Folklore and Mythology
Electronic Texts
page 1
edited and/or translated by
D. L. Ashliman
University of Pittsburgh
© 1996-2002
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- Abducted by Aliens.
The aliens in these legends are not
men from outer space but the underground folk: fairies, trolls, elves,
and the like.
- The Recovered Bride (Ireland).
- Taken by the Good People (Ireland).
- Twenty Years with the Good People (Ireland).
- The Fairies' Hill (Scotland).
- The Stolen Lady (Scotland).
- A Smith Rescues a Captured Woman from a Troll (Denmark).
- Aesop's Fables.
Joseph Jacobs' classic retelling of 82 fables and included in the
Harvard Classics, vol. 17, part 1.
This site is part of Bartleby.com,
Great Books Online.
- Aesop's
Fables, edited by John R. Long.
- Aging and Death
in Folklore.
An essay by D. L. Ashliman, with supporting texts from proverbs,
folktales, and myths from around the world.
- Air Castles. Tales
of type 1430 about daydreams of wealth and fame.
- The Broken Pot (India, The Panchatantra).
- The Poor Man and the Flask of Oil (India, Bidpai).
- The Daydreamer (India, Cecil Henry Bompas).
- The Barber's Tale of His Fifth Brother (1001 Nights).
- A Wise Lesson; or, The Dervish and the Honey Jar (Jewish).
- The Milkmaid and Her Pail (Aesop).
- Lazy Heinz (Germany, Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm).
- Lean Lisa (Germany, Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm).
- The Lad and the Fox (Sweden, Gabriel Djurklou).
- Bibliography of additional type 1430 tales (English and German).
- Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves
from the 1001 Nights. The classic "Open Sesame" tale
(type 676).
- Amleth, Prince of Denmark, from the Gesta
Danorum of Saxo Grammaticus. This account, written about 1185 but
based on older oral tradition, describes the same players and events that
were immortalized by William Shakespeare in his The Tragedy of Hamlet,
Prince of Denmark, written about 1602.
- Andersen, Hans Christian (1805-1875).
- Hans Christian Andersen:
Fairy Tales and Stories. An excellent home page featuring Denmark's
most famous writer. Included here are a chronological
listing of Andersen's folk-like fairy tales, electronic texts of most
stories, and links to additional information.
- The
H. C. Andersen Home Page. Links to Andersen's works in Danish. This
site is sponsored by the Danish Royal Library.
- H. C. Andersen-Centret,
a treasure trove of information (in Danish and in English) from the
H. C. Andersen Center in Odense, Denmark.
- Androcles and the Lion. Tales of type 156,
in which a man pulls a thorn from a lion's paw, thus gaining the beast's
eternal gratitude and loyalty.
- The Slave and the Lion (Aesop).
- Androcles and the Lion (Joseph Jacobs).
- Of the Remembrance of Benefits (Gesta Romanorum).
- Animal Brides.
Folktales of Aarne-Thompson type 402.
- Chonguita the Monkey Wife (Philippines).
- The Frog Maiden (Burma).
- The Dog Bride (India).
- The Cat Who Became a Queen (India).
- The Mouse Maiden (Sri Lanka).
- The Prince and the Tortoise (1001 Nights).
- The Frog's Skin (Georgia).
- The Frog (Austria/Italy).
- The Frog's Bridegroom (Germany).
- Doll i' the Grass (Norway).
- The She-Wolf (Croatia).
- Links to additional tales of type 402.
- Animal Brides
and Animal Bridegrooms: Tales Told by North American Indians.
- The Bear Who Married a Woman (Tsimshian).
- The Girl Who Married the Crow (Thompson [Ntlakyapamuk]).
- The Woman Who Became a Horse (Thompson [Ntlakyapamuk]).
- The Woman Who Became a Horse (Skidi Pawnee).
- The Bear Woman (Okanagon).
- The Fish Man (Salish).
- The Man Who Married a Bear (Nez Percé).
- Animals in Exile.
Folktales of Aarne-Thompson type 130.
- The Bremen Town Musicians (Germany).
- The Choristers of St. Gudule (Flanders).
- The Robbers and the Farm Animals (Switzerland).
- The Story of the White Pet (Scotland).
- The Bull, the Tup, the Cock, and the Steg (England).
- Jack and His Comrades (Ireland).
- How Jack Went to Seek His Fortune, version 1 (USA).
- How Jack Went to Seek His Fortune, version 2
(USA).
- The Dog, the Cat, the Ass, and the Cock (USA).
- Anti-Semitic
Legends. A collection of legends reflecting
anti-Jewish sentiment among European Christians. These tales, like their
witchcraft analogs, illustrate
an unfortunate chapter in human history.
- The Jews' Stone (Austria).
- The Girl Who Was Killed by Jews (Germany).
- Pfefferkorn the Jew at Halle (Germany).
- The Expulsion of the Jews from Prussia (Germany).
- The Bloody Children of the Jews (Germany).
- The Imprisoned Jew at Magdeburg
(Germany).
- The Chapel of the Holy Body
at Magdeburg (Germany).
- The Lost Jew (Germany).
- The Story of Judas (Italy).
- Malchus at the Column (Italy).
- Buttadeu (Sicily).
- The Eternal Jew on the Matterhorn (Switzerland).
- The Jew in the Thorns (Germany).
- Asbjørnsen, Peter Christen (1812-1885) and Moe,
Jørgen (1813-1882).
Norske
Folkeeventyr. The classic collection of Norwegian folktales, here in
the Norwegian language.
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- Bald Stories: Folktales
about Hairless Men.
- The Man and His Two Wives (Aesop).
- The Middle-Aged Man and the Two Widows (Jean de La Fontaine).
- The Bald Old Man (Korea).
- The Mix-up (from a seventeenth-century German chapbook).
- How Saint Peter Lost His Hair (Germany).
- Why the Vulture Is Bald (Burma).
- The Bald Man (Tibet).
- Balder's
Death, as recorded in The Prose Edda of Snorri
Sturluson.
- The Bear Trainer and His Cat. Folktales of
Aarne-Thompson type 1161 (also categorized as
migratory legends of Christiansen type 6015) in which a troll or other
sinister creature mistakes a bear for a cat, then quickly learns that
bears do not make good pets.
- The Cat on the Dovrefjell (Norway).
- The Cat of Norrhult (Sweden).
- The Water Nix in the Oil Mill near Frauendorf (Germany).
- The Water-Man (Moravia).
- Bearskin
and other tales of type 361, in which a man gains a fortune and a
beautiful bride by entering into a pact with the devil.
- Bearskin (Hans Jakob Christoffel von Grimmelshausen, Germany).
- Bearskin (Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm, Germany).
- The Devil as Partner (Switzerland).
- Don Giovanni de la Fortuna (Sicily).
- The Reward of Kindness (Philippines)
- Beauty and the Beast.
Folktales of type 425C.
- Beauty and the Beast (Reconstructed from various European sources by
Joseph Jacobs).
- Beauty and the Beast (France, Jeanne-Marie LePrince de Beaumont).
- The Summer and Winter Garden (Germany, Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm).
- The Singing, Springing Lark (Germany, Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm).
- The Clinking Clanking Lowesleaf (Germany, Carl and Theodor Colshorn).
- The Little Nut Twig (Germany, Ludwig Bechstein).
- Little Broomstick (Germany, Ludwig Bechstein).
- The Bear Prince (Switzerland, Otto Sutermeister).
- Zelinda and the Monster (Italy, Thomas Frederick Crane).
- The Small-Tooth Dog (England, Sidney Oldall Addy).
- The Singing Rose (Austria, Ignaz and Joseph Zingerle).
- The Enchanted Frog (Germany, Carl and Theodor Colshorn).
-
The Bell of Justice.
Folktales of type 207C, in which an abandoned old horse gains justice by
tugging on a bell rope.
- Of a Bell That Was Ordered in King John's Days (Italy, Il
Novellino).
- The Bell of Atri (Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Tales of a Wayside
Inn).
- Big Peter and Little Peter, a classic
trickster tale of type 1535 from Norway.
- The Bird's Three Precepts. Fables of
type 150, in which a captured bird gains its freedom by giving its captor
three pieces of advice.
- Three Precepts (Jewish).
- Of Hearing Good Counsel (Gesta Romanorum).
- The Three Proverbs (Poland).
- The Black School.
Migratory legends of
type 3000, in which a wizard in training escapes from his satanic teacher,
albeit with the loss of his shadow.
- The Black School (Iceland).
- "Black Airt" and Devil Contracts (Scotland).
- Bluebeard. Folktales of types 312 and 312A
about women whose brothers rescue them from their ruthless husbands or
abductors.
- Bluebeard (France, Charles Perrault).
- King Bluebeard (Germany).
- Don Firriulieddu (Italy).
- The Little Boy and His Dogs (African-American, Joel Chandler Harris).
- The Brahman Girl That Married a Tiger (India).
- The Blue Belt.
A folktale from Norway, collected in the mid nineteenth century by Peter
Christen Asbjørnsen and Jørgen Moe. The magic belt in this
tale is reminiscent of the Norse god Thor's belt of strength as
described in The Prose Edda of Snorri Sturluson.
- Boccaccio, Giovanni (1313-1375).
- The
Decameron Web. Sponsored by the Italian Studies Department at
Brown University.
- The Boy Who Had Never Seen a Woman. Tales
of type 1678.
- The Enchanted Pear Tree. Tales of type
1423.
-
The Three-Ring Parable.
Tales of type 972.
- Boniface and the Oak of Donar
[Thor]. A Christian missionary cuts down a tree sacred to the German
heathens.
- The Boy Who Had Never Seen a Woman. Tales
of type 1678.
- Filippo Balducci and His Son (abstracted from The Decameron by
Giovanni
Boccaccio).
- A Young Monk Wanted to Have a Goose (Germany).
- How a King Had a Son of His Brought Up in a Dark Place (Italy, Il
Novellino).
- The Children of Satan (Jewish).
- Breaking Wind:
Legendary Farts.
- The Historic Fart (1001 Nights).
- The Father of Farts (1001
Nights.).
- How Till Eulenspiegel Became a Furrier's Apprentice (Germany).
- Till Eulenspiegel and the Innkeeper at Cologne (Germany).
- Deceiving the Devil (Germany).
- General Pumpkin (Korea).
- Bride Tests. Folktales about housekeeping
tests used for choosing a bride.
- The Hurds (type 1451, Germany).
- Choosing a Bride (type 1452, Germany).
- The Cheese Test (type 1452, Switzerland).
- The Storehouse Key in the Distaff (type 1453, Norway).
- Brothers.
The Blood Brothers, a
European folktale of type 303.
- Bulfinch's
Mythology. Bob Fisher's exemplary electronic edition of
The Age of Fable; or, Stories of Gods and Heroes
by Thomas Bulfinch.
- Bump in the Night.
- Scottish Prayer.
- When the Whole Earth Was Overrun with Ghosts (England).
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- Cain
and Abel. Folktales about the world's first fratricide.
- Kabil and Habil (Palestine).
- Cain and Abel (Turkey).
- Abel and Cain (Italy).
- The First Grave (Poland).
- Cannibalism.
The Place Where There Were No Graves.
Folktales about eating dead people.
- The Place Where There Were No Graves (Egypt).
- The Country Where Death Is Not (Sudan).
-
Cat and Mouse.
Fables about cats and mice.
- Cat and Mouse in Partnership (Germany, Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm), type
15.
- Mouse and Mouser (England), type 111.
- Belling the Cat (Aesop), type 110.
- The Cat and the Mice (Aesop), type 113*.
- The Hypocritical Cat (Tibet), type 113B.
- The Cat and the Mice (Tibet), type 113B.
- The Cat as Holy Man (Palestine), type 113B.
- The Town Mouse and the Field Mouse (Romania), types 112 and
113B.
- The Dog, the Cat, and the Mouse (Romania), type 200.
- The Cat and the Mouse (England), type 2034.
- Why the Cat Kills Rats (Nigeria).
- Cattarinetta, a
folktale from Italy of type 333A
about a careless girl who is eaten up by a witch.
- Censorship in Folklore:
An Essay by D. L. Ashliman.
- Chain tales.
- Changeling legends.
Fairies, trolls, elves, and devils kidnap
human children, leaving their own demonic offspring in their place.
- Changelings: An
Essay by D. L. Ashliman.
- The Changeling. A
poem by James Russell Lowell.
- The
Changeling. A ballad by John Greenleaf Whittier.
- Changeling
Legends from the British Isles. Stories from England, Wales, the Isle
of Man, Scotland, and Ireland.
- German Changeling
Legends. Stories from German-speaking countries.
- Scandinavian Changeling Legends.
Stories from Denmark, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden.
- Charms against
Sprains. Charms recorded in the Orkney and Shetland Islands during
the nineteenth century that bear a close similarity to the
famous pre-Christian
Merseburg
Incantation (Merseburger Zauberspruch) number 2 from Germany.
- Chaucer, Geoffrey (ca. 1340-1400).
- The Enchanted Pear Tree. Tales of type
1423.
- The
Canturbury Tales. A Middle English edition from the Electronic Text
Center, University of Virginia
Library.
- Child Custody. Tales
of type 926 in which a wise judge decides a disputed child custody case.
- Solomon and the Two Women (Bible, First Book of Kings).
- The Future Buddha as Judge (The Jataka Tales).
- King Alfonso, the Slave Girl, and Her Master (Italy).
- China.
Folktales from China.
- The Gold Colt and the Fire Dragon Shirt.
- The Story of the Three Genjias.
- Aniz the Shepherd.
- The Wooden Horse.
- The Magic Moneybag.
- The Golden Reed Pipe.
- Seeking Her Husband at the Great Wall.
- The Tiger King's Skin Cloak.
- The Frog Who Became an Emperor.
- Tikki Tikki Tembo.
- A Chinese Creation and
Flood Myth from the Miao people.
-
Cinderella.
Aarne-Thompson folktale type 510A and related stories of persecuted
heroines.
- The Cinder Maid (reconstructed from various European sources by Joseph
Jacobs).
- Cinderella; or, The Little Glass Slipper (France, Charles Perrault).
- Cinderella (Germany, Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm, version of 1812).
- Katie Woodencloak (Norway, Peter Christen Asbjørnsen and
Jørgen Moe).
- Fair, Brown, and Trembling (Ireland).
- Rashin-Coatie (Scotland).
- Cinderella (Italy).
- Conkiajgharuna, the Little Rag Girl (Georgia).
- Pepelyouga (Serbia).
- The Wonderful Birch (Russia).
- The Baba Yaga (Russia, Aleksandr Afanasyev).
- The Wicked Stepmother (India).
- Link to The
Green Knight (Denmark).
- Link to The Story of
Tam and Cam (Vietnam).
- Link to Tam and Cam
(Vietnam). Another version of the above tale.
- Link to The
Father Who Wanted to Marry His Daughter. Folktales of Aarne-Thompson
type 510B.
- Clothes Make the Man. Folktales of type 1558.
- The Brahman's Clothes (India).
- Eat, My Clothes! (Italy).
- Heroes They Seemed When Once They Were Clothed (Iceland).
- A Corpse Claims Its Property.
Ghost stories of Aarne-Thompson type 366.
- White Cap (Iceland).
- The Shroud (Russia).
- The Stolen Liver (Poland).
- Saddaedda (Italy).
- The Burial Dress (Germany).
- The Audacious Girl (Germany).
- The Golden Leg (Germany)
- The Golden Arm (England).
- Teeny-Tiny (England).
- Give Me My Teeth (England).
- A Ghost Story (African-American).
- Cupid and Psyche, as recorded by the Roman
writer Lucius Apuleius.
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- Death of a Child:
Folktales about Mourning
- The Parable of the Mustard Seed (India).
- The Burial Shirt (Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm).
- Let the Dead Rest (Germany).
- Grieving Mothers (Germany).
- The Sad Little Angel (Germany).
- Excessive Grief for the Dead (England).
- Death of an
Underground Person, or of the King of the Cats.
Migratory legends of type 6070B and tales of Aarne-Thompson type 113A.
- Torke's Child Is Dead / Kilian's Child Is Dead (Germany).
- Hübel and Habel (Germany).
- Prilling and Pralling Is Dead (Germany).
- The Unknown Girl (Germany).
- The Troll Turned Cat (Denmark).
- The Cat of the Carman's Stage (Ireland).
- The King of the Cats (Scotland).
- The King o' the Cats (England).
- Mally Dixon (England).
- Death of the
Seven Dwarfs, a folk legend from Switzerland with an ending quite
different from that of the familiar fairy tale "Snow-White and the Seven
Dwarfs" by the Grimm brothers.
- Devil.
How the Devil Married Three Sisters and other type
311 tales.
- How the Devil Married Three Sisters (Italy).
- Your Hen Is in the Mountain (Norway).
- Fitcher's Bird (Germany).
- The Hare's Bride (Germany).
- Devil's Bridge Legends.
Folktales of type 1191, in which the devil builds a bridge, but is
then cheated out of the human soul he expected as payment.
- The Sachsenhäuser Bridge at Frankfurt (Germany).
- The Bamberg Cathedral and Bridge (Germany).
- The Devil's Bridge in Lake Galenbeck (Germany).
- The Devil's Bridge (Switzerland).
- The Devil's Bridge (Wales).
- The Bridge at Kentchurch (England).
- The Devil's Bridge (England).
- Kilgrim Bridge (England).
- Disappearance of the
Little People. Legends from Germany explaining the disappearance of
dwarfs, elves, and other underground people, translated and edited by E.
Dale Wenger.
- Doctor Know-All and
other folktales of
type 1641 about being in the right place at the right time.
- Harisarman (India).
- The Stolen Treasure (India).
- Crab (Italy).
- Doctor Know-All (Germany).
- Doctor and Detective (Denmark).
- Black Robin (Wales).
- Dream.
The Man Who Became Rich
through a Dream and other tales of type 1645 in which dreamers seek
treasure abroad but find it at home.
- The Man Who Became Rich through a Dream (The 1001 Nights).
- The Peddler of Swaffham (England).
- Upsall Castle (England).
- Dundonald Castle (Scotland).
- The Dream of the Treasure on the Bridge (Germany).
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- East of the Sun and West
of the Moon. A classic animal bridegroom tale from the Norwegian
collection of Asbjørnsen and Moe.
- Eat Me When I'm Fatter.
Fables of type 122F.
- The Lambikin (India).
- The Fisher and the Little Fish (Aesop).
- The Dog and the Wolf (Bohemia).
- Mr. Hawk and Brother Rabbit (African-America).
- The Emperor's New Clothes and
other tales of type 1620.
- The Emperor's New Clothes (Denmark, Hans Christian Andersen).
- The Invisible Silk Robe (Sri Lanka).
- The King's New Turban (Turkey).
- The King and the Clever Girl (India).
- The Miller with the Golden Thumb (England).
- End of the World.
Folktales types 2033 and 20C,
in which storytellers from around the world
make light of paranoia and mass hysteria.
- The Timid Hare and the Flight of the Beasts (India, The Jataka
Tales).
- Plop! (Tibet).
- Henny-Penny and Her Fellow Travelers (Scotland, Robert Chambers).
- The Cock and the Hen That Went to Dovrefjell (Norway, Peter Christen
Asbjørnsen and Jørgen Moe).
- Brother Rabbit Takes Some Exercise (African-American, Joel Chandler
Harris).
- Ertha, the Germanic
Earth Goddess. The account, written by Tacitus in the year 98, of a
north German deity variously named Ertha, Hertha, Nerthus, or Mother
Earth.
She may be related to the folkloric figures known as Bertha or Frau Holle.
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- Fairy Gifts.
Stories of type 503 from around the world about mortals who are blessed or
cursed by
the "hidden people."
- The Fairies and the Hump-Back (Scotland).
- The Legend of Knockgrafton (Ireland).
- The Gifts of the Little People (Germany).
- The Palace in the Rath (Ireland).
- The Two Humpbacks (Italy).
- How an Old Man Lost His Wen (Japan).
- The Story of Hok Lee and the Dwarfs (China).
- The Man with the Goiter (Tibet).
- Fairy
Tales. A collection of electronic texts from the University of
Maryland. These are popular stories and appropriate for children. Sources
are not given, and the translations are not always reliable.
- The Faithful Wife Who Rescued Her Husband from
Slavery. Folktales of type 888.
- The Man Hitched to a Plow (France/Germany).
- Conrad von Tannenberg (Germany).
- The Lute Player (Russia).
- Link to Andreas Grein of Purbach, a related
legend about Turkish slavery from Burgenland, Austria.
- Link to The Weathercock on Saint Stephen's
Cathedral, another Austrian legend about a prisoner's miraculous
escape.
- Father-daughter incest.
The Father Who Wanted to Marry His
Daughter. Folktales of Aarne-Thompson type 510B.
- Doralice (Italy, Giovanni Francesco Straparola).
- The She-Bear (Italy, Giambattista Basile).
- All-Kinds-of-Fur, also known as "Allerleirauh" (Germany, Jacob and
Wilhelm Grimm, version of 1812).
- Broomthrow, Brushthrow, Combthrow (Austria,
Theodor Vernaleken).
- Fair Maria Wood (Italy, Thomas Frederick Crane).
- Gold Teeth (Italy, Estella Canziani).
- The Story of Catskin (England, James Orchard Halliwell).
- Notes and Bibliography.
- Type 510B folktales in the English language.
- Type 510B folktales in the German language.
- The Fisherman and His Wife and other
tales of dissatisfaction and greed.
- The Fisherman and His Wife (Germany).
- Hanns Dudeldee (Germany).
- The Stonecutter (Japan).
- The Stonemason Who Was Never Satisfied (China).
- The Bullock's Balls (India).
- Faust Legends. Stories about mortals who enter into
contracts with the demonic powers.
- Doctor Johann Faustus (Germany, abstracted from the Faust Chapbook of
1587).
- Dr. Faust at Boxberg Castle (Germany, Bernhard
Baader).
- Dr. Faust's Hell-Master (Germany, Joh. Aug. Ernst Köhler).
- Dr. Faust in Erfurt (Germany, J. G. Th.
Grässe).
- Dr. Faust and Melanchton in Wittenberg (Germany, J. G. Th.
Grässe).
- Dr. Faust in Anhalt (Germany, Ludwig Bechstein).
- Dr. Faustus Was a Good Man (a nursery rhyme from England).
- Dafydd Hiraddug and the Crow Barn (Wales, Elias Owen).
- Selected literary works based on the Faust Legend.
- Selected musical works based on the Faust Legend.
- The Foolish Friend
and other tales of type 1586,
in which a fool kills an insect resting on someone's head,
with catastrophic consequences.
- The Mosquito and the Carpenter (The Jataka Tales).
- The Foolish Friend (The Panchatantra).
- The Gardner and the Bear (Bidpai).
- The Hare and the Merchant (Tibet).
- The Seven Wise Men of Buneyr (Pakistan).
- The Bear and the Amateur of Gardening (Jean de La Fontaine).
- Giufà and the Judge (Italy).
- The Little Omelet (Italy).
- Permission Granted, but Probably Regreted (Germany).
- Foolish Hans (Germany).
- Foolish Wishes.
Tales of type 750A and other stories about the foolish use of
magic wishes.
- The Two-Headed Weaver (The Panchatantra).
- The Three Wishes (1001 Nights).
- The Sausage (Sweden).
- The Three Wishes (England).
- Fools Cannot Count Themselves. Folktales
of type 1287.
- The Twelve Men of Gotham (England).
- The Five Traveling Journeymen (Germany).
- The Seven Wise Men of Buneyr (Pakistan).
- How the Kadambawa Men Counted Themselves (Sri Lanka).
- Forgiveness and Redemption. Legends of
Aarne-Thompson type 755 and 756.
- The Flourishing Staff (Jewish).
- Tannhäuser (Germany).
- The Woman Who Had No Shadow (Scandinavia).
- The Fox and the Cat
and other fables of Aarne-Thompson type 105 about the dangers of
being too clever.
- The Fish That Were Too Clever (India, The Panchatantra).
- The Fox and the Cat (Aesop).
- The Cat and the Fox (France, Jean de La Fontaine).
- The Fox and the Cat (Germany, Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm).
- The Seven-Witted Fox and the One-Witted Owl (Romania).
- The Fox and His Bagful of Wits and the One-Witted Hedgehog (Romania).
- The Fox and the Hedgehog (South Slavonic).
- The Tiger Finds a Teacher (China).
- The Fox (or Jackal) and the Fleas. Fables
of Aarne-Thompson type 63.
- The Fox and the Flees (Scotland).
- The Jackal and the Flees (India).
- The Fox Steals the Butter.
Fables of type 15.
- Reynard and Bruin (Europe).
- The Fox Cheats the Bear out of His Yule Feast (Norway).
- Fox and Wolf (Netherlands).
- The Keg of Butter (Scotland).
- Cat and Mouse in Partnership (Germany).
- Mister Rabbit Nibbles Up the Butter (African-American).
- The Fox, the Wolf, and the Horse and
other fables of type 47E.
- The Fox, the Wolf, and the Horse (France, Jean de La Fontaine).
- Here It Is Told of the Fox and the Mule (Italy).
- Two Foxes and a Horse (Scotland).
- Frau Holle by Jacob
and Wilhelm Grimm. A comparison of the versions of 1812 and 1857.
- Frog Kings.
Folktales of Aarne-Thompson type 440 about slimy suitors.
- The Frog King; or, Iron Heinrich (Germany, Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm).
- The Frog Prince (The first English translation [with an altered title
and a revised ending] of the above tale).
- The Frog Prince (Germany, Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm).
- The Enchanted Frog (Germany, Carl and Theodor Colshorn).
- The Queen Who Sought a Drink from a Certain Well
(Scotland, J. F. Campbell).
- The Maiden and the Frog (England, James Orchard Halliwell-Phillipps).
- The Frog Prince (Sri Lanka [Ceylon], H. Parker).
- The Toad Bridegroom (Korea, Zong In-Sob).
- The Frog Who Became an Emperor (China).
- The Frog King
by the brothers Grimm. A
comparison of the versions of 1812 and 1857.
- Der Froschkönig von den
Brüdern Grimm.
A comparison, in the orignal German, of the versions of 1812 and 1857.
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- Gambara and the
Longbeards (Langobards). A clever woman, with the help of the goddess
Frea (Frigg), tricks Wodan (Odin) into blessing her tribe with victory.
- Gawain.
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.
The middle English text, based on a printed book edited by
J. R. R. Tolkien and E. V. Gordon.
- Gefion's Home
Page.
This site contains two accounts, both written by
Snorri Sturlason, the 13th-century Icelandic writer, describing how the
Æsir goddess Gefion (also spelled Gefjon) created the Danish island
of Sjælland (Zealand) by plowing out an enormous field from the
Kingdom of Sweden.
- The Girl with
White Hands. A Zobell family legend about Kirstine Andersdatter, also
known as Christine Andersen.
- The God
Gióng. A legend from Vietnam about the miraculous conception
and birth of a young giant, and his subsequent defeat of the foreign
invaders threatening his homeland.
- Godfather Death. Tales of type 332.
- Godfather Death (Germany).
- Dr. Urssenbeck, Physician of Miracles and Death (Austria).
- The Boy with the Ale Keg (Norway).
- The Just Man (Italy).
- Godiva. The legend of
Lady Godiva (Godgifu) from Coventry in Warwickshire, England.
- Lady Godiva (Roger of Wendover).
- Godiva (Alfred, Lord Tennyson).
- Golden Fowls.
- The Goose That Laid the Golden Eggs (Aesop).
- The Goose and the Golden Eggs (Aesop).
- The Golden Mallard (from The Jataka; or, Stories of The Buddha's
Former Births).
- The Lucky-Bird Humá (Kashmir).
- The Golden Key. The
Grimm Brothers' final tale, an enigmatic story with no ending, suggesting
perhaps that there is no final word in folktale interpretation.
- The Golem: A Jewish Legend. The Golem was a
man-and-magic-made monster created to protect Jews against the false
accusations of ritual murder. This legend may have prompted Mary Shelley
to write her famous novel about Dr. Frankenstein and his artificial
monster.
- Greed. Folktales of type 68A in which an
individual places himself at risk by trying to hold too much.
- The Boy and the Filberts (Aesop).
- The Greedy Monkey (Pakistan).
- Grettir's Saga.
The
Saga of Grettir the Strong (Grettir's Saga)
- Grimm Brothers -- Jacob(1785-1863) and Wilhelm (1786-1859).
- Grimm Brothers' Home Page.
- Grimms' Children's and Household Tales
. Also known as The Grimms' Fairy
Tales, this is the most influential of all folklore
collections and one of the most beloved books of all time. At this site
are listed all the stories' titles, in English and in German, plus their
Aarne-Thompson type classification numbers.
This site also includes links to texts of the Grimms' tales, both in the
original German and in English translation.
New texts are being added
regularly, so check back if you did not find the tale you were
seeking.
- Märchen
der
Gebrüder Grimm. These German-language texts are part of the Bibliothek der
Märchen, a library of folk and fairy tales, sponsored by Projekt
Gutenberg-DE, die digitale Bibliothek.
- Deutsche
Sagen, herausgegeben von den Brüdern Grimm. These
German-language texts are part
of the Sagensammlung, a
library of legends, sponsored by Projekt
Gutenberg-DE, die digitale Bibliothek.
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- Half a Loaf Is Better Than None. Folktales
about greedy individuals who would rather have nothing than give up part
of what appears to be within their reach.
- The Boy and the Filberts (Aesop).
- The Greedy Monkey (India).
- The Hand from the
Grave. Legends from Germany and Switzerland about wayward children
whose hands, following their death and burial, refuse to stay buried.
- The Willful Child (Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm).
- The Hand on the Grave (J. D. H. Temme).
- The Parent Murderer of Salzwedel (J. D. H. Temme).
- The Hand in Mellenthin (A. Kuhn and W. Schwartz).
- A Hand Grows from the Grave (A. Kuhn and W. Schwartz).
- A Hand Grows from the Grave (three legends, Karl Bartsch).
- The Withered Hand in the Church at Bergen (A. Haas).
- The Cursed Hand (Karl Haupt).
- A Hand Grows from the Grave (Bernhard Baader).
- The Hand That Grew from the Grave (J. G. Th. Grässe).
- A Child's Hand That Wrongly Attacked a Mother Grows Out of the Grave
(Friederich Wagenfeld).
- A Mother Disciplines Her Deceased Child (Switzerland, Franz
Niderberger).
- Hand of Glory.
Legends about magic lights made from human hands.
- The Hand of Glory (three legends from England, Edwin Sidney Hartland).
- Thieves' Lights (Germany, Ernst Moritz Arndt).
- Thieves' Lights (two legends from Germany, Karl Bartsch).
- The Hanging Game.
Folktales of type 1066, in which boys, playing that they are executioners,
end up killing one of their comrades.
- The Hanging Game (England).
- Boys Try Beheading (Germany/Poland).
- Hansel and Gretel by Jacob and Wilhelm
Grimm: A comparison of the versions of 1812 and 1857.
- Haunted by the Ghost of a Murdered Child.
Migratory legends of type 4025.
- The Abondoned Child (Iceland).
- The Child Phantom (Sweden).
- Hávamál:
The Words of Odin the High One. Proverbs and wisdom from the
Elder or Poetic Edda.
- Heathen Monuments.
Legends about ancient alters, graves, megaliths, menhirs, mounds,
pictographs, runestones, picture stones, standing stones, and other such
monuments from the past.
- The Standing Stones of Stenhouse (Orkney
Islands, Sir Walter Scott).
- The Stone of Odin (Orkney Islands, G. F. Black).
- The Temple of the Moon, the Temple of
the Sun, and Wodden's Stone (Orkney Islands, G. F. Black).
- The Rollright Stones (England, James Orchard
Halliwell-Phillipps).
- Druidical Circles and Monoliths (Scotland, Walter Gregor).
- The Frau Holle Stone (Germany, J. W. Wolf).
- Giants in Denmark (Saxo Grammaticus).
- Gloshed's Altar (Sweden, Herman Hofberg).
- The Stone of Stolzenhagen (Germany,
J. D. H. Temme).
- The Seven Stones of Morin (Germany,
J. D. H. Temme).
- The Adam's Dance of Wirchow
(Germany, J. D. H. Temme).
- The Giant's Stone near Züschen (Germany, Karl Lyncker).
- The Hun Graves at Züssow (Germany, J. D. H. Temme).
- Table-Mên: The Saxon Kings'
Visit to the Land's End
(England, Robert Hunt).
- King Arthur's Stone (England, Robert
Hunt).
- The Witches of the Logan Stone (England, Robert Hunt).
- How to Become a Witch (England, Robert Hunt).
- Olaf's Mound and the Raised
Stone at Slugan
(Scotland, Lord Archibald Campbell).
- The Heathen Temple
at Uppsala by Adam of Bremen. A description, written between 1072 and
1076, of the Norse temple dedicated to the gods Thor, Wotan (Odin), and
Frey.
- Heimskringla;
or, The Chronicle of the Kings of Norway by
Snorri Sturluson. This monumental work is a collection of sagas
concerning the rulers of
Norway, between about 850 and 1177. It includes:
- Ynglinga Saga;
- Halfdan the Black Saga
- Harald Harfager's Saga
- Hakon the Good's Saga
- Saga of King Harald Grafeld and of Earl Hakon Son of Sigurd
- King Olaf Trygvason's Saga
- Saga of Olaf Haraldson (St. Olaf)
- Saga of Magnus the Good
- Saga of Harald Hardrade
- Saga of Olaf Kyrre
- Magnus Barefoot's Saga
- Saga of Sigurd the Crusader and His Brothers Eystein and Olaf
- Saga of Magnus the Blind and of Harald Gille
- Saga of Sigurd, Inge, and Eystein, the Sons of Harald
- Saga of Hakon Herdebreid ("Hakon the Broad-Shouldered")
- Magnus Erlingson's Saga
- Hertha Lake, a
legend about the heathen deity Hertha. This may be the earth goddess
mentioned by Tacitus in his Germania, written in the year 98.
- Hildebrandslied. A heroic epic from
eight-century Germany.
- Hodja. See Nasreddin Hodja:
Tales of the Turkish Trickster.
- Hog Bridegrooms.
Tales of Aarne-Thompson type 441, in
which a beautiful maiden is forced to marry a hog or a hedgehog.
- King Pig (Italy, Geovanni Francesco Straparola).
- Hans-My-Hedgehog, version of 1814 (Germany, Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm).
- The Wild Pig (Germany, J. W. Wolf).
- The Hedgehog (Hungary).
- The Enchanted Pig (Romania).
- The Story of the Pig (Romania, Ion Creanga).
- Horse.
Catching a Horse by Its Tail. Folktales of
type 47A in which a trickster cons his victim into thinking he can catch a
horse by tying himself to its tail.
- The Fox and the Horse (Germany).
- Reynard Wants to Tast Horseflesh (Norway).
- Fox and Wolf (Netherlands).
- Brother Fox Catches Mr. Horse (African America).
- The Fox, the Monkey, the Hare, and the Horse (China).
- The Husband Who Was to Mind the House
(Norway). A man and woman exchange jobs for the day.
- Human Sacrifice in
Legends and Myths.
- Aun Sacrifices Nine Sons to Odin (Sweden).
- Buried Alive (Sweden).
- The Höxter Ghost (Germany).
- The Entombed Child (Germany).
- The Entombed Child (Germany).
- The Ghost at Spyker (Germany).
- Sacrificing Virgins to Lakes (Germany).
- The Name Greene (Germany).
- An Infant Speaks (Germany).
- The Secured Foundation Stone (Germany).
- London Bridge Has Fallen Down (England).
- The Magdeburg Bridge -- Die Magdeburger
Brücke (Germany).
- The Story of the Bridge (Turkey -- Gypsy).
- Rumors of Foundation Sacrifice (India).
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- Iceland Accepts Christianity.
The history of the first Christian mission in Iceland, abstracted from the
medieval epic Njal's Saga.
- Incest in Indo-European
Folktales. An essay, with folklore texts, by D. L. Ashliman.
- Ingratitude Is the World's Reward.
Folktales of Aarne-Thompson type 155. A kind person rescues a trapped
animal, who in turn threatens to eat his benefactor. In the end the animal
is tricked back into the trap.
- The Crocodile, the Brahman, and the Fox (India, The Southern
Panchatantra).
- The Camel Driver and the Adder (Bidpai).
- The Tiger, the Brahman, and the Jackal (India).
- The Farmer, the Crocodile, and the Jackal (Pakistan).
- The Young Man and the Snake (Pakistan).
- The Jackal's Judgment (Sri Lanka)
- The Ungrateful Tiger (Korea).
- Inside Again (Europe).
- Of Nature and the Returns of Ingratitude (Gesta Romanorum).
- The Reward of Good Deeds (Denmark).
- The Man, the Serpent, and the Fox (Greece).
- The Ingrates (Italy).
- Ingratitude Is the World's Reward (Moravia).
- The Peasant, the Snake, and King Solomon (Romania).
- Brother Wolf Still in Trouble (African-American).
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- Jack and the Beanstalk.
Three versions of the English folktale (Aarne-Thompson type 328).
- Japanese
Folktales.
- The Two Frogs
- The Mirror of Matsuyama
- Visu the Woodsman and the Old Priest
- Little Peachling (Momotaro)
- The Tongue-Cut Sparrow
- A Woman and the Bell of Miidera
- The Stonecutter
- Danzayémon, Chief of the Etas
- Japanese Legends
about Supernatural Sweethearts.
- The Robe of Feathers.
- The Snow Bride.
- Willow Wife.
- The White Butterfly.
- The Vampire Cat.
- The Firefly.
- The Princess Peony.
- Jataka Tales. Stories about the different
incarnations of the future Buddha.
- The Future Buddha as Judge.
- The Mosquito and the Carpenter.
- The Golden Mallard.
- The Tortoise That Refused to Leave Home.
- How a Parrot Told Tales of His Mistress and Had His Neck Wrung.
- The Monkey's Heart.
- The Talkative Tortoise.
- The People Who Saw the Judas Tree.
- The Timid Hare and the Flight of the Beasts.
- The Language of Animals.
- Sulasa and Sattuka.
- How an Ungrateful Son Planned to Murder His Old Father.
- Jephthah and His Daughter, a story of
human sacrifice from the Old Testament.
- Justice as a Joke. Folktales of type
1534A.
- Judgements of Karakash (Palestine).
- Chelm Justice (Jewish).
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- Lang, Andrew (1844-1912).
The Colored Fairy Books of Andrew Lang. From the Electronic Text Center,
University of Virginia Library.
- The
Blue Fairy Book (1889).
- The
Red Fairy Book (1890).
- The
Yellow Fairy Book (1894).
-
The Violet Fairy Book (1901).
- The Language of Animals.
Folktales of Aarne-Thompson type 670 about wife beating.
- The Language of Animals (from The Jataka; or, Stories of the
Buddha's Former Births).
- The King Who Learnt the Speech of Animals (Sri Lanka).
- The Bull, the Donkey, and the Husbandman (from The 1001
Nights).
- The Merchant Who Understood the Language of Animals (Palestine).
- The Snake's Gift: Language of Animals (Serbia).
- The Dog and the Cock (Denmark).
- Bibliography of addition type 670 tales (English and German).
- Llewellyn
and His Dog Gellert and other folktales of Aarne-Thompson type 178A.
- The Brahman's Wife and the Mongoose
(India, The Panchatantra).
- The Brahman's Wife and the Mongoose (India,
Georgiana Kingscote).
- The Faithful Dog and the Serpent (Jewish, Angelo S. Rappoport).
- Folliculus and His Greyhound (Gesta Romanorum).
- The Farmer and His Dog (Æsop).
- Beth Gellert (Wales).
- Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth (1807-1882).
- The Bell of Justice from
Tales
of a Wayside Inn.
- Norse Ballads of Henry Wadsworth
Longfellow.
- The Challenge of Thor.
- Thangbrand the Priest.
- The Skeleton in Armor.
- Tegner's Drapa [on the death of Balder the Beautiful].
- Luther, Martin (1483-1546).
Doctor Luther at the Wartburg. The legend of
Martin Luther throwing an ink pot at the devil, here recorded by
Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm.
- Luxembourg Legends.
Sponsored by the Luxembourg Tourist Office of London.
- Melusina, the Mermaid of Luxembourg.
- The "Stierchesgeescht."
- The "Zidewitzen" at Bourglinster.
- Dancing Witches in Koerich.
- The Werewolf of Bettembourg.
- Lying Tales. Self-contradictory
stories of type 1965 and similar playful lies.
- Lying Tale (England).
- Sir Gammer Vans (England).
- One Dark Night (USA).
- Knoist and His Three Sons (Germany).
- The Three Brothers (Italy).
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- Man and Serpent.
Tales of type 285D.
- The Man and the Serpent (Aesop).
- The Gold-Giving Snake (The Panchatantra).
- Of Good Advice (Gesta Romanorum).
- Mastermaid (Norway).
A masterful telling of a type 313 folktale.
-
Master Builder Legends.
- Loki and the Master Builder (From The Prose Edda of Snorri
Sturluson.
- King Olaf and the Giant (Norway/Sweden).
- The Giant Finn and Lund's Cathedral (Sweden).
- Esbern Snare and the Kalundborg Church (Denmark).
- Who Built the Reynir Church? (Iceland).
- The Devil's Church near Dembe (Poland).
- Why the North Tower of Saint Stephen's Cathedral Remains Unfinished
(Austria).
- Why the Tower of Wasserburg Church Remains Unfinished (Bavaria).
- The Master Builder of the Würzburg Cathedral (Bavaria).
- Related Links.
- Melusina. Legends about mermaids, water sprites, and forest
nymphs and their sensuous relationships with mortal men.
- Melusina (France).
- Melusina (Luxembourg).
- Melusina (Germany).
- Herr Peter Dimringer von Staufenberg (Germany).
- The Water Maid (Germany).
- Brauhard's Mermaid (Germany).
- Melusina (Germany).
- The Mermaid Wife and
other legends of type 4080.
- The Mermaid Wife (Shetland Islands).
- The Silkie Wife (Shetland and Orkney Islands).
- The Sealskin (Iceland).
- Herman Perk and the Seal (Shetland Islands).
-
The Merseburg Incantations (Merseburger Zaubersprüche). Two
magic
poems from pre-Christian Germany.
- The first poem describes the activities of
valkyrie-like sorceresses called "the Idisi" who have the power to bind or
to free battling warriors. Following the narrative are the words of a
brief
incantation or charm chanted to free captured warriors.
- The second poem tells how a number of goddesses unsuccessfully
attempt to cure the injured leg of Balder's horse. Wodan, with his
unfailing magic, knows the right charm, and the horse is healed. The
narrative concludes with the actual words of an incantation used to heal
broken limbs. This pre-Christian incantation is similar to charms
against sprains recorded in the Orkney
and
Shetland Islands during the nineteenth century.
- Midas, and other
folktales of type 782 about humans with animal ears or horns.
- Midas (Greece).
- The Goat's Ears of the Emperor Trojan (Serbia).
- The King with the Horse's Ears (Ireland).
- March's Ears (1) (Wales).
- March's Ears (2) (Wales).
- The Child with the Ears of an Ox (India).
- The Presidente Who Had Horns (Philippines).
- Midwife (or Godparent) for the Elves.
A human helps deliver an elf-woman's baby, or serves as the elf-child's
godparent. Stories of this type are found throughout northern
Europe, and are classified as migratory legend type 5070 or Aarne-Thompson
folktale type 476*.
- The Troll Labor (Sweden, Peter Rahm).
- The Clergyman's Wife (Sweden).
- The Servant Girl and the Elves (Germany, Jacob
and Wilhelm Grimm).
- The Godmother (Switzerland, Jacob and Wilhelm
Grimm).
- The Woman among the Elves (Germany, Karl Lyncker).
- The Dwarfs in Schalk Mountain (Germany, Carl
and Theodor Colshorn).
- An Underground Woman in Labor (Germany, Karl
Bartsch).
- The Midwife of Hafoddydd (Wales, John Rhys).
- The Fairy Nurse (Ireland, W. R. Wilde).
- The Fairy Nurse (Ireland, Patrick Kennedy).
- Monkey Bridegrooms.
- The Monkey Boy (India).
- The Monkey and the Girl (India).
- The Monkey Husband (India).
- Juan Wearing a Monkey's Skin (Philippines).
- The Enchanted Prince (Philippines).
- Mr. Monkey, the Bridegroom (French Louisiana).
- The
Monkey's Heart. Folktales of Aarne-Thompson type 91, in
which a captive animal rescues itself by claiming to have left its heart
(or other tasty organ) at home.
- The Monkey's Heart (India, The Jataka Tales).
- The Foolish Dragon (China).
- The Rabbit and the Turtle (Korea).
- The Monkey and the Crocodile (Philippines).
- The Monkey and the Jellyfish (Japan).
- The Heart of a Monkey (Africa, Swahili).
- Brother Rabbit and the Gizzard-Eater (African-American, Joel Chandler
Harris).
- Mother and child.
Every Mother Thinks Her Child Is the Most
Beautiful, folktales of type 247.
- The Crow and Its Ugly Fledglings (Romania).
- Why Is There Enmity Between the Crow and the Hawk? (Romania).
- The Eagle and the Owl (France).
- Everyone Thinks His Children Are Best (Norway).
- Jupiter and the Monkey (Aesop).
- Mouse.
Town Mouse and Country Mouse.
Fables of type 112.
- The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse (Aesop).
- The Town Rat and the Country Rat (La Fontaine).
- The Town Mouse and the Field Mouse (Romania).
- The House Mouse and the Country Mouse (Norway).
- Multiple Births in
Legend and Folklore. Multiple births have not always been considered
to be a blessing. Indeed, as the following legends show, in times past
they were sometimes seen to be a sign of the mother's infidelity or other
sin, with potentially fatal consequences for the children.
- King Aistulf (Germany, Jacob and Wilhelm
Grimm).
- As Many Children As There Are Days in the Year
(The Netherlands, Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm).
- The Boy in the Fishpond (Germany, Jacob and
Wilhelm Grimm).
- The Origin of the Welfs (Germany, Jacob and
Wilhelm Grimm).
- Wölpe (Germany, A. Kuhn and W.
Schwarz).
- Donkey Meadow and the Nine Brunos
(Germany, A. Kuhn and W. Schwarz).
- Nine Children at One Time (Germany, Ludwig Bechstein).
- The Entombed Noblewoman (Austria, Johann Adolf Heyl).
- The Dogs (Germany, Karl Lyncker).
- The Nine Children (Germany, Karl Lyncker).
- Twelve Children Born at One Time (Scandinavia).
- Links to related stories.
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