(Werewolf illustration for the story "The Werewolf Howls".
Internal illustration from the pulp magazine Weird Tales (November 1941, vol.
36, no. 2, page 38), [Public Domain] via Creative Commons)
Around 1487 CE, two famous
Papal Inquisitors named Heinrich Kramer and James Sprenger published The Malleus Maleficarum with the
blessing of Pope Innocent VIII. The book covered supernatural topics such as
witchcraft, demons and monsters in a question and answer format. It remained a
highly influential text among inquisitors and witch-hunters for around three
centuries.
In the peculiar pages of The Malleus Maleficarum, the authors gave
several accounts of monsters, or, at least, illusions of monsters inspired by
witches or the devil. One of the more interesting tales recorded in the book
told of a delirious man who unfortunately believed he turned into a murderous
wolf whenever he slept. The authors of the text used the following story as an
example of the magical illusions that witches and devils could impose on
unsuspecting people.
The Inquisitors cited a
certain William of Paris as the source of this tale. The story began with a
troubled man living alone in a cave. He truly and honestly believed that he
became a wolf while he slept. Cursed by witchcraft or preyed on by demons, the
man dreamed that he crept into nearby towns at night and devoured helpless
children. When he awoke, however, he realized that children truly had been
killed in nearby towns. Whenever the man dreamt that he had murdered a child,
without fail, a child would be found mauled to death the next day, as if by an
animal. With these revelations, the man believed to his very core that he was a
genuine werewolf.
According to the Inquisitors,
however, the man was being deceived. They wrote that while the cursed victim
dreamed horrible visions of hunting children, the devil possessed a wolf and reenacted
the man’s nightmares in reality. The dreaming man tossed and turned harmlessly
in his cave while a separate wolf, supposedly controlled by demonic forces, stalked
into town and attacked the vulnerable youth.
According to The Malleus Maleficarum, the diabolical
charade continued for a long time. In the end, the story concluded with the
townspeople finding the man writhing in delirium on a forest floor. The
Inquisitors left no mention of what was done with the mad man, and no names
were provided except their source, William of Paris.
Written by C. Keith Hansley.
- The Malleus Maleficarum by Heinrich Kramer and James Sprenger, translated by Montague Summers. New York: Dover Publications, 1971.
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