Posted on 09/18/2009 12:15:33 PM PDT by Nikas777
April 18, 2007
The Woodwose Bigfoots European cousin
Like the Loch Ness Monster or the Abominable Snowman, I usually think of Bigfoot (or Sasquatch as hes sometimes known) as a distinctly 20th century phenomenon. However, while its true that interest in these legendary creatures was stoked by images captured through the modern means of photography and film, the stories surrounding them actually go back centuries. From the lakes of Scotland, to the heights of the Himalayas, to the Pacific Northwest of America, locals have long attested to the presence of these elusive beings.
Although little-known today, a mythical creature with striking similarities to Bigfoot was believed to exist an even longer time ago in medieval Europe. Called a woodwose, or in Anglo-Saxon wuduwasa, this wild man of the forest was a familiar figure in the literature and visual arts of the Middle Ages.
Walk on the Wild Side
As with Bigfoot, the woodwoses natural territory was believed to be the forest (hence the name: literally wood-man), and it too was said to be a hominoid covered in a heavy coat of hair. However, the woodwose was rarely described as ape-like, as Bigfoot often is. Rather, it was a creature very similar to other humans, but with a wild manner and an unusual amount of hair all over its body.
Different theories have been put forward about the origin of the woodwose myth, including the medieval belief that woodwoses were people who had wandered into the woods, and as a means of survival grew hair to protect themselves from the elements. Another theory was that people born with an excess of body hair retreated from human society and led isolated lives as wild men (and women). In opposition to these ideas, some modern researchers have proposed that woodwose sightings were actually sightings of Neanderthals still living in medieval Europe.
While it is unclear exactly how the image of the woodwose arose, once it entered the publics imagination it became a common motif in architecture, the visual arts, and literature. For example, woodwoses were often featured in the decoration of medieval churches, most particularly in ceiling bosses, the pieces of sculpture placed at the intersections of overlapping roof vaults. They were also depicted in works of art by such illustrious printmakers as Albrecht Dürer and Martin Schongauer. The medieval writer Geoffrey of Monmouth made mention of a Man of the Woods in his epic Life of Merlin, as did the writer of the Kings Mirror, a Norwegian educational treatise dating to A.D. 1250.
Great Balls of Fire
Another phenomenon growing out the woodwose myth was the popular medieval custom of attending masquerades dressed as hairy wild men. The most famous story about this practice concerns an event that came to be known as the Bal des Ardents, or the Ball of the Burning Men, which refers to a 1393 ball organized by the then-Queen of France. In preparation for this event, the king, Charles VI and with five other men dressed themselves in costumes made out of linen soaked in highly flammable pitch to which they stuck frazzled hemp fibers to simulate hair. In addition, as part of their get-ups, the six men were chained together. Understandably, flaming torches were not allowed at the event, but the kings brother nevertheless came near the costumed men bearing a lighted torch. Tragically, one of the men caught fire, and in the panic that ensued, four of the men burned to death, although the king escaped injury.
Whither Woodwose
While the woodwose myth is no longer so prevalent in the public imagination, its influence can still be seen. Two relatively recent examples of this influence are a poem and book written by the British poet Ted Hughes, both titled Wodwo (another variant of woodwose), which were published in the late 1960s. Another reference to the woodwose is found in the writings of J.R.R. Tolkien, who called one of his fictional races of men Woses.
Regardless of the actual circumstances that gave rise to the woodwose myth, its clear that the image of the wild man of the woods has had an enduring resonance in works of art dating back at least as far as the Middle Ages. Its not surprising that this is this case; like Bigfoot, the woodwose can be seen as a symbol of the distance society has traveled from its primitive roots, but also of our continued attraction to the unknown and wild elements of our own nature. Morgen Jahnke
I am intrigued by the notion that the woodwose were actually the last remaining Neanderthals still alive during medieval Europe.
"A woodwose...how womantic!"
There are some who believe the Almas of the Urals are Neaderthals, still alive in the 20th Century.
ping sunkenciv for the European folklore and ping to dragonblustar7 for the cyrptozoology.
Yes. Also the woodwose were described as hairy like apes but clothed in a primitive manner and using simple primitive weapons like a club and very combative/territorial.
LOL!! That’s EXACTLY what I thought of, even before I read your post!
ping
Add me to the ping list please.
LOL!!!!
Bwaaa!
I think the monster in Beowolf was a bigfoot.
Really? Interesting. (Are you kidding or for real? - it is cool either way)
Or a surviving Neanderthal.
Beowulf was set in Denmark and Southwestern Sweden. Grendel was not identified, but I’s say he was a troll, or started out as a troll. The poem was transmitted in West Saxon. I don’t know if there were trolls in the Saxon England bestiary. Not certain if the Norse troll swam and lived in caves under water, but apparently they could in the Anglo Saxon imagination.
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Thanks dragonblustar and Nikas777. |
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Dietrich im kampf mit dem Wilden Mann. Stutgart. 1470
Germany and Austria is filled with folktales of Wild Men, 'Wilder Mann' hotels and statues are everywhere, particularly in the Tyrol. In fact, growing up in Bavaria, I was convinced they still lived in the mountains there.
Grover Krantz suggested that the surviving hunter-gatherer groups in Europe didn’t finally die out / get assimilated until the Middle Ages, and to them attributes those wild man accounts. The Almasty is altogether different, sez Krantz (said, actually, cuz he’s now deceased) and was reported as recently as the 1940s.
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