The origin of fairy tales dates back thousands of years. The history of fairy tales or fairy stories have fantasy creatures and talking animals. Enchantments and far-fetched events are also usually part of the plot. Unlike legends and folklore tales, they seldom contain any references to religion, actual places, persons or events. The term "once upon a time" is used rather than an actual reference to a date. Early oral fairy tales and folklore were for adults as much as for children. The early written fairy tales of the literary type definitely contained strictly adult material. In many instances, they were quite gruesome. They became more children's fairy tales in the 19th and 20th centuries.
There are two theories that have attempted to explain the common elements in the text of the different fairytales found spread over many continents. One theory is that a tale comes from a single source and spreads from culture to culture over time. A good example of this is the story of Aladdin, his flying carpet, magic lamp, and the genie. Disney made an animated movie of the tale and a live action film was recently made. We all associate the story and the characters with the mideast/Arab world. In reality, the original tale came from China. The other theory is that these tales reference common human experience from many cultures and over time evolved into tales of similar human experiences. The first written fairy tales were from ancient Egypt and occurred around 1300 BC. It is amazing to find very similar stories/plots occurring in the folklore from different countries at different times and in totally different cultures.
Many of our most pervasive stories can be found in the tales of the Brothers Grimm and even earlier and have changed a great deal along the way. All the blindings, sexual misconduct, and death has been mostly scrubbed away in the last century or so. None of the stories with people getting nailed into barrels and thrown down hills or into ponds have really made it into the mainstream. Take a look at a few terrifying, gruesome, often bizarre early versions of ubiquitous fairy tales. Warning—the original versions of these fairy tales contain grisly details.
Sleeping Beauty:
In one of the very earliest versions of this classic story
published in 1634, the princess does not prick her finger on a spindle, instead
getting a sliver of flax stuck under her fingernail. She falls down, apparently
dead, but her father cannot face the idea of losing her, so he lays her body on
a bed in one of his estates. Later, a king out hunting in the woods finds her,
and since he can't wake her up, rapes her while she's unconscious, then heads
home to his own country. Some time after that, still unconscious, she gives
birth to two children, and one of them accidentally sucks the splinter out of
her finger, so she wakes up. The king who raped her is already married, but he
burns his wife alive so he and the princess can be together. To keep everything
"morally sound," the wife tries to kill and eat the babies first. Not
exactly the type of story to tell children at bedtime.
Little Red Riding Hood
The Brothers Grimm actually made this story a lot nicer than
it was when they originally got their hands on it. In the original version from
1697, there is no intrepid huntsman. Little Red simply strips naked, gets in
bed, and then dies, eaten up by the big bad wolf. In another even darker
version, she eats her own grandmother first. In the Chinese version of the
story, it is a tiger instead of a wolf that is the villain and eats the girl.
Rumpelstiltskin
This story is pretty simple. The miller's daughter is
trapped and forced to spin straw into gold or be killed. A little man appears
to her, and spins it for her, but says that he will take her child in payment
unless she can guess his name. In the Grimm fairy tale, when she finally
figures out Rumpelstiltskin's name, he yells, "The Devil told you that!
The Devil told you that!" He stamps his right foot so hard that he drives
it into the ground right up to his waist. Then he takes hold of his left foot with
both hands and tears himself in two. Again, certainly not acceptable fare for
children, whether bedtime or not.
Cinderella
In the Grimm story, not only do the stepsisters cut off
parts of their feet in order to fit into the glass slippers where the blood
pooling in their shoes gives them away, but at the end, they have their eyes
pecked out by doves, just for good measure.
Snow White
In the original 1812 Grimm Brothers version, the evil Queen
is Snow White's actual mother rather than her stepmother, which makes the story
more terrifying. The Disney version also left out the fact that the Queen sends
the huntsman out to bring back Snow White's liver and lungs, which she then
means to eat. In the Grimm version, she's not in a deep sleep when the prince
finds her—she's dead. The prince, being an enthusiastic participant in
necrophilia, is taking her dead body to his castle when his servant trips,
jostles the coffin, and dislodges the poison apple from her throat. And once
again, the Grimms gave the story a gruesome consequence for the villain. When
the queen shows up at Snow White's wedding, she's forced to step into iron
shoes that had been cooking in the fire, and then dances until she falls down
dead.
Hansel and Gretel
The version of the story we know is already pretty
gruesome—the evil stepmother abandons the children to die in the forest, they
happen upon a cannibalistic witch's cottage who fattens them up to eat They
outwit then kill the witch and escape. The Grimm version is basically the same,
but an early French version, called The Lost Children, has an even more
gruesome ending.
Rapunzel
Rapunzel, Rapunzel,
let down your hair. In the Grimm version, she does just that for a prince
on numerous occasions and winds up pregnant. She innocently mentions to her
jailer witch that her clothes feel too tight. The witch doesn't want any
competition so she chops off Rapunzel's hair and magically transports her far
away, where she lives as a beggar with no money, no home, and after a few
months, two hungry mouths to feed. As for the prince, the witch lures him up
and then pushes him from the window. Some thorn bushes break his fall, but also
poke out his eyes. But, surprisingly, there is a happy ending.
Goldilocks and the Three Bears
In this tale's earliest known incarnation, there was no
Goldilocks—only the three bears and a fox named Scrapefoot, who enters the
three bears' palace, sleeps in their beds and messes around with their salmon
of knowledge. In the end, she either gets thrown out of the window or eaten,
depending on who's telling the tale. Interestingly, it has been suggested that
the use of the word vixen to mean
female fox is how we got to Goldilocks, by means of a crafty old woman in the
intervening story incarnations.
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