What's the Name of That Book??? discussion
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Named Non-US Fictional Folk Heroes
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Also, have you tried this: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Folk_...
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_...


You might find Graham Seal's Encyclopedia Of Folk Heroes a good starting point, it seems to be fairly wide-ranging geographically.

You might find Graham Seal's Encyclopedia Of Folk Heroes a good starting point, ..."
Perfect! I've heard the name Stagolee but know nothing about him/her. Queen Mab I've heard of from Romeo & Juliet. Galloping Jones and Finn Mac Cumhal are completely new to me. Sounds like exactly what I was looking for.

I can't really think that many, most are real historical figures. Of course there is Lotta Svärd but it's mainly known for the later auxiliary movement and the women who served in it. The Kalevala has of course famous characters, but I'm not sure they are really folk heroes. I don't think there was need for them, and when there were, the "heroes" were real people.

Ballad of the Whiskey Robber: A True Story of Bank Heists, Ice Hockey, Transylvanian Pelt Smuggling, Moonlighting Detectives, and Broken Hearts

I wasn't thinking of a character that was created by a single author, but more one that grew in the telling from narrator to narrator.
Wasn't Astrid Lindgren the creator of Pippi?



Thanks for that suggestion but I was hoping for stories about mortals. I am also aware of the heroes of Greek myths but am looking for folk characters that are post-classical. I am aware of the characters from Grimms' fairy tales but again, they're more archtypes and don't actually have names.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilya_Mu...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juraj_J...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pan_Twa...

Yes! I'd never heard of any of these guys. As a product of a U.S. Public School education (I even went to a state college) I'm ignorant of many things that folks in other countries are exposed to. I'm just trying to fill in some gaps. Do you know of any book that collects tale of these folks?
Already got my public library digging up a copy of Encyclopedia Of Folk Heroes that an earlier poster suggested.

Lalli might be one, he is famous for killing a bishop. Did either of them ever exist, that's another thing. And there is probably no book about him in English. Jaakko Ilkka was a real person, he was a peasant leader and executed after the Cudgel War in 1597.
Then of course there is William Tell in Switzerland and Robin Hood, obviously, and also Faust. And many stories were told about Alexey Stakhanov in the Soviet Union.

Check with your library (or a local university library) for "The Greenwood Library of Folktales"...it's a reference set I use quite often. It's a good starting place to discover new names and stories from around the world.
The Greenwood Library of World Folktales: Stories from the Great Collections gathers together a vast array of folktales and arranges them according to region or cultural group. Each volume of the set is devoted to a particular broad geographic region:
Volume 1: Africa, The Middle East, Australia and Oceania
Volume 2: Asia
Volume 3: Europe
Volume 4: North and South America

Thanks. That sounds great.

Lalli might be one, he is famous for k..."
I knew Mikko Mieheläinen from old folk tales book that was translated to Polish and (though that looks like kind of funny misunderstanding now) you could quite easily google him up on Polish sites as Finnish folk hero.

Those MAY be the thing. El Cid is not really a folk tale so much as a historical person/events that have been inflated a bit, no? Sort of like OUR George Washington stories.

He isn't mentioned in Finnish at all. It might be an old tale but only one of many that we may or may not have been read as a child. Unlike Lalli who is well known, probably even mentioned in the history books, and a "hero", maybe. We don't particularly care for heroes.
I still think there are cultural differences, too, Americans like their heroes more than the rest of the world. You can even see it when it comes to movies. For example the French have Bluebeard but he had a habit of murdering wives...


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wong_Fe...


Of course the swedes don't really need a trickster folk hero, who could measure up to Loke.
In NZ, there's Maui, not related to the island in Hawaii. He's generally considered a demigod by anthropologists, but treated rather more prosaically by my storytelling elders when I was little, in fact most of his stunts involved annoying the crap out of the actual gods. He did things like fishing up the North Island of NZ (it does look like a big fish, once you figure out the angle) from the south island - his canoe. He also slowed down the sun which was going much too fast, and stole fire from the gods who were hoarding it. Stories about Maui are probably a lot easier to find in English than Bellman too, and although all the really big ones are right on that Wikipedia page.

"
Those sound great! I'm learning a lot. I'm glad I asked the original question.

Being a New Yorker I'd heard of the origins of the nickname Gotham for the Big Apple so I could understand there being a book called The Wise Men Of Gotham but I'd never heard of The Wise Men of Chelm
Only when I googled Chelm did I learn about the old jewish folk stories of Chelm so your suggestion has already taught me something.
Thanks
Books mentioned in this topic
The Wise Men of Chelm (other topics)The Wise Men of Gotham (other topics)
The Wise Men of Chelm (other topics)
The Hungry Coat: A Tale from Turkey (other topics)
The Wise Men of Gotham (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Astrid Lindgren (other topics)Rudyard Kipling (other topics)
My Question...
Are there similar (named) characters in other countries cultures? (I'm guessing that there are) Can anyone recommend a good book about them? Hopefully a collection that spans countries.
Yet when I ask others, the only Non-US folk heroes who have names seem to be Hansel and Gretel and they're not exactly heroes with multiple stories.
Does anyone know of any, possibly collected in a book?
I DO know about a few that Rudyard Kipling put into his Just So Stories and of course there's King Arthur, but I'm hoping that there may be a book that surveys these characters around the world.