>In the winter of 1450 a ravenous army of wolves invaded Paris >The beasts terrorized the people and devoured over 40 men, women, and children >Citizens waged battle against the canines and succeeded in luring them into the center of the city where they were slain with makeshift weapons and stones, the leader of the pack being defeated in front of Notre Dame Cathedral
>In WWI a pack of man eating wolves were so bloodthirsty that the Russians and Germans called a temporary truce to rid themselves of the creatures
Were european wolves always so vicious? Or did some aspect of european culture make them this way?
I even read somewhere about europeans building raised roadside platform shelters from wolves
>European Wolves Wolves are just vicious. Full stop. Its a pack of predatory animals for sakes.
In China, wolves & tigers were quite the hassle, that the it was a civic duty to alert villages of any pack/pride close by.
Said villages then arm up and go after them similar to the way said militias arm up and go after bandits.
In addition, some chinese weapons evolved out of animal control campaigns, like the Wolf Lance, Wolf Club, and the Tiger Fork,
Ethan Fisher
Wolves are known to form super-packs in times of desperation and just run down anything in their way, even humans. When times are plentiful for the wolves they leave humans alone out of fear.
It could be that America still has vast swathes of uninhabited land so the wolves rarely interact with humans, whereas they are always close by in Europe
Tyler Long
>Wolves are known to form super-packs in times of desperation and just run down anything in their way [insert political joke here]
Jonathan Sanders
>Germans are known to form Warsaw-pacts in times of desperation and just get run down by anything in their way
Jonathan Wright
Even better.
During Winter 1914/1915 Austrian Chief of Staff ordered several offensives in Carpathian mountain ranges. Offensives in mountains during winter, yes, that's what he wanted. Oh, I forgot to mention that enormous amount of rotting bodies being the result of those offensives attracted wolf packs from whole region, it was so bad that the wounded often had to fight for their lives with wolves before the help arrived.
Adam Brooks
The Beast of Gévaudan massacred over over 200 people in 18th century France
Isaac Lee
>desire to know more intensifies
Charles Thompson
Just read a little about this beast >killed a by a blessed silver bullet made by Jean Chastel Is this the origin of >silver kills werewolves Or was that myth the reason he made the bullet?
Julian Long
>Were european wolves always so vicious? Not anymore they're not. Because they were exterminated by humans. Except for some 10+ strong pack kept in a preservation somewhere in Spain.
European wolves and asian tigers (not countries -- actual ass tigers that used to live across entirety of Asia) were pushed by deforestation and man claiming their hunting grounds until they went extinct
> American wolves are pretty chill more territory still unoccupied by humans
Small factoid, some ten years ago wild she-wolf has appeared and was shot on university grounds where i worked at the time. It was a during hard winter and it couldn't find deer in the nearby steppes -- because those are dying out as well.
John Kelly
There's about 250 wolves in Finland still and the amount is growing, until hunters start illegally culling them again.
Zachary Rodriguez
It makes me quite sad to see them shrink in number. No animal gives me quite so much terror as a wolf, and that's the reason i love them Fucking boss animals
Brandon Campbell
Dayum
Locals and hunters claimed it could shrug off bullets. Some claimed it was a servant of the devil. It would even attack multiple times per day without even eating victims. The wolf knew how to avoid hunters and strike when need be.
Jaxson Jones
>>In WWI a pack of man eating wolves were so bloodthirsty that the Russians and Germans called a temporary truce to rid themselves of the creatures
needs to be a movie
I watched a few docus on it, it was probably a hyena brought from Africa as a pet and got loose. Also, silver is fucking terrible for bullets, it fires extremely inaccurately and much weaker, it had to be fired from a very close distance for it to be a killing shot.
The theory the guys proposed was that some guy bought a hyena, trained it (they're trainable, just google it) to attack people and eventually killed it. This explains how he managed to kill it, he thought it to stand still which allowed him to fire from a close distance and kill it. The historic description of the corpse and stuffed display (which was brought to the king of France of that time) give away as a hyena.
Kevin Cook
There are still few pack of wolves here in Serbia, they are only extinct in lowlands
Carter Taylor
There is still Wolves in parts of France,Germany,Italy and Scandinavia plus most of Eastern Europe plus i think they are spreading because they were spotted in the Netherlands last year and this was the first sighting of Wolves there in 150 years.
Lincoln Kelly
2spook
Asher Brooks
By only the trauma they've imprinted on European seniors, you learn a lot about the fears that Europeans had about those creatures once.
My grandmother is vividly outspoken against re-introducing wolves in the french alps for example and she's not the only elder person with those views.
David Wood
Watch Brotherhood of the Wolves. [spoiler]It's basically Bloodborne the film.[/spoiler]
John Parker
In several European branches of Indo-European languages the word for wolf went under taboo-deformation (same process that produced God/Gosh, hell/heck in English), because apparently people were afraid uttering its name would summon it
Proto-Indo-Euroepan *wĺ̥kʷos Proto-Germanic *wulfaz (expected **wulhwaz) Latin lupus (expected **volquus)
The Irish inherited term olc means evil, and they used various euphemisms to refer to wolves, such as mac tíre "son of the land", madra alla "wild dog"
Bentley Rodriguez
My unlimited contribution of rabid wolves to congress is protected free speech.
Jacob Anderson
That art is boss. Image searched. the artist is wang kewei. all his shit is as cool as his first name.
John Reed
>In WWI a pack of man eating wolves were so bloodthirsty that the Russians and Germans called a temporary truce to rid themselves of the creatures You ever read War Land on the Eastern Front? Germans thought the eastern front was 2spooky for them. Apparently, Lithuanians were still like Wicker Man isolated, and patrols at night were worried about werewolves and witches.
Eventually, this wore down the Germans sanity meter, making them form the most bizarre freikorps.
Sebastian Harris
>depopulation due to black death >wolves having the taste of blood from feeding on dead >increase in wildlife due to decrease in human population
Ethan Martinez
>>Germans are known to form Warsaw-pacts
Jace Richardson
It's stories like this that makes me absolutely terrified for wolves
Nathaniel Cruz
>when a limp wristed vegan yank asks why we exterminated these hell beasts
Ian Morgan
Anyone else learned about the Gevaudan beast from this book?
Asher Adams
Sounds a bit far fetched
Logan Thompson
>Not anymore they're not. Because they were exterminated by humans.
Eastern Europe and Finland still has a shit ton of wolves.
Parker Ross
>it was probably a hyena brought from Africa as a pet
lol
Brayden Young
#notallhyenas
William Gomez
>polandball overrun by werewolves
This is some Vampire Hunter D tier shit my niggas.
Joshua Thomas
>werewolves
Nigga wut
David Murphy
Kurwa...
N-Nothing
There's no werewolves in Polan
Everything is of fine
Now go home, pay your taxes, and stop bringing silver here
Luis Flores
Only a small portion of Poland has werewolves, what the fuck are you on about?
Go have some fun in Belarus.
Evan James
Heh, no kidding. Their theory about the motives of the guy was that because of the locals' disillusionment with the church (it was several years prior to the French rev), the local church conspired with some guy to train a hyena and attack, while he'd keep it in his shed or something (this explains why there were never traces nor evidences when hunters en masse searched for it, iirc the hunt was even on behalf of the king), and make people turn to God and the church for protection. Eventually the church gave him the que to kill it so he made some bs story about blessing bullets (I think?) and shooting it. They guy got royalties and a monument in his village.
So yeah could be complete bs.
Hudson Brooks
Wasn't prince Vladimir of Kiev allegedly a werewolf?
And Herodotus said all of the Balts/Slavs were werewolves too
Gavin Sullivan
Thread kinda taking a turn towards /x/...
Lincoln Lee
There were no Slavs around Herodotus' times.
Alexander White
I don't know about wolves, but the vampire myth basically originates in Slavic lands. Even the word vampire is of Slavic origin.
Parker Phillips
I mean the people of ancient northeast europe
He said they had the tendency to turn into wolves
Bentley Perez
In the fairytales he's a werewolf
The legend was more like "hurr hurr he used to be a pagan wizard"
Eli Turner
Bears were treated similarly. The farther north you go in Europe the more likely you are to have the actual word for bear replaced by something that means "Demon". "Bear" itself derives from this.
Nathaniel Evans
Bears are scary as fuck. Thing is a healthy man can fuck up a wolf without guns (assuming the wolf is alone), but a bear will completely maul you.
Christian Foster
Oh yeah, you're right. I got confused.
>bylacheekibreeki overrun by werewolves
Cybla!
Aiden Lopez
>The English word "bear" comes from Old English bera and belongs to a family of names for the bear in Germanic languages that originate from an adjective meaning "brown"
Sebastian Flores
But they are wolves not werewolves.
Leo Nguyen
>animal behavior >affected by human culture
Leo Ross
>Were european wolves always so vicious? Or did some aspect of european culture make them this way?
>Belarus and Russia >completely green >COMPLETELY >wolves running around the streets of capital cities
Alexander Sanders
That looks like a slightly darker bear wearing a lighter bear mask.
Jackson Carter
Well we got coyotes running around the streets of our cities in Murrica so that's not even shocking to me.
Ryder Russell
Have you ever seen a coyote running around Times Square?
James Evans
Wolves are vicious in general
I think the issue in Europe was the population, even then populations were really widespread and habitat loss/over hunting meant there wasn't a lot for pod for wolves, so they were forced to prey on livestock and people.
In North America populations are more concentrated for the most part and there are still wide open wild spaced with wildlife for them, though in the past wolves here were in trouble Now they are only just returning to the East
Adrian Jenkins
No but I see plenty here in Phoenix, in urban areas.
Brandon Adams
>In Vilna (now Vilnius), then in Russia, in 1891.The bear was large but tame, but it had a taste for vodka. One day it bustled into a village tavern and grabbed a keg of vodka. The owner of the inn, Isaack Rabbanovitch, objected, and tried to snatch it back.
>It would be an understatement to say this was an error. In the chaotic scenes that ensued the infuriated animal hugged to death the tavern keeper, then did the same to his two sons and daughter. The villagers found the drunken animal asleep on the floor in a pool of blood and alcohol, surrounded by its victims. The bear was immediately shot.
Well no but gypsies are running around backyards stealing dogs and i still don't fear them as much as wolves. I think its just the primal fear they instill in humans that makes me respect them so much
Nicholas Mitchell
Sort of
Anthony Lewis
Eurasian wolf. The Eurasian wolf. Here is the thing, the continental version was literally exterminated during the 1800s. The Soviet wolf, which got reintroduced during the 1900s, is a lot tamer. Humans also foraged the entire countryside in a different way before. Now there is actually dense forests outside of population centers, and it might keep the wolves more docile.
Ayden Harris
How old is that picture? There's photo evidence of at least one lone wolf taking a stroll through an industrial area here in the Netherlands, with more unconfirmed sightings reported.
Logan Young
What made the european one so dangerous then?
Brayden Young
Found the werewolf
Jace Walker
>Detroit is such a shithole that it's getting overrun by wild dogs.
"That night [of the 19 February 1945] was the most horrible that any member of the M. L. [motor launch] crews ever experienced. The scattered rifle shots in the pitch black swamp punctured by the screams of wounded men crushed in the jaws of huge reptiles, and the blurred worrying sound of spinning crocodiles made a cacophony of hell that has rarely been duplicated on earth. At dawn the vultures arrived to clean up what the crocodiles had left.... Of about one thousand Japanese soldiers that entered the swamps of Ramree, only about twenty were found alive."
Landon Stewart
My cousin RayRay said the dogs are so bold now they've started claiming houses and driving off the squatters
Christopher Miller
IIRC this was in the Guinness Book of World record for worst casualties of any military unit by ratio.
Brayden Watson
>Working in Sweden building a new rollercoaster with a bunch of other guys >Only a few Swedish guys there, most of us are Irish or American >There's a zoo next to our building lot, or rather one of the edges of the enclosures runs along the side of our lot >It's where the wolves are >Working late again, stay on a little while to save us trouble in the morning >Packing up our gear into to the truck >Turn around and see a single wolf standing in the dark on the other side of the fence, watching me >Spooky, but pretty fuckin neato >Take a picture >Turn to put the rest of the stuff back in the truck >When I get in the truck and look out my window there's about 15 more wolves standing alongside it, all staring at me >This was the least scary wolf-related incident of the trip
Fucking terrifying. Furfags who obsess over these hellhounds need to be shown the reality of them
Oliver Kelly
>Talking to some of the guys who work at the zoo near us >Tell us about how apparently the wolves killed a keeper in 2012 inside the enclosure >"You know how you see some wildlife enclosure animals kind of under control by a particular keeper? As in, they aren't tame but they won't kill them?" >"These ones are just fucking wild. Nobody can get near them. If one gets sick or hurt we can't really go near it unless the others leave it well alone." >One day I'm up one of the higher loops on the roller coaster helping fit some new beams >I look down at one point to see my friend sitting on a log having his lunch, the fence to his back >On the other side of the fence there's a hedge >On the other side of that hedge, about 8 wolves all standing still as stone staring at him >When we're all bored and drunk that night we come back up to the site to get some of the food from the mess room >My friend decides to try throwing some food to the wolves who are watching nearby >They ignore all the food he throws and just keep staring >Walking up or down the fence makes them follow you without a sound, and without looking away for even a second >Found out the next day that on nights when we were working on the site, the wolves barely touched the food given to them by keepers until long after we left
Juan Perez
I work in one of those dark green areas and there are wolves around. Found a little pupper a while back, seems to be a light mix of wolf and shepherd dog. Apparently those that do come from mixes of wolf and dog tend to be more vicious and bold than purebreeds.