Beast of Gévaudan
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Beast of Gévaudan | |
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The Beast of Gévaudan, as depicted in a contemporary drawing |
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Classification | |
Grouping: | suspected Mesonychid/Creodont |
Statistics | |
Also Known As: | La bête du Gévaudan (French) |
Country: | France |
Region: | Gévaudan (Modern day Lozère) |
First Reported: | 1764 |
Last Sighted: | 1767 |
Status: | Urban Legend |
The Beast of Gévaudan (French: La bête du Gévaudan) was a legendary wolf like creature that terrorised the the former province of Gévaudan (modern day Lozère département), in the Margeride Mountains in south-central France from about 1764 to 1767. Many attacks took place, killing between 60-100 people, and debate continues as to the Beast's true identity. [1] The story is a popular subject for cryptozoologists and conspiracy theorists.
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[edit] Appearance
The Beast was described as being a wolflike creature the size of a cow, with a wide chest, a long sinuous tail with a lion-like tuft of fur on the end, and a greyhound-like head with small straight ears and large protruding fangs. [1]
It may have been able to leap up to thirty feet, according to analysis of some of its tracks.
[edit] Attacks
The first attack that provided a description of the creature took place in May/June of 1764. A girl from Langogne was working a farm in the Forêt de Mercoire when she saw a large, wolflike animal emerge from the trees and charge directly toward her, but it was driven away by the farm's bulls.
The creature's reported method of killing was unusual for a predator,often targeting the head, and ignoring the usual areas targeted by predators, including the legs and throat. Often the head was crushed or removed. It also seemed to target people over farm animals, reportedly having an aversion to cattle; many times it would attack someone while cattle were in the same field.
There were some reports that the beast was seen with another such animal, or with young; others state that the beast was with a man.
Some accounts put the number of dead at fifteen women, sixty-eight children, and six men (figures of those dead, another 30 wounded or mauled). The Beast's preference towards women and children is perhaps due to their working the country-side farms in pairs or even alone, making themselves easier targets. Men, however, tended to have objects that could be used as weapons, such as sickles, and often worked the fields in large groups.
[edit] The hunt for the beast
On January 12, 1765, Jacques Portefaix and six friends were attacked by the Beast; they drove it away by staying grouped together. Their fight caught the attention of King King Louis XV, who awarded 300 livres to the men. The King then directed professional wolf-hunters, Jean-Charles-Marc-Antoine Vaumesle d'Enneval and his son Jean-François, to kill the beast.
They arrived in Clermont-Ferrand on February 17, 1765, bringing them eight bloodhounds which had been trained in wolf-hunting. They spent several months hunting wolves by night (although most of the attacks were at dawn or dusk), believing them to be the beast. However the attacks continued, and by June 1765 they were replaced by François Antoine (AKA Antoine de Beauterne), the king's harquebus bearer and chief huntsman, and who held the title of Great Louvetier (wolf hunter) of the realm. He arrived in le Malzieu on June 22.
On September 21, 1765, Antoine killed a big gray wolf measuring 80 cm high, 1.7 m long, and weighing 60 kg. The wolf was called 'Le Loup de Chazes,' after the nearby Abbaye des Chazes. It was agreed locally that this was quite large for a wolf. Antoine officially stated: "We declare by the present report signed from our hand, we never saw a big wolf that could be compared to this one. Which is why we estimate this could be the fearsome beast that caused so much damage."
The wolf was stuffed and sent to Versailles where Antoine was received as a hero, receiving a large sum of money as well as lands, titles and awards.
However, on December 2, 1765, the Beast attacked again in la Besseyre Saint Mary, severely injuring two children. Dozens more deaths are reported to have followed.
[edit] Jean Chastel
The killing of the creature that eventually marked the end of the attacks is credited to a local hunter, Jean Chastel, at the Sogne d'Auvers.
Controversy surround's Chastel's account of his success. He claimed that, when part of a large hunting party, he sat down to read the Bible and pray. During one of the prayers the creature came into sight, staring at Chastel, who finished his prayer before shooting the beast. This would have been abberant behaviour for the beast, as it would usually attack on sight. Some believe this is proof Chastel participated with the beast, or that even he had trained it. However, he may simply have invented the story of the prayer out of religious motives.
[edit] Explanations
Various explanations were offered at the time of the attacks. They ranged from exaggerated accounts of wolf attacks, to a loup-garou (werewolf) [1] all the way to the beast being a punishment from God, or perhaps an unholy creature summoned by a sorcerer.
Current opinions offer up the theory that the attacks were actually a serial killer, or group of serial killers, using wolf attacks to cover their own murders. Also sometimes mentioned are the theories that the beast may have been a Dire Wolf,[1] a marginally larger, extinct relative of modern wolves; as well as the theory that the animal may have simply been an escaped captive exotic animal such as a hyena or lion.
Yet another theory is that the creature was a specially bred wolfdog hybrid used for hunting, such as those bred and used by the Spanish in the 16th century.
Certain cryptozoologists believe that it may have been a mesonychid, while other individuals may think it is a creodont. However, it has not been explained how a it would have survived until the 18th century without detection.
Some believe it to be a Thylacine (also called the Tasmanian Tiger), though it is said this extinct (last verified specimen died in 1936) animal could not have been strong or vicious enough for the job. Also Australia had only just become known to Europeans, and it would have been impossible for a thylacine to have survived until 1765 even if Abel Tasman, the only European visitor thus far, had brought one back.
[edit] In the arts and popular culture
- Robert Louis Stevenson travelled through the region in 1878 and described the legend in his book Travels with a Donkey in the Cévennes:
For this was the land of the ever-memorable BEAST, the Napoleon Bonaparte of wolves. What a career was his! He lived ten months at free quarters in Gévaudan and Vivarais; he ate women and children and ‘shepherdesses celebrated for their beauty’; he pursued armed horsemen; he has been seen at broad noonday chasing a post-chaise and outrider along the king’s high-road, and chaise and outrider fleeing before him at the gallop. He was placarded like a political offender, and ten thousand francs were offered for his head. And yet, when he was shot and sent to Versailles, behold! a common wolf, and even small for that.
- The cosmic horror fiction writer Clark Ashton Smith was inspired to write "The Beast of Averoigne" and other short stories set in an ancient Auvergne.
- The legend surrounding the attacks spawned a movie, Brotherhood of the Wolf (2001), which, while based on the records of the creature, also took several creative liberties in order to make the story more entertaining. Generating positive reviews and record business, it is primarily fictional.
- A barely more accurate version of the historic events was shown in the TV-film La bête du Gévaudan, France 2003, first aired by the station ARTE in 2005, directed by Patrick Volson.
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Occultopedia: Beast of Gévaudan
- Shadow of the Beast
- The Cryptid Zoo: Beast of Gévaudan
- Beast of Gévauland, a show by Théâtre S'Amourailles