werewolves when incurring the wrath of the Devil A notable exception to the association of Lycanthropy and the Devil comes from a rare and lesser known account of an 80 year old man named Thiess In 1692 in Jurgensburg Livonia Thiess testified under oath that he and other werewolves were the Hounds of God 61 He claimed they were warriors who descended into hell to battle witches and demons Their efforts ensured that the Devil and his minions did not carry off the grain from local failed crops down to hell Thiess was ultimately sentenced to ten lashes for idolatry and superstitious belief Remedies Various methods have existed for removing the werewolf form In antiquity the Ancient Greeks and Romans believed in the power of exhaustion in curing people of lycanthropy The victim would be subjected to long periods of physical activity in the hope of being purged of the malady This practice stemmed from the fact that many alleged werewolves would be left feeling weak and debilitated after committing depredations 43 In medieval Europe traditionally there are three methods one can use to cure a victim of lycanthropy medicinally usually via the use of wolfsbane surgically or by exorcism However many of the cures advocated by medieval medical practitioners proved fatal to the patients A Sicilian belief of Arabic origin holds that a werewolf can be cured of its ailment by striking it on the forehead or scalp with a knife Another belief from the same culture involves the piercing of the werewolf s hands with nails Sometimes less extreme methods were used In the German lowland of Schleswig Holstein a werewolf could be cured if one were to simply address it three times by its Christian name while one Danish belief holds that merely scolding a werewolf will cure it 43 Conversion to Christianity is also a common method of removing lycanthropy in the medieval period a devotion to St Hubert has also been cited as both cure for and protection from lycanthropes Connection to revenants Further information Revenant Before the end of the 19th century the Greeks believed that the corpses of werewolves if not destroyed would return to life in the form of wolves or hyenas which prowled battlefields drinking the blood of dying soldiers In the same vein in some rural areas of Germany Poland and Northern France it was once believed that people who died in mortal sin came back to life as blood drinking wolves These undead werewolves would return to their human corpse form at daylight They were dealt with by decapitation with a spade and exorcism by the parish priest The head would then be thrown into a stream where the weight of its sins was thought to weigh it down Sometimes the same methods used to dispose of ordinary vampires would be used The vampire was also linked to the werewolf in East European countries particularly Bulgaria Serbia and Slovenia In Serbia the werewolf and vampire are known collectively as vulkodlak 43 Hungary and Balkans In Hungarian folklore the werewolves used to live specially in the region of Transdanubia and it was thought that the ability to change into a wolf was obtained in the infant age after the suffering of abuse by the parents or by a curse At the age of seven the boy or the girl leaves the house goes hunting by night and can change to a person or wolf whenever he wants The curse can also be obtained when in the adulthood the person passed three times through an arch made of a Birch with the help of a wild rose s spine The werewolves were known to exterminate all kind of farm animals especially sheep The transformation usually occurred during the winter solstice Easter and a full moon Later in the 17th and 18th century the trials in Hungary not only were conducted against witches but against werewolves too and many records exist creating connections between both kinds Also the vampires and werewolves are closely related in Hungary being both feared in the antiquity 62 Among the South Slavs and also among the ethnic Kashubian people in present day northern Poland there was the belief that if a child was born with hair a birthmark or a caul on their head they were supposed to possess shapeshifting abilities Though capable of turning into any animal they wished it was commonly believed that such people preferred to turn into a wolf 63 Serbian vukodlaks traditionally had the habit of congregating annually in the winter months when they would strip off their wolf skins and hang them from trees They would then get a hold of another vulkodlak s skin and burn it releasing from its curse the vukodlak from whom the skin came 43 Caucasus According to Armenian lore there are women who in consequence of deadly sins are condemned to spend seven years in wolf form 64 In a typical account a condemned woman is visited by a wolfskin toting spirit who orders her to wear the skin which causes her to acquire frightful cravings for human flesh soon after With her better nature overcome the she wolf devours each of her own children then her relatives children in order of relationship and finally the children of strangers She wanders only at night with doors and locks springing open at her approach When morning arrives she reverts to human form and removes her wolfskin The transformation is generally said to be involuntary but there are alternate versions involving voluntary metamorphosis where the women can transform at will Americas and Caribbean Main article Skin walker See also Soucouyant and Rougarou The Naskapis believed that the caribou afterlife is guarded by giant wolves which kill careless hunters venturing too near The Navajo people feared witches in wolf s clothing called Mai cob 56 Woodward thought that these beliefs were due to the Norse colonization of the Americas 43 When the European colonization of the Americas occurred the pioneers brought their own werewolf folklore with them and were later influenced by the lore of their neighbouring colonies and those of the Natives Belief in the loup garou present in Canada thence Acadiana citation needed the Upper and Lower Peninsulas of Michigan 65 and upstate New York originates from French folklore influenced by Native American stories on the Wendigo In Mexico there is a belief in a creature called the nagual In Haiti there is a superstition that werewolf spirits known locally as Je rouge red eyes can possess the bodies of unwitting persons and nightly transform them into cannibalistic lupine creatures The Haitian je rouges typically try to trick mothers into giving away their children voluntarily by waking them at night and asking their permission to take their child to which the disoriented mother may either reply yes or no The Haitian je rouges differ from traditional European werewolves by their habit of actively trying to spread their lycanthropic condition to others much like vampires 43 Modern receptionWerewolf fiction Main article Werewolf fiction The Were Wolf by Clemence Housman Most modern fiction describes werewolves as vulnerable to silver weapons and highly resistant to other injuries This feature appears in German folklore of the 19th century 66 The claim that the Beast of Gevaudan an 18th century wolf or wolflike creature was shot by a silver bullet appears to have been introduced by novelists retelling the story from 1935 onwards and not in earlier versions 67 68 69 English folklore prior to 1865 showed shapeshifters to be vulnerable to silver till the publican shot a silver button over their heads when they were instantly transformed into two ill favoured old ladies 70 c 1640 the city of Greifswald Germany was infested by werewolves A clever lad suggested that they gather all their silver buttons goblets belt buckles and so forth and melt them down into bullets for their muskets and pistols this time they slaughtered the creatures and rid Greifswald of the lycanthropes 71 The 1897 novel Dracula and the short story Dracula s Guest both written by Bram Stoker drew on earlier mythologies of werewolves and similar legendary demons and was to voice the anxieties of an age and the fears of late Victorian patriarchy 72 In Dracula s Guest a band of military horsemen coming to the aid of the protagonist chase off Dracula depicted as a great wolf stating the only way to kill it is by a Sacred Bullet 73 This is also mentioned in the main novel Dracula as well Count Dracula stated in the novel that legends of werewolves originated from his Szekely racial bloodline 74 who himself is also depicted with the ability to shapeshift into a wolf at will during the night but is unable to do so during the day except at noon 75 The 1928 novel The Wolf s Bride A Tale from Estonia written by the Finnish author Aino Kallas tells story of the forester Priidik s wife Aalo living in Hiiumaa in the 17th century who became a werewolf under the influence of a malevolent forest spirit also known as Diabolus Sylvarum 76 The first feature film to use an anthropomorphic werewolf was Werewolf of London in 1935 The main werewolf of this film is a dapper London scientist who retains some of his style and most of his human features after his transformation 77 as lead actor Henry Hull was unwilling to spend long hours being made up by makeup artist Jack Pierce 78 Universal Studios drew on a Balkan tale of a plant associated with lycanthropy as there was no literary work to draw upon unlike the case with vampires There is no reference to silver nor other aspects of werewolf lore such as cannibalism 79 A more tragic character is Lawrence Talbot played by Lon Chaney Jr in 1941 s The Wolf Man With Pierce s makeup more elaborate this time 80 the movie catapulted the werewolf into public consciousness 77 Sympathetic portrayals are few but notable such as the comedic but tortured protagonist David Naughton in An American Werewolf in London 81 and a less anguished and more confident and charismatic Jack Nicholson in the 1994 film Wolf 82 Over time the depiction of werewolves has gone from fully malevolent to even heroic creatures such as in the Underworld and Twilight series as well as Blood Lad Dance in the Vampire Bund Rosario Vampire and various other movies anime manga and comic books Other werewolves are decidedly more willful and malevolent such as those in the novel The Howling and its subsequent sequels and film adaptations The form a werewolf assumes was generally anthropomorphic in early films such as The Wolf Man and Werewolf of London but a larger and powerful wolf in many later films 83 Werewolves are often depicted as immune to damage caused by ordinary weapons being vulnerable only to silver objects such as a silver tipped cane bullet or blade this attribute was first adopted cinematically in The Wolf Man 80 This negative reaction to silver is sometimes so strong that the mere touch of the metal on a werewolf s skin will cause burns Current day werewolf fiction almost exclusively involves lycanthropy being either a hereditary condition or being transmitted like an infectious disease by the bite of another werewolf In some fiction the power of the werewolf extends to human form such as invulnerability to conventional injury due to their healing factor superhuman speed and strength and falling on their feet from high falls Also aggressiveness and animalistic urges may be intensified and more difficult to control hunger sexual arousal Usually in these cases the abilities are diminished in human form In other fiction it can be cured by medicine men or antidotes Along with the vulnerability to the silver bullet the full moon being the cause of the transformation only became part of the depiction of werewolves on a widespread basis in the twentieth century 84 The first movie to feature the transformative effect of the full moon was Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man in 1943 85 The video game The Quarry greatly altered the transformation process of the werewolf In the game a character infected by a werewolf will eventually transform instantly into a werewolf as their body seems to explode At the end of the full moon night they will revert to their human form in a similar manner Werewolves are typically envisioned as working class monsters often being low in socio economic status although they can represent a variety of social classes and at times were seen as a way of representing aristocratic decadence during 19th century horror literature 86 87 88 Nazi Germany Nazi Germany used Werwolf as the mythical creature s name is spelled in German in 1942 43 as the codename for one of Hitler s headquarters In the war s final days the Nazi Operation Werwolf aimed at creating a commando force that would operate behind enemy lines as the Allies advanced through Germany itself Two fictional depictions of Operation Werwolf the US television series True Blood and the 2012 novel Wolf Hunter by J L Benet mix the two meanings of Werwolf by depicting the 1945 diehard Nazi commandos as being actual werewolves 89 See alsoAsena Damarchus Keibu Keioiba Kitsune Nagual Pricolici Werecat Wulver Werewolf witch trialsNotes Also spelled werwolf Usually pronounced ˈ w ɛer w ʊ l f WAIR wuulf but also sometimes ˈ w ɪer w ʊ l f WEER wuulf or ˈ w ɜːr w ʊ l f WUR wuulf Pronounced ˈ l aɪ k en 8 r oʊ p LY ken throhp the motif of the full moon is a modern invention since historical sources do not mention it as an instigator of metamorphosis de Blecourt 2015 pp 3 4 Pronounced l aɪ ˈ k ae n 8 r e p i ly KAN thre pee Lorey 2000 records 280 known cases this contrasts with a total number of 12 000 recorded cases of executions for witchcraft or an estimated grand total of about 60 000 corresponding to 2 or 0 5 respectively The recorded cases span the period of 1407 to 1725 peaking during the period of 1575 1657 Lorey 2000 records six trials in the period 1701 and 1725 all in either Styria or Carinthia 1701 Paul Perwolf of Wolfsburg Obdach Styria executed 1705 Vlastl of Murau Styria verdict unknown 1705 6 six beggars in Wolfsberg Carinthia executed 1707 8 three shepherds in Leoben and Freyenstein Styria one lynching two probable executions 1718 Jakob Kranawitter a mentally retarded beggar in Rotenfel Oberwolz Styria corporeal punishment 1725 Paul Schaffer beggar of St Leonhard im Lavanttal Carinthia executed Citations a b c Orel 2003 p 463 a b Oxford English Dictionary 2021 s v werewolf n a b c Koch 2020 p 96 West 2007 p 450 de Vries 1962 p 646 a b c DEAF G 334 338 FEW 17 569 Nichols 1987 p 170 a b Butler 2005 pp 237 238 Balinisteanu Tudor 2016 Romanian Folklore and Literary Representations of Vampires Folklore 127 2 150 172 doi 10 1080 0015587X 2016 1155358 ISSN 0015 587X S2CID 148481574 a b c Zochios Stamatis 2018 Interpretation ethnolinguistique de termes mythologiques neohelleniques d origine slave designant des morts malfaisants Revue des etudes slaves 89 3 303 317 doi 10 4000 res 1787 ISSN 0080 2557 S2CID 192528255 Butler 2005 pp 242 Delamarre 2007 pp 30 31 Oxford English Dictionary 2021 s v lyncanthropy n and lyncanthrope n Otten 1986 pp 5 8 de Blecourt 2015 pp 82 83 Kim R McCone Hund Wolf und Krieger bei den Indogermanen in W Meid ed Studien zum indogermanischen Wortschatz Innsbruck 1987 101 154 Herodotus IV 105 Histories Pomponius Mela 1998 2 14 Description of the world De chorographia English University of Michigan Press ISBN 9780472107735 a b Pausanias 8 2 Description of Greece Ovid I 219 239 Metamorphoses Apollodorus 3 8 1 Bibliotheca Pausanias 6 8 2 Pliny the Elder Natural History viii 82 Suda eta 271 Pliny the Elder Natural History viii 81 The tale probably relates to a rite of passage for Arcadian youths Ogden Daniel 2002 Magic Witchcraft and Ghosts in the Greek and Roman Worlds A Sourcebook Oxford University Press p 178 ISBN 0 19 513575 X Ovid I Metamorphoses Menard Philippe 1984 Les histoires de loup garou au moyen age Symposium in honorem prof M de Riquer in French Barcelona UP pp 209 38 Virgil viii Eclogues p 98 Petronius 1996 Satyrica R Bracht Branham and Daniel Kinney Berkeley University of California p 56 ISBN 0 520 20599 5 Augustine of Hippo The City of God XVIII 17 a b Canon Episcopi www personal utulsa edu Retrieved 2020 03 27 Otten 1986 pp 5 6 Antapodosis 3 29 Gervase of Tilbury Otia Imperiala Book I Chapter 15 translated and edited by S E Banks and J W Binns Oxford Oxford University Press 2002 86 87 Georg Schepss Conradus Hirsaugiensis 1889 Conradi Hirsaugiensis Dialogus super Auctores sive Didascalon Eine Literaturgeschichte aus den XII in Latin Harvard University A Stuber Pseudo Augustine Liber de Spiritu et Anima Chapter 26 XVII Marie de France Bisclavret translated by Glyn S Burgess and Keith Busby in The Lais of Marie de France London Penguin Books 1999 68 Gervase of Tilbury Otia Imperiala Book I Chapter 15 translated and edited by S E Banks and J W Binns Oxford Oxford University Press 2002 87 Hopkins Amanda 2005 Melion and Biclarel Two Old French Werewolf Lays The University of Liverpool ISBN 0 9533816 9 2 Retrieved 26 May 2020 Baring Gould p 100 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Woodward Ian 1979 The Werewolf Delusion Paddington Press ISBN 0 448 23170 0 unreliable source page needed Modestin Georg 2005 Von den hexen so in Wallis verbrant wurdent Eine wieder entdeckte Handschrift mit dem Bericht des Chronisten Hans Frund uber eine Hexenverfolgung im Wallis 1428 PDF doc rero ch pp 407 408 Retrieved 19 September 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Cynthia Grant Schonberger January March 1979 Luther and the Justification of Resistance to Legitimate Authority Journal of the History of Ideas University of Pennsylvania Press 40 1 3 20 doi 10 2307 2709257 JSTOR 2709257 S2CID 55409226 as specified in Luther s Collected Works 39 ii 41 42 iii Demonologie Hoyt Nelly S Cassierer Thomas trans 1965 The Encyclopedia Selections Diderot d Alembert and a Society of Men of Letters Indianapolis Bobbs Merrill Otten 1986 pp 161 167 Is the fear of wolves justified A Fennoscandian perspective PDF Acta Zoologica Lituanica 2003 Volumen 13 Numerus 1 Archived from the original PDF on 2008 03 07 Retrieved 2008 05 09 Facundo Quiroga The Tiger of the Argentine Prairies and the Legend of the runa uturuncu Archived 2017 08 16 at the Wayback Machine in Spanish The Legend of the runa uturuncu in the Mythology of the Latin American Guerilla Archived 2011 07 11 at the Wayback Machine in Spanish The Guarani Myth about the Origin of Human Language and the Tiger men in Spanish J B Ambrosetti 1976 Fantasmas de la selva misionera Ghosts of the Misiones Jungle Editorial Convergencia Buenos Aires Steiger Brad 2011 The Werewolf Book The Encyclopedia of Shape Shifting Beings Visible Ink Press p 267 ISBN 978 1578593675 Illis L Jan 1964 On Porphyria and the AEtiology of Werwolves Proc R Soc Med 57 1 23 6 PMC 1897308 PMID 14114172 a b Lopez Barry 1978 Of Wolves and Men New York Scribner Classics ISBN 0 7432 4936 4 OCLC 54857556 Dening T R amp West A 1989 Multiple serial lycanthropy Psychopathology 22 344 347 Ebbe Schon 2011 05 16 Varulv Vasen in Swedish SVT Archived from the original on 2011 04 14 Retrieved 2011 05 16 a b Bennett Aaron So You Want to be a Werewolf Fate Vol 55 no 6 Issue 627 July 2002 O Donnell Elliot Werwolves Methuen London 1912 pp 65 67 Gershenson Daniel Apollo the Wolf God Journal of Indo European Studies Monograph 8 McLean Virginia Institute for the Study of Man 1991 ISBN 0 941694 38 0 pp 136 7 Szabo Gyorgy Mitologiai kislexikon I II Budapest Merenyi Konyvkiado ev nelkul Mitologiai kislexikon Willis Roy Davidson Hilda Ellis 1997 World Mythology The Illustrated Guide Piaktus ISBN 0 7499 1739 3 OCLC 37594992 The Fables of Mkhitar Gosh New York 1987 translated with an introduction by R Bedrosian edited by Elise Antreassian and illustrated by Anahid Janjigian Legends of Grosse Pointe Ashliman D L Werewolf Legends from Germany pitt edu Retrieved January 1 2022 Robert Jackson 1995 Witchcraft and the Occult Devizes Quintet Publishing 25 Baud huin Benoit Bonet Alain 1995 Gevaudan petites histoires de la grande bete in French Ex Aequo Editions p 193 ISBN 978 2 37873 070 3 Crouzet Guy 2001 La grande peur du Gevaudan in French Guy Crouzet pp 156 158 ISBN 2 9516719 0 3 S Baring Gould The Book of Were Wolves 1865 Temme J D H Die Volkssagen von Pommern und Rugen Translated by D L Ashliman Berlin In de Nicolaischen Buchhandlung 1840 Sellers Susan Myth and Fairy Tale in Contemporary Women s Fiction Palgrave Macmillan 2001 p 85 Stoker Brett Dracula s Guest PDF p 11 A wolf and yet not a wolf No use trying for him without the sacred bullet a third remarked Stoker Bram Ch 3 Johnathon Harker s Journal Dracula PDF p 42 We Szekelys have a right to be proud for in our veins flows the blood of many brave races who fought as the lion fights for lordship Here in the whirlpool of European races the Ugric tribe bore down from Iceland the fighting spirit which Thor and Wodin gave them which their Berserkers displayed to such fell intent on the seaboards of Europe aye and of Asia and Africa too till the peoples thought that the werewolves themselves had come Stoker Bram Ch 18 Mina Harker s Journal Dracula PDF His power ceases as does that all of all evil things at the coming of the day Only at certain times can he have limited freedom If he be not at the place whither he is bound he can only change himself at noon or exact sunrise or sunset Chantal Bourgault Du Coudray The Curse of the Werewolf Fantasy Horror and the Beast Within London I B Tauris 2006 ISBN 9781429462655 p 112 169 a b Searles B 1988 Films of Science Fiction and Fantasy Harry N Abrams pp 165 67 ISBN 0 8109 0922 7 Clemens pp 119 20 Clemens pp 117 18 a b Clemens p 120 Steiger Brad 1999 The Werewolf Book The Encyclopedia of Shapeshifting Beings Farmington Hills MI Visible Ink p 12 ISBN 1 57859 078 7 OCLC 41565057 Steiger Brad 1999 The Werewolf Book The Encyclopedia of Shapeshifting Beings Visible Ink p 330 ISBN 1 57859 078 7 OCLC 41565057 Steiger Brad 1999 The Werewolf Book The Encyclopedia of Shapeshifting Beings Visible Ink ISBN 1 57859 078 7 OCLC 41565057 p 17 Andrzej Wicher Piotr Spyra Joanna Matyjaszczyk 19 November 2014 Basic Categories of Fantastic Literature Revisited Cambridge Scholars Publishing pp 95 96 ISBN 978 1 4438 7143 3 Glut Donald F 2002 The Frankenstein Archive McFarland p 19 ISBN 0786413530 Crossen Carys Elizabeth The Nature of the Beast Transformations of the Werewolf from the 1970s to the Twenty first Century University of Wales Press 2019 p 206 Senn Bryan The Werewolf Filmography 300 Movies McFarland 2017 p 8 Wilson Natalie Seduced by Twilight The allure and contradictory messages of the popular saga McFarland 2014 p 39 Boissoneault Lorraine The Nazi Werewolves Who Terrorized Allied Soldiers at the End of WWII Smithsonian Magazine The Smithsonian Retrieved 27 May 2020 ReferencesSecondary sources Butler Francis 2005 Russian vurdalak vampire and Related Forms in Slavic Journal of Slavic Linguistics 13 2 237 250 JSTOR 24599657 de Blecourt Willem 2015 Werewolf Histories Springer ISBN 978 1 137 52634 2 Delamarre Xavier 2007 Gallo Brittonica suite 11 21 Zeitschrift fur celtische Philologie 55 1 doi 10 1515 ZCPH 2007 29 ISSN 0084 5302 S2CID 163928150 de Vries Jan 1962 Altnordisches Etymologisches Worterbuch 1977 ed Brill ISBN 978 90 04 05436 3 Douglas Adam 1992 The Beast Within A History of the Werewolf London Chapmans ISBN 0 380 72264 X Frost Brian J 2003 The Essential Guide to Werewolf Literature Popular Press ISBN 978 0 87972 860 1 Goens Jean 1993 Loups garous vampires et autres monstres enquetes medicales et litteraires Paris CNRS Editions Koch John T 2020 Celto Germanic Later Prehistory and Post Proto Indo European vocabulary in the North and West University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh and Celtic Studies ISBN 9781907029325 Lecouteux Claude 2003 Witches Werewolves and Fairies Shapeshifters and Astral Doubles in the Middle Ages Inner Traditions Bear ISBN 978 0 89281 096 3 Nichols Johanna 1987 Russian vurdalak werewolf and its cognates In Flier Michael S Karlinsky Simon eds Language literature linguistics In honor of Francis Whitfield on his seventieth birthday March 25 1986 Berkeley Slavic Specialties ISBN 978 0933884588 Orel Vladimir 2003 A Handbook of Germanic Etymology Brill ISBN 978 90 04 12875 0 Otten Charlotte F 1986 The Lycanthropy Reader Werewolves in Western Culture Syracuse University Press ISBN 978 0 8156 2384 7 Oxford English Dictionary Online Oxford University Press 2021 West Martin L 2007 Indo European Poetry and Myth Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 928075 9 Primary sources Wolfeshusius Johannes Fridericus De Lycanthropia An vere illi ut fama est luporum amp aliarum bestiarum formis induantur Problema philosophicum pro sententia Joan Bodini adversus dissentaneas aliquorum opiniones noviter assertum Leipzig Typis Abrahami Lambergi 1591 In Latin microfilm held by the United States National Library of Medicine Prieur Claude Dialogue de la Lycanthropie Ou transformation d hommes en loups vulgairement dits loups garous et si telle se peut faire Louvain J Maes amp P Zangre 1596 Bourquelot and Jean de Nynauld De la Lycanthropie Transformation et Extase des Sorciers Paris 1615 Summers Montague The Werewolf London K Paul Trench Trubner 1933 1st edition reissued 1934 New York E P Dutton 1966 New Hyde Park N Y University Books 1973 Secaucus N J Citadel Press 2003 Mineola N Y Dover with new title The Werewolf in Lore and Legend ISBN 0 7661 3210 2Further readingBaring Gould Sabine 1865 The Book of Werewolves Being an Account of a Terrible Superstition London Smith Elder amp Co Google Books Grimm Deutsche Mythologie 4 ii and iii Hertz Der Werwolf Stuttgart 1862 Leubuscher Uber die Wehrwolfe 1850 O Donnell Elliot 1912 Werewolves Sconduto Leslie A Metamorphoses of thewerewolf a literary study from antiquity through the Renaissance Stewart Caroline Taylor 1909 The origin of the werewolf superstition University of Missouri Studies ISBN 9780524023778 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Werwolf Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press External links Look up werewolf in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikiquote has quotations related to Werewolf Wikimedia Commons has media related to Werewolves Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Werewolf amp oldid 1147695377, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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