Werewolf information

Werewolf
A human being who turns into a wolf and later resumes human form. During their episodes as wolves, werewolves savagely attack, kill, and devour animals and people. The word "werewolf," or "man-wolf," was first recorded in Old English the 11th century in the Ecclesiastical Ordinances of King Cnut (1017-1037). It was sometimes used to refer to outlaws.

Werewolf lore has existed since antiquity. Early humans may have established strong bonds with wolves — from whom dogs evolved — and there is evidence of various animal cults, in which humans aquired animal powers by donning their skins. The Berserkers and Eigi Einhmair are examples of later animal cults. Early humans may also have practiced cannibalism. In the earliest religions, gods and goddesses had animal attributes. In ancient Egypt, the images of gods were as were-animals: human bodies with animal heads.

Legends and myths of human transformation into wolves — one of the most feared of all animals — are thousands of years old. The wolf is prominent in Greek stories and in Norse, Scandinavian, Icelandic, and Teutonic lore. In some legends, the werewolf is a person born under that curse, who cannot prevent himself from his hellish metamorphosis, which happens on nights of the full moon. The person, usually a man, but also a woman or a child, acquires the shape of a wolf and all itsattributes, and roams about the countrusode attacking and eating victims. In other tales, the werewolf is a witch who accomplishes the transformation by magical means or with the aid of demons.

In most tales, the werewolf is wounded, and the wound sympathetically carries over to the human form and reveals the idenity of the werewolf. The sympathetic would appeared as evidence later in witch trials.

Werewolf superstitions may have some basis in lingering practices of primitive cannibalism. As other become more civilized, those who still liked to eat human flesh were increasingly ostracized and demonized.

Werewolf beliefs were particularly strong in parts of Europe where wolves were common and presented dangers. Superstitions and fears of wolves ran hight in the Baltic regions (Livonia, Latvia, and Lithuania), France, Germany, Switzerland, and even parts of Spain. Plague epidemics that decimated local populations enabled wolves to flourish. As they lost natural prey to hunters, they turned to livestock, pets, and even humans, though attacks on humans are rare. France was particularly plagued wtih wolf terrors, the greatest of which was the Beast of Gevaudan. In England, wolves were exterminated by the 16th century, and so fear of wolves — and consequently stories of werewolves — are less common than in other parts of Europe.

Werewolf sightings and encounters continue into modern times, and mingle with reports of other mysterious creatures. The Beast of Bray Road has had numerous sightings and close encounters in Wisconsin.

 

Werewolves and Ghosts
Whether the werewolves actually live in the physical world or are part of some parallel world that occasionally and temporarily becomes accessible has been debated by researchers. Some encounters seem more like ghosts, suggesting a parallel world or dimension.

Elliot O’Donnell recorded a case of an apparent werewolf phantom, told to him by a young woman who had the experience. Jean St. Denis was staying at a small farm in Merinoethshire, Wales. She would go to the railway station platform to do her sketching. One evening at dusk she was packing up her equipment, she noticed an odd and indistinct figure sitting on a truck nearby. The figure seemed to be staring at her. At the same time, she became acutely aware that the station was deserted, save for her and the figure, whom she took to be a man. She asked it the time, but it gave no response. St. Denis quickly finished packing and departed. She had to walk to the farm alone in the growing darkness.

Along the way, she realized she was being followed. Looking over her shoulder, she could see the strange figure behind her. With the loneliest and darkest stretch of road ahead of her, she decided to confront it. She was horrified to see her pursuer was part man and part wolf. It had a naked, gray, man-like body and hideous wolf’s head with blazing eyes. When she turned her flashlight into its face, it pulled back and put its paw-like hands in front of its eyes. The figure then faded completely away, like a ghost.

O’Donnell relates another werewolf "ghost" case from the Valley of the Doones in Exmoor. A woman walking home alone late one night suddenly saw in front of her a tall gray man with a wolf’s head, stalking a terrifed rabbit that was frozen still. Just as the werewolf seemed ready to spring, a stag burst out of the brush and startled it, and the figure abruptly vanished.

More recently, the British parapsychologist Robin Furman reported a phantom werewolf encounter in his home in Grimsby, England. When his daughter complained of a strange, apparitional figure watching her from her bedroom door, Furman switched rooms with her. Once in the room, he felt that he was not alone, and then noticed the figure of a tall wolf-headed man looking in through the doorway. The form faded and then disappeared. Furman felt no hostility or evilness from the figure, but thought that it was more looking at him out of curiosity. The figure was never seen again.

Phantom werewolves angrily looking for their missing bones have been reported, as in the Hebrides Werewolf and Merinethshire Werewolf cases. A demonic phantom werewolf manifested in conjunction with the discovery of the stone Hexham Heads in Northumberland, England in 1972.

 

Werewolves and Witchcraft
In the 15th and 16th centuries, the Inquisition was at its peak. Werewolves, like witches, were seen as servants of the devil, and trials of accused witch werewolves increased. The cases were characterized by murder and cannibalism. In Europe people accused of shape-shifting and other acts of witchcraft were burned. In the Pyrenees alone, some 200 men and women "werewolves" were sent to their deaths.

Demonologists accepted werewolves, but most believed them to be delusional with the aid of the devil, or simply delusional. Kings James I of Englance wrote in his Demonology that werewolves, or "ManWoolfes," were not people under the influence of the devil, but suffered from delusions and melancholia, and imitated wolf behavior.

Some accused werewolves clearly were mentally unstable and deranged people. In 1541, a deranged farmer in Pavia who murdered several persons was arrested as a werewolf. One of his claims upheld a popular superstition, that werewolves have their wolf pelts on the inside of their human skins. To verify this, the authorities cut off all his limbs. They found no wolf pelt, of course. The accused, now innocent, unfortunately died several days later.

In many cultures, witches, sorcerers and other magically empowered individuals are able to shift into the forms of wolves or other animals. As werewolves or were-animals, the are able to move with great speed, become invisble, and use supernatural powers to attack and kill enemies.

 

Types of Werewolves
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u>In lore there are two general types of werewolves: involuntary and voluntary.

The involuntary werewolf is a person cursed, perhaps because of a sin. The curse might last a few years or a lifetime. For example, an Armenian folk belief holds that a sinful woman is condemned to be a werewolf for seven years. A demon appears to her and commands her to don a wolf skin. When she does so, she assumes the nature of a wolf, devouring her children and then strangers, wandering about at night to wreak havoc and returning to human form in the morning.

The voluntary werewolf is a person who likes to eat human flesh and acquires magical skills that enable transformation into wolf form at will. The transformation is accomplished in various ways.

By completely disrobing

By donning a girdle or belt made of wolf skin or human skin

By rubbing the body with magical ointment

By drinking rain water out of a wolf’s footprints

By reciting magical incantations

By being aided by the devil or his demons

In Montague Summer’s collection of werewolf lore in the British Isles, a self-described werewolf named Calcevayra related that he did his transformations on nights of the full moon. He would go to a distant location, strip off all his clothes and hide them beneath a rock or in a thornbush, and then roll to and fro in the sand until he "rose up in the form of a wolf, raging with a wolf’s fierce appetites." Calcevayra also said that wolves always run with their mouths open because it helps their speed. If their jaws are closed, they cannot unclenched their teeth.

Characteristics of both types of the werewolf are:

An insatiable desire for the raw flesh and blood of animals and humans

Insatiable sexual lust

Wolfish behavior, such as howling and running about on all fours

Savage attacks on animals and people

Exhaustion after werewolf episodes end

In addition, there are lycanthropes, suffers of Lycanthropy, which medicine recognizes as a mental and nervous disorder. Lycanthropes exhibit the same characteristics as the werewolves of lore.

 

Werewolves and Vampires
In Slavic lore, the werewolf is closely related to the vampire; the name of the Serbo-Croatian Vukodlak vampire means "wolf’s hair." Vlokoslak, a Serbian term, and Vyrkolaka, a Greek term, are among the names applied to either a vampire or a werewolf. Many European superstitions about vampires hold that they can shape-shift into various animal forms beside wolves.

In Greek and Serbian lore, werewolves are doomed to become vampires after death.

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Loup-Garou
French term for werewolf or "wolf-man." The term loup-garou may have come from the French "Loup, gardez-vous." which means "Wolf, watch out."

In the bayou lore of Louisiana, the loup-garous gather in the bayou for wild dances and celebrations. Each werewolf owns an airplane-size bat that is uses for transportation. The loup-garous fly around invading people’s homes. They drop down chimneys and bite sleeping perons. The victims are transformed into werewolves.

One remedy against bayou loup-garou is similar to one employed against vampires: keeping it busy counting. When a colander of sifter is hung outside a house, the loup-garou wil have to stop and count all the holes before it can enter.

Other remedies against the loup-garou are salt and frogs. If salt touches a loup-garou, it will start to burn, and the creature will throw off its wolf skin and resume human form. The werewolf is afraid of frogs and will flee if one is thrown at it.

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I just had to include the loup-garou stuff.  I’m sure Raven’s readers will remeber Azi…and for those who actally read his diary as well…there was a few brief moments with Romulus. As such…if you click on good ol’ Romy’s name back there, you’ll get to the last entry in Azi’s diary, which also makes mentions of the whole frog thing. (Plus you get to ‘see’ a much covered pissed off Sidhe. *laughs*)

Also…since I’ve brought that up…I’m seriously considering to ‘rewrite’ Raven’s ‘7th year’.  Though I know it’ll be bloody hard to write her outside of Hogwarts…But I’ve been thinking about getting back to the Obeah story.

[And one must not forget that my darling sister, and our dear Smut Lord hails from Louisiana as well.]

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I have no comments. *laughs* Werewolves. Cool. Though there’s some info. that I’d rather not know. *shudders* Some of it’s a bit hideous. *runs away* Haha. Blah. I’m tired, too…so I’m not making much sense of things. ~

June 1, 2006

I had to laugh at the frog thing.. bc as soon as I read it.. I thought.. I wonder if my tiny frogs in my aquirium would scare one off… I have no idea whats wrong with me tonight *laughs*

I know you guys try to be helpful and it usually works I just have no idea really what’s wrong. Need to work out some personal issues and whatnot. I’ll be fine thank you. Werewolves are creeeeeepppy.

June 1, 2006

Thanks for sharing all this information with us

June 2, 2006

this was fascinating…great entry :o)