This is Halloween: Werewolf

Halloween is pretty much upon us: scary films, crazy costumes and spooky stories. What’s scarier, a vampire or a zombie? Will you dress up as a witch or a werewolf? In this series, Muriel Bailly profiled a famous Halloween monster every day to manifest the myths beneath the masks and make-up.

Werewolf

Werewolf, German woodcut from 1722.

Werewolf, German woodcut from 1722.

Fact file

A werewolf, also known as a lycanthrope (from the Greek lykos: wolf and anthropos: man), is someone who can shape shift into a wolf, either at will or due to some kind of magic.

The first mention of people with the ability to transform into wolves appeared as early as the works of Herodotus, Pausanias and Ovid in Late Antiquity. In his “Metamorphoses“, Ovid tells us the story of the Lycaon, King of Arcadia, who was turned into a wolf by Zeus for trying to play a trick on the Olympian god.

Zeus turning Lycaon into a wolf.

Zeus turning Lycaon into a wolf.

There are many alleged ways to become a werewolf, besides the famous (but recently invented) method of getting bitten by one. You can be the victim of a curse as in the case of Lycaon; you can drink rain water from the footprint of a wolf; or you can sleep naked outside during a full moon.

France

Until the Early Modern period, werewolves were mostly considered to be the victims of curses and were met with a certain amount of empathy, such as in the 12th century French novel Bisclavret by Marie de France. Bisclavret was a nobleman who mysteriously disappeared for three days each month. Not even his wife knew what he was up to during this time. When she begged him to tell her, he finally confessed to being a werewolf. He foolishly (in retrospect) mentioned that when he transforms, he needs to hide his human clothes in a safe place to be able to return to human form. Bisclavret’s wife, shocked by this, arranged to steal her husband’s clothes with her lover to trap him in his lupine form.

In the western world, witchcraft and the supernatural were associated with satanic rituals. Witch and werewolf hunts were fairly common and the lines between them were sometimes blurred: witches were accused of being werewolves and vice versa.

Woodcut of a werewolf attack, 1512.

Woodcut of a werewolf attack, 1512.

Trials and executions increased in 16th century Europe where mentions of werewolves intensified alongside sordid stories of murders. Some of the accused were arrested because villagers needed someone to blame for dead livestock, but others were accused for committing much more horrendous crimes.

Pierre Burgot and Michel Verdun were both executed as werewolves in 1521, ditto Gilles Garnier (known as the “Werewolf of Dole”) in 1573. Records indicate that all were serial killers. During his testimony, Garnier revealed that when out hunting in the forest he was visited but a ghost. Struggling to feed himself and his wife, the apparition offered him an ointment that turned him into a wolf, resulting in far more successful hunts. Sadly, Garnier was hunting and eating children. It seems that the term ‘werewolf’ almost describes the beast inside the man surging out when committing such despicable atrocities.

A human compared to a wolf.

A human compared to a wolf.

Germany

A belief in werewolves had almost disappeared from French-speaking areas of Europe by around 1650. It was the Germanic, central area of Europe in which these myths persisted with any vigour. Werewolves were still being feared by people in the Austrian and Bavarian Alps into the 18th century.

The most gruesome werewolf story from Germany is the one about Peter Stumpp. He was known as the “Werewolf of Bedburg”, accused of being a serial killer and cannibal. His trial and execution were barbaric and after experiencing extreme torture, he confessed to killing and eating at least thirteen children, two pregnant women and many livestock. At his trial Stumpp stated that the Devil gave him a belt of wolf fur as a child that transformed him into:

“The likeness of a greedy, devouring wolf, strong and mighty, with eyes great and large, which in the night sparkled like brands of fire; a mouth great and wide, with most sharp and cruel teeth; a huge body and mighty paws.”

Woodcut of the execution of Peter Stumpp in 1589 at Bedburg near Cologne.

Woodcut of the execution of Peter Stumpp in 1589 at Bedburg near Cologne.

Were-animals

Before wolves were wiped out from large areas of Europe, their attacks on people were part of life, albeit a rare one. It makes sense that wolves, being the most feared predators in that part of the world, were catapulted into the folklore of demonic shape shifters. In parts of the world without wolves, their “wolf equivalents” have entered mythology in the same way: Africa has werehyenas and India has weretigers. Other werecats feature in South America.

Modern werewolves

Werewolves were popularised again by Gothic literature (on which the British Library has an exciting new exhibition, Terror and Wonder: The Gothic Imagination). It was at the beginning of the 20th century that the silver bullet motif first surfaced and is already inextricably linked to werewolf mythology. Lycanthropy being passed on via the bite from the monster is another relatively recent werewolf trope.

Not your classic

Not your classic “werewolf and young lady” image.

Whether they were true or not, the stories surrounding werewolves are among the bloodiest and goriest legends of the last 500 years or so. Today, like many classic monsters, werewolves have been glamorised in contemporary pop culture such as Twilight and Teenwolf. Has the beast finally been tamed?

Muriel Bailly is a Visitor Experience Assistant at Wellcome Collection.

Here be Dragons

Today is 23 April, the traditionally accepted date of St George’s death (in AD 303). To celebrate St George’s Day, Charlie Morgan continues our theme of mythical beasts as he takes a look at St George’s legendary adversary: the mighty dragon.

Saint George. Line engraving, 1851.

Saint George. Line engraving, 1851.

You’d be forgiven for forgetting that today is St George’s Day. Without the festivities of, say, St Patrick’s Day, for years St George’s Day’s saving grace was being the time of the year when we’d be reminded of dragons. The fourth season of Game of Thrones began recently and patron saints tend to not do well up against HBO blockbusters; however, until Daenerys gets her own feast day I suppose we’re stuck with St George. Which makes this as good a time as any to explore what dragons actually are.

As with unicorns, most of us are familiar with dragons from literature, art and films. From Falkor the luckdragon in The Neverending Story and Haku in Spirited Away, to Maleficent’s dragon form and Draco in Dragonheart. From dragons in the Harry Potter series and Reign of Fire, to Mushu in Mulan and Lockheed in X-Men. Not forgetting, of course, Smaug the Magnificent in the Hobbit and many more. But where did myths of these legendary creatures come from?

The woman clothed with the sun is attacked by a seven-headed dragon (representing the 12th Book of Revelation).

The woman clothed with the sun is attacked by a seven-headed dragon (representing the 12th Book of Revelation).

The legend of St George and the dragon stems from the latter serving as a symbol of the Christian devil. This might come from an adapted form of the snake in the Garden of Eden but it’s most memorable in the Book of Revelations, where Satan is embodied as ‘a great red dragon, having seven heads and ten horns, and seven crowns upon his heads’. The beast wages war with Archangel Michael before being thrown down to earth where he is worshipped as a false God. Eventually an angel descends from heaven and casts the dragon into a bottomless pit.

Satan as a dragon thrown into hell, circa 1420-30.

Satan as a dragon thrown into hell, circa 1420-30.

Flash forward and it’s no surprise that the story became so reified during the Crusades. But if dragons in Europe inspired fear, further east they did the exact opposite.

Illustration of a male devata (i.e. lesser deity) riding a large dragon.

Illustration in a Thai manuscript of a male devata (i.e. lesser deity) riding a large dragon.

If you visit the Forbidden City in Beijing you might spot the ornately decorated Nine Dragon Wall that stands within. If you make a trip to our Medicine Man gallery when it re-opens you might catch sight of an ominous looking chair upon which dragon heads protrude from the arms. You might have been born in the Year of the Dragon or you might have watched a costumed dragon snake through Chinatown during New Year’s; either way it is clear that dragons play an important role in Chinese culture.

Chinese dragons long symbolised luck or power but have tended to fly and breathe fire far less than their European counterparts. Instead, they regularly swam through water, controlled the weather and for years gave legitimacy to Imperial families: specifically, the five-clawed dragon motif confirmed the Emperor as the Son of Heaven and provided his consorts with similar authority. In countries that border China dragons also command respect. In Bhutan the national icon is the ‘Druk’ (Thunder Dragon) and the state ruler is the Dragon King. Say what you want about monarchies but that’s a pretty cool name.

Late 19th century Chinese imperial letter from the governor of Chiang-su (Kiangsu) Province, The letter is enclosed with yellow silk end papers depicting the five-clawed dragon motif.

Late 19th century Chinese imperial letter from the governor of Chiang-su (Kiangsu) Province, The letter is enclosed with yellow silk end papers depicting the five-clawed dragon motif.

When it comes to their blood, dragons again divide opinion. According to some myths, bathing in dragon blood would imbue the bather with invincible skin; in others, it’s acidic or simply deadly to the touch. Back in Europe, the last dragon was supposedly slain in 1572 when one was taken down by a farmer hitting it on the head with a walking stick. Still, in a 1670s recipe by Lady Ann Fanshawe that produced a ‘red powder good for miscarrying’, the first ingredient she listed was ‘of Dragon’s blood one dram’. Was she referring to plant resin or, as certain encyclopedias of the time suggested, the real blood of a dragon? We can only guess as to which side of the fence Lady Fanshawe was on but, since then, the medical has certainly won out over the mythological.

Lady Ann Fanshawe's recipe.

Lady Ann Fanshawe’s recipe.

Today we are most familiar with dragons such as those which mark the boundaries of the City of London or the one that is emblazoned on the flag of Wales. Interestingly the latter has not been a historical constant and, with a nod to Muriel Bailly’s recent blog post, during the reign of the Stuarts it was jettisoned in favour of a unicorn. Aside from flags, and outside the world of cryptozoology, dragons nowadays exist mostly in the realms of science fiction and fantasy.

In the real world we have to settle for Komodo dragons and Draco lizards. Incidentally, other inspirations for dragon mythology may have come from a variety of places, as discussed by the Smithsonian and Live Science. Yet a 2004 piece of docu-fiction, called The Last Dragon, began by noting the amount of cultures that, despite having no contact with each other, all developed mythologies of dragons. From this it posited a fictional evolutionary process of the dragon before its eventual defeat to man. The film is of course fiction, but centuries on from both St George and the Chinese Emperors it’s still nice to dream.

Charlie Morgan is a Visitor Experience Assistant at Wellcome Collection.