Lundi 30 mars 2026 au soir, une femme a été mordue et grièvement blessée au visage par un loup dans le quartier d’Altona, à Hambourg. L’animal a ensuite été retrouvé dans le centre-ville, près de la Binnenalster, avant d’être pris en charge par les autorités. Les circonstances de l’attaque restent à ce stade inexpliquées.
Une femme blessée au visage à Altona
L’attaque a eu lieu lundi 30 mars 2026 vers 19:00, selon les informations relayées par plusieurs médias, dont Bild et 20 Minuten.
Le loup capturé près de la Binnenalster
L’animal a été repéré dans le centre-ville de Hambourg puis tiré hors de l’Alster à l’aide d’un nœud coulant avant d’être confié à l’autorité environnementale.
L’identité de l’animal jugée très probable
L’expert Norman Stier a confirmé qu’il s’agissait bien d’un loup après examen d’images et de vidéos envoyées par des particuliers.
L’enquête se poursuit
Les autorités n’ont pas encore établi pourquoi le loup s’est approché de la femme ni s’il s’agit du même animal que celui aperçu depuis le week-end.
A wolf bit and seriously injured a woman in the face in Hamburg's Altona district on Monday evening, March 30, 2026, in what police and wildlife experts described as a highly unusual attack. The incident occurred around 19:00, reportedly in front of an Ikea branch in the district, according to reporting by the Bild newspaper cited across multiple outlets. The woman suffered facial injuries and was taken to a hospital for treatment, according to the 20 Minuten report. Hamburg police confirmed the attack to the German news agency dpa. Officers immediately launched a search for the animal across the city.
Police pull wolf from Alster with a noose The search ended late Monday evening when emergency crews located the wolf in Hamburg's city center, near the landing stage on the Binnenalster at Jungfernstieg. As officers approached, the animal fled and jumped into the water. Police used a noose to pull the wolf from the Alster, a spokesperson for the situation center confirmed. A hunter then transported the animal away from the city center. The captured wolf was handed over to the environmental authority, which assumed responsibility for the animal's care and any further decisions about its fate. According to the Hamburger Morgenpost, as cited by Spiegel Online, a decision on what would happen to the wolf was expected on Tuesday.
Expert confirms wolf identity after days of sightings across Hamburg The animal had been spotted multiple times across Hamburg since Saturday, March 28, two days before the attack. According to earlier statements from the environmental authority, it was first observed in parks along the Falkensteiner Ufer in Blankenese, before being seen farther east in the districts of Nienstedten and Othmarschen, and later in St. Pauli. Initial uncertainty about whether the animal was truly a wolf was resolved when Norman Stier, a wolf expert from the Technical University of Dresden, evaluated image and video material submitted by members of the public and confirmed unequivocally that it was a wolf. In most prior encounters, witnesses reported the animal behaved shyly and avoided people. One resident described an encounter in his own garden during which the wolf immediately fled, according to 20 Minuten. Police said they considered it likely, though not yet certain, that the captured animal was the same wolf seen over the preceding days, as they did not assume multiple wolves were present in the city area.
Wolf attacks on humans are considered extremely rare in Europe. According to a 2002 study by the Norwegian Institute for Nature Research, cited in the Zeit Online reporting, healthy wolves have attacked humans in only a small number of historical cases. The same source identified three primary causes behind such attacks: rabies, provocation, and food conditioning. Wildlife authorities note that young wolves in particular can display curious behavior toward humans, though they typically withdraw slowly and calmly rather than approaching aggressively.
Circumstances of the attack remain unclear, investigation ongoing Several key details about the incident remained unconfirmed as of early Tuesday morning. Police initially declined to specify the exact nature or severity of the woman's injuries beyond the facial wounds reported by multiple outlets. The reason the wolf and the woman came into such close proximity — and why the animal bit her — was not established. Wolves are generally considered shy animals that avoid human contact, making the attack an unusual escalation, as 20 Minuten noted. What occurred between the attack in Altona and the wolf's appearance in the Binnenalster, several kilometers away in the city center, was also not explained in initial reports. The environmental authority was set to examine the animal's condition and determine next steps, with the broader question of why a wolf entered one of Germany's largest urban centers remaining unanswered.
Mentioned People
- Norman Stier — Ekspert ds. wilków i badacz z Politechniki w Dreźnie odpowiedzialny za monitoring dzikiej fauny
Sources: 16 articles
- Frau von Wolf gebissen - Was wir wissen und was nicht (Süddeutsche Zeitung)
- Ženu v Hamburku pokousal vlk (Novinky)
- Hamburg: Frau von Wolf gebissen - Was wir wissen und was nicht (ZEIT ONLINE)
- Hamburg: Wolf verletzt Frau im Gesicht, Polizei sichert Tier (20 Minuten)
- Mitten in Hamburg: Wolf beisst Frau ins Gesicht (Blick.ch)
- Wolf: Frau in Hamburg von Wolf gebissen (ZEIT ONLINE)
- Wolf beißt Frau in Hamburg - und muss aus Alster gezogen werden (Spiegel Online)
- Frau gebissen: Polizei fängt Wolf in Hamburg ein (newsORF.at)
- Frau in Hamburg von Wolf gebissen - Tier aus Alster gezogen (stern.de)
- Frau in Hamburg von Wolf gebissen - Tier aus Alster gezogen (Süddeutsche Zeitung)