The Golden Bird

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Golden Bird
Household stories Bros Grimm (L & W Crane) plate facing p236.png
The prince and the princess ride on the horse to escape with the caged golden bird, the fox at their side. Illustration by Walter Crane in Lucy Crane's translation Household stories from the collection of the Bros. Grimm (1882).
Folk tale
NameThe Golden Bird
Data
Aarne–Thompson groupingATU 550 (The Quest for the Golden Bird; The Quest for the Firebird; Bird, Horse and Princess)
RegionGermany
Published inKinder- und Hausmärchen, by the Brothers Grimm (1812)
RelatedThe Bird 'Grip'; The Greek Princess and the Young Gardener; Tsarevitch Ivan, the Fire Bird and the Gray Wolf; How Ian Direach got the Blue Falcon; The Nunda, Eater of People

"The Golden Bird (German: Der goldene Vogel) is a fairy tale collected by the Brothers Grimm (KHM 57) about the pursuit of a golden bird by a gardener's three sons.[1]

It is Aarne–Thompson folktale type 550, "The Golden Bird", a Supernatural Helper (Animal as Helper). Other tales of this type include The Bird 'Grip', The Greek Princess and the Young Gardener, Tsarevitch Ivan, the Firebird and the Gray Wolf, How Ian Direach got the Blue Falcon, and The Nunda, Eater of People.[2]

Origin[]

A similar version of the story was previously collected in 1808 and published as Die weisse Taube ("The White Dove"), provided by Ms. Gretchen Wild and published along The Golden Bird in the first edition of the Brothers Grimm compilation. In the original tale, the youngest son of the king is known as Dummling,[3] a typical name for naïve or foolish characters in German fairy tales.[4] In newer editions that restore the original tale, it is known as "The Simpleton".[5]

Synopsis[]

"The Golden Bird" collected by the Brothers Grimm and first published in 1812, narrated and recorded on December 14, 2008

Every year, a king's apple tree is robbed of one golden apple during the night. He sets his gardener's sons to watch, and though the first two fall asleep, the youngest stays awake and sees that the thief is a golden bird. He tries to shoot it, but only knocks a feather off.

The gardener's youngest son sights the Golden Bird in the king's garden

The feather is so valuable that the king decides he must have the bird. He sends his gardener's three sons, one after another, to capture the priceless golden bird. The sons each meet a talking fox, who gives them advice for their quest: to choose an old and shabby inn over a rich and pleasant one. The first two sons ignore the advice and, in the pleasant inn, abandon their quest.

The third son obeys the fox, so the fox advises him to take the bird in its wooden cage from the castle in which it lives, instead of putting it into the golden cage next to it, because this is a signal. But he disobeys, and the golden bird rouses the castle, resulting in his capture. He is sent after the golden horse as a condition for sparing his life. The fox advises him to use a dark gray leather saddle rather than a golden one which is a signal again, but he fails again by putting a golden saddle on a horse. He is sent after the princess from the golden castle. The fox advises him not to let her say farewell to her parents, but he disobeys, and the princess's father orders him to remove a hill for 8 days as the price of his life.

The fox removes it, and then, as they set out, he advises the prince how to keep all the things he has won since then. It then asks the prince to shoot it and cut off its head. When the prince refuses, it warns him against buying gallows' flesh and sitting on the edge of rivers.

He finds that his older brothers, who have been carousing and living sinfully in the meantime, are to be hanged (on the gallows) and buys their liberty. They find out what he has done. When he sits on a river's edge, they push him in. They take the things and the princess and bring them to their father. However the bird, the horse, and the princess all grieve for the youngest son. The fox rescues the prince. When he returns to his father's castle dressed in a beggar's cloak, the bird, the horse, and the princess all recognize him as the man who won them, and become cheerful again. His older brothers got punished for their good-less deeds, and he marries the princess.

Finally, the third son cuts off the fox's head and feet at the creature's request. The fox is revealed to be a man, the brother of the princess who had been enchanted by a witch after being lost for great many years.

Analysis[]

The tale type is characterized by a chain of quests, one after the other, that the hero must fulfill before he takes the prizes to his father. In many variants, the first object is the bird that steals the golden apples from the king's garden; in others, it is a magical fruit or a magical plant, which sets up the next parts of the quest: the horse and the princess.[6]

The animal helper[]

The prince rides on the fox's back. Illustration by George Cruikshank for Grimm's Goblins, by Edgar Taylor (1823).

The helper of the hero differs between versions: usually a fox or a wolf in most versions, but very rarely there is another type of animal, like a lion,[7] a bear[8] or a hare.[9] In some variants, it is a grateful dead who helps the hero as retribution for a good deed of the protagonist.[10]

In a variant collected in Austria, by Ignaz and Joseph Zingerle (Der Vogel Phönix, das Wasser des Lebens und die Wunderblume, or "The Phoenix Bird, the Water of Life and the Most beautiful Flower"),[11] the tale begins with the motif of the birth of twin wonder-children, akin to The Dancing Water, the Singing Apple, and the Speaking Bird. Cast away from home, the twins grow up and take refuge in their (unbeknownst to them) father's house. Their aunt asks for the titular items, and the fox who helps the hero is his mother's reincarnation.[12]

In a Polish variant by Oskar Kolberg, O królewiczu i jego przyjacielu, kruku ("About the prince and his friend, the Raven"), a raven, sent by a mysterious hermit, helps a prince in his quest for a golden bird. This variant is peculiar in that the princess is the second-to-last object of the quest, and the horse the last.[13]

In a Hungarian variant translated by Michel Klimo as L'Oiseau de Feu, the hero is a poor farmer's youngest son, named Ladislas. His helper is a "ours d'argent" (silver bear). They quest for the firebird (which has been taking his father's flowers), the silver-maned horse from the "roi de fer" ("Iron King") and the daughter of the Fairy Queen.[14]

The bird as the object of the quest[]

The character of the Golden Bird has been noted to resemble the mythological phoenix bird.[15] Indeed, in many variants the hero quests for the Phoenix bird.[16]

The Golden Bird of the Brothers Grimm tale can be seen as a counterpart to the Firebird of Slavic folklore, a bird said to possess magical powers and a radiant brilliance, in many fairy tales.[17] The Slavic Firebird can also be known by the name Ohnivak[18] Zhar Bird[19] or Bird Zhar;[20] Glowing Bird,[21] or The Bird of Light.[22]

Sometimes, the king or the hero's father send the hero on his quest for the bird to cure him of his illness or blindness, instead of finding out who has been destroying his garden and/or stealing his precious golden apples.[23] Under this lens, the tale veers close to ATU 551, "The Water of Life" (The Sons on a quest for a wonderful remedy for their father), also collected by the Brothers Grimm.[24]

In many variants, the reason for the quest is to bring the bird to decorate a newly-built church,[25] temple or mosque,[26] as per the suggestion of a passing beggar or hermit that informed the king of its existence.[27][28][29][a]

In 20th century Dutch collections, the bird is sometimes called Vogel Vinus or Vogel Venus. Scholarship suggests that the name is a corruption of the name Phönix by the narrators.[32] The name also appears in the 19th century Hungarian tale A Vénus madara ("The Bird Venus").[33]

In a variant published by illustrator Howard Pyle, The White Bird, the prince takes part in a chain of quests: for the Fruit of Happiness, the Sword of Brightness and the titular White Bird. When the prince captures the White Bird, it transforms into a beautiful princess.[34]

In the Hungarian variant Az aranymadár ("The Golden Bird"), the king wants to own a fabled golden bird. A prince captures the bird and it reveals it is a princess cursed into the avian form by a witch.[35]

The horse as the object of the quest[]

The horse of the variants of the tale is sometimes referenced along with the bird, attached to a special trait, such as in Flemish versions Van de Gouden Vogel, het Gouden Peerde en de Prinses,[36] and Van de wonderschoone Prinses, het zilveren Paardeken en de gouden Vogel,[37] and in French-Flanders version Van Vogel Venus, Peerdeken-Muishaar en Glooremonde.[38]

The horse, in many variants of the tale, is the means by which the hero escapes with the princess. In one Italian variant, the horse is described as irraggiungibile ("unreachable").[39]

In the Hungarian variant A vak király ("The Blind King"), the youngest prince, with the help of a fox, joins the quest for the golden bird and the silver-coloured horse with golden hair.[40]

In a French tale from Poitou, Le merle blanc ("The White Blackbird"), an old king sends his sons to find the titular white blackbird so he can be young again. When the youngest prince begins his quest, he finds a friendly fox, which informs him about the lengthy chain of quests he must make: to get the bird, he must take the "belle fille" first; to get her, he must find the mule whose every step can jump seven leagues.[41]

The princess as the object of the quest[]

In the title of many variants, the Princess as the last object the hero's quest is referenced in the title. The tales usually reference a peculiar characteristic or special trait, such as in Corsican variant La jument qui marche comme le vent, l'oiseau qui chante et joue de la musique et la dame des sept beautés (Corsican: "A jumenta chi biaghja quant'u ventu, l'agellu chi canta e chi sona, a donna di sette bellezze"; English: "The she-donkey that rides like the wind, the bird that sings and plays music, and the maiden of seven beauties"), collected by Genevieve Massignon.[42]

In Italian variant L'acqua di l'occhi e la bella di setti veli ("The water for the eyes and the beauty with seven veils"), the prince is sent on a quest for "l'acqua di l'occhi", the beauty with seven veils, the talking horse and the "aceddu Bonvirdi" (a kind of bird).[43]

In Romanian variant Pasărea cîntă, domnii dorm, the emperor asks for the golden bird whose song makes men sleep. His son travels the lands for the fabled bird, and discovers its owner is the princess of the golden kingdom.[44]

In Hungarian variant A próbára tett királyfi ("The king's son put to the test"), in the final part of the quest, the prince is tasked with kidnapping a fairy princess from her witch mother. With his faithful fox companion, which transforms into a replica of the fairy maiden to trick her mother, the prince obtains the fairy maiden.[45]

In a tale collected by Andrew Lang and attributed to the Brothers Grimm, The Golden Mermaid, the king's golden apples are stolen by some creature or thief, so he sends his sons to find it. The youngest son, however, is the only one successful: he discovers the thief is a magic bird that belongs to an Emperor; steals a golden horse and obtains the titular golden mermaid as his wife.[46] The tale is actually Romanian and was collected by Arthur and Albert Schott from the Banat region with the title Das goldene Meermädchen ("The Golden Sea-Maiden").[47][48]

In a collection of Upper Silesian fairy tales by Joseph Freiherr von Eichendorff (unpublished at the time, but in print only later by his descendant  [de] containing the tale Der Vogel Venus ("The Bird Venus") or Das Märchen vom Vogel Venus, dem Pferd Pontifar und der schönen Amalia aus dem schwarzen Wald ("The Tale of the Bird Venus, the Horse Pontifar and the beautiful Amalia of the Dark Forest"), the king wants the bird Venus to regain his youth. The prince also quests for the horse Pontifar and lady Amalia, a mysterious maiden who lives in a dark castle in a dark forest, guarded by wolves, lions and bears. When the hero is ready to take her on his journey back, she is seen at the castle's gates wearing a black dress. The story is a combination of types: ATU 506, "The Grateful Dead", since the fox helper is the spirit of a dead man; ATU 551, "The Water of Life", and ATU 550, "Bird, Horse and Princess".[49]

Other interpretations[]

A mythological interpretation of the tale type suggests an approximation of the Golden Bird with a peacock, a bird with astral and solar symbolism in world cultures.[50] Likewise, the hero of the tale also rides a golden horse and rescues a beautiful maiden, which can be equated to Venus (the Morning Star) - or, according to Lithuanian scholarship, its Baltic counterpart, Aušrinė.[51][52][53]

Historical linguist Václav Blažek argues for parallels of certain motifs (the night watch of the heroes, the golden apples, the avian thief) to Ossetian Nart sagas and the Greek myth of the Garden of the Hesperides.[54]

Variants[]

Scholarship acknowledges that the character of the "magic bird with glowing feathers" or with the golden plumage is known in the folklore of many peoples around the world, such as Russian “zhar-ptica”, Slovak “fire bird” and Armenian "Kush-Pari".[55][56][b]

It has been noted that the tale "is told in Middle East and in Europe",[58] but its variants are present in traditions from the world over,[59] including India, Indonesia and Central Africa,[60] as well as North Africa, North, Central and South America.[61]

Swedish folktale collectors George Stephens and Gunnar Olof Hyltén-Cavallius suggested an Eastern origin for the story.[62]

Literary history[]

Scholars Stith Thompson, Johannes Bolte and Jiří Polívka traced a long literary history of the tale type:[63] an ancient version is attested in The Arabian Nights.[64]

A story titled Sagan af Artus Fagra is reported to contain a tale of three brothers, Carolo, Vilhiamo and Arturo of the Fagra clan, sons of the King of the Angles, who depart to India on a quest for the Phoenix bird to heal their father.[65] It was published in an Icelandic manuscript of the 14th century.[66][67] Swedish folktale collectors George Stephens and Gunnar Olof Hyltén-Cavallius listed Danish tale Kong Edvard och Prints Artus,[68] collected in 1816, as a story related to Sagan of Artus Fagra.[69]

Dutch scholarship states that a Flemish medieval manuscript from the 11th century, Roman van Walewein (en het schaakspel) (English: "The Romance of Walewein (and the chessboard)") (nl), is an ancestor of the ATU 550 tale type.[70][71][72] In that vein, folklorist Joseph Jacobs also suggested the romance of Walewein as predecessor to "The Golden Bird" tale, albeit in regards to an Irish variant of the type.[73]

Scholars Willem de Blécourt and Suzanne Magnanini indicate as a literary version a tale written by Lorenzo Selva, in his Metamorfosi: an illegitimate son of a king searches for the Pistis, a plant with healing powers. Later, he is forced to seek the maiden Agape, a foreign princess from a distant land, and a winged horse to finish the quest.[74][75]

An almost immediate predecessor to the Grimms' tale was published in 1787, in an anonymous compilation of fairy tales. In this story, Der treue Fuchs ("The loyal fox"), the youngest son of King Romwald, Prince Nanell, shares his food with a fox and the animal helps him acquire the Phoenix bird, the "bunte Pferdchen" ("colored horse") and the beautiful Trako Maid. The publisher was later identified as Wilhelm Christoph Günther (de).[76]

Oral versions[]

Europe[]

France[]

A French version, collected by Paul Sébillot in Littérature orale de la Haute-Bretagne, is called Le Merle d'or (The Golden Blackbird). Andrew Lang included that variant in The Green Fairy Book (1892).[77][78] In The Golden Blackbird, the gardener's son set out because the doctors have prescribed the golden blackbird for their ill father. The two older brothers are lured into the inn without any warning, and the youngest meets the talking hare that aids him only after he passes it by. The horse is featured only as a purchase, and he did not have to perform two tasks to win the Porcelain Maiden, the princess figure. Also, the hare is not transformed at the end of the tale.[79]

Another version, collected by François-Marie Luzel, is called Princess Marcassa and the Dreadaine Bird. There, the sick man is a king rather than a gardener, and the animal - a white fox in this variant - isn't the brother of the princess, but the soul of a poor old man whom the prince, after being robbed by his older brothers, buries with the last of his money. The prince, while stealing the bird, impregnates the princess as she sleeps, and it's the child's insistence on finding his father which makes the princess follow him and reveal the truth.

Western Europe[]

In a "Scottish-Tinker" tale, The Fox, Brian, the son of the King of Greece, in order to marry the hen's wife, must quest for "the most marvellous bird" in the world, the White Glaive of Light and the Sun Goddess, "daughter of the king of the gathering of Fionn". He is helped in his tasks by a fox, which is the Sun Goddess's brother transformed.[80]

Ireland[]

An Irish variant of the type, published in 1936 (Le roi magicien sous la terre), seems to contain the Celtic motif of "the journey to the Other World".[81]

In another Irish variant, The Bird of the Golden Land, the king sets his sons on the quest for the titular bird, and whoever brings it with him shall have the crown. The three brothers arrive at a house of an old man, who gives a sledge to the oldest prince, a rope to the second and a cradle to the youngest. He also directs them to a secret underground passage that leads to the Golden Land. The youngest descends on the cradle and arrives at the hut of an old woman, who seems to know the reason for his quest. She directs him to a stable, where he finds a mare that can take him across seas and to the King of the Golden Land. After he meets the King, His Majesty proposes a challenge: the king will hide three times in different locations, and thrice the prince must find him (which he does, by accident). Secondly, the prince must hide and the king must look for him (which the prince accomplishes with the help of the mare). After the youngest prince returns with the Bird of the Golden Land to the hut of the old woman, she reveals she is a queen, the mare is another queen and the Bird itself is a third queen.[82]

Southern Europe[]

In a Galician tale, O Páxaro de Ouro, the king owns an orchard where there is a tree with red Portuguese apples that are stolen by the titular golden bird.[83]

A scholarly inquiry by Italian Istituto centrale per i beni sonori ed audiovisivi ("Central Institute of Sound and Audiovisual Heritage"), produced in the late 1960s and early 1970s, found thirteen variants of the tale across Italian sources, under the name La Ricerca dell'Uccello d'Oro.[84]

Germany[]

Folklorist Jeremiah Curtin noted that the Russian, Slavic and German variants are many,[85] such as Die drei Gärtnerssöhne ("The gardener's three sons");[86] or Der Goldvogel, das Goldpferd und die Prinzeßin, by German theologue Johann Andreas Christian Löhr.[87]

In the Plattdeutsche (Low German) variant collected by Wilhelm Wisser, Vagel Fenus, the protagonist searches for the bird Fenus because his father dreamt that it could restore his health,[88] while in the tale De gollen Vagel, the tale begins with the usual vigil at the garden to protect the tree of golden apples.[89]

In a variant from Flensburg, Guldfuglen ("Goldbird"), the gardener's youngest son, with the help of a fox, searches for the White Hart and the "White Maiden" ("hivde Jomfru").[90]

Romania[]

In a Romanian variant, Boy-Beautiful, the Golden Apples, and the Were-Wolf, the sons of the emperor investigate who has been eating the emperor's prized apples, and the youngest prince (possibly Făt-Frumos) finds two shining golden feathers in the foliage.[91]

In Romanian variant Povestea lupului năsdrăvan şi a Ilenei Cosinzene, a wolf helps the prince in his quest for the feather of a golden dove, a golden apple, a horse and the legendary princess Ileana Cosânzeana. When the king's other sons kill the prince, the apple wilts, the dove becomes a black raven and the horse and the princess vanish into the sky.[92]

In another tale, The Wonderful Bird (Pasărea măiastră (ro)), the king sends his sons for a bird to decorate a newly built church. His elder sons return with the bird and a poultry maid, the bird does not sing and the maid seems to be despondent. The youngest prince returns incognito to his father's kingdom and tells his story: the bird begins to sing when the prince enters the church, recognizing its master.[93]

In the tale Der Vogel des Paradieses ("The Bird of Paradise"), collected by Romanian ethnologue  [fr] from  [de], the king wants to find the Bird of Paradise to become young again. The third prince's helper is an old man (implied by the narrative to be God Himself), and both quest for the Bird of Paradise, the horse of "Negru Dovedit", the saber of the Red King and the daughter of the Green King.[94]

Hungary[]

In a Hungarian tale, A csodás szőlőtő ("The Wonderful Grapevine"), three princes ask his father, the king, why one of his eyes laughs while the other cries. This prompts a quest for the king's lost grapevine and, later, for a horse and a princess.[95]

In another Hungarian variant translated by Michel Klimo as an alternative version of L'Oiseau de Feu, the hero is a king's son who is helped by a wolf. In his quest for the horse and the princess, he must take them from two multi-headed dragons.[96]

Eastern Europe[]

In a Polish variant, About Jan the Prince, the fabled bird is named The Flamebird.[97] The tale was originally collected by Antoni Josef Glinski, with the title O Janie królewiczu, żar-ptaku i o wilku wiatrolocie ("About Jan the Prince, the Flamebird and the Wind-like Wolf").[98]

In a Yugoslavian variant, The Little Lame Fox, Janko, the naive but good-hearted youngest son of a farmer, is helped by a fox in his quest for the Golden Apple-Tree, the Golden Horse, the Golden Cradle and the Golden Maiden. The Golden Maiden, a princess herself, insists that she will marry Janko, for his good and brave heart.[99]

In a Slovakian tale Popelvár, the foolish hero gets the bird for his father, the king, but he is killed by his brothers, who also take his wife, princess Sipsindilona. In this tale, the princess shows more agency than other heroines and tries to find a way back to her beloved on her own terms.[100]

In a Czech tale collected by Karel Jaromír Erben, Ptak Ohnivák a Liška Ryška ("The Firebird and the Red Fox"), the youngest prince is helped by a red fox in his quest for the Ohnivák, the horse Zlatohřivák and the maiden Zlatovláska ("Golden-Hair").[101] He also published the tale in the Czech almanac Máj, and even compared it to the German tale by the Grimms.[102]

In a Bulgarian variant, "Златното птиче" ("The Golden Bird"), the king orders his sons to guard his prized golden apple-tree from the nocturnal thief. The youngest prince discovers it is a bird with "fiery-like, luminous feathers". The kings sends his sons to look for the bird: the two elders give up on the quest as soon as they begin, while the youngest meets an old man who helps him. The prince gets the bird and a flying horse as part of the quest, and marries the daughter of the king who owns the golden bird.[103]

In a tale from the Votjak (Udmurt people), A világgazda lánya ("The Daughter of the Lord of the World"), a poor man has three sons and tasks them with watching the crops against a nocturnal thief. The elder two fail, but the youngest, Petir, discovers a bird of dazzling beauty and golden plumage. They go on a journey and meet a man on the road; the elder two are rude to him and the old man sends them to their deaths ar the hands of a bear and a wolf. The youngest is kind and the old man gives him a flying carpet. Petir, then, takes part in a chain of quests for the golden bird from the lord of the air, the golden-mnaed horse from the lord of the earth, the golden-scaled perch from the lord of the water, and the daughter of the lord of the world.[104]

Scandinavian[]

Variants from Scandinavian countries have been attested in the works of Svend Grundtvig (Danish variant "The Golden Bird" or Guldfuglen)[105][106] and Peter Asbjornsen (Norwegian variant "The Golden Bird" or Gullfuglen).[107][108][109]

Baltic Countries[]

August Leskien collected variants from Lithuania, where the wolf is the helper, akin to Slavic variants: Vom Dummbart und dem Wolf, der sein Freund war[110] and a similarly named tale where the apples are made of diamond and the bird is a falcon,[111] and Von den drei Königssöhnen.

Latvia[]

In a Latvian variant collected in 1877, "одарѣ раскрасавицѣ царевић и братѣдуракѣ съ его помощниками" ("The talented princes, the foolish brother and his helpers"), the king sets a deadline for his three sons: one year from now, they must capture and bring him the golden bird that ate his golden apples. The youngest son is the only one that soldiers on, and eventually captures the bird, two dogs, a steed and a princess.[112] Fricis Brīvzemnieks, in the same book, gave an abridged summary of two other variants: in one, the prince abducts a princess with golden hair, eyes like dew and fingernails like diamonds,[113] and in the other, when the prince captures the golden bird, it uses its power to revive the older brothers who were petrified.[114]

Armenia[]

Armenian scholarship reports at least 60 variants of tale type ATU 550 in Armenian publications.[115]

Caucasus Region[]

In a variant from the Karachay-Balkars with the title "Золотая птица" ("Golden Bird"), the titular golden bird steals magic apples from the king's garden that grant youth and restore vitality. For three years, the king orders his three sons to guard the tree. On the third year, the youngest prince discovers the bird. With the help of a wolf, he then takes part in a quest for the golden-maned horse of the Earth Khan and a goldfish from the lake of Khan Dadiyana.[116]

Asia[]

In an Uzbek variant, "Сладкоголосый соловей" ("The Nightingale with the Sweet Voice"), a cruel sheik or shah orders the construction of a splendid tree made of gold and jewels he collected all his life. After it is made, some nocturnal thief begins to steal pieces of the tree. The shah's three sons decide to hold a night watch. Only the youngest discovers the culprit: a bird of immense beauty - its beak of ruby, the feathers of pearls and coral, and with a sweet-sounding voice. The shah decides that whoever brings the bird shall inherit the throne. A monkey is the helper in this variant, and the prince also quests for a beautiful princess that sleeps in a golden ark, and a horse named Kara Kaldyrgotsch from magician Orsaky, who lives in the Isle of Diamonds.[117]

In an Indian variant, In Search of a Dream, the youngest prince quests for an emerald bird, because his father, the king, had a dream about a beautiful garden, with a tree in it where the bird was perched. Apart from this tale, Indian scholar A. K. Ramanujan pointed the existence of twenty-seven variants collected from all over India.[118]

In a Tatar tale collected in Tobolsk, Der den Vogel suchende Fürstensohn ("The Prince's Son that seeks the bird"), the prince's youngest son watches his father's house at night and finds a bird. Soon, he travels to capture the bird and bring it home. With the help of a wolf, he later steals seven wonderful horses and a golden cithara from two different foreign princes and finally abducts a princess from a fourth realm.[119]

In a Tajik tale, "ХАСАН И ВОЛК" ("Hasan and the Wolf"), the king is quite sad, until he is convinced to visit other cities and their gardens. He learns that on the fortieth garden, a wondrous tree produces a flower and a fruit, but they are stolen by a bird. He asks his son Hasan to stand guard on the tree and bring him the flower, the fruit and the bird. Hasan stands guard on three nights, and on the third discovers the bird. He shoots at it and it drops a feather with something writing on it. He is approached by a wolf, who helps him obtain the beautiful daughter of another padishah, and the yellow horse that belongs to a div.[120]

Africa[]

Central Africa[]

In a variant from Congo, The Tale of the Golden Birds, a flock of golden-coloured Golden Birds fly over the kraal, and the local king sends his 11 sons after them. During their long journey, every one of the brothers decide to settle in a local village, until there is only one brother left to continue their quest. He arrives at the city of the Golden Birds, whose people demand the Magic Drum. In turn, the people who have the drum ask for the Golden Queen from the city that rules over all the land and who shines like the sun. The youngest gets the prizes and visits his brothers before returning to their father. His brothers, however, kill him and take the birds, the drum and the woman to their father. A little dog, which the Golden Queen took with her, resurrects the slain brother, who goes to his home city and reveals his brothers' treachery.[121]

Eastern Africa[]

In an Eastern African variant, "История Маталаи Шамси, принцессы Заря" ("The Story of Matalai Shamsi, Princess of the Dawn"), a king and his seven sons are sitting in the garden, when a beautifil luminous bird passes by them. The king wants his sons to get the bird for him and sends them. Six of them decide to give up the quest partway through, while their youngest half-brother, Shamsudini, vows to fulfil their father's request. He meets a djinn on his way who becomes his helper after getting him food. Shamsudini embarks on a quest for the Thunder-Sword and Matalai Shamsi, the "Princess Sunrise".[122] The story was first pubished by Dutch linguist Jan Knappert with the title The Story of Bibi Matalai Shamsi, 'Princess Sunrise', and sourced as from the Swahili[123]

Americas[]

Canada[]

A similar variant fairy tale of French-Canadian origin is The Golden Phoenix collected by Marius Barbeau, and retold by . It follows the hero Petit Jean, the youngest son of the King, who discovers the thief of his father's golden apple to be a golden Phoenix, a legendary bird. Other differences include a battle with 3 mythical beasts, a Sultan's game of hide-and-seek and his marriage with the Sultan's beautiful daughter.

United States[]

Variants have been recorded from American regions and states: a version named The Golden Duck from West Virginia;[124] a tale The King's Golden Apple Tree, from Kentucky;[125] a version from the American Southwest.[126]

In a French-Missourian variant, L'Zouéseau d'Or ("The Golden Bird"), the youngest prince, P'tit Jean (Little John) finds out that the golden bird is the thief from his father's garden. He then goes on a quest for a golden-maned horse and the Prettiest Princess in the World, with the help of a fox. At the end of the tale, the fox is revealed to be the princess's brother.[127]

Mexico[]

J. Alden Mason collected a variant from Mexico, titled Cuento del Pájaro del Dulce Canto (English: "The Bird of the Sweet Song").[128]

Brazil[]

In a Brazilian variant collected by Sílvio Romero in Sergipe, A Raposinha (English: "The little fox"), a prince stops three men from beating a dead person, and in gratitude is helped by a fox in his search for a parrot from the Kingdom of Parrots as a cure for the king's blindness.[129]

Literary versions[]

French author Edouard Laboulaye included a literary version named The Three Wonders of the World in his book Last Fairy Tales: the queen wishes for a magical bird that can rejuvenate people with its song. The youngest prince also acquires the winged horse Griffon and a wife for himself, the princess Fairest of the Fair.[130]

Italian author Luigi Capuana used the motif of the golden-coloured bird stealing the apples in his literary fiaba Le arance d'oro ("The Golden Apples"),[131] where a goldfinch is sent to steal the oranges in the King's orchard.[132][133]

Professor Jack Zipes states that the tale type inspired Russian poet Pyotr Pavlovich Yershov to write his fairy tale poem The Little Humpbacked Horse. The tale begins akin to ATU 530, "The Princess on the Glass Mountain", (hero finds or captures wild horse(s) with magical powers) and continues as ATU 550: the envious Tsar asks the peasant Ivan to bring him the firebird and the beautiful Tsar-Maid.[134]

A literary treatment of the tale exists in The True Annals of Fairy-Land: The Reign of King Herla, titled The Golden Bird: with the help of friendly fox, the king's youngest son ventures to seek the Golden Bird, the Golden Horse and a princess, the Beautiful Daughter of the King of the Golden Castle. At the conclusion of the tale, the fox is revealed to be the Princess's brother, transfomed into a vulpine shape.[135]

Czech school teacher Ludmila Tesařová (cs) published a literary version of the tale, named Pták Zlatohlav, wherein the knight quests for the golden-headed bird whose marvellous singing can cure an ailing princess.[136]

Adaptations[]

A Hungarian variant of the tale was adapted into an episode of the Hungarian television series Hungarian Folk Tales (Magyar népmesék). It was titled The Fox Princess (A rókaszemü menyecske).[137]

The tale type also inspired the composition of the Märchenoper L'Upupa und der Triumph der Sohnesliebe ("The Hoopoe and the Triumph of Filial Love"), inspired by a Syrian fairy tale titled Die Geschichte von dem Vogel mit der Feder.[138]

See also[]

Footnotes[]

  1. ^ Professors Michael Meraklis and Richard MacGillivray Dawkins remarked that this is the reason for the quest in Greek variants of the tale type.[30][31]
  2. ^ Other examples of fantastic bird with luminous plumage are the Chilean Alicanto, Mediaeval Germanic Hercinia.[57]

References[]

  1. ^ Ashliman, D. L. (2020). "Grimm Brothers' Children's and Household Tales (Grimms' Fairy Tales)". University of Pittsburgh.
  2. ^ "SurLaLune Fairy Tales: Tales Similar To Firebird". surlalunefairytales.com.
  3. ^ Bolte, Johannes; Polívka, Jiri. Anmerkungen zu den Kinder- u. Hausmärchen der Brüder Grimm. Erster Band (NR. 1-60). Germany, Leipzig: Dieterich'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung. 1913. pp. 503–504.
  4. ^ Grimm, Jacob & Grimm, Wilhelm; Taylor, Edgar; Cruikshank, George (illustrator). Grimm's Goblins: Grimm's Household Stories. London: R. Meek & Co.. 1877. p. 289.
  5. ^ Grimm, Jacob, Wilhelm Grimm, JACK ZIPES, and ANDREA DEZSÖ. "THE SIMPLETON." In The Original Folk and Fairy Tales of the Brothers Grimm: The Complete First Edition, 207-15. Princeton; Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2014. Accessed August 13, 2020. doi:10.2307/j.ctt6wq18v.71.
  6. ^ Sorlin, Evelyne. "Le Thème de la tristesse dans les contes AaTh 514 et 550". In: Fabula 30, Jahresband (1989): 285–288. doi: https://doi.org/10.1515/fabl.1989.30.1.279
  7. ^ "Der Goldvogel". In: Löwis of Menar, August von. Finnische und estnische Volksmärchen. Jena: Eugen Diederichs. 1922. pp. 12–16.
  8. ^ "Der Vogel Phönix". In: Wolf, Johann Wilhelm. Deutsche Hausmärchen. Göttingen/Leipzig: 1851. pp. 229–242.
  9. ^ "The Golden Bird and the Good Hare". In: Groome, Francis Hindes. Gypsy folk-tales. London: Hurst and Blackett. 1899. pp. 182-187.
  10. ^ Bolte, Johannes; Polívka, Jiri. Anmerkungen zu den Kinder- u. hausmärchen der brüder Grimm. Erster Band (NR. 1-60). Germany, Leipzig: Dieterich'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung. 1913. pp. 503–515.
  11. ^ Zingerle, Ignaz und Zingerle, Joseph. Kinder- und Hausmärchen aus Süddeutschland. Regensburg: F. Pustet. 1854. pp. 157–172.
  12. ^ The Pleasant Nights. Volume 1. Edited with Introduction and Commentaries by Donald Beecher. Translated by W. G. Waters. University of Toronto Press. 2012. p. 598. ISBN 978-1-4426-4426-7
  13. ^ Kolberg, Oskar. Lud: Jego zwyczaje, sposób życia, mowa, podania, przysłowia, obrzędy, gusła, zabawy, pieśni, muzyka i tańce. Serya VIII. Kraków: w drukarni Dr. Ludwika Gumplowicza. 1875. pp. 48–52. [1]
  14. ^ Klimo, Michel. Contes et légendes de Hongrie. Les littératures populaires de toutes les nations. Traditions, légendes, contes, chansons, proverbes, devinettes, superstitïons. Tome XXXVI. Paris: J. Maisonneuve. 1898. pp. 259–265.
  15. ^ Grimm, Jacob & Grimm, Wilhelm; Taylor, Edgar; Cruikshank, George (illustrator). Grimm's Goblins: Grimm's Household Stories. London: R. Meek & Co.. 1877. p. 289.
  16. ^ Bolte, Johannes; Polívka, Jiri. Anmerkungen zu den Kinder- u. Hausmärchen der Brüder Grimm. Erster Band (NR. 1–60). Germany, Leipzig: Dieterich'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung. 1913. pp. 503–515.
  17. ^ Ralston, William Ralston Shedden. Russian fairy tales: a choice collection of Muscovite folk-lore. New York: Pollard & Moss. 1887. pp. 288–292.
  18. ^ Harding, Emily J. Fairy tales of the Slav peasants and herdsmen. London: G. Allen. 1886. pp. 265–292.
  19. ^ Pyle, Katherine. Fairy Tales of Many Nations. New York: E.P. Dutton & Co. 1911. pp. 118–139.
  20. ^ Bain, R. Nisbet. Cossack fairy tales and folk tales. London : G.G. Harrap & Co.. 1916. pp. 95–104.
  21. ^ "Tzarevich Ivan, the Glowing Bird and the Grey Wolf" In: Wheeler, Post. Russian wonder tales: with a foreword on the Russian skazki. London: A. & C. Black. 1917. pp. 93–118.
  22. ^ Russian Folk-Tales by Alexander Nikolaevich Afanasyev. Translated by Leonard Arthur Magnus.New York: E. P. Dutton and Company. 1916. pp. 78–90.
  23. ^ Bolte, Johannes; Polívka, Jiri. Anmerkungen zu den Kinder- u. hausmärchen der brüder Grimm. Erster Band (NR. 1-60). Germany, Leipzig: Dieterich'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung. 1913. pp. 503–515.
  24. ^ Hyltén-Cavallius, Gunnar Olof och Stephens, George. Svenska Folk-Sagor och Äfventyr. Förste Delen. Stockholm: pa A. Bohlins Förlag. 1844. pp. 151–152.
  25. ^ Pop-Reteganul, Ion. Împăratul cu trei feciori  (in Romanian) – via Wikisource.
  26. ^ "The Nightingale in the Mosque". In: Fillmore, Parker. The Laughing Prince: a Book of Jugoslav Fairy Tales And Folk Tales. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1921. pp. 171–200.
  27. ^ "Der Prinz und der Wundervogel". In: Heller, Lotte. Ukrainische Volksmärchen; übertragen und erzählt von Lotte Heller und Nadija Surowzowa. Illustriert von Jury Wowk. Wien: Rikola Verlag. 1921. pp. 55–63.
  28. ^ "The Fairy Nightingale". In: Seklemian, A. G. The Golden Maiden and Other Folk Tales and Fairy Stories Told in Armenia. Cleveland and New York: The Helman-Taylor Company. 1898. pp. 33–39.
  29. ^ "Der goldne Vogel". In: Haltrich, Joseph. Deutsche Volksmärchen aus dem Sachsenlande in Siebenbürgen. Berlin: 1856. pp. 31–39. [2]
  30. ^ Merakles, Michales G. Studien zum griechischen Märchen. Eingeleitet, übers, und bearb. von Walter Puchner. (Raabser Märchen-Reihe, vol. 9. Wien: Österr. Museum für Volkskunde, 1992. p. 159. ISBN 3-900359-52-0.
  31. ^ Dawkins, Richard McGillivray. Modern Greek folktales. Oxford: Clarendon Press. 1953. p. 190.
  32. ^ Meder, Theo. "De gouden vogel (vuurvogel)". In: Van Aladdin tot Zwaan kleef aan. Lexicon van sprookjes: ontstaan, ontwikkeling, variaties. 1ste druk. Ton Dekker & Jurjen van der Kooi & Theo Meder. Kritak: Sun. 1997. p. 152.
  33. ^ György Gaal. Gaal György magyar népmesegyujteménye (3. kötet). Pesten: Emich Gusztáv Sajátja. 1860. pp. 1–14.
  34. ^ Pyle, Howard; Pyle, Katharine. The Wonder Clock: Or, Four & Twenty Marvellous Tales, Being One for Each Hour of the Day. New York: Printed by Harper & Brothers. 1915 (1887). pp. 107–120. [3]
  35. ^ György Gaal. Gaal György magyar népmesegyujteménye (2. kötet). Pesten: Pfeifer Ferdinánd Sajátja. 1857. pp. 149–156.
  36. ^ Vervliet, J. B.; Cornelissen, Jozef. Vlaamsche volksvertelsels en kindersprookjes. Lier: Jozef VAN IN & Cie, Drukkers-Uitgevers. 1900. pp. 36–42. [4]
  37. ^ de Meyere, Victor. De Vlaamsche vertelselschat. Deel 3. 1ste druk. 1929. pp. 103–111.
  38. ^ de Meyere, Victor. De Vlaamsche vertelselschat. Deel 3. 1ste druk. 1929. p. 305.
  39. ^ Di Francia, Letterio (Curatore). Fiabe e novelle calabresi. Prima e seconda parte. Torino: Giovanni Chiantore, 1935. pp. 196–198. [5]
  40. ^ László Arany. Eredeti népmesék. Pest: Kiadja Heckenast Gusztáv. 1862. pp. 1–29.
  41. ^ Pineau, Léon. Les contes populaires du Poitou. Paris: E. Leroux. 1891. pp. 21–26. [6]
  42. ^ Massignon, Genevieve. Contes corses. Paris: Picarde. 1984 [1963]. pp. 7–10. ISBN 2-7084-0102-5
  43. ^ Di Francia, Letterio (Curatore). Fiabe e novelle calabresi. Prima e seconda parte. Torino: Giovanni Chiantore, 1935. pp. 181–195.
  44. ^ Pop-Reteganul, Ion. Pasărea cîntă, domnii dorm  (in Romanian) – via Wikisource.
  45. ^ János Berze Nagy. Népmesék Heves- és Jász-Nagykun-Szolnok-megyébol (Népköltési gyüjtemény 9. kötet). Budapest: Az Athenaeum Részvény-Társulat Tulajdona. 1907. pp. 72–80.
  46. ^ Lang, Andrew. The Green Fairy Book. Longmans, Green. 1892. pp. 328-338.
  47. ^ Schott, Arthur und Albert. Rumänische Volkserzählungen aus dem Banat. Bukarest: Kriterion. 1975. pp. 194–204.
  48. ^ Schott, Arthur; Schott, Albert. Walachische Maehrchen. Stuttgart und Tübingen: J. G. Cotta'scher Verlag. 1845. pp. 253–262.
  49. ^ Zarych, Elżbieta. “Ludowe, Literackie I Romantyczne W Górnośląskich Baśniach I Podaniach (Oberschlesiche Märchen Und Sagen) Josepha von Eichendorffa”. In: Joseph von Eichendorff (1788–1857) a Česko-Polská kulturnÍ a Umělecká pohraničÍ: kolektivnÍ Monografie [Joseph von Eichendorff (1788–1857) I Czesko-Polskie Kulturowe I Artystyczne Pogranicza: Monografia Zbiorowa]. Edited by Libor Martinek and Małgorzata Gamrat. KLP - Koniasch Latin Press, 2018. pp. 75–80, 87-89. http://bohemistika.fpf.slu.cz/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/eichendorff-komplet.pdf
  50. ^ Vaiškūnas, Jonas. "SOME PERIPHERAL FORMS OF THE MEDITERRANEAN AND ORIENTAL ZODIAC TRADITIONS IN HEATHEN LITHUANIA". In: Archaeologia Baltica Volume 10: Astronomy and Cosmology in Folk Traditions and Cultural Heritage. Klaipėda University Press. 2008. p. 89. ISSN 1392-5520
  51. ^ Vaiškūnas, Jonas. "SOME PERIPHERAL FORMS OF THE MEDITERRANEAN AND ORIENTAL ZODIAC TRADITIONS IN HEATHEN LITHUANIA". In: Archaeologia Baltica Volume 10: Astronomy and Cosmology in Folk Traditions and Cultural Heritage. Klaipėda University Press. 2008. pp. 89, 91-92. ISSN 1392-5520
  52. ^ VĖLIUS, Norbertas, 1994. "Velnias ir Aušrinė". In: Lietuvos mokslas, T. II, 1(2), Vilnius: PI “Lietuvos mokslo” redakcija. pp. 116–129.
  53. ^ Razauskas, Dainius. "Iš baltų mitinio vaizdyno juodraščių: Aušrinė (ir Vakarinė)" [From rough copies of the Baltic mythic imagery: the Morning Star]. In: Liaudies kultūra'. Nr. 6 (201), p. 20.
  54. ^ BLAŽEK, Václav. "The Role of "Apple" in the Indo-European Mythological Tradition and in Neighboring Traditions". In: Lisiecki, Marcin; Milne, Louise S.; Yanchevskaya, Nataliya. Power and Speech: Mythology of the Social and the Sacred. Toruń: EIKON, 2016. pp. 257–297. ISBN 978-83-64869-16-7.
  55. ^ Vaiškūnas, Jonas. "SOME PERIPHERAL FORMS OF THE MEDITERRANEAN AND ORIENTAL ZODIAC TRADITIONS IN HEATHEN LITHUANIA". In: Archaeologia Baltica Volume 10: Astronomy and Cosmology in Folk Traditions and Cultural Heritage. Klaipėda University Press. 2008. p. 89. ISSN 1392-5520
  56. ^ Dixon-Kennedy, Mike (1998). Encyclopedia of Russian and Slavic Myth and Legend. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO. p. 161. ISBN 9781576070635.
  57. ^ Eason, Cassandra. Fabulous Creatures, Mythical Monsters, and Animal Power Symbols: A Handbook. Greenwood Press. 2008. pp. 60. ISBN 978-02-75994-25-9.
  58. ^ Ramanujan, A. K. A Flowering Tree and Other Oral Tales from India. Berkeley London: University of California Press. 1997. p. 248. ISBN 0-520-20398-4
  59. ^ Elijah's Violin and Other Jewish Fairy Tales. Selected and retold by Howard Schwartz. New York, Oxford: The Oxforn University Press. 1994 [1983]. p. 301. ISBN 0-19-509200-7
  60. ^ Garry, Jane. "Choice of Roads. Motif N122.0.1, and Crossroads, Various Motifs". In: Jane Garry and Hasan El-Shamy (eds.). Archetypes and Motifs in Folklore and Literature. A Handbook. Armonk / London: M.E. Sharpe, 2005. p. 334.
  61. ^ Gier, Albert. "Hans Werner Henze, 'L'Upupa und der Triumph der Sohnesliebe'. Probleme der Märchenoper im 21. Jahrhundert". In: Fabula 50, no. 3-4 (2009): 264. https://doi.org/10.1515/FABL.2009.021
  62. ^ Hyltén-Cavallius, Gunnar Olof och Stephens, George. Svenska Folk-Sagor och Äfventyr. Förste Delen. Stockholm: pa A. Bohlins Förlag. 1844. p. 151.
  63. ^ Thompson, Stith (1977). The Folktale. University of California Press. p. 107. ISBN 0-520-03537-2.
  64. ^ Dégh, Linda. Folktales and Society: Story-telling in a Hungarian Peasant Community. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press. 1989 [1969]. p. 331. ISBN 0-253-31679-0
  65. ^ Grimm, Jacob & Grimm, Wilhelm; Taylor, Edgar; Cruikshank, George (illustrator). Grimm's Goblins: Grimm's Household Stories. London: R. Meek & Co.. 1877. p. 289.
  66. ^ The Complaynt of Scotland: Written in 1548. With Preliminary Dissertantion and Gossary. Edinburgh: 1801. p. 237. [7]
  67. ^ Jacob & Wilhelm Grimm; Zipes, Jack; Dezsö, Andrea (illustrator). The Original Folk and Fairy Tales of the Brothers Grimm: The Complete First Edition Princeton; Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2014. p. 497. Accessed August 12, 2020. doi:10.2307/j.ctt6wq18v.166.
  68. ^ Nyerup, Rasmus. Almindelig Morskabslæsning i Danmark og Norge igjennem Aarhundreder. Kjøbenhavn: 1816. pp. 227–230. [8]
  69. ^ Hyltén-Cavallius, Gunnar Olof och Stephens, George. Svenska Folk-Sagor och Äfventyr. Förste Delen. Stockholm: pa A. Bohlins Förlag. 1844. p. 151.
  70. ^ Meder, Theo. "De gouden vogel (vuurvogel)". In: Van Aladdin tot Zwaan kleef aan. Lexicon van sprookjes: ontstaan, ontwikkeling, variaties. 1ste druk. Ton Dekker & Jurjen van der Kooi & Theo Meder. Kritak: Sun. 1997. pp. 152–153.
  71. ^ Ker, W. P. "The Roman Van Walewein (Gawain)". In: Folklore 5, no. 2 (1894): 121–28. http://www.jstor.org/stable/1253647.
  72. ^ Winkelman, J. H. "Der Ritter, das Schachspiel und die Braut. Ein Beitrag zur Interpretation des mittelniederländischen 'Roman van Walewein'". In: Festschrift Walter Haug und Burghart Wachinger. Edited by Johannes Janota, Paul Sappler, Frieder Schanze, Benedikt K. Vollmann, Gisela Vollmann-Profe and Hans-Joachim Ziegeler. Berlin, New York: Max Niemeyer Verlag, 1992. pp. 549–564. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110937114.549
  73. ^ Jacobs, Joseph. More Celtic Fairy Tales. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons. 1895. p. 229.
  74. ^ Magnanini, Suzanne. "Between Straparola and Basile: Three Fairy Tales from Lorenzo Selva's Della Metamorfosi (1582)." Marvels & Tales 25, no. 2 (2011): 331–69. Accessed November 29, 2020. http://www.jstor.org/stable/41389007.
  75. ^ De Blécourt, Willem. "A Quest for Rejuvenation." In: Tales of Magic, Tales in Print: On the Genealogy of Fairy Tales and the Brothers Grimm. p. 61. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2012. http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv6p4w6.7.
  76. ^ Günther, Christopher Wilhelm. Kindermärchen Aus Mündlichen Erzählungen Gesammelt. 2e aufl. Jena: F. Frommann, 1857. pp. 93–150. [9]
  77. ^ "THE GOLDEN BLACKBIRD from Andrew Lang's Fairy Books". mythfolklore.net.
  78. ^ Le Merle d'or, by Paul Sébillot, on French Wikisource.
  79. ^ Wiggin, Kate Douglas Smith; Smith, Nora Archibald. Magic casements: a second fairy book. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, Doran & Co.. 1931 [1904]. pp. 245–250.
  80. ^ Groome, Francis Hindes. Gypsy folk-tales. London: Hurst and Blackett. 1899. pp. 283–289.
  81. ^ Sjœstedt-Jonval, Marie-Louise. "An Craoibhinn Aoibhinn (Douglas Hyde), Ocht sgéalta o Choillte Mághach. Dublin, Educational Co., 1936" [compte-rendu]. In: Etudes Celtiques, vol. 2, fascicule 3, 1937. pp. 142-144. www.persee.fr/doc/ecelt_0373-1928_1937_num_2_3_1137_t2_0142_0000_2
  82. ^ Curtin, Jeremiah. "The Bird of the Golden Land". In: Béaloideas 11, no. 1/2 (1941): 14-24. Accessed April 1, 2021. doi:10.2307/20642560. www.jstor.org/stable/20642560
  83. ^ Carre Alvarelllos, Lois. Contos Populares da Galiza. Porto: Museu de Etnografia de Porto. 1968. pp. 25-30.
  84. ^ Discoteca di Stato (1975). Alberto Mario Cirese; Liliana Serafini (eds.). Tradizioni orali non cantate: primo inventario nazionale per tipi, motivi o argomenti [Oral and Non Sung Traditions: First National Inventory by Types, Motifs or Topics] (in Italian and English). Ministero dei beni culturali e ambientali. p. 146.
  85. ^ Curtin, Jeremiah. Myths and Folk-tales of the Russians, Western Slavs, and Magyars. Boston: Little, Brown, and Company. 1890. p. 349.
  86. ^ Lehnert, Johann Heinrich. Mährchenkranz für Kinder, der erheiternden Unterhaltung besonders im Familienkreise geweiht. Berlin [1829]. CXLVIII-CLV (148–155).
  87. ^ Löhr, Johann Andreas Christian. Das Buch der Maehrchen für Kindheit und Jugend, nebst etzlichen Schnaken und Schnurren, anmuthig und lehrhaftig [1–]2. Band 2, Leipzig [ca. 1819/20]. pp. 248–257.
  88. ^ Wisser, Wilhelm. Plattdeutsche Volksmärchen. Jena: Verlegt bei Euden Diederichs. 1922. pp. 156–162. [10]
  89. ^ Wisser, Wilhelm. Plattdeutsche Volksmärchen. Jena: Verlegt bei Euden Diederichs. 1922. pp. 163–170. [11]
  90. ^ Madsen, Jens. Folkeminder fra Hanved Sogn ved Flensborg. Kjobenhavn: i komission C. S. Ivensens Boghandel. 1870. pp. 3-7. [12]
  91. ^ Kúnos, Ignácz; Bain, R. Nisbet (translator). Turkish fairy tales and folk tales. New York: Frederick A. Stokes Company. [1896] pp. 244–259.
  92. ^ Vasiliu, Alexandru. Poveşti şi legende culese de Alexandru Vasiliu. Învăţător în Tătăruşi (Suceava). Academia Română din viaţa poporului român XXXVI. Cultura Naţională: 1927.
  93. ^ Kremnitz, Mite, and Mary J Safford. Roumanian Fairy Tales. New York: H. Holt and company. 1885. pp. 16–29. [13]
  94. ^ Schullerus, Pauline. Rumänische Volksmärchen aus dem mittleren Harbachtal. Bukarest: Kriterion 1977 [1907]. pp. 244-250.
  95. ^ Arnold Ipolyi. Ipolyi Arnold népmesegyüjteménye (Népköltési gyüjtemény 13. kötet). Budapest: Az Athenaeum Részvénytársualt Tulajdona. 1914. pp. 118-132.
  96. ^ Klimo, Michel. Contes et légendes de Hongrie. Les littératures populaires de toutes les nations. Traditions, légendes, contes, chansons, proverbes, devinettes, superstitïons. Tome XXXVI. Paris: J. Maisonneuve. 1898. pp. 265-276.
  97. ^ Byrde, Elsie. The Polish Fairy Book. London: T. Fisher Unwin LTD. 1925. pp. 85–102.
  98. ^ Gliński, Antoni Józef. Bajarz polski: Baśni, powieści i gawędy ludowe. Tom I. Wilno: W Drukarni Gubernialnéj. 1862. pp. 15-38. [14]
  99. ^ Fillmore, Parker. The Laughing Prince: a Book of Jugoslav Fairy Tales And Folk Tales. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1921. pp. 73–106.
  100. ^ Péter Bálint. "Being Perceived and Understood (The Function of the Portrait or Photograph in Tales)". In: Identitás és Népmese [Identity and the Folktale]. Edited by Bálint Péter. Hajdúböszörmény. 2011. pp. 239–244. ISBN 978-963-89167-9-2
  101. ^ Erben, Karel Jaromír. České pohádky. Jan Laichter. 1905. pp. 97-116.
  102. ^ Miletínský, J. E./Erben, Karel Jaromír. "Pták Ohnivák a liška Ryška". In: Máj. Jarní almanah na rok 1858. Praha: H. Dominikus, 1858. pp. 205–224.
  103. ^ Raynov, Nikolai. "Български приказки". Захарий Стоянов, 2005. Tale nr. 10. ISBN 954-739-618-8.
  104. ^ Domokos Péter; Karig Sára. Vatka meg Kalmez: Votják Mondák és Mesék. Budapest: Európa Könyvkiadó, 1974. pp. 205-210.
  105. ^ Grundtvig, Svend. Danske Folkeæventyr ved Svend Grundtvig. Kjobenhavn: Forlagt af Aug. Bahg og Lehmann & Stage. Trykt Hos J. Jorgensen & Co. 1884. pp. 102–124.
  106. ^ Hatch, Mary Cottam; Grundtvig, Sven. More Danish tales. New York: Harcourt, Brace. 1949. pp. 214–237.
  107. ^ Asbjørnsen, Peter Christen. Norske Folke-eventyr: Ny samling. Christiania: I kommission hos J. Dybwad, 1871. pp. 108–116.
  108. ^ Asbjørnsen, Peter Christen; Dasent, George Webbe. Tales from the fjeld: a series of popular tales from the Norse of P. Ch. Asbjørnsen. London: Gibbings; New York: G.P. Putnam's. 1896. pp. 391–403.
  109. ^ Asbjørnsen, Peter Christen; Brækstad, Hans Lien (translator). Fairy tales from the far North. London: David Nutt. 1897. pp. 8–19.
  110. ^ Leskien, August/Brugman, K. Litauische Volkslieder und Märchen. Straßburg: Karl J. Trübner, 1882. pp. 363-371.
  111. ^ Leskien, August/Brugman, K. Litauische Volkslieder und Märchen. Straßburg: Karl J. Trübner, 1882. pp. 371-375.
  112. ^ Brīvzemnieks, Fricis. Латышскія народныя сказки. Moskva: 1877. pp. 211-222. [15] (In Russian [pre-1918 grammatical reform])
  113. ^ Brīvzemnieks, Fricis. Латышскія народныя сказки. Moskva: 1877. pp. 223–227 (footnote nr. 1). [16] (In Russian [pre-1918 grammatical reform])
  114. ^ Brīvzemnieks, Fricis. Латышскія народныя сказки. Moskva: 1877. pp. 227–229 (continuation of footnote nr. 1). [17] (In Russian [pre-1918 grammatical reform])
  115. ^ Hayrapetyan Tamar. "L’appropriation culturelle des mondes étrangers dans le rossingnol prodigieux: la forêt comme symbole cryptique (traduit ci-dessous par Léon Ketcheyan)". In: Revue des etudes Arméniennes tome 38, 2018, pp. 427-428.
  116. ^ Балкарские и карачаевские сказки [Fairy Tales from the Karachays and the Balkars]. Сборник сказок. Мoskva: Детская литература, 1983. Tale nr. 17.
  117. ^ Узбекские народные сказки [Uzbek Folk-Tales]. В 2-х томах. Том 1. Перевод с узбекского. Сост. М. Афзалов, Х. Расулов, З. Хусаинова. Ташкент: Издательство литературы и искусства имени Гафура Гуляма, 1972. Tale nr. 22.
  118. ^ Ramanujan, A. K. A Flowering Tree and Other Oral Tales from India. Berkeley London: University of California Press. 1997. pp. 91-94 and 248. ISBN 0-520-20398-4
  119. ^ Radlov, Vasiliĭ Vasilʹevich. Proben der volkslitteratur der türkischen stämme. IV. Theil: Dir Mundarten der Baradiner, Taraer, Toboler und Tümenischen Tataren. St. Petersburg: Commisionäre der Kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften. 1872. pp. 146-154. [18]
  120. ^ Улуг-Зода, Клавдия. "Таджикские народные сказки". Ирфон, 1967. pp. 263-272.
  121. ^ Savory, Phyllis. Congo Fireside Tales. New York: Hastings House, 1962. pp. 54-61.
  122. ^ Вольпе, М. "Волшебный цветок. сказки Восточной Африки" [The Magic Flower. Tales of East Africa]. Мoskva: Художественная литература, 1987. Tale nr. 19.
  123. ^ Knappert, Jan. Myths and Legends of the Swahili. London: Heinemann, 1970. pp. 189ff. ISBN 9780435900830.
  124. ^ Musick, Ruth Ann. Green Hills of Magic: West Virginia Folktales from Europe. Lexington: The University Press of Kentucky. 1970. pp. 174-185. ISBN 978-0-8131-1191-9
  125. ^ Campbell, Marie. Tales from the Cloud-Walking Country. Athens and London: The University of Georgia Press. 2000 [1958]. pp. 70-77. ISBN 0-8203-2186-9
  126. ^ Campa, Arthur L. "Spanish Traditional Tales in the Southwest." In: Western Folklore 6, no. 4 (1947): 322–34. Accessed October 11, 2020. doi:10.2307/1497665.
  127. ^ Carrière, Joseph Médard. Tales From the French Folk-lore of Missouri. Evanston: Northwestern university, 1937. pp. 161–166.
  128. ^ American Folklore Society. Journal of American Folklore. Vol. 25. Washington [etc.]: American Folklore Society, 1912. pp. 194–195.
  129. ^ Romero, Sílvio. Contos populares do Brazil. São Paulo: Livraria de Francisco Alves. 1897. pp. 28–31.
  130. ^ Laboulaye, Edouard; Booth, Mary Louise. Last fairy tales. New York: Harper & Brothers. [ca. 1884] pp. 1-36. [19]
  131. ^ Underhill, Zoe Dana. The Dwarfs' Tailor, And Other Fairy Tales. New York: Harper & Brothers Publishers. 1896. pp. 164-176.
  132. ^ Capuana, Luigi. C'era una volta...: Fiabe. Milano: Fratelli Treves, Editori. 1885. pp. 57-73.
  133. ^ Capuana, Luigi. Once upon a time fairy tales. New York: Cassell Publishing Company. 1893. pp. 16–28. [20]
  134. ^ Zipes, Jack (2019). "Speaking the Truth with Folk and Fairy Tales: The Power of the Powerless". The Journal of American Folklore. 132 (525): 243–259. doi:10.5406/jamerfolk.132.525.0243. JSTOR 10.5406/jamerfolk.132.525.0243.
  135. ^ The true annals of fairy-land: the reign of King Herla. Edited by William Canton; illustrated by Charles Robinson. London: J.M. Dent & Co. [1900] pp. 96–105.
  136. ^ TESAŘOVÁ, Ludmila. "Za kouzelnou branou: původní české pohádky". Ilustroval Artuš Scheiner. Praha: Weinfurter, 1932. pp. 24–32.
  137. ^ "Animated Hungarian folk tales". Magyar népmesék (TV Series 1980–2012). Magyar Televízió Müvelödési Föszerkesztöség (MTV) (I), Pannónia Filmstúdió. 18 September 1980. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
  138. ^ Gier, Albert. "Hans Werner Henze, 'L'Upupa und der Triumph der Sohnesliebe'. Probleme der Märchenoper im 21. Jahrhundert". In: Fabula 50, no. 3-4 (2009): 261–272. https://doi.org/10.1515/FABL.2009.021

Bibliography[]

  • Bolte, Johannes; Polívka, Jiri. Anmerkungen zu den Kinder- u. hausmärchen der brüder Grimm. Erster Band (NR. 1-60). Germany, Leipzig: Dieterich'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung. 1913. pp. 503–515.
  • Cosquin, Emmanuel. Contes populaires de Lorraine comparés avec les contes des autres provinces de France et des pays étrangers, et précedés d'un essai sur l'origine et la propagation des contes populaires européens. Tome I. Paris: Vieweg. 1887. pp. 212–222.
  • Hyltén-Cavallius, Gunnar Olof och Stephens, George. Svenska Folk-Sagor och Äfventyr. Förste Delen. Stockholm: pa A. Bohlins Förlag. 1844. pp. 151–152 and 164–168.
  • Hyltén-Cavallius, Gunnar Olof och Stephens, George. Svenska Folk-Sagor och Äfventyr. Förste Delen. Stockholm: pa A. Bohlins Förlag. 1849. pp. 488–489.
  • Schott, Arthur and Schott, Albert. Walachische Maehrchen. Stuttgart: J. G. Cotta. 1845. pp. 368–370.

Further reading[]

  • Blécourt, Willem. (2008). 'The Golden Bird', 'The Water of Life' and the Walewein. Tijdschrift Voor Nederlandse Taal-en Letterkunde. 124. 259–277.
  • De Blécourt, Willem. "A Quest for Rejuvenation." In: Tales of Magic, Tales in Print: On the Genealogy of Fairy Tales and the Brothers Grimm. pp. 51–79. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2012. http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv6p4w6.7.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""