
NEED TO KNOW
A wild wolf attacked a woman in the middle of a busy shopping area in Hamburg, Germany
The woman sustained a wound to the face and received stitches following the attack
The incident is the first such attack since wolves were reintroduced to Germany nearly three decades ago
A wolf bit a woman at a shopping center in the middle of a busy city, the first attack of its kind in several decades.
Near the Altona station in Hamburg on March 31, an otherwise normal day on Grosse Bergstrasse — a main shopping center in the German city — quickly turned dire when a wolf appeared on the bustling street and attacked a woman, per BBC and The Associated Press. The incident is being considered the first such attack by a wolf since Germany reintroduced the endangered species almost 30 years ago, per Politico.
The woman was in the busy shopping district when she spotted the wolf, which appeared disoriented and had repeatedly run into a glass window, per the German outlet NDR, citing police. The woman then attempted to lead the wolf away from the busy area when it bit her face and ran off.
Credit: Marcus Brandt/picture alliance via Getty
The individual received medical care at the scene and was then taken to a nearby hospital to receive stitches, per Politico. She has since been discharged.
Following the attack, the wolf fled and meandered through the city until late that night, when it was located near Lake Binnenalster. Subduing the animal was no easy task, according to the BBC; police hoisted the wolf from the water with a rope, but it escaped onto land and eluded authorities for about an hour before it was captured.
The wolf has since been transported to Klövensteen Wildlife Park and is expected to return to the wilderness in the future, per NDR.
"The wolf is currently very scared and stressed," said Christian Erdmann, from the Wildlife and Species Conservation Center, per NDR. "We recommend releasing the wolf in a sparsely populated area, provided the veterinarian has given the animal a clean bill of health."
Credit: Getty
The Federal Agency for Nature Conservation told German outlet dpa that the wolf attack marks the first such incident in Germany in 28 years, since the animals first returned to the country. Before that, wolves weren't present in the country for 150 years, per AP.
"There has not been a case like this since the reintroduction began in 1998," a spokesperson told the dpa, the BBC reported.
Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.
Though this is the first known attack on a human in recent years, wolves have posed a threat to livestock in Germany for some time, AP reported. Germany recently approved a law that makes it easier for farmers to shoot wolves that threaten livestock. In 2025, the European Parliament voted to amend wolves' status from "strictly protected" to "protected."
Read the original article on People
latest_posts
- 1
Lebanon’s Hezbollah and Yemen’s Houthis join Iran in strike on Israel - 2
Amplifying Cash The executives: The Upsides and downsides of Various Ledgers - 3
Virtual Route d: A Survey of \Exploring On the web Stages\ Web Administration - 4
Brazil approves law strengthening protective measures for female victims of gender-based violence - 5
The Most Astonishing Arising Advances to Watch
The Latest: Fueling begins as NASA aims to send 1st crew to the moon in 53 years
Mussolini's summer villa on Adriatic coast sold for €1.2 million
The Force of Systems administration: Individual Examples of overcoming adversity
'No Kings' protests recap: More than 8 million turned out across all 50 states, organizers say
After harsh winter, Ukrainians find joy in releasing bats rescued from war
Israel says it will keep control over part of southern Lebanon after war with Hezbollah ends
The most effective method to Examine a Cellular breakdown in the lungs Finding with Family
Artemis 2 astronauts fly around the moon in record-breaking lunar loop by NASA
Where America’s CO2 emissions come from – what you need to know, in charts













