Rags to Royalty



A classic of Literature, this Changeling Fantasy is as simple as it is sublime: the beautiful, hard working, put upon commoner girl who never loses her hope will be a princess or queen by stories end. That much is certain, what varies is how she goes from Rags to Royalty.


 * Cinderella Style: A commoner by birth, or with only minor ties to nobility. Nonetheless, through hard work, perseverance, and the help of musical mice, she'll swoop into the ball and make the prince her "husband".
 * Other classics of this type: Beauty and The Beast, Aladdin
 * Snow White Style: Legitimately royalty, but forced into hiding to escape those who plot against her or because she can not act as she needs to as long as she is seen as royal. Usually part of a Fish Out of Water plot as she tries to hide her royalty and fake being a commoner. May have to prove birthright with bizarre tests or special trinkets only the legitimate Princess would have.
 * Other classics of this type: "The Princess and the Pea".
 * Sleeping Beauty Style: Like the Snow White, she's royalty and forced into hiding for protection. Unlike the Snow White, she has no idea she has a Secret Legacy. Of course, her Genre Blind guardians feel she's safer not knowing her ancestry or that there are evil forces seeking to harm her, or possibly they don't know either. You can guess how that ends. (Note: Named after the Disney version of the story only.)
 * The classic Gender Flip version is, of course, King Arthur.
 * King Thrushbeard Style: A spoiled royal daughter who loses her inheritance due to her own actions and is forced to live in poverty. Fortuitously, when she comes to realize the value of what she lost, it is restored to her. Often as part of her humiliation she marries a commoner, who turns out to be a King Incognito whom she had previously scorned.
 * The Goose Girl Style: Those who plotted against the princess succeed, and she is forced into a menial position, or enslaved, until her story comes out. Usually, the princess knows who she is, but isn't able to tell the truth.
 * A Gender Flip classic of this type, the Child Ballad "The Lord of Lorn"
 * A common technique is to combine this with Cinderella. The heroine wins the prince, perhaps even marries him and has his child; then her enemies triumph over her, and she must flee until she is restored. Bride and Switch is also common, just before the wedding. Such a combination occurs in The Wonderful Birch and The Maiden Without Hands

This is Older Than Feudalism, and has long since gone into being a Dead Horse Trope when used in a serious application. However, sweeten the deal with a deconstruction or other device, and this will work quite well in a modern setting.

Epidemic in the Fairy Tale, it often reappears in retellings of fairy tales. This is a common reason why kings who have promised the Standard Hero Reward decide instead to assign another Engagement Challenge, and then another. And another. . . (This is usually very unwise in the long run.)

Christopher Booker takes the Cinderella version for his second plot, Rags to Riches. According to his scheme, the hero seems to get everything he wants very early, only to lose it through a serious character flaw, which leads to the darkest moment for the hero (e.g., in the original Aladdin, when the villain had stolen both the lamp and the princess). Then, of course, the hero manages to face his flaws and gets an even better prize than the one he would have been content with early on.

May combine with She Cleans Up Nicely and Lineage Comes From the Father.

Anime and Manga

 * In Tower of God, the 10 Great Families tend to adopt strong and talented children, among them orphans, to become Rankers and Princess candidates. The reason for this is that the Families apparently don't get it on that much (except for Koon Eduan). The way to riches is very hard and dangerous though, as seen with Androssi Zahard's backstory.
 * In Sailor Moon Usagi/Serena is a Sleeping Beauty, being a reincarnated princess with the forces that destroyed her kingdom hot on her heels. She does find out the bad guys are after her early on, but not that she's a princess until late in the first season.
 * Techanically, Mamoru and all of The Sailor Senshi fit this, as they were all royals in their past lives.
 * There's a reasonably clever subversion in Mai-Otome. From the start we're expected to figure out that Mashiro isn't the real princess - meanwhile, the main character, Arika, conspicuously has the same birthday and a prerequisite necklace and all. But as it turns out, that's a Red Herring, and in fact, it's Nina, the Rival Turned Evil, who unbeknowst to all was the princess. The scene in which Big Bad Nagi finds out is priceless. Ultimately thanks to Character Development, Mashiro turns out to be the one best suited to be a princess anyway.
 * Lucia of Mermaid Melody Pichi Pichi Pitch is a Sleeping Beauty in the manga (though she finds out her lineage very early) and a Snow White in the anime. Hanon, Rina and Caren are Snow Whites as well throughout the series.
 * A Cinderella-type, coupled with a Satchel Switcheroo and a complete idiot forms the basis for the Gag Series Himesama Goyoujin (Princess Be Careful).
 * The entire Band of the Hawk from Berserk are Cinderellas, as they're all common mercenaries elevated to knighthood. Griffith, however, is the biggest example. At his highest point he had a good chance of marrying Princess Charlotte and becoming heir to the kingdom. This is portrayed fairly realistically, though, as Griffith does have to deal with a couple of assassination attempts by disgruntled nobles. Its subverted when Griffith goes through a Heroic BSOD, gets captured and tortured by the King, and the Band of the Hawk become outlaws.
 * of Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha is a Sleeping Beauty, being the clone of an Ancient Belkan king. She probably also wishes that she never found out about who she was considering how she hates being addressed as "Your Highness" and prefers others to just treat her as an ordinary (if exceptionally skilled) 9-year old.
 * and of Mahou Sensei Negima are both Sleeping Beauty types, turning out to both be members of the royal family of the Vespertatia Kingdom in the Magic World. It subverts the Genre Blind guardian bit, as they were probably both safer before they started getting involved with their legacies.
 * Somewhat special case in Mei-chan no Shitsuji as Shinonome Mei whose family is described as 'just getting by' finds out she's actually the heir to the very rich Houga family after her parents are killed in an accident, and her friend and classmate Shibata Kento comes from a family of butlers that serve her family.
 * C-ko is a long-lost alien princess. Sixteen years earlier, her people lost her, and she ended up crashing down to Earth. They do eventually find her, leading to this discovery (and invoking this trope).
 * Youko Nakijima from The Twelve Kingdoms started out the series as an Ordinary High School Student, became Trapped in Another World and then discovered that she was actually the appointed ruler of one of the series' titular countries. Unlike many Rags to Royalty stories, this one doesn't end with her getting the throne—she has to fight wars, consolidate her power and deal with the treacherous nobles and officials who plot to overthrow her.
 * 'Katekyo Hitman Reborn' uses this trope in the form of a "Tippetarius Style". Sawada Tsunayoshi is a normal highschooler until the hitman tutor shows up at his doorstep and tells him he's a candidate for the tenth generation boss of a mafia. Hilarity ensues.
 * Empress Marianne of Code Geass would be a definite Cinderella case, a commoner by birth who rose to prominence as one of the Knights of the Round, before becoming one of The Emperor's imperial consorts.
 * Her children also fit into this trope, as Snow Whites.
 * The title character of Naruto is a mix between the cinderella type and the sleeping beauty type. First starts as an outcast orphan who was regarded as a no good troblemaker without a future. Slowly grows up into a respectable and eventually idolized figure as his achievements grow. Then  But of course, none of this is actually adressed by anyone in the manga....for the time being anyways.
 * Though to be honest, his relation to  It isn't as distant as his mother's connection was,
 * There are three in Rose of Versailles:
 * , a Cinderella type (in the very fictionalized manga/anime and Real Life).
 * , a Sleeping Beauty.
 * And to finish the thread,  was a Cinderella, also both here and in Real Life (though the ROV version was... highly fictionalized).  )
 * Nadja Applefield from Ashita no Nadja is a big case of Sleeping Beauty. Her mother, whom she thought of as being dead, is actually alive somewhere, and she learns of it when she's sent a trunk with her mom's belongings - so she sets out to find said mom and her place in the world. What Nadja does not know is that said mother is
 * From Fushigi Yuugi, we have You Houki. She was a poor farm girl, taking care of her ailing father, when she was asked to join the emperor's harem (much to the ire of her former boyfriend Suu, later revealed to be ). Originally, she didn't want to go, but her father pressured her saying she'd have a better life.
 * In the Where Are They Now? Epilogue of Mahou Sensei Negima, It's revealed that  picked up a pair of animals which turned out to be princes from the Magic World. Within five years they were married and already had their first kids.

Ballads

 * In Child Ballad #89 "Fause Foodrage," a nobleman's infant daughter is exchanged for the infant prince. After the prince learned the truth and overcame the usurper who would have killed him, he marries the daughter.

Comic Books

 * Justified in Fables. Briar Rose can never stay poor thanks to a blessing placed on her at birth so when she loses her entire fortune fleeing the Adversary she quickly recoups it with a few smart business deals. One character notes that if she were to give away her fortune on a whim: "she'd probably win the lottery the next day".
 * Plourr Illo, a Boisterous Bruiser expy of Anastasia, went into hiding and later became a pilot for the Rebellion after revolutionaries killed her family. She wasn't in rags, exactly, but she lived as well as any of the other pilots and kept her heritage a secret.
 * Bone Thorn was unaware of her royal legacy. Her grandma told her that she is meant to lead a kingdom as the next queen. Thorn becomes Queen in the end.

Fairy Tales
"Oh, nettle-plant, Little nettle-plant, What dost thou here alone? I have known the time When I ate thee unboiled, When I ate thee unroasted."
 * In "The Beautiful Damsel and the Wicked Old Woman", a prince marries a peasant girl because she is beautiful, weeps pearls and brings flowers when she can smile, and sews exquisitely, but when she is coming to the wedding with an old woman, the woman gouges her eyes out and thrust her into a cave, to replace her with her own daughter. But the girl weeps pearls and buys back her eyes, and when she can see, she sews a handkerchief that the prince recognizes, so she regains him.
 * In "The Blue Mountains", the hero, a soldier, wins the princess. The same happens in "The Three Princesses of Whiteland", where the hero is a peasant boy.
 * In Grimms' "The Girl Without Hands", the miller's daughter marries a king; then the Devil conspires against her, she is driven out to the wilderness, but the king follows her and she regains her place.
 * In "The Grateful Beasts", the peasant lad Ferko marries the princess and becomes king
 * In "The Maiden with the Rose on her Forehead", a woman finds a beautiful girl in enchanted sleep in her husband's house. Not knowing she is his niece, she enslaves her, but her husband finds out and restores the girl to her proper station. A similar plot is found in "The Young Slave".
 * In "The Goose Girl", the heroine's servant overpowers her and makes her promise not to tell anyone; then the servant passes herself off as the princess and has the heroine turned into a goose-girl. She escapes when she confesses to a stove rather than a person.
 * A Gender Flip version of the above, Child Ballad "The Lord Of Lorn", has the young Lord of Lorn confess to a horse while the lady of the castle just happens to be listening.
 * Gender Flip Cinderellas, Cinderlad or Askeladden, win princesses in such tales as "The Princess on the Glass Hill", "Boots and the Troll", and "The Seven Foals".
 * "Molly Whuppie" does not only win the king's son for herself, but his older brothers for her older sisters.
 * In "East of the Sun and West of the Moon", the woodcutter's youngest daughter marries a bear who proves to be a prince.
 * In "The Dancing Water, the Singing Apple, and the Speaking Bird" and "The Three Little Birds", the king's children are abandoned and grow up in ignorance of their birth, until a magic bird informs the king and children of the truth.
 * In "The Fish and the Ring", "Vasilii the Unlucky", "The Devil With the Three Golden Hairs", "The King Who Would Be Stronger Than Fate", and many other fairy tales, a rich child is doomed to marry a poor child, and the poor child always succeeds.
 * In "Brother and Sister", when the king find Sister in the woods, with her transformed brother, he marries her.
 * A central portion of the "Persecuted Heroine" fairy tale type.
 * Cinderella variants, such as "The Hearth Cat", "The Maiden and The Fish", "The Sharp Grey Sheep", "Tattercoats", and "The Wonderful Birch".
 * Variants which follow Snow White, such as "Catskin", "Katie Woodencloak", "Rashin-Coatie", "The Bear", Grimms' "All-Kinds-Of-Fur", "The King Who Wished Marry To His Daughter", and "Cap O' Rushes".
 * In "Maid Maleen", after the princess falls in love with a prince her father does not approve of, the father imprisons her in a tower. Then he loses his kingdom and is unable to get her out. She and her maid burrow out and live in appalling poverty until she can find her way to the prince's kingdom and win him back.


 * In "The Story of The Black Cow", the hero ends up marrying a princess because of his gold hair.
 * In "Catherine and Her Fate", Catherine, having chosen to be miserable in youth and happy in old age rather than the other way round, ends up as a Scullery Maid—except that her Fate, being an Anthropomorphic Personification, is always showing up and wrecking her position for seven years. Finally, however, her Fate gives her a MacGuffin, and when the king needs it, he decides to give her its weight in gold. It takes his whole treasury, he demands the story, and when she is done, he decides to marry her.
 * In "Adalminas Pearl", the cruel princess loses her enchanted pearl and becomes a plain, dumb peasant girl. Thanks to a back up enchantment, her heart however turns good now, and stays that even after she gets the pearl back.
 * In The Grateful Prince, the prince goes to rescue a peasant girl who was captive to an ogre because his father had promised him to the ogre, and substituted to the girl. After he does, he marries her.

Film

 * Star Wars
 * Pan's Labyrinth has Ophelia as a Sleeping Beauty; she's the reincarnation of a fairy princess, but must pass many tests to prove she is still more royalty than human, and hasn't been corrupted by living among us.
 * That's assuming the Faun is telling the truth, and is neither lying nor a product of Ophelia's imagination. Your Mileage May Vary.
 * Word of God is it's all true.
 * The eponymous King Ralph is a male Cinderella, though he's not exactly sweeping princesses off their feet. Rather, he comes by his office by accident of birth, after every other member of the royal family dies in an explosion.
 * The fantasy film Quest Of The Delta Knights, which may be best remembered as having been shown on Mystery Science Theater 3000, had a Sleeping Beauty character. The two young heroes, Tee and Leonardo da Vinci, rescue a prostitute named Thena from having to spend the night with evil Lord Vultare. The trio are captured by a group of warriors from a neighboring country, the leader of whom takes Thena aside for a private interview. She tells him a short form of her life story, and he comes to the (in this troper's opinion, rather incomprehensible) conclusion that she is none other than his own long-lost younger sister, Princess Athena.
 * The 1987 Ally Sheedy vehicle Maid To Order offers a modern King Thrushbeard in the story of a wild spendthrift heiress who is magically banished into the working class to learn humility, compassion and the value of a buck, thanks to her Fairy Godmother.
 * Overboard had a similar plot, only it was a case of accidental amnesia and the scheme of a lower class workman (that the spoiled heiress had earlier insulted) that sent her to live the life of a poor housewife.
 * Maid in Manhattan, with Jennifer Lopez as a hotel maid (Cinderella), Ralph Fiennes as a Congressional candidate staying at the hotel (The Prince), Natasha Richardson and Amy Sedaris as airheaded socialites also lusting after him (the Wicked Stepsisters), Lopez' coworkers as a collective group of fairy godmothers, and the museum benefit where things come to a head (the Ball).
 * In the film Working Girl, Tess McGill starts as an overworked and unappreciated secretary living in Staten Island with a deadbeat boyfriend. By the movie's ending, she pulled off a major business merger, gained a new job and a Wall Street analyst lover.
 * Her first boyfriend wasn't a deadbeat, he had a perfectly good blue-collar job and before the movie ended had achieved his aim of owning his own boat. However he had no sympathy with her white-collar aspirations and he cheated on her.
 * In In the Name of The King: A Dungeon Siege Tale, Farmer is a simple farmer with no aspirations other than to grow crops and be a good husband and father. When his son is killed and his wife captured by the Evil Sorcerer Big Bad, he goes to try to get her back and avenge his son. Meanwhile, the kingdom of Ehb is under seige from the sorcerer's mindless horde of creatures called the Krug. King Konreid meets Farmer and is told by his wizard that Farmer is his long-lost son. Farmer neither believes him nor does he care. During the first battle with the Krug, the king is betrayed and mortally wounded by . On his deathbed, he convinces Farmer that the latter is his son. Farmer becomes King Camden Konreid.

Literature

 * The Princess Diaries books are a deconstruction—Mia was as happy as any other teen at first and horrified to discover she was a Princess. Being a Princess is difficult, and her grandmere is... trying... to say the least. However, Mia eventually discovers she has gained fame which she can use to try and right what she sees as social injustices and wrongs.
 * The Belgariad had Garion, a male Sleeping Beauty.
 * The original Deltora Quest series.
 * Emberella in the Discworld novel Witches Abroad starts out as a parody of Cinderella, but turns out to be a more-or-less straight Sleeping Beauty.
 * Sergeant Nimashet Despreaux in John Ringo's Prince Roger/March Upcountry series, who subverts the trope by recognizing that it is not a good idea for a bodyguard to be attracted to the person she's guarding. Also, since she is from a hick planet, she doesn't want to get anywhere near the Deadly Decadent Court. She actually has to be ORDERED by her CO to have a relationship with the prince because they need to get him out of a depressed funk. Later on, when he becomes heir to the throne, she gets cold feet. She then has to be ORDERED by her CO to marry him so that she can serve as his moderating influence and conscience.
 * In the children's novel Just Ella, by Margaret Haddix, the trope is subverted. Having gotten to the ball by her own devices, she is dogged by rumors it was really a fairy godmother. She finds that court life is stifling, the poor are horribly downtrodden, and Prince Charming is stupid and unfeeling.
 * Kate Forsythe's Rhiannon o' the Dubhslain (a Sleeping Beauty).
 * Thanks to Royally Screwed-Up, in Deep Secret,
 * Edgar Rice Burroughs's heroes and heroines are generally of high birth but sometimes feature as Sleeping Beauties or Snow Whites.
 * Tarzan of the Apes turns out to be an English nobleman.
 * In The Master Mind of Mars, the heroine, Valla Dia, is in flight after the conquest of her city; only at the end she does reveal herself to be the princess of it.
 * In A Fighting Man of Mars, the hero meets a slave girl Tavia; only at the end it is revealed that she is a princess by blood. (Even she didn't know.)
 * The Cave Girl was a ship-wrecked child of Spanish nobility.
 * In The Monster Men, the hero is revealed to be amnesiac, and an upper-class American.
 * In The Chessman of Mars, the hero, a prince, disguises himself as a poor mercenary because he had given the heroine a bad first impression as a prince.
 * Mercedes Lackey adores this trope. Granted, half of Misty's work is retelling of fairy tales, but she really does get a kick out of this particular type of tale.
 * Cinderellas: Godmother Elena of The Fairy Godmother and its sequels, Talia of the Arrows Trilogy, Rose Hawkins of The Fire Rose Eleanor Robinson of Phoenix and Ashes, and Ninette Dupond of Reserved for the Cat.
 * Sleeping Beauty: Marina of Gates of Sleep.
 * Show Whites: Maya Witherspoon of Serpent's Shadow and Phoenix and Ashes and Winterhart of the Mage Wars trilogy.
 * In John Barnes's One for the Morning Glory, Calliope is secretly the princess of a neighboring country, smuggled to safety.
 * Greek Mythology goes a step beyond with the Legend of Eros and Psyche. Although Psyche is actually a princess by right, she goes one scale higher, to get married by the God of Love himself in disguise. Then Zeus makes her immortal.
 * Ceddy, AKA Cedrik Errol, of Little Lord Fauntleroy, is another example of the 'rags to riches' and 'hidden nobility' part of this trope. His father was the son of a very rich and anti-American Lord, his mother was the orphaned and much abused lady-in-waiting of a Rich Bitch, they got together despite the Parental Marriage Veto, after the dad was disinherited they lived a middle-to-poor-class but happy life with little Cedric, and it's only after the father's death that Cedric learns his origins and then goes to England to meet his paternal family.
 * Princess Augusta  of Lloyd Alexander's Westmark is a combination Sleeping Beauty/Goose Girl type: she doesn't remember her royal heritage thanks to traumatic amnesia, and the country believes that she's dead. Deconstructed somewhat in the sequels, where noble and foreign disapproval of her commoner upbringing sets the plot in motion.
 * Also from Lloyd Alexander are Taran and Princess Eilonwy, in the Prydain Chronicles. Eilonwy is an aversion of the Snow White in that she isn't on the run from her royal lineage, but was stolen as an infant. She herself is perfectly well aware that she's a Princess of Llyr, but when she meets protagonist Taran in the first book, she doesn't bother to mention it at any point; he only finds out on the last page when another character says it almost offhandedly. Taran himself, by the end of the series, is a Cinderella who makes a very abrupt transition from assistant pig-keeper to High King.
 * In many variants of the medieval Chivalric Romance of Robert the Devil, the hero is living a life of menial labor when he rescues the princess and gets to marry her. Unusually, this is his own choice: his parents had wished for a child—whether from God or the Devil. The son is therefore born possessed by evil, and he is doing penance for the evil he did.
 * In many chivalric romances such as Vitae Duorum Offarum, Emare, Mai and Beaflor, and La Belle Helene de Constantinople, the heroine escapes her father threatening marriage and wins the heart of a king. After she has a child, she is slandered and driven out again, only reuniting with her husband after much tribulation. (See "The Girl Without Hands" under Fairy Tales.)
 * In the Chivalric Romance Sir Amadas, Amadas wins the hand of the princess with the aid of a mysterious White Knight, who proves to be a dead man whose burial he had secured.
 * In the Chivalric Romance King Horn, Horn, after being cast adrift in a boat as a boy, returned to his father's kingdom to reclaim it.
 * Similarly with Havelock in Havelock the Dane.
 * In the Chivalric Romance Roswall and Lillian, the hero is attacked by his own servant and must promise to never reveal the attack to save his own life. He wins the princess in a tournament with the aid of magical helpers who give him armor and weapons.
 * Aragorn/Strider, of The Lord of the Rings, is somewhere between Goose Girl and Snow White. He's the heir to two dynasties (one a dynasty and people without a proper state, the other a land without a king), lives with his identity hidden for safety reasons, and was kept ignorant of his heritage during his childhood in Rivendell (which was nowhere near "rags" territory). As an adult he takes on the leadership of his people, and spends most of his time away from home fighting the horrors of the Enemy, whether to protect unwitting hobbits and Men in Eriador or as leader in the armies of Rohan and Gondor under the name Thorongil. Additionally, his line has been living this way for more than a dozen generations before their kingdom is finally restored.
 * Aragorn's early life is a lot like that of King Arthur, who was placed for adoption by Merlin to keep him hidden and safe from his enemies until he could claim his throne.
 * Robert A. Heinlein's Citizen of the Galaxy uses the Goose Girl: Freed slave Thorby goes through most of the novel with a variety of foster parents until he finally reaches a point where he can be identified by his footprints. He discovers that he's Thor Bradley Rudbek, long-lost heir of the obscenely wealthy Rudbek clan, sold into slavery as an infant when his parents were attacked by Space Pirates.
 * Lessa of the Dragonriders of Pern series is a grown-up Snow White/Goose Girl ragged princess (albeit a Tsundere with emphasis on the Tsun) whose family was destroyed when Fax took over her Hold. She changes her goal—instead of taking back leadership of Ruatha Hold, she becomes a queen dragon rider and Weyrwoman (an even higher social rank).
 * By the end of the Seventh Sword trilogy, this happens several times. The first of which is Katanjii, a minor character who breaks his arm early on, but discovers that he has a strong business sense that enables him to make business deals that always benefit him, despite his small stature, young age, and seeming innocence. The trilogy concludes with:
 * Nanjii, (Katanjii's older brother ).
 * Sonshu, the main protagonist  despite spending most of the story being despised by just about everyone.
 * Jaa, Sonshu's love interest and a slave.
 * in the Codex Alera series is a male in the Sleeping Beauty style, and  was a Cinderella in the backstory and is a Goose Girl during the events of the main plot.   only reveals his birthright after he has proven himself a brilliant military commander.
 * Jame, the heroine of P.C. Hodgell's Chronicles of the Kencyrath series, is a Sleeping Beauty type; she believes herself the outcast, ragtag daughter of a minor Lord, but she turns out to be the sister of the Highlord of the Kencyrath—a situation that doesn't make her all that happy, because she chafes under (and eventually rejects) the restrictions of the role.
 * In CS Lewis' The Horse and His Boy:
 * Likewise,
 * In Robert E. Howard's "The Scarlet Citadel" Conan the Barbarian is proud of his going through this as a Self-Made Man.
 * In Josepha Sherman's The Shining Falcon, Maria is reduced to a peasant's life before gaining Finist's love.
 * In Beowulf, Hrothgar's queen is described as queenly and wearing gold, but her name is "Wealhtheow," which means "foreign slave."
 * In The Bible, Esther is chosen to be queen (to replace Queen Vashti after her husband Ahasuerus/Xerxes banished her from the empire). Esther is an ordinary young girl, and at that one of the Jews living in exile in Babylon, but she is chosen by the king himself out of an entire harem on account of her beauty.
 * Princess Jenna from the Septimus Heap series grew up in a poor Wizard family before being called to become Princess at her tenth birthday.
 * In Fred Saberhagen's Books of Swords trilogy, or rather, its backstory, Yambu, the Silver Queen, was the rightful ruler of...Yambu, after her parents, the previous king and queen, were killed. Unfortunately, the people who killed them had somehow gotten the idea that they should be in charge now, so Yambu had to go on the run as a fugitive, where she was helped by a mysterious stranger who called himself the Emperor. Despite appearing to be a clown, he turned out to be a great warrior and a powerful wizard, and saved her repeatedly and became her lover, and ultimately led a successful military-diplomatic campaign to put her back on the throne. It was at that moment that he asked her to marry him, but....
 * Subverted with Yambu's daughter (by the Emperor), Ariane. Yambu, fearing her as a rival to her power, sells her into slavery. She is rescued from slavery by Baron Doon and his companions before anything really bad happens to her, but she is never put on the throne, and never returns to a state of royalty.
 * Played straight, though, with Mark: he grows up as a peasant, but becomes Prince Consort of Tasavalta after he marries Princess Kristin.
 * Bria in The Last Dove is the Sleeping Beauty Style.

Live Action Television

 * Guinevere does it Cinderella style on Merlin going from serving girl to Queen of Camelot in becoming Arthur's wife.

Opera

 * Gilbert and Sullivan's The Yeomen of the Guard: Elsie's marriage to the Colonel.
 * In Pinafore, Josephine's marriage to Ralph, since he is really the Captain.
 * In Ruddigore, both Hannah and Rose marry to baronets.
 * In The Pirates of Penzance, the Admiral's Backstory—he even bought an estate, and its contents, with included the buried ancestors. His daughters proceed to marry the pirates when they are revealed to be noblemen.

Table games

 * In Chess, a pawn which reaches the eighth and final row may be immediately promoted to any other rank except king; as the most powerful piece on the board is the queen, this Easy Sex Change is almost always chosen.
 * This trope is used in one of the Alice in Wonderland books to promote Alice to queen upon reaching the eighth row.

Theater

 * William Shakespeare. Some of these are dukes rather than kings or princes—but sovereign ones.
 * As You Like It: The duke is forced into exile in the Backstory, and in the play, Rosalind his daughter has to follow him. They are restored at the end.
 * Cymbeline: The young princes are raised as shepherds but identified at the end.
 * Measure for Measure: Isabella marries the duke at the end
 * Pericles, Prince of Tyre: The prince is shipwreaked and only restored at the end.
 * The Tempest: Prospero's deposition means both he and Miranda are this.
 * Twelfth Night: Viola ends marrying the duke.
 * The Winters Tale: Perdita is raised as a shepherdess, although a princess.

Video Games
"Sly While (Rajan) goes to great lengths to convince others of his royalty, he's really trying to convince himself."
 * The Legend of Zelda Ocarina of Time had a version of the Snow White.
 * Tetra of The Legend of Zelda the Wind Waker follows the Sleeping Beauty version of this trope,
 * in The Legend of Zelda Twilight Princess is another Snow White example.
 * And of course, the Zelda in Zelda II the Adventure of Link is a rather literal Sleeping Beauty.
 * Subverted in the second Sly Cooper game, where one of the villains is a tiger crimelord named Rajan, who climbed up from poverty through a life of crime . While presenting himself as royalty (via the self imposed title "Lord of the Hills" and his "newly purchased "ancestral palace""), he's basically a thug in king's clothing with no real title or royal blood.


 * In Disgaea 3,  is a Cinderella example in two of the endings.
 * Lyndis from Fire Emblem 7 is a mix of Snow White and Sleeping Beauty. She knows she's the princess of the Lorca tribe since her Disappeared Dad was the chieftain... but she certainly does not know that her Missing Mom was a former princess of the Lycian royalty. The first part of the game is dedicated to her finding out about her mom's origins, taking off to meet up with her still-living grandfather and defeating her Evil Great Uncle.
 * The same game has two Cinderellas: Louise and  They're two childhood friends who are also members of very minor noble clans, who marry into much-higher families: Louise is Happily Married to Pent of Reglay, while   At the same time, we meet two Snow Whites:
 * in Fire Emblem 4 were both Sleeping Beauties.
 * The first
 * The second is a young girl living in a secluded forest, who was always told to not leave the tiny village, but didn't know why she should be in complete isolation.
 * Also,  Celice and his friends aka the kids of the first generation charactes belong to different cathegories, depending on their backstories. They're most commonly Snow Whites (Celice, Leaf, Oifaye, Shannan, Lester and Lana, Skasaha and Lakche, Patty, Aless, Arthur/Amid, maybe Altenna, Phee and Sety, Delmud and Nanna), but we also have some Sleeping Beauties (Leen and Corpul) and Goose Girls/Guys (Faval, Teeny/Linda).   Oh, and   is a Snow White,
 * Additionally, in Thracia 776 we get some more of these. Leaf, Nanna and Miranda are Snow Whites fighting to get their kingdoms back, to start.
 * Fire Emblem 10 gives us a mixed Cinderella and Sleeping Beauty in.
 * It also both subverts and averts the Sleeping Beauty type with
 * Fable II gives us an interesting example. The Hero is a pauper as a child, but then his/her Secret Legacy is discovered, which is that he/she is descended from a badass master of strength, marksmanship/litheness, and magic. After the tragic death of his/her sister at the hands of the Big Bad, he/she grows up, masters the aforementioned skills, and defeats the Big Bad. However, rather than marry into royalty, he/she forms his/her own monarchy, and because he/she is a Hero (master of said skills), he/she and his/her children, the main characters of Fable III, are referred to as nobility, and having royal blood.
 * Which comes back to bite said family in the ass in the Fable III DLC "Traitor's Keep", when a general who was imprisoned by the Hero's despotic son stages a coup, and argues that the royal family is tyrannical and unnecessary, with no real claim to rule Albion besides its magic powers.
 * "The Mystery of Princess Talara" from the Elder Scrolls universe features a magnificent subversion of the Sleeping Beauty type; the plot even has ties to the main conflict of Arena.
 * It's strongly implied that the main character in Suikoden IV may, in fact, be . This isn't a straight example, though, because said main character comes into his own independantly of royal lineage. (In fact, assuming the title would've been a drop in status by the time it comes up.) It does cast the fight with   in a new light, though, doesn't it?
 * In King's Quest III, the slave Gwydion.
 * He's not the only one who gets this landing on his plate. Graham was a Cinderella style - son of a minor knight who worked his way up the ranks, returned the kingdom's lost treasures, and was given the crown by the childless King Edward. Edgar in the forth and seventh game was under a situation closer to Gwydion's. Cassima was put into a Goose Girl situation in the fifth game by Mordak. Fanon speculates the Cinderella route comes full circle with Connor after the eighth game. Of course, that depends on whether or not you want to acknowledge the game even exists.
 * Dragon Age: Origins has  as a Snow White type. He doesn't give a damn about his Royal Blood, and even when the plot demands the Rightful King Returns, he'll only do it kicking and screaming unless the player talks him into some Character Development earlier in the game.
 * A bizarre one from the same family goes the Sleeping Beauty route. Turns out the Jedi Council was pulling a massive amount of From a Certain Point of View in regards to your Player Character...
 * Total War has version of this: Peasent commander can be adopted into royal family if he is good enough, possibly becoming heir to the crown, becoming leader of the faction and so on and so on... Untill he is Emperor of the pretty much known world.!
 * Lost Odyssey has Jansen as a Cinderella type where he was a commoner until the end of the game where
 * Dragon Quest V's protagonist. Common kid --> slave --> wanderer ---> King of Gotha. It's just that he doesn't know it until he reaches his hometown. Not that we don't see this coming.

Webcomics

 * Villain example: In Sluggy Freelance, the demon lord Horribus (as well as his siblings Deplora and Terribus) were originally the demon equivalents of rednecks, with the simple names Horb, Plorb, and Terb, until Horribus's role in conquering the Dimension of Pain earned them all aristocratic status.
 * The same occurs for long suffering member of Horribus's Quirky Miniboss Squad, who is made the new demon lord.
 * While not a princess per se, Agatha Heterodyne in Girl Genius is a Sleeping Beauty type—the long-lost daughter and only survivor  of the powerful Heterodyne family. Raised by Parental Substitutes and protected from her heritage as a Spark by a locket her uncle made for her, she grows up having no idea she's heir to one of the most important families there is in a world run by Mad Scientists.
 * In Erstwhile, Maid Maleen is a Goose Girl, All-Furs a Snow White, and the farmer's clever daughter is a Cinderella.

Western Animation

 * In Avatar: The Last Airbender, Prince Zuko and his uncle General Iroh spend the second season as outright fugitive Snow Whites. Iroh seems to prefer this to the Royally Screwed-Up Fire Nation court, while Zuko... has a harder time coping for various reasons.
 * The FOX animated film Anastasia is the massively historically inaccurate story of a amnesiac orphan girl called Anya who, in the course of a series of misadventures, discovers that she's actually Her Imperial Highness, the Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna of Russia.
 * Though this trope is somewhat subverted in that Anya/Anastasia goes from Royalty to Rags to Royalty Again to
 * Shrek: Princess Fiona is a Snow White, kept in a tower until her curse is reversed.
 * Disney's Aladdin.
 * Rapunzel and  in Tangled. Rapunzel is a Tippetarius Style, kidnapped as a baby so Mother Gothel can make use of her magic hair, while   is a
 * Disney later subverts this with The Princess and the Frog. Tiana marries Prince Naveen officially becomes a princess by marriage. But she dosen't get the royal treatment, but instead opens up her own restaurant with Naveen.

Real Life

 * Prince William's wife Kate Middleton, the current Duchess of Cambridge, was described as a commoner as she is only upper middle class rather than nobility.
 * Prince Edward's wife Sophie Rhys-Jones, now the Countess of Wessex, was also a commoner, as was Sarah Ferguson, Duchess of York, Prince Andrew's ex-wife.
 * Ditto Anni-Frid Princess Reuss of Plauen, better known as Frida Lyngstad, the brunette from ABBA. Her late husband's country was absorbed into unified Germany after World War I, meaning she has no real power, but it's still a long way to go from her childhood. (She was the product of her mother's affair with a German soldier during the occupation of Norway, and was raised by her grandmother to protect her from the abuse war children received in Norway.)
 * Princess Letizia Ortiz, married to Felipe Juan Pablo Alfonso de Todos los Santos (better known as King Felipe VI of Spain), was a commoner though beautiful journalist. She studied in a public school and high school and her parents are a nurse and an unknown journalist. The Prince fell in love making this story a Cinderella type.
 * King Rama IV of Thailand (you know, from The King and I) spent twenty-seven years in a monastery after an usurper stole his father's throne. He was a devout monk who insisted on strict observance of the Southern School Buddhist monastic rules, which included things like chastity, moderation and poverty (a Buddhist monk is permitted a small number of robes, a begging bowl, a fan and very little else.) Upon the death of the usurper he became king, and inherited a whole load of palaces, servants and concubines.
 * In a real-life "Goose Girl" example, King Clovis II of France (7th century) married an Anglo-Saxon noble who'd been sold into slavery.
 * King Charles XIV John was born as Jean Bernadotte and came from a lower-middle class family in Pau, France. He joined the army early on and eventually became Marshall of France under emperor Napoleon, the 1st Sovereign Prince of Ponte Corvo and also married Napoleon's ex-fiancee Désirée Clary. Later on, because of a number of strange circumstances, he was adopted by the childless king of Sweden and made successor and founded the house of Bernadotte which still rules Sweden to this day.
 * Also of Swedish royalty, but of a later stripe: Prince Daniel, spouse of Crown Princess Victoria, was born in a rural Swedish town as the son of a social worker and a postal employee.
 * Princess Grace of Monaco. Not exactly rags, since her father was a self-made millionaire, but she still was a descendant of Irish bricklayers, and became a princess by marriage.
 * Mette-Marit Tjessem Høiby was a common single-mom before she married Crown Prince Haakon of Norway and became Crown princess.
 * King Jaja of Opobo in what is today coastal Nigeria was born the son of peasant farmers further inland in the 1800s. He was kidnapped and sold as a slave to King Pepple of Bonny. He eventually ran the king's trading business so well that Pepple freed him, and made him Chief of his own War Canoe House. Later, Jaja led a group of disenchanted War Canoe Houses in a trade war with the town. They left Bonny, founded another port town, Opobo, and Jaja was proclaimed its first King. His War Canoe House is still the ruling House in Opobo today. (Jaja himself later got into a trade dispute with the British over rights to buy palm oil from the hinterland, was abducted, imprisoned in England, and died off the Gold Coast on his way back home).
 * Every biography of a famous conqueror is this. Many times it is an epic rather then strictly based on truth.
 * Older Than Feudalism: Julius Caesar was born an Impoverished Patrician but earned a senate seat for heroism in battle. He eventually became dictator for life.
 * Possibly one of the most triumphant examples, to the degree that "Caesar" is now synonymous with "Emperor" in Western society.
 * Theodora, the daughter of a bear trainer and a dancer/actress in 6th century Istanbul, went from prostitute to empress of the Byzantine Empire through her marriage to Justinian I.
 * Justinian himself was born a Thracian peasant and engineered the rise of his uncle to the throne before inheriting it himself.
 * Basil I, founder of the Macedonian dynasty of the Byzantine Empire, was born to Armenian peasant parents and eventually became Emperor, proving to be competent enough to establish his dynasty.
 * Temujin was born to Mongol nobility, but was driven into exile with his mother and for a time he was even enslaved by his family's enemies. He later conquered most of the world, making him an extremely successful Sleeping Beauty type.
 * The Roman Emperor Diocletian, was born to parents who were former slaves (some sources even say he himself was born a slave). After joining the Roman Army, he eventually climbed the ranks to become one of the emperor's top generals. After the death of both the emperor and his son during a battle in Persia, Diocletian was proclaimed emperor. He would go on to make reforms that would bring the Roman Empire out of the Crisis of the Third Century.
 * While not exactly royalty, more than one Roman catholic Pope started his life in poverty or as mere middle-class and ended up as the highest authority in Catholicism. Some examples are: St. Pius X (Giuseppe Melchiorre Sarto, Country Mouse and son of a post office worker in a tiny village), Blessed John XXIII (Angelo Roncalli, doubling as a Country Mouse and an Impoverished Patrician since his sharecropper family descended from a secondary noble branch) and Blessed John Paul II (Karol Wojtyla, son of a Polish ex-military officer, thus as much urban middle-class).
 * Mary, Crown Princess of Denmark began her life as an accounts manager for several advertising agencies, and later a realtor specializing in luxury properties. Cue the Sydney Olympics, Crown Prince Frederik and a pub, and let the fairytale begin.
 * Queen Noor of Jordan, born Lisa Hallaby -- although she didn't exactly come from rags, as her father was CEO of Pan Am, an assistant Secretary of Defense during the Truman administration and was head of the FAA under John F. Kennedy.