Welcome to Stuff to Blow Your Mind, a production of iHeartRadio.
Hi, my name is Robert Lamb and this is the Monster Fact, a short form series from Stuff to Blow Your Mind, focusing on mythical creatures, ideas, and monsters. In time, we've been discussing the roots of werewolf traditions, both in
prehistoric human history and in ancient mythology and literature. Based on my readings, I think it's safe to say that werewolf traditions emerge from various elements in human history and the human psyche, taking on different forms depending on time and location, and most importantly influencing later traditions legends, folk tales,
and of course fictional takes as well. When we look for specific examples of early or even the earliest literary examples of werewolfs, it really depends on how narrowly or
widely we refine our search. For instance, the oldest surviving work of literature, the Epic of Gilgamesh, features the wild man and possible beast men in Keitu, and there's certainly some crossover from here into later werewolf traditions, but to be clear, in Ketu, not a werewolf more interesting as Daniel Ogden brings up in the werewolf in the ancient world. The epic of Gilgamesh does feature reference to the goddess Ishtar having turned humans into various beasts, including a wolf.
Much later, though still ancient to us, Homer's the Odyssey from the eighth century BCE refers to the witch Circe transforming humans not only into pigs her specialty, but into
wolves as well. These are both cases of transformative witchcraft, and while Ogden contends that stories like this certainly feed into werewolf traditions, we'd be going overboard to single either out as a true case zero for literary or mythic lacanthropy, focusing on the importance of temporary and even deliberate transformation
with connection between the two forms. Ogden points to a tale that is often singled out as the most obvious werewolf story from the ancient world, one appearing in the satiricon of Gaius Petronius Arbiter from the late first century CE. The Latin satire contains a story told by the character Nicros at a banquet, and it roughly goes as follows. Back when the freedman Nicros was still a slave he fell in love with the wife of an innkeeper, and
would sneak off to her whenever he could. One night, when the master of the house was away, Nicros persuaded the current HouseGuest, quote a soldier as brave as Orcus, to accompany him on the midnight journey. Shortly afterwards, they found themselves in an acropolis amongst the tombs, where the moon shone down in them like the midday sun. And then Nicros observed the soldier in a most shocking and
remarkable act. He took off all his clothes, neatly, piled them up urinated in a circle around them, and then transformed into a wolf. The wolf howled and ran away, and when Nekroes tried to touch the clothes that the soldier had left within the circle of urine, he found that the clothing had turned to stone. In fear, he hurried on to see the innkeeper's wife, whose name was Melissa, and she told him that if he'd arrived earlier, he could have helped them, for a wild wolf had attacked
their livestock, draining their blood. Before they were able to drive the beast away with a spear to the neck, Nicros began his way home after that, passing where the clothing had been stacked, but finding only splashes of blood there, And when he finally reached his master's house, he found a doctor attending to the soldier who had suffered a
grievous neck wound. Now we can easily identify the key attributes of temporary deliberate transformation with connection between the two forms, as well as various flourishes that would remain popular in
werewolf fiction up through modern times. Thus it's pretty definitive. Furthermore, Ogden contends that this one is quote one really good quirking story, which is key because the tale first and foremost serves as entertainment with humorous wrinkles concerning the storyteller, while also somewhat reflecting popular beliefs and the contemporary appetite for fantastic tales infused with the supernatural. In short, it's a werewolf story doing what werewolf stories have always done,
and that is entertained. Visual depictions are less definitive as we often lack the full context of what we're looking at. Is it a mere wolf, a human disguised as a wolf, or merely wearing a wolf's pelt. There are various stopping points before we arrive at full werewolf. Even as we contend with images tied to known tales, such as the Satiricon or the myth of Lycaean theory, anthropic figures can
likewise mean various things. Still acknowledging all of this, some images do read strongly as werewolf, at least to us Modern viewers across the Gulf of time consider the sixth century Etruscan pontic plate, which seems to depict a furry, bipedal humanoid with a wolf's head. The context is unclear, though probably linked in some way to Hercules and the
centaur depicted elsewhere on the plate. The theoryanthropic figure here may represent death or the wolf man combination here may reference the god Faunas, who in Ovid's metamorphosis attempts to rape Hercules while Hercules is dressed in his lover amphies clothing. We're reminded in all of this that the werewolf is
a monster. It is a thing, a form that illustrates various ideas, observations, and comparisons, and any of these ideas, observations, or comparisons may essentially summon an image comparable to the werewolf, completely on their own, detached in whole or in part from any particular werewolf tradition. That's it for now, But next week we will continue our journey and we will turn our attention to the female werewolf. Tune in for additional episodes of The Monster Fact, The Artifact, or Anomilia
Stupendium each week. As always, you can email us at contact at stuff to Blow your Mind dot com.
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