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The Greatest Werewolf Art Of The Middle Ages And Renaissance

Potoooooooo

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While they weren't always depicted as shirtless teen heartthrobs, creatures who turn from human into wolf (and vice versa) appear in tales dating back to antiquity. So throughout the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, artists have had plenty of strange and creepy stories to inform their werewolf illustrations.
http://io9.com/the-greatest-werewolf-art-of-the-middle-ages-and-renais-1652969702

A priest administering last rites to the dying wife on the right while the cursed husband is standing on the left, a miniature from Topographica Hibernica, c. 1196-1223
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Dog-headed men from Livre des merveilles du monde, a 13th-century travelogue with stories told by Marco Polo

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An illustration from a book that tells a cycle of romances about Alexander the Great, illustrated by Jehan de Grise in the late 14th century
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Werewolf, by Lucas Cranach the Elder, c. 1512
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Witch turned werewolf attacking travelers, a woodcut by Hans Weiditz, from Die Emeis, written by Dr. Johann von Kaysersberg, 1517
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A 16th century copperplate engraving of Lycaon, the king of Arcadia, transformed into a wolf by Zeus, made by Italian artist Agostino de' Musi
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King Lycaon, on an engraving from Ovid's Metamorphoses Book I, made by Hendrik Goltzius, 1589
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The werewolf of Eschenbach, Germany, trapped in a well, 1685
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Another engraving of the Werewolf of Eschenbach, 1685
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The Beast of Gévaudan, "a calf-sized men-eating wolf" that attacked about 210 people, resulting in 113 deaths (98 of them were partly eaten), between 1764 and 1767
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Two wolves eating a sheep, from the cover of Wie man die falschen Propheten erkennen (How to recognize false prophets), 1809
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An illustration from a book that tells a cycle of romances about Alexander the Great, illustrated by Jehan de Grise in the late 14th century
mfwg7ks4p0hvttcdbpdr.jpg

The werewolf in this picture is the least disturbing part.
 
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