Tradition / Region: French Mythology
Alternate Names: Beast of Primarette, Carnivorous Wolf of Primarette
Category: Wolf, Man-Eater, Historical Beast, Possibly Werewolf
The Myth
The Primarette Beast was a fearsome devouring creature blamed for a series of deadly attacks in the Dauphiné region of France between 1747 and 1752. Contemporary records describe it as a wolf, though some sources also compared it to a lynx.
The terror began in May 1747, when a child was seized at the door of his home during church hours. Witnesses tracked the blood trail into the woods and found scattered body parts. Parish records confirm multiple similar killings over the following years, most of them involving children taken near homes or fields.
The local priest noted that villagers believed the attacks were not ordinary wolves. Some claimed they were werewolves or supernatural beasts permitted by divine will. Others suggested they were unusually large or aggressive wolves. The priest himself tried to dismiss these beliefs, yet he illustrated the death records with drawings of wolf heads, reflecting how deeply the fear marked the community.
By 1752, after at least seven victims, the killings ceased. No confirmed explanation was ever given. Whether the culprit was a pack of wolves, a single abnormal predator, or something more mysterious, the Primarette Beast entered regional folklore as one of Europe’s many legendary man-eating wolves.
Gallery
Sources
Wikipedia contributors. (n.d.). Bête de Primarette. In Wikipedia, from https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/B%C3%AAte_de_Primarette
Interpretive Lenses
Religious Readings
- Christian Ascetic Deep Dive
Philosophical Readings
- Nietzschean Deep Dive
Psychological Readings
- Jungian Deep Dive
Esoteric Deep Dive
- Hermetic Deep Dive
Political / Social Readings
- Marxist Deep Dive