Lycanthropy is a psychiatric illness in which the sufferer thinks he is a wolf or other nonhuman species. Undoubtedly stimulated by the once widespread superstition that the lycanthropy is given as a supernatural condition, where men actually assume the physical form of the werewolves or the other animals, the delusion has been most likely to take place among the people who believe in transmigration and reincarnation of souls.
About the Lycanthropy
In general, an individual is thought to take the form of the region’s most dangerous predator: the bear or wolf in Northern Asia and Europe, the leopard or hyena in Africa, and the tiger in China, India, Japan, and other parts of Asia; but other animals are mentioned as well. Animal guardian spirits, totemism, vampires, werewolves, and witches are all related to superstition and mental disorders. The fairy tales, folklore, and legends of several peoples and nations represent evidence of lycanthropic belief.
Stories of the men turning into beasts reach back to antiquity. Werewolf myths, which are thought to have originated in prehistoric times, became associated with the Olympian religion in parts of ancient Greece. In Arcadia, a region plagued by wolves, there exists a cult of the Wolf-Zeus. Mount Lycaeus was one of the scenes of a yearly gathering, where the priests were said to prepare the sacrificial feast, which included the meat mixed with human parts. As per the legend, whoever tasted it became a wolf and could not come back as a human unless he or she abstained from the human flesh for 9 years.
Also, the Romans knew of this superstition. Anyone who was supposed to have been turned as a wolf by means of herbs or magic spells was known as versipellis (or “turn skin”) by the Romans.
Stories about the werewolf (loup-garou – in French) were widely believed in Europe at the time of the Middle Ages. Bandits and Outlaws played on these superstitions by sometimes wearing the wolfskins on their armour. People were particularly susceptible to the delusion that they were wolves at the time, and if convicted, alleged lycanthropes were burned alive. Only rarely was their condition, which is recognized as a psychological disturbance. Although superstition is no longer considered to be common, traces still linger in a few isolated and primitive areas.
Introduction
Lycanthropy (from the Greek lykoi, Anthropos, and “wolf,” “human”) is an illusion or strange belief in which a person believes he or she has been transformed into an animal as a result of their feelings and behaviour.
Lycanthropy is very frequently seen in schizophrenia or mood disorders and is the symptom of delusion, which is not particular to a certain disorder. In very rare cases, patients believe that other people have changed into animals, and this is known as Lycanthropic intermetamorphosis in Moselhy’s report and the Lycanthropy spectrum in Nejad’s report.
Classic amphetamines( dextroamphetamine, methamphetamines, and methylphenidate) act through the dopaminergic pathway, but substitute amphetamines contain the neurochemical effects on serotonergic and dopaminergic pathways having behavioural effects showing the same delusional and amphetamine reactions.
A few amphetamine substitutes are divided into hallucinogenic drugs. A few examples of substitute amphetamines include 3,4 methylenedioxyamphetamine (MDMA), also called XTC or Adam, N-ethyl 3,4 Methylenedioxyamphetamine (MMDA), also called Eve, 5-methoxy 3,4 methyl-dexamphetamine (MMDA), and the 2, 5 methoxys 4 methylamphetamine (DOM), which is also called STP. In this particular report, we present a rare case of lycanthropy in a schizophrenic patient following ecstasy consumption.
Werewolf Lycanthropy
In folklore, a werewolf (“man-wolf”), occasionally called lycanthrope or wolf walker (“wolf person”), is a human having the ability to shapeshift into a wolf (or, especially in the modern film, the transformations of a therianthropic hybrid wolf-like creature occur on the full moon night, either intentionally or after being put under the affliction or curse (often a scratch or bite from another werewolf). Early sources for belief in this affliction or ability, known as lycanthropy, are the Gervase of Tilbury (1150–1228) and Petronius (27–66).
The werewolf is a well-known term in European folklore, with many variations that are linked by a popular development of a Christian interpretation of the underlying European folklore during the mediaeval period. Also, from the early modern period, werewolf beliefs spread to the New World with colonialism.
Belief in the werewolves developed in parallel to the belief in witches in the course of the Early Modern period and Late Middle Ages. The trial of the alleged werewolves began in what is now Switzerland (especially the Vaud and Valais) in the early 15th century and spread throughout Europe in the 16th century, peaking in the 17th century and subsiding by the 18th century, similar to the witchcraft trials as a whole.
Tales of Lycanthropy
A Chilling Collection of the Werewolf Horror! Animal Behavior and the other Tales of Lycanthropy delivers 13 startling tales – which is a lone wolf wishing to be a mother.