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Hello and welcome back to the Most Amazing Channel on the internet.
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I am your host Rebecca Felgate, and today we are talking about the dark and scary origins of your favourite fairy tales!
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Before we get into the video, why don't you let me know what your favourite fairy tale is!
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Honestly, I love hearing all of these.
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I don't know what my favorite is.
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I think maybe "Sleeping Beauty," but now I've found out what the origin is—not so much.
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I look forward to reading all of them.
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Also, while you're down there, why don't you like this video and share it with a friend.
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If you guys want to connect with me on social media, there's a link to my Instagram in the description box.
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Coming in at number 10 we have "Pinocchio."
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All Pinocchio wants to do is be a real boy, but that is not happening in Carlo Collodi's original version of the tale.
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In the 1800s' version of the tale, Pinocchio kills Jiminy cricket by throwing a hammer at him.
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Why?
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Well, he's angry at the cricket for being a bit of a know-it-all, so he batters him.
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He doesn't even really feel that bad about it, to be honest.
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He then falls asleep by the fire and his feet burn off, but it's alright because good-old Gepetto builds him some new ones.
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Then, naughty Pinocchio is hung from a tree and suffocates.
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The moral of the story: disobey and die.
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One way to scare the kids into good behaviour, I guess.
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Coming into number 9, we have "Sleeping Beauty."
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So the original tale of "Sleeping Beauty" is a story called "The Sun, Moon, and Talia" and is, like sleeping beauty, about a princess that falls into a deep sleep.
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OK, at first the similarities are on point.
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Instead of being prophesied to prick her finger on a spindle and spinning wheel, it's flax and hemp that are a problem.
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The girl does get flax stuck under her fingernail and falls into a deep sleep.
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Her rich father has her enshrined in a mausoleum in the woods, where one day an older king from another kingdom finds her.
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He then rapes her corpse, then leaves her.
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She then gives birth, and fairies look after her babies, until one day, one of her kids sucks the flax out from under her fingernail and she wakes up to 2 surprises.
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She names her kids Sun and Moon as they, like the celestial bodies, are a mystery to her.
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The rapey and older king returns to find her awake and they fall in love, which is really weird.
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The only problem is, other than the rape, is that he has a wife.
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His wife then finds out and orders her chef to cook her husband's kids and kill the mistress, but he manages to find out first and kill her.
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The king, Talia, Sun, and Moon live happily ever after.
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Isn't that nice?
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Coming in at number 8 we have "Cinderella".
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"Cinderella" is a heartwarming rags-to-riches tale.
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And yeah, the version we know today is sad what with Cinderella being an orphan and everything, but beyond that, Cinders does get a benevolent fairy godmother who helps her deal with her sisters and wicked stepmother.
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It all works out alright in the end, though.
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That slipper fits and she marries her prince.
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OK, sure, but in the origin version, her ghastly sisters chop parts of their own feet off to be able to fit in the slipper.
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The prince only finds out when he finds blood in the shoe.
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Eventually he does find out that Cinderella is the true owner of the slippers and they get married, but that isn't all.
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Doves peck out her older sisters' eyes.
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Hip hip hooray!
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Coming in at number 7, we have "Snow White."
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So, we all love a bit of Snow White, right?
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In the story we know and love, Snow White is a princess with a wicked stepmother who forces her out of her home, because she's jealous of her beauty.
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She meets 7 kindly dwarves in the woods who take care of her, but when the wicked stepmother finds out she's still alive, she tries to poison her.
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Later, she's awoken by a prince with a true love's kiss.
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Things weren't so cutesy in the original Brothers Grimm Tale.
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Snow White is indeed cast out, but the wicked stepmother, Queen of the Kingdom, asks a huntsman to murder her in the woods and bring back her heart and lungs so she can eat them.
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The huntsman does spare her, but the queen finds out and eventually tries to kill her 3 times.
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Eventually, she gatecrashes Snow White and the prince's wedding, and is then forced to put on a pair of burning hot iron shoes that have, like, been in a fire all day and then she's forced to dance in them until she dies.
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Her flesh is immediately badly burned, but she eventually drops dead of exhaustion.
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Honestly, that sounds more like the origin story behind the "Red Wedding," not a beloved fairy tale.
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Coming in to number 6, we have "The Goose Girl." I hadn't heard of "The Goose Girl," but I hear
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it's a very popular tale in Germany and Eastern Europe, after doing a bit of research.
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It's a bedtime fairy tale and its origins are the stuff of nightmares.
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To cut a long story short, in the original tale, a deceitful maid is thrown into a barrel
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with spikes and rolled around till she dies.
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Ah, some classic medieval torture.
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That does sound particularly grim. Is it worse than being hung, drawn, and quartered
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or better?
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What about being pulled apart by horses?
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Coming in to number 5, we have "Hansel and Gretel." There are kind of two twisted origin stories here
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that merged to create one tale told verbally for hundreds of years, but first written down
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by the Brothers Grimm.
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So, back in medieval Germany, where the tale is set, there were wide-spread famines and
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people simply could no longer provide for their children. So they abandoned them, leaving
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them to die alone in the woods, possibly from starvation, or maybe by being savaged
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by animals.
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This is legit, it happened in history.
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The next part of the tale comes from the story of a pair of rival bakers.
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One of them had the misfortune of being a woman.
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Katharina Schraderin was well known for her incredible gingerbread in her German village
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in the 1600s.
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A competing male baker became jealous of her success, so played on a timeless trend of
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smearing the woman with nasty rumours.
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What could he do in the 1600s?
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Well, he called her a witch.
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In accusing her, he convinced others to track her down.
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The posse rounded her up and burned her to death in her very own baker's oven.
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Right.
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Coming in to number 4, we have "Mulan." The original "Mulan" was written by Chu Reno
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and was called "The Ballad if Hua Mulan."
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Any ballad can't be a good thing.
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Hua Mulan was a legendary Chinese woman.
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In the ballad, like in the fairy tale, she disguises herself as a man in order to join
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the army and she falls in love with Luo Cheng.
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When she comes back from war, she discovers hat her father has died and her mum has
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remarried.
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Not only that, the man who waged war in the first place has called for her to be his
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concubine, so basically a sex slave.
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Instead of doing that, she commits suicide.
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But before she does, she gets her sister to dress as a man and send a letter to Luo Chang.
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Her sister does, but then ends up sleeping with him herself.
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Horrifying.
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Coming in to number 3, we have "Red Riding Hood." The story of "Red Riding Hood" that we know
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and love today, includes a grandma, a wolf, and a little girl, and a hunter.
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Despite a few darker undertones, the story has a happy ending and Red Riding Hood is
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reunited with her grandma and the bad wolf is killed.
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Not so much in the original, however.
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In the earliest versions, which were said to originate in Italy and were said to be
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named things like "The Story of Grandmother" or "False Grandmother," actually things are pretty gnarly.
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In these early versions, while it was usually a wolf that did the taunting, some actually
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had vampires or ogres after the little girl.
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In the origin tales, the wolf does kill the grandmother and then gets Red Ridinghood to unwittingly eat
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her body and drink her blood.
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He then strips the girl naked, forces her to burn her clothes and then makes her get
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into bed with him.
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In most of the old stories he eats her, but in some, well, it's worse.
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Coming in to number 2, we have "The Pied Piper of Hamlin." So we know the story of the Pied Piper.
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It's a popular, but admittedly dark, fairy tale in which a town in lower Saxony, Germany is infested
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with rats, as it probably would have been in the Middle Ages.
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Enter the Pied Piper, a man with a magical pipe who does a deal with the town mayor to
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lure all of the rats away.
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He does this successfully and the town is rid of the rodents, however, the mayor refuses
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to pay, so the Pied Piper uses his magic pipe to lead away all of the town's children
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in revenge.
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Well, it turns out the dark origin here is that, it's actually true.
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Surviving town records from the church in Hamlin say that in the year of 1284, on the day
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of Saint John and Paul on June 26, "by a piper, clothed in many kinds of colours, 130 children
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born in Hamelin were seduced, and lost at a place of execution near the 'koppen'."
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It is thought the children were taken as part of the children's crusade, and the whole
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business with the rats was added later.
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Some even say that the real piper was a peadophile who abducted the children in their sleep.
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Finally, honestly, I don't think it gets darker or scarier than this, we have Ariel, the little mermaid. Hands down, the origin story to "The Little
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Mermaid" is absolutely horrifying!
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Hans Christian Andersen's original tale was gruesome.
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I hope you're ready for it.
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Instead of a princess mermaid falling in love, exchanging her voice for legs and marrying
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a prince to live happily ever after, the origin was fraught with bad decision-making and utter
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heartbreak.
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The mermaid is indeed a princess and does indeed save the life of a prince she falls
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for.
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She also makes a bargain with a sea witch in exchange for legs so she can meet him.
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Only the original version is much more intense. The sea witch takes the mermaid's tongue
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and gives her legs. Every time she walks, though, she feels the pain of walking on knives, and sticking her legs through swords.
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Unfortunately, this has the effect of making her feet bleed regularly.
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She's told if she doesn't secure the love of her prince, she will die.
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She meets the prince, who asks her to dance for him, which she does even though it causes
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her pure and utter agony.
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He then falls in love with someone else, breaking her heart.
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Her mermaid sisters have her back, they sell their lovely hair to the sea witch for a knife that offers the mermaid
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a way out.
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If she kills the prince and drips his blood on her legs, she can end her pain and become
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a mermaid again.
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Sadly for her, she loves him way too much and instead, as the witch promised, she dies.
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She simply seizes to exist.
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Right, not so great, then.
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So guys, that was the top 10 scary fairy tale dark origins. What did you think to that?
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I'm honestly so shocked that some of our best-loved stories came from such horrible tales and fables! We
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used to be so dark, oh my goodness! Although, I do love a good fairy tale chat. So do let me know what your favourite is and maybe we can the comment section a friendlier place.
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Thank you guys for watching this video. Do make sure you leave a thumb's up, share it with a friend, and I am your host, Rebecca Felgate, I'll see you in the next video. Bye!