Though not
a werewolf account, the wolf of Soissons
is about a wolf that devours human and tormented the village of Soissons which
is in the Northeast of Paris for two days in the year 1765. Around 18 people
were attacked and four of them died from their fatal wounds.
First of
the victim of the Wolf of Soissons
would be a pregnant woman, and the unborn child. They were allegedly attacked by the wolf in
the church of Septmont during the final day of February. Concerned citizen took the infant which is
only about 4-5 months old right to the mother’s womb hoping that it will be
baptized before he die. The Wolf of Soissons reportedly attacked
again, few moments after the first attack was recorded and only a few yards
away from the scene. Madame d’Amberief
was able to survive the attack by fighting back together with her son.
On the 1st
day of March, the attack continues near Courcelles. A man was reportedly attack by the vicious Wolf of Soissons. Fortunately he only suffered a head
injury. Two young boys were unlucky to
meet the ravenous wolf on a road to Paris. Marechal and Boucher were savagely
attacked by the creature and were seriously wounded. Then a farmer lost half of his face after the
wolf bit it, fortunately he was able to escape on the local mill. But on the local mill a seventeen-year-old
boy was already killed by the wolf of
Soissons.
The next
recorded attack of the wolf was on Bazoches.
A woman’s head were nearly decapitated and a girl who ran shrieking and
in panic to the village to get a help was fatally wounded by its attack. And in the town four more villagers were
attacked by the Wolf of Soissons. Other people arrive in the scene that
startled the wolf causing it to flee.
They chased it to the courtyard where it had a fight with a dog. Then the wolf went to the Pasteur where it
reportedly killed a number of sheep and mutilated the body of a servant.
Finally a
man named Antoine Saverella which is an ex-militia member pursued the Wolf of Soissons, where he was able to
kill it with a pitchfork. He was
rewarded with an amount of 300 livres by Louis XV of France.
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