Category: Myth and Lore
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East of the Sun and West of the Moon
Origins and setting “East of the Sun and West of the Moon” is one of the best-loved Norwegian wonder tales recorded by Asbjørnsen and Moe in the nineteenth century. It bears the bone-structure of “Beauty and the Beast,” but with northern light and iron in it: a White Bear who is a prince by night;…
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The Master Maid
Origins and setting “The Master Maid” (Mestermøya) is a Norwegian wonder tale gathered in the nineteenth century. It belongs to the “clever bride” cycle: a prince enters the service of a man-eating giant who sets impossible tasks; a captive maiden—so skilful that even trolls mutter her name with respect—secretly helps him; together they flee, throwing…
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The Giant Who Had No Heart in His Body
Origins and setting This Norwegian wonder tale—told in the valleys and fjords and written down in the nineteenth century—belongs to the ancient motif of the external soul: a monster who hides his life outside his flesh so that no sword can kill him. Its cast is brisk: a king with seven sons; six elder princes…
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Three Billy Goats Gruff
Origins and setting “Three Billy Goats Gruff” (Norwegian: De tre bukkene Bruse) is a classic Scandinavian wonder tale most widely known from nineteenth-century Norway, where it was told about goats driven up from valley pastures to the summer meadows. Its dramatis personae are elemental: three goat brothers—Little, Middle, and Big Billy Goat Gruff—and a troll…
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The Princess and the Pea
Origins and setting “The Princess and the Pea” is a brief, gleaming literary wonder tale by the Danish storyteller Hans Christian Andersen (1835). Though tiny in compass, it distils an entire courtly romance into a single night’s test: a pea, a stack of mattresses and featherbeds, and a claimant whose sensibility is proof of royal…
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The Snow Queen
Origins and setting Hans Christian Andersen’s “The Snow Queen” (Snedronningen) first appeared in 1844. Unusually for a wonder tale, it unfolds in seven stories, a chambered journey from hearth to ice and back again, following the children Gerda and Kay (often “Kai”) as love and loyalty contend with the glittering chill of cleverness without warmth.…
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The Little Mermaid
Origins and setting Hans Christian Andersen’s “The Little Mermaid” (1837) is a Danish wonder tale that swims between romance and theology. Beneath the sea in a crystal palace lives a Sea-King, his wise mother, and six mer-princesses; above is a mortal world with the promise (and peril) of an immortal soul. The tale’s stations are…
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The Red Shoes
Origins and setting “The Red Shoes” (De røde Skoe) is a nineteenth-century Danish wonder tale by Hans Christian Andersen that travelled swiftly into English nursery rooms. It is a moral romance about vanity and grace: a poor girl named Karen, a rich old lady who adopts her, a pair of bright red shoes that are…
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Baba Yaga and Vasilisa the Beautiful
Origins and setting This is one of the best-loved Russian wonder tales, recorded in the nineteenth century and told across the Slavic world. It sets the gentle steadfastness of Vasilisa against the fearsome wisdom of Baba Yaga, the witch who rides in a mortar, fences her yard with bones, and lives in a hut that…
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The Firebird and the Grey Wolf
Origins and setting “The Firebird and the Grey Wolf” is a celebrated East Slavic wonder tale, most familiar in Russian collections and often grouped with ATU 550: The Quest for the Golden Bird. Its imagery is unmistakable: a glowing Firebird that steals golden apples from a Tsar’s garden; a Grey Wolf, both terrifying and tender,…
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The Frog Princess
Origins and setting “The Frog Princess” (Tsarevna Lyagushka) is a classic Russian wonder tale, widely told across the East Slavic world. It blends two powerful folktale strands: the animal-bride who is secretly an enchanted wise woman, and the youngest prince’s quest through the “thrice-nine lands” to win her back. Its set pieces are famous: the…
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Koschei the Deathless
Origins and setting The tale of Koschei the Deathless (Кощей Бессмертный) is one of the most famous wonder tales of Russia and the East Slavic world. Koschei is a figure both grotesque and fearsome: gaunt as bone, ravenous for gold and for women, and yet impossible to kill by ordinary means. His “death” is hidden…
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Morozko (Father Frost)
Origins and setting “Morozko”—also known as Father Frost—is a beloved East Slavic wonder tale, most often told in Russia and Belarus, within the international tale-type ATU 480: Kind and Unkind Girls. Its figures are archetypal and few: a sweet-natured stepdaughter, a jealous stepmother, a weak but sorrowing father, and Morozko, winter personified—crisp, crackling, and just.…
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Jack and the Beanstalk
Origins and setting “Jack and the Beanstalk” is an English wonder tale from the family of “boy-thief vs. ogre/giant” adventures. Its core has remained steady since the early nineteenth century: a poor widow’s son trades the family cow for magic beans, climbs a beanstalk into the clouds, and outwits a flesh-eating giant (often called an…
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Tom Tit Tot
Origins and setting “Tom Tit Tot” is an English wonder tale from East Anglia (often Suffolk), kin to the broader European family of “name-of-the-helper” stories, of which “Rumpelstiltskin” is the best known. In this local telling the flavour is entirely English: rush-light kitchens, pie-crusts on the sill, spinning-wheels humming, and a goblin with a name…
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Mr Fox
Origins and setting “Mr Fox” is an English wonder tale from the Bluebeard/Robber Bridegroom story family (often grouped under ATU 955). It keeps the grim kernel of those tales—an elegant suitor with a hidden house and a murderous secret—but is remembered above all for two ringing formulas: the carved warning “Be bold, be bold… but…
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Cap o’ Rushes
Origins and setting “Cap o’ Rushes” is an English wonder tale most often told in East Anglia and the Fens, where reeds and rushes rim the meres and rivers. It belongs to two well-loved story families: the “As meat loves salt” testing-of-love tales and the “Disguised heroine” cycle (a cousin to “Catskin” and “Cinderella”). Its…
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Tam Lin
Origins and setting “Tam Lin” is a celebrated Scottish Border ballad (often numbered among the classic Child ballads) that has travelled the oral tradition for centuries. Its scene is the greenwood of Carterhaugh, near the confluence of the Ettrick and Yarrow Waters. Its dramatis personae are constant: Janet (or Margaret), a wilful high-born maiden; Tam…
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The Selkie Bride
Origins and setting Across the coasts of Orkney and Shetland, the Hebrides, and the north of Ireland, fisherfolk told of selkies—seal-people who shed their skins on moonlit strands and take human form for a night of dancing. Among their most haunting stories is that of the Selkie Bride: a seal-woman whose skin is stolen by…
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The Fairy Bride of Llyn y Fan Fach
Origins and setting This Welsh wonder tale comes from the Black Mountain country on the western edge of the Brecon Beacons, where Llyn y Fan Fach—the Little Lake below the high escarpment—lies clear and dark beneath the wind. It is one of Britain’s most beloved fairy-bride stories. A mortal cowherd wins a lady of the…
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The Brewery of Eggshells
Origins and setting “The Brewery of Eggshells” is a Welsh wonder tale of the Tylwyth Teg—the Fair Folk—belonging to the great family of changeling stories known all across the Celtic lands. Its constant elements are a mother whose thriving twins turn wan and uncanny, a neighbour (or wise man) who suspects fairy mischief, a sly…