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Any links for the German fairytales recently found??

Home › Forums › Off-topic › Everything else off-topic › Any links for the German fairytales recently found??

  • This topic has 10 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 13 years, 1 month ago by arjay369.
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  • May 24, 2012 at 6:01 am #134588
    nonnie
    Participant

    http://www.germany.info/Vertretung/usa/en/__pr/GIC/2012/03/19Fairytales.html

    http://www.finebooksmagazine.com/fine_books_blog/2012/03/new-fairy-tales-discovered-in-german-archive.phtml

    http://www.worldnavigator.info/article/english_versions_of_500_newly_discovered_german_fairytales_in_the_works

    I have been haunting the internet looking for translations of those German fairy tales but so far nothing is available beyond a few scattered stories. If anyone has links please post them here.

    Nonnie

    .

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    May 24, 2012 at 6:05 am #147617
    nonnie
    Participant

    http://io9.com/5904138/trove-of-500-fairytales-discovered-in-germany-+-will-disney-option-the-turnip-princess

    turnip princess… not sure about this one

    http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/books/2012/04/a-brand-new-fairytale.html

    King Golden Locks ??

    😯 😆 😯

    .

    May 24, 2012 at 9:51 am #147620
    flower
    Participant

    Hey I’m new 🙂
    My english isn’t perfect, but maybe I can translate some fairytales for you?
    Or at least write a summary. Tell me the tales name and I start.

    May 24, 2012 at 12:56 pm #147629
    mia
    Participant

    Flower, she’s talking about the Franz Xaver von Schönwerth fairy tales. Over a hundred of them were published by Erika Eichenseer. The book’s called Prinz Roßzwifl und andere MĂ€rchen.

    NONNIE, I’ve got a free week next week. I’ll try to translate a few more for you. 😉 I already did the WinterkĂŒberl one (a variation of the Rumpelstilskin one). I’ll post it below again. I’m not a good writer, so the flow truly isn’t the best. ^^ I’ll try my best with the other stories.

    WinterkĂŒberl
    (Winter=winter and KĂŒberl is simply a Bavarian last name from the region it’s from)

    Once upon a time there lived a king who had a beautiful wife. The wife suddenly fell
    ill. She got worse and finally died, because she couldn’t remember the name that would
    have given her health.
    During one time when the queen was still a child, she wandered through the thicket, got
    separated from her group, climed a mountain and fell into a whole. She then came to a
    cave where a mountain dwarf lived. He wanted to keep the child, but seeing that the little
    girl was scared of him and cried to see her mother, he guided her to the forest edge. From
    there she could see her home again. The mountain dwarf then told her: “Don’t forget
    my name! As long as you remember it ,you’ll be healthy and prosperous and won’t die.
    Woe betide you, should you forget! But also, you can’t tell anyone else, otherwise you’ll
    fall and die.”
    Once, the queen fell and because of that, she forgot the name and died. The king announced
    that he would marry the woman who resembled his deceased wife the most.
    Many tried, but in vain.
    In one little town, however, lived a tailor’s daughter and she told her father: “I’ll go to see
    the king. Maybe I’ll become his wife.” The father didn’t want her to go, but to no avail.
    She went. While going through the forest she saw a dwarf jumping happily over a fire
    and speaking:

    “Burn, fire, burn,
    that the queen won’t tell,
    that I’m called WinterkĂŒberl.”

    The tailor’s daughter made a mental note of that and when she came to the kind, she
    truly resembled the deceased queen. Thus the tailor’s daughter became the new queen.
    Later on, she found out why the old queen had to die. So, the tailor’s daughter remembered
    what had happened in the forest, kept the name in mind and with that, luck,
    health and life. She ruled many years happily and contend, even after her husband had
    died.

    The End

    May 24, 2012 at 1:54 pm #147636
    flower
    Participant

    Oh, I’m suprised, I never heard of this guy 😳
    Are his storys just as famous as the Grimm/ Andersen storys?

    May 24, 2012 at 4:18 pm #147644
    mia
    Participant

    Nope. He’s quite a famous Bavarian, öh, folklorist (no clue, how you say that in English, Volkskundler). He collected and wrote down Bavarian stories and fairy tales. Two years ago, they found about 500 stories in the archives of an institues with his name 
 Forgot how it was called. 🙁

    May 24, 2012 at 4:22 pm #147646
    flower
    Participant

    In Once they didn’t use any of his storys ?!

    May 25, 2012 at 10:01 am #147706
    mia
    Participant

    Not yet, nope. They have mostly concentrated on known fairy tales and children’s stories, Frederick and Kathryn aside.
    There are just too many stories, ha ha. If we’re lucky, we’ll see some in future episodes/seasons. 🙂

    May 26, 2012 at 1:18 am #147750
    nonnie
    Participant

    @mia wrote:

    Nope. He’s quite a famous Bavarian, öh, folklorist (no clue, how you say that in English, Volkskundler). He collected and wrote down Bavarian stories and fairy tales. Two years ago, they found about 500 stories in the archives of an institutes with his name 
 Forgot how it was called. 🙁

    I read several articles on this gentleman he wrote the fairy-tales as told in oral history, instead of dressing up the stories like the Grimm brothers did for publications. He was trying to save the stories from his region as an academic endeavor more then to profit from them.

    Nonnie,

    .

    May 26, 2012 at 9:25 am #147762
    mia
    Participant

    Exactly. Therefore they sometimes are quite short, not that best writeen and in some I wonder what purpose they had.

    Did you already read The Beautiful Slave, NONNIE? If not, I’ll translate that one.

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