Werewolves page 5
According to Armenian lore, there are women who, in consequence of
deadly sins, are condemned to spend seven years in wolf form. 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.
The 11th
Century Belarusian Prince Usiaslau of Polatsk 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."
There were numerous reports of werewolf
attacks – and consequent court trials – in sixteenth century France. In
some of the cases there was clear evidence against the accused of
murder and cannibalism, but none of association with wolves; in other
cases people have been terrified by such creatures, such as that of
Gilles Garnier in Dole in 1573, there was clear evidence against some
wolf but none against the accused[citation needed]. The loup-garou
eventually ceased to be regarded as a dangerous heretic and reverted to
the pre-Christian notion of a "man-wolf-fiend." The lubins or lupins
were usually female and shy in contrast to the aggressive
loups-garous.[citation needed]
Some French werewolf lore is
associated with documented events. The Beast of Gévaudan terrorized the
general area of the former province of Gévaudan, now called Lozère, in
south-central France. From the years 1764 to 1767, an unknown entity
killed upwards of 80 men, women, and children.[citation needed] The
creature was described as a giant wolf by the sole survivor of the
attacks, which ceased after several wolves were killed in the area.
At
the beginning of the seventeenth century witchcraft was prosecuted by
James I of England, who regarded "warwoolfes" as victims of delusion
induced by "a natural superabundance of melancholic."
American cultures
Main article: Skin-walker
During
the Norse colonization of the Americas, it is thought by Woodward that
the Vikings brought with them their beliefs in werewolves, which would
manifest themselves in the folklore of some Native American tribes.
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".
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, the Upper Peninsula of Michigan 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 nahual, which traditionally limits itself to
stealing cheese and raping women rather than murder. 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.
Origins of werewolf beliefs
Many authors have speculated that
werewolf and vampire legends may have been used to explain serial
killings in less rational ages. This theory is given credence by the
tendency of some modern serial killers to indulge in practices commonly
associated with werewolves, such as cannibalism, mutilation, and cyclic
attacks. The idea is well explored in Sabine Baring-Gould's work The
Book of Werewolves.
Until the 20th century, wolf attacks on
humans were an occasional, but widespread feature of life in
Europe. 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,[6] as well as werepumas ("runa uturunco") and
werejaguars ("yaguaraté-abá" or "tigre-capiango") of southern
South America.
In his Man into Wolf (1948), anthropologist
Robert Eisler drew attention to the fact that many Indo-European tribal
names and some modern European surnames mean "wolf" or "wolf-men". This
is argued by Eisler to indicate that the European transition from fruit
gathering to predatory hunting was a conscious process, simultaneously
accompanied by an emotional upheaval still remembered in humanity's
subconscious, which in turn became reflected in the later medieval
superstition of werewolves.