Felidae
Panthera lineage

Neofelis (clouded leopards)

Panthera (lions, tigers etc.)

Bay cat lineage

Pardofelis (bay cat, marbled cat etc.)

Caracal lineage

Caracal (caracal, serval etc.)

Ocelot lineage

Leopardus (ocelot, margay etc.)

Lynx lineage

Lynx (lynxes, bobcat etc.)

Puma lineage

Acinonyx (cheetah)

Puma (cougar, yaguarondi etc.)

Leopard cat lineage

Otocolobus (manul)

Prionailurus (leopard cat, fishing cat etc.)

Domestic cat lineage

Felis (domestic cat, wildcat etc.)

References edit

If non-rabid wolves only attacked people in defense of themselves or their pups, then why is it that the majority of recorded victims are women and young children, not hunters/trappers? And why are the victims *stalked* and *eaten*? This is consistent with the way treat prey, not threats.

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According to the Nihon Shoki, the rise of the Hata clan in the imperial court began when Hata no Otsuchi pacified a pair of wolves fighting outside Kyoto. When he recounted this to Emperor Kinmei, the Emperor was so moved by the man's compassion that he made Hata no Otsuchi head of the imperial treasury.[1]

The Man'yōshū contains three poems praising the chaotic wolf-inhabited wilderness outside the palace walls as an ideal of asceticism and simplicity, in contrast to the rigid etiquette of court life. The poet Kakinomoto no Hitomaro wrote of how the plains inhabited by the so-called "Large-Mouthed Pure God" were sacred, and inhabited only by wolves and the spirits of deceased emperors. While this Shintoist view of nature emphasized the separateness between the spirit world represented by the wilderness and the human world, Buddhist beliefs on the oneness of life

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CHILD 44

Boris Zarubin

Gratchev (Russian: Грачёв)

Fyodor Andreev (Russian: Фёдор Андреев)

Arkady Fyodorovich Andreev (Russian: Аркадий Фёдорович Андреев)

Mikoyan

Ivan Kuzmitch Zhukov (Russian: Ива́н Кузмич Жу́ков)

Larisa Petrova (Russian: Лариса Петрова)

Varlam Babinich (Russian: Варла́м Бабинич)

Inessa Nesterova (Russian: Ине́сса Не́стерова)

Trofim Sidorov (Russian: Трофим Сидоров)

Oksana Sidorova (Russian: Оксана Сидорова)

THE SECRET SPEECH

Frol Panin (Russian: Фрол Па́нин)

Jekabs Drozdov (Russian: Я́ков Дроздов)

Lazar (Russian: Ла́зарь)

Anisya (Russian: Анися) (b. 1917 - ) Fraera (Russian: Фра́ера) klikukha

Nikolai Borisov (Russian: Николай Борисов) (b. 1919 - )

Suren Moskvin (Russian: Суре́н Москвин)

Krasikov (Russian: Красиков)

Karl Enukidze (Russian: Карл Енуки́дзе)

Iulia Peshkova (Russian: Ю́лия Пешкова)

Genrikh Duvakin (Russian: Ге́нрих Дувакин)

Abel Prezent (Russian: Авель Презент)

Malysh (Russian: Малыш)

Likhoi (Russian: Лихои)

Zhores Sinyavsky (Russian: Жоре́с Синя́вский)

Georgi Vavilov (Russian: Георги Вавилов)

Marina Niurina (Russian: Марина Нюрина)

AGENT 6

Jim Yates

Marcus Greene

Simon Clarke

Anton Vashchenko

trainee KHAD agent Nara Mir (Dari: نارا میر)

Memar Mir (Dari: مهمار میر)

Fahad Mohammed (Dari: محمد فهاد‎‎)

Samir Mohammed (Dari: فهاد سامیر)

Zabi (Dari: زابی)

Fyodor Mazurov

  1. ^ Walker, B. L. (2009), The lost wolves of Japan, University of Washington Press, pp. 57-83, ISBN 0295989939