Same. There's actually lots when it comes to dragons. I'm crazy enough to think they weren't so mythological. Or maybe we're all crazy enough to think they are.
@@jefffinkbonner9551Man walked with dinosaurs.. plenty of documentaries out there loaded with evidence. The name dinosaur was coined in 1840 but before then they were called dragon's. We have actual proof with that T-Rex thighbone that was found with tissue and blood DNA that for sure didn't hang around for millions or billion's of year's. Do a little digging and you'll come to only one conclusion. They've been lying. They claim to age the bones by the geological columns but that's incorrect as well because they've found trees standing up through supposed ages of time which no one knows of millions of years old trees and the one's they find upside down certainly calls their methods into question. Sea shells found at the tops of some of the highest mountains points to a big time flood taking into account that tribes all over the world all have flood stories.
first one legitimately sounds like a mistranslation of a shamanic mask-ritual of some sort: the man dons the mask and "becomes" the wolf-spirit and then returns to normal after discarding it...
it does sound like it, but being from these regions myself i can tell you that i have never heard about slavs performing masked rituals, instead i believe that it was a psychotic episode caused by the shaman taking shrooms, northern slavs had a lot of cultural connections to vikings, especially in the belarus/russian regions and so it wouldn't surprise me if Herodotus had simply witnessed one of the shamans perform a ritual where he drinks some of the famous viking psychoactive potions that priests of odin and berserkers were known to drink
Since they have a remedy to "Cure" Lycanthropy, has anyone tried it on a human with rabies? I am sure rabies were a common issue back in the Roman times, since... let's face it hygiene wasn't up to modern standards... I mean.. they wipe their ass with a sponge on a stick... an actual SHIT STICK. I digress... Rats would be an issue, and so would rabies. I wonder if this description could actually be looked into, in order to see if it has actual medical value?
My grandpa killed lots of rabies inflicted dogs with sticks and knew a lot of people who died of rabies who were locked in rooms and were fed corn bread under the door to avoid contact.
@@iozmar9398 That must have been horrible. I've had rabies shots myself as a child. There was a dog bite I suffered, and after euthanized, was shown to have it... Was not fun.
Or spray coyote piss all over them and see how they react. Buying that stuff in the bottle ain't cheap but what price is too high to reveal a werewolf? None! Spray your friends and suspicious looking people with bottled coyote piss because I hear that kind of thing will force the dog man out from hiding. If the person vomits from the rich coyote flavor they are not lycontropes but if they don't continue spraying until they show their true form.
If he was a werewolf, his vision will blur, he will froth at the mouth like a dog, fall into a coma, and die. And if he was not a werewolf, the SAME will happen, because you fed him the plant known as the "queen of poisons"...
Guys, guys! We all know Wolfsbane can kill a man but Matrix is not wrong, it's just a last resort! Now coyote piss should be the first thing you use UNLESS you are positive your fiend is a werewolf or they owe you money for the coyote juice they forced you to buy because their lycanthropic-esq ways. Live like a wolf, die by the bane my grandpa used to scream at the nurses on nightshift. Never was there a wiser man!
Like closing off half the world because of a virus no more dangerous than the flu is rational behavior. In a few years people are going to laugh their asses of because of our silliness...
1. Seasonal wolf pelt costumes of that culture embellished with talltales from travellers from the steppe's shores, neighbouring them, to Athens 2. Some sort of wasting disease that makes sleep-walking more likely 3. Some neighbors that really hated poor tortured Peter Stubbe decided to get rid of him by making up bullshit about him being a witch and watching him transform, by taking advantage of (a) man-eating wol(f/ves) in the area, that were starving that season for whatever reason (which often leads to that historically, when a member of the pack in their desperation discovers they can take down human children and petite women, when they are usually afraid of Humans, by nature originally, because how tall we stand; canines mostly judge size vertically only, when it comes to sizing others up)...or it was just all made up coming along the way from "the continent". 4. I've actually studying the very fascinating case of the Beast of Gevaudan on multiple occassions, and there is actually records that give much much more information than the account read here. I suggest anyone who may read this check it out for yourself, but honestly: It seems very likely to me that if the beast was not some sort of deformed wolf or dog, it was even more likely some form of African predatory mammal, that either escaped or was released, after being brought to France by ship, the folks of that backwater part of France had never seen before. Especially if you take into account the description of the strange (to those who killed it and later observed the kill atleast) animal that was killed by some men, and then the killings stopped, sounding VERY similar to certain known African animals. Almost no one at the time claimed it to be anything but an unknown beast (which did, though, lead many of them to consider it demonic in origin, but not a werewolf). 5. Dude just had some kind of paranoid psychosis, very exacerbated (or perhaps even brought on entirely) by getting fucked up on the shit he was indulging in.
@@calo-kg2cy Can you please explain to me sir, both how stories 2 and 4 even describe Lyncanthropy at all (and in the case of the fourth I can assure you I have looked into it extensively, and almost no one at the time even claimed that), and if so, how such a transformation could possibly occur, physically?
Getting a confession from someone under torture by the rack gives absolutely no credence nor evidence of a persons guilt. His death was most likely already assured by the “witness” testimony and confessed just to expedite his inevitable and inescapable demise.
@@ScooBdont indeed, you are correct. I almost added that part myself, but I thought it was pretty clearly implied by the rest of my original comment, and so chose to not make my already lengthy comment even longer, lol
Funny how the guy in the last one, being treated for schizophrenia, anxiety, and religious delusions would have had his assertions taken at face value by the previous writers and then tortured.
My grandmother told me that her father witnessed a werewolf tied to a chair while he transformed. When he lived in Italy She was serious. I still don't know if I believe it or not.
Me and a friend saw one in Pearland TX around 10 years ago around 4-5 AM. We both were frozen, the air had this pressure and bloodlust as it walked on 4s down the street w a dog in its mouth. It passed just a few feet in front of us and we dared not make a sound. The beast went into the woods/field behind the houses. The beast was bigger than my 2000 Honda Civic & now that I think about it there is a lone house/cottage back there where me and my sister used to pick blackberries.. I'm just glad I wasn't alone in seeing it.
There was a murderer in XIX century Spain who confesed to be a werewolf: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manuel_Blanco_Romasanta There's even a movie: www.imdb.com/title/tt0374180/
Part 3 in the 1500s... it make you worry and wonder about what actually happened. Was he a serial killer who prowled about in a wolf-costume who murdered kids and pregnant women, and maybe even ritually ate them and his own son? Or was he perhaps an innocent man threatened into claiming these fancies by torture?
Stubb Peter sounds like a bad one. I wouldn't have believed that he turned into the shape of a wolf to do his murders had he not fully admitted under the threat of agonising torture.
U.S army didn’t follow the prescribed method of cure.Blatantly obvious why he ran away.Thanks for the opportunity to comment. I am off to chase some rabbits now.
Can we take a moment to appreciate that the 1975 warewolf from " Appalachia " ? 😅 As someone from " Appalachia " myself ( like it's it's own state or something and not the longest continuous mountain range in the US ) , I legit tell you that I'm not surprised. Like, not even a little 😅 .... There's some WEIRD things that happen " up in them hollers " 'round here, lol 😅😶
The case of the Beast of Gévaudan is quite perplexing, but it is not unique. Accounts of attacks by "beasts"/cryptids/unidentified animals were not unique to France and that time period - there are lesser known cases all around Europe, as enumerated in the book "The man-eater of Gévaudan" (by Giovanni Todaro). And there is a quite increase of such accounts in the 18th century - I suspect that is not because they were more prevalant, but probably due to a higher development of the use of the press during this time period. I myself made a video about such accounts in my country of origin, one being very close to the time period of the Beast of Gévaudan.
I’d love to hear accounts from other civilizations around the world. If werewolves existed, they wouldn’t have been unique to Europe. And if they were….sounds like the ppl there may have just been ignorant to how to treat diseases (like rabies) or ID animal behavior.
I always say behind every myth, legend,& folklore, has a small bit of some form truth. This study story sounds so similar 2 ""LITTLE RED RIDING HOOD". Intensifying voice. Greatly presented w/ your skill of technology, horror filled frighten voice/ bits of story accounts. Stunningly animated. Thanks 4 time & sharing this intensifying frighten horrific accounts including locations, names, & dates. Stunning work.
The second story is based on the effects of people with rabies, as rabies does something that i cant remember to your throat and makes you instinctively avoid water. Apparently it hurts to drink water, and you suffer from extreme dehydration, as well as being more aggressive and lashing out because of said dehydration and rabies. People would see other people get sick and go crazy from wolf attacks, but we now know that a multitude of animals carry it.
Med student here: #2 sounds a bit like what happens in untreated Diabetes Mellitus: the profound thirst and dehydration, which also leads to dry eyes and mouths, along with the wasting, and it significantly slows the healing process, so people having lots of cuts and bruises that wont heal sounds reasonable. Sleeping trouble also isn't an unusual symptom in this context. Odd to think that "werewolves" were just ancient, untreated diabetics.
Although quite possible they were just diabetic (with ancients not understanding what we consider common day diseases), why were they specifically wondering around tombs and not wanting to come out during the day??? Genuine question.
@@serinawoods-huntley1175 Not sure about the wandering around tombs thing (this might've been a bit of dramatic flair added by the author?), having very dry eyes would make being in brightly lit places rather uncomfortable. If you're losing massive amounts of water via urination, and drinking more doesn't seem to solve the problem, and now your eyes hurt all the time, then thinking "I'll just avoid going outside at night" is a pretty reasonable response. Alternatively, maybe it was their attempt at mitigating the effects of diabetic retinopathy (essentially a condition where having very high blood sugar ends up damaging the blood vessels which supply the eye) Just a guess on my part, of course.
That's Hollywood werewolves don't need a full moon you can easily become a werewolf the same way Peter did you just need a Belt made of Wolfs skin anyone who puts the belt on will instantly transform into a Werewolf
I know this is a three year old video, but could you provide a citation or link to the report for the final section ( 10:48 )? My wife is a psychologist and we are both from Appalachia, I’d like to do some more research into it!
We'd better get vampire accounts next. Especially ones that go back to the origin of vampires in Europe (grave robbers noting growing hair and fingernails on bloated corpses and thinking they were responsible for miasma).
You have ventured into a topic which requires much study. You should research the cynocephalus. Some of the werewolf sighting can be attributed to them. Final question: Were did you get access to the US Army Vet info?
greetings from cologne, germany. >:D german wiki for bedburg says the werewolf panic probably was planted to distract attention away from mercenary armies who were suddenly jobless during the protestant vs. catholic conflicts of that era.
Do British people like American accents as much as we like British accents? I fw those Liverpool or Manchester accents. What do you say Brits? Is it that Louisiana accent that 'Bama, NY, Midwest or that New England?
Just Remember... Anthropologists say They've only Discovered 1% of all the fossils that are out there . ALOT of fossils of life in the distant/ and more recent (10 thousand years or so) past.. ARE still yet too be Discovered . Great field too go into... so many new Fossils just waiting to be discovered AND EVEN NAMED . 🤠🖖
Murton Dingle: "Yes! Heroditus! The fabled historian of yore! He even appeared as a theme in the English Patient!" Tommy Dawkins: "Then what happened?" Murton Dingle: "Heroditus has hithhero been discredited by modern historians, being more of a sensationalist story teller than an accurate analyzer." Tommy Dawkins: "What happened in the MOVIE Murton..."
very interesting.. i like wolfs and have always been interested the werewolf stories.. and the stories of dog headed men from the past.. thanks this was fine! carry on!
@@AndrewTheMandrew531 werewolves don't exist... but serial killers do. Strip away the superstition, and the story of Peter Stubbe sounds just like the account of a serial killer.
Christine Grooms Than I could say that a magical shrew named Harold existed somewhere out there that cured cancer, and you wouldn’t be able to disprove it, based on that logic. I may never have seen Harold, but I’m going to assume he doesn’t exist, because I don’t have any evidence proving he does exist.
"Rub opium on their nostrils" - reminds me of the well-established method of keeping babies quiet. Simply add some strong alcohol to their dinner, and they will sleep like babies. Wake up a bit cranky tho.
Also the bête du Gévaudan has been theorised to have been a pet hyena but don't tell the locals that, werewolves are as lucrative a myth for them as witches are to Salem Massachusetts. Even if you take the legend at face value it's described more like a really big wolf/cryptid than an actual shape shifting person.
"What seems to be the problem?" Doc, I think I'm a werewolf. "I see. Could you please stand by that wall?" Okay... Wait, what are you doing with that gun? "Loading it, obviously." Why? "I'm going to shoot you." With a silver bullet? "No, a regular one. You see, if you're a werewolf, a regular bullet should be merely a nuisance to you." And what if I'm not a werewolf? "Well... I AM going to aim for your head, if you catch my drift." Doc, I don't think I'm a werewolf.
lycanthropy brought to you by squarespace, also I've heard there's nothing better then a good bleeding, a 3 day rub down, followed by a little dash of smack yummy 😋 lol
Do the first description of the arabian peninsula by the Portuguese (who conquered Muscat [Oman], Hormuz [Iran/Persia], Aden [Yemen], Bahrain/Qatar and parts of modern-day UAE).
For a more recent story there was a report of one in Hull, UK jumping over a river. Two separate witness sightings :O Great video and well researched content, that extra flair on the narration is appreciated too 🙌
Now I want a 5 historical accounts of vampires, goblins, and dragons. I wanna hear all the tales.
Same. There's actually lots when it comes to dragons. I'm crazy enough to think they weren't so mythological. Or maybe we're all crazy enough to think they are.
@@jefffinkbonner9551 weren't you on a chat of rights and duties on conspiracies?
@@jefffinkbonner9551Man walked with dinosaurs.. plenty of documentaries out there loaded with evidence. The name dinosaur was coined in 1840 but before then they were called dragon's. We have actual proof with that T-Rex thighbone that was found with tissue and blood DNA that for sure didn't hang around for millions or billion's of year's. Do a little digging and you'll come to only one conclusion. They've been lying. They claim to age the bones by the geological columns but that's incorrect as well because they've found trees standing up through supposed ages of time which no one knows of millions of years old trees and the one's they find upside down certainly calls their methods into question. Sea shells found at the tops of some of the highest mountains points to a big time flood taking into account that tribes all over the world all have flood stories.
I saw a werewolf at Trader Vic's. His hair was perfect.
I saw a werewolf over at Lee Ho Fooks. He was eating a big bowl of beef chow mein.
There is nothing worse than a werewolf with messy hair.
I saw one walking with the queen
Werewolves LOVE their pina coladas
I'd like to meet his Taylor.
first one legitimately sounds like a mistranslation of a shamanic mask-ritual of some sort: the man dons the mask and "becomes" the wolf-spirit and then returns to normal after discarding it...
It is
it does sound like it, but being from these regions myself i can tell you that i have never heard about slavs performing masked rituals, instead i believe that it was a psychotic episode caused by the shaman taking shrooms, northern slavs had a lot of cultural connections to vikings, especially in the belarus/russian regions and so it wouldn't surprise me if Herodotus had simply witnessed one of the shamans perform a ritual where he drinks some of the famous viking psychoactive potions that priests of odin and berserkers were known to drink
They don't convince me either, Herodotus.
You know your claim is out there when even Herodotus is like, "yeah I'm not too sure about that."
Lol those crazy Scythians
Ah yes. The ol' opium on the ears.
😂🤣😂🤣
Treating Lycanthropy in 440BC: Throw leeches on them
Treating Lycanthropy in 1975: DISCO DANCING!!!
Lycanthropy in 1990s and 2000s: They present football programmes on Sky Sports.
- WereWolf Like Me (fanvid BBC Being Human)- ruclips.net/video/6HkSWmEPXFM/видео.html
The symptoms mentioned at the beginning are also the same symptoms of the Rabies virus.
Since they have a remedy to "Cure" Lycanthropy, has anyone tried it on a human with rabies? I am sure rabies were a common issue back in the Roman times, since... let's face it hygiene wasn't up to modern standards... I mean.. they wipe their ass with a sponge on a stick... an actual SHIT STICK.
I digress... Rats would be an issue, and so would rabies. I wonder if this description could actually be looked into, in order to see if it has actual medical value?
@@kaijukojin4371 An interesting thought, we are often all to quick to dismiss the past losing any wisdom held within it.
My grandpa killed lots of rabies inflicted dogs with sticks and knew a lot of people who died of rabies who were locked in rooms and were fed corn bread under the door to avoid contact.
@@iozmar9398 That must have been horrible. I've had rabies shots myself as a child. There was a dog bite I suffered, and after euthanized, was shown to have it... Was not fun.
@@iozmar9398
.... That's intense... Like, where the hell ( and when?? ) is your grandpa from??
( And why cornbread?? )
The most effective cure for lycanthropy, sign they up to Squarespace.
To anyone who suspects thier friend to be a werewolf, cook them scrambled eggs and put a special spice inside....Wolfsbane.
Or spray coyote piss all over them and see how they react. Buying that stuff in the bottle ain't cheap but what price is too high to reveal a werewolf?
None! Spray your friends and suspicious looking people with bottled coyote piss because I hear that kind of thing will force the dog man out from hiding.
If the person vomits from the rich coyote flavor they are not lycontropes but if they don't continue spraying until they show their true form.
@@galloe8933 That is a great idea.
If he was a werewolf, his vision will blur, he will froth at the mouth like a dog, fall into a coma, and die. And if he was not a werewolf, the SAME will happen, because you fed him the plant known as the "queen of poisons"...
It’s poisonous and will kill your friend either way. Don’t do that.
Guys, guys! We all know Wolfsbane can kill a man but Matrix is not wrong, it's just a last resort! Now coyote piss should be the first thing you use UNLESS you are positive your fiend is a werewolf or they owe you money for the coyote juice they forced you to buy because their lycanthropic-esq ways.
Live like a wolf, die by the bane my grandpa used to scream at the nurses on nightshift. Never was there a wiser man!
It's always bloodletting and leeches with these old guys.
Well how else is one supposed to balance their humours if not for a good leeching? How I ask you?
@@therealGibralter a flogging??
@@ximkai8794 no, a flogging is only good for pus and bile
That or a couple of holes in the head. Nothing like a good skull drilling...
5 Historical Accounts of Ancient Furries
How dare you amuse me!
Shall we resurrect the custom of werwolf hunting?
@@jersood9059 Yoda already did it
- WereWolf Like Me (fanvid BBC Being Human)- ruclips.net/video/6HkSWmEPXFM/видео.html
No
"... but they tell it none the less...". Are you calling me a liar good Sir?
In the modern world we look back on this and chuckle. Back then this was a legitimate threat.
Like closing off half the world because of a virus no more dangerous than the flu is rational behavior. In a few years people are going to laugh their asses of because of our silliness...
Ardunafeth are you alright mate?
@@Ardunafeth well the mortality rate is higher than common flu so technically it's more dangerous
@@Ardunafeth
This is stupid, delusional.
Not to Herodotus, it wasn't.
Classic VOTP here. Amazing stuff.
This is quickly becoming one of my favorite history channels. So many good ones here, that is saying something.
Probably Werewolves and vampires are ancient serial killers, that got immortalized in myths and legends.
Just make sure all your werewolf friends are up to date on all shots and dog tags.
1. Seasonal wolf pelt costumes of that culture embellished with talltales from travellers from the steppe's shores, neighbouring them, to Athens
2. Some sort of wasting disease that makes sleep-walking more likely
3. Some neighbors that really hated poor tortured Peter Stubbe decided to get rid of him by making up bullshit about him being a witch and watching him transform, by taking advantage of (a) man-eating wol(f/ves) in the area, that were starving that season for whatever reason (which often leads to that historically, when a member of the pack in their desperation discovers they can take down human children and petite women, when they are usually afraid of Humans, by nature originally, because how tall we stand; canines mostly judge size vertically only, when it comes to sizing others up)...or it was just all made up coming along the way from "the continent".
4. I've actually studying the very fascinating case of the Beast of Gevaudan on multiple occassions, and there is actually records that give much much more information than the account read here. I suggest anyone who may read this check it out for yourself, but honestly: It seems very likely to me that if the beast was not some sort of deformed wolf or dog, it was even more likely some form of African predatory mammal, that either escaped or was released, after being brought to France by ship, the folks of that backwater part of France had never seen before. Especially if you take into account the description of the strange (to those who killed it and later observed the kill atleast) animal that was killed by some men, and then the killings stopped, sounding VERY similar to certain known African animals. Almost no one at the time claimed it to be anything but an unknown beast (which did, though, lead many of them to consider it demonic in origin, but not a werewolf).
5. Dude just had some kind of paranoid psychosis, very exacerbated (or perhaps even brought on entirely) by getting fucked up on the shit he was indulging in.
@@calo-kg2cy Can you please explain to me sir, both how stories 2 and 4 even describe Lyncanthropy at all (and in the case of the fourth I can assure you I have looked into it extensively, and almost no one at the time even claimed that), and if so, how such a transformation could possibly occur, physically?
Getting a confession from someone under torture by the rack gives absolutely no credence nor evidence of a persons guilt. His death was most likely already assured by the “witness” testimony and confessed just to expedite his inevitable and inescapable demise.
You’re cool, I like your comment
@@ScooBdont indeed, you are correct. I almost added that part myself, but I thought it was pretty clearly implied by the rest of my original comment, and so chose to not make my already lengthy comment even longer, lol
@@enihil7713 Thank you, fren
Executing a werewolf on Oct. 31. Talk about tempting fate.
Executing a werewolf on Friday the 13th while it’s a full moon. Now that is tempting fate.
@@patricianoftheplebs6015 More like on Friday the 17th
At Midnight. With a BLUE Moon! Oooooh...
Funny how the guy in the last one, being treated for schizophrenia, anxiety, and religious delusions would have had his assertions taken at face value by the previous writers and then tortured.
I just found this channel today and I cant stop listening. Very good voice
My grandmother told me that her father witnessed a werewolf tied to a chair while he transformed. When he lived in Italy She was serious. I still don't know if I believe it or not.
Ask her do you go to hell if you are a werewolf
@@ashbarshunshavers341 She's gone but I would guess no
@@ashbarshunshavers341 Sort of a odd question to be asking lol seem a tad worried ay lad… Asking for a friend I’m assuming? 🤨 🧐
Grannies would never lie to us they know what's up
No werewolves just dogmen
Sometimes youtube reccomends absolute gems 💎
“Dog man” lives
Its not halloween, but any time of the year is good for me, I like dark stuff
Me and a friend saw one in Pearland TX around 10 years ago around 4-5 AM. We both were frozen, the air had this pressure and bloodlust as it walked on 4s down the street w a dog in its mouth. It passed just a few feet in front of us and we dared not make a sound. The beast went into the woods/field behind the houses. The beast was bigger than my 2000 Honda Civic & now that I think about it there is a lone house/cottage back there where me and my sister used to pick blackberries.. I'm just glad I wasn't alone in seeing it.
There was a murderer in XIX century Spain who confesed to be a werewolf: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manuel_Blanco_Romasanta
There's even a movie: www.imdb.com/title/tt0374180/
What an interesting direction you took. I always wondered what people of the past actually thought of monsters and mythical beasts.
Part 3 in the 1500s... it make you worry and wonder about what actually happened. Was he a serial killer who prowled about in a wolf-costume who murdered kids and pregnant women, and maybe even ritually ate them and his own son? Or was he perhaps an innocent man threatened into claiming these fancies by torture?
Or you know..the 3rd option??
Stubb Peter sounds like a bad one. I wouldn't have believed that he turned into the shape of a wolf to do his murders had he not fully admitted under the threat of agonising torture.
Remember guys, werewolves not swearwolves
Is that a jojos reference
@@hollo1611 no
What we do in the Shadows lol.
Man of culture
U.S army didn’t follow the prescribed method of cure.Blatantly obvious why he ran away.Thanks for the opportunity to comment. I am off to chase some rabbits now.
Of course the four story was featured or the premis of the movie Brotherhood of the Wolf. Fact or fiction it was a fun watch.
I love the practical medicine for lycanthropy part! Lol. Stay well out there everybody, and God bless you friends.😊
Can we take a moment to appreciate that the 1975 warewolf from " Appalachia " ? 😅
As someone from " Appalachia " myself ( like it's it's own state or something and not the longest continuous mountain range in the US ) , I legit tell you that I'm not surprised.
Like, not even a little 😅
.... There's some WEIRD things that happen " up in them hollers " 'round here, lol 😅😶
All these emojis make me dislike you.
I love o.g. werewolf myth and lycanthrope myth. thanks for the vid!
When that 16th century church bell tolled I fully expected to hear Powerwulf strike up.
The Neuri were Yotvingians. Named after the river Narew that they lived around.
Interesting
Not Merovingians??
@@joannvonroemer509 Merovingians were in France
The case of the Beast of Gévaudan is quite perplexing, but it is not unique. Accounts of attacks by "beasts"/cryptids/unidentified animals were not unique to France and that time period - there are lesser known cases all around Europe, as enumerated in the book "The man-eater of Gévaudan" (by Giovanni Todaro). And there is a quite increase of such accounts in the 18th century - I suspect that is not because they were more prevalant, but probably due to a higher development of the use of the press during this time period. I myself made a video about such accounts in my country of origin, one being very close to the time period of the Beast of Gévaudan.
I’d love to hear accounts from other civilizations around the world. If werewolves existed, they wouldn’t have been unique to Europe. And if they were….sounds like the ppl there may have just been ignorant to how to treat diseases (like rabies) or ID animal behavior.
I always say behind every myth, legend,& folklore, has a small bit of some form truth. This study story sounds so similar 2 ""LITTLE RED RIDING HOOD". Intensifying voice. Greatly presented w/ your skill of technology, horror filled frighten voice/ bits of story accounts. Stunningly animated. Thanks 4 time & sharing this intensifying frighten horrific accounts including locations, names, & dates. Stunning work.
The second story is based on the effects of people with rabies, as rabies does something that i cant remember to your throat and makes you instinctively avoid water. Apparently it hurts to drink water, and you suffer from extreme dehydration, as well as being more aggressive and lashing out because of said dehydration and rabies. People would see other people get sick and go crazy from wolf attacks, but we now know that a multitude of animals carry it.
Elevator pitch : an audio only version for this channel!
“...pumpkin salve...”
Yummmm
The werewolf in Appalachia was named "Dwayyo."
The one in Germany named Peter who put on a girdle that turned him into a werewolf is the 1 that sounds the most convincing to me.
"rub opium of Thier ears and nose to sleep"
that'll do.
That last one sounds like CIA LSD experiments...😂😂
Amazing. Easiest sub of my life.
Med student here: #2 sounds a bit like what happens in untreated Diabetes Mellitus: the profound thirst and dehydration, which also leads to dry eyes and mouths, along with the wasting, and it significantly slows the healing process, so people having lots of cuts and bruises that wont heal sounds reasonable. Sleeping trouble also isn't an unusual symptom in this context.
Odd to think that "werewolves" were just ancient, untreated diabetics.
Although quite possible they were just diabetic (with ancients not understanding what we consider common day diseases), why were they specifically wondering around tombs and not wanting to come out during the day??? Genuine question.
@@serinawoods-huntley1175 Not sure about the wandering around tombs thing (this might've been a bit of dramatic flair added by the author?), having very dry eyes would make being in brightly lit places rather uncomfortable. If you're losing massive amounts of water via urination, and drinking more doesn't seem to solve the problem, and now your eyes hurt all the time, then thinking "I'll just avoid going outside at night" is a pretty reasonable response. Alternatively, maybe it was their attempt at mitigating the effects of diabetic retinopathy (essentially a condition where having very high blood sugar ends up damaging the blood vessels which supply the eye)
Just a guess on my part, of course.
@@ramseykeilani9569 Hm okay. Thanks for the detailed answer. I find the cross between myth, medicine and the spirit realm fascinating.
interesting! good video!
Wow another banger, keep up the great work bud!
Splendid and fascinating - the reading and the topic.
Do you have a link to the Gevaudan documents?
I always knew they were real!!! Thanks for the amazing video!
Great video mate 👍
Even a man who is pure of heart and says his prayers by night may become a wolf when the wolfbane blooms and the moon is full and bright
Van Helsing!
The screenwriter of the Wolfman movie inevented that, has nothing to do with this video really, just Hollywood.
Still,beautiful in a haunting kind of way
That's Hollywood werewolves don't need a full moon you can easily become a werewolf the same way Peter did you just need a Belt made of Wolfs skin anyone who puts the belt on will instantly transform into a Werewolf
I know this is a three year old video, but could you provide a citation or link to the report for the final section ( 10:48 )?
My wife is a psychologist and we are both from Appalachia, I’d like to do some more research into it!
What I learned from this is I think I'm ready to try to sleep...
It's typical human ignorance that we should so vilify such beauriful intellegent sensitive creatures.
Your voice is very good for reading these horrors. Good job. I like the 'translated out of high German'. Interesting, 1589. That part is cool, too.
Translated out the high Dutch, btw. Which is Nederlands, my language, not German or Deutsch in German.
@@RKroese Okay. Thank you. I didn"t realize there was that distinction. I love languagues. Thanks again.
Never knew werewolves were taken so seriously.😵
We'd better get vampire accounts next. Especially ones that go back to the origin of vampires in Europe (grave robbers noting growing hair and fingernails on bloated corpses and thinking they were responsible for miasma).
Who watched history of the earth’s first video
You did! Thanks! 😁
You welcome
What's that?
Thanks. Didn't see that it is up already. I subbed already, though.
That'll be next... Lovin this Werewolf vid!
Stubb Peter: Great day for a walk in the woods, sure hope I don't get accused of lycanthropy or something
The guy's depressed? Let's bleed him till he passes out!
You have ventured into a topic which requires much study. You should research the cynocephalus. Some of the werewolf sighting can be attributed to them.
Final question: Were did you get access to the US Army Vet info?
greetings from cologne, germany. >:D
german wiki for bedburg says the werewolf panic probably was planted to distract attention away from mercenary armies who were suddenly jobless during the protestant vs. catholic conflicts of that era.
I didn't expect this today...
the soldier at the end of this vid. we used to call it working your ticket.
Do British people like American accents as much as we like British accents? I fw those Liverpool or Manchester accents. What do you say Brits? Is it that Louisiana accent that 'Bama, NY, Midwest or that New England?
If you want that sweet sweet New Hampshire accent look up my boy Fritz Wetherbee or Adam Sandler
Just Remember... Anthropologists say
They've only Discovered 1% of all the fossils that are out there . ALOT of fossils of life in the distant/ and more recent (10 thousand years or so) past.. ARE still yet too be Discovered .
Great field too go into... so many new Fossils just waiting to be discovered AND EVEN NAMED . 🤠🖖
Where are all the transitional fossils?
Murton Dingle: "Yes! Heroditus! The fabled historian of yore! He even appeared as a theme in the English Patient!"
Tommy Dawkins: "Then what happened?"
Murton Dingle: "Heroditus has hithhero been discredited by modern historians, being more of a sensationalist story teller than an accurate analyzer."
Tommy Dawkins: "What happened in the MOVIE Murton..."
very interesting.. i like wolfs and have always been interested the werewolf stories.. and the stories of dog headed men from the past.. thanks this was fine! carry on!
Great video. I would have put it in storage until October though, get those thirsty Halloween clicks.
Pumpkin salve? Hold up, is this why pumpkin spice got so popular?
Do you think you could do one about Witches? 🙂❤️
There just furries costplaying i always knew furries existed long ago
These "furries" killed people. They weren't just cosplaying.
Doctor D as if werewolves actually exist! Ha! If they did, I’d be dead already!
@@AndrewTheMandrew531 not really fair to say something doesn't exist just because you've never seen it
@@AndrewTheMandrew531 werewolves don't exist... but serial killers do. Strip away the superstition, and the story of Peter Stubbe sounds just like the account of a serial killer.
Christine Grooms Than I could say that a magical shrew named Harold existed somewhere out there that cured cancer, and you wouldn’t be able to disprove it, based on that logic. I may never have seen Harold, but I’m going to assume he doesn’t exist, because I don’t have any evidence proving he does exist.
"Rub opium on their nostrils" - reminds me of the well-established method of keeping babies quiet. Simply add some strong alcohol to their dinner, and they will sleep like babies. Wake up a bit cranky tho.
I love that the second classical account isn't really claiming the existence of literal werewolves but describing what are basically hardcore furries.
Also the bête du Gévaudan has been theorised to have been a pet hyena but don't tell the locals that, werewolves are as lucrative a myth for them as witches are to Salem Massachusetts. Even if you take the legend at face value it's described more like a really big wolf/cryptid than an actual shape shifting person.
So serial killers then?
Historical accounts of the samsquantch next please
masterpiece
"What seems to be the problem?"
Doc, I think I'm a werewolf.
"I see. Could you please stand by that wall?"
Okay... Wait, what are you doing with that gun?
"Loading it, obviously."
Why?
"I'm going to shoot you."
With a silver bullet?
"No, a regular one. You see, if you're a werewolf, a regular bullet should be merely a nuisance to you."
And what if I'm not a werewolf?
"Well... I AM going to aim for your head, if you catch my drift."
Doc, I don't think I'm a werewolf.
They're not necessarily physical.
lycanthropy brought to you by squarespace, also I've heard there's nothing better then a good bleeding, a 3 day rub down, followed by a little dash of smack yummy 😋 lol
Do the first description of the arabian peninsula by the Portuguese (who conquered Muscat [Oman], Hormuz [Iran/Persia], Aden [Yemen], Bahrain/Qatar and parts of modern-day UAE).
it's called alcoholism and it rules
12:30 ish, Diabetes Melitus, Schogrens Syndrom, Lupus.....
The ancient greeks knew how to handle furries
Wasn't the beast of Gevuadon just a very large and aggressive wolf?
We need to go back to writing books with titles which are just small books.
The symptoms at the beginning is cotton mouth, red eyes and high af.
The part 4 that took place in the french country side was a hyena they actually have it in a museum I forget which one
For a more recent story there was a report of one in Hull, UK jumping over a river. Two separate witness sightings :O
Great video and well researched content, that extra flair on the narration is appreciated too 🙌
Theres a live dog man lived in india he lives in America now with his family. Could he be descendent of them.
Can you explain
@@corywiedenbeck1562 look up hairyest people he will show up with his family too
Why is there no lycaon of arcadia?
When the cure is worse than the disease.
With that cure or treatment, I say skip right to the opium part.
I'm a werewolf. Rub me down with some drugs.
As a werewolf. I am offended.