Aesop's Fables: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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{{reflist}}
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[[Category:Classic Literature]]
[[Category:Classic Literature]]
[[Category:Aesop's Fables]]
[[Category:Literature]]
[[Category:Literature]]
[[Category:Myth, Legend and Folklore]]
[[Category:Myth, Legend and Folklore]]

Latest revision as of 21:54, 17 December 2023

Aesop's Fables
Original Title: Aesopica
Written by: Aesop
Central Theme: A story for every situation, and An Aesop for every story.
Synopsis: A collection of short stories, each with a moral.
First published: Ongoing, from the 7th century BCE to today
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Aesopos (Greek Αἴσωπος, shortened to Aesop in modern English) was a slave, later freedman, living somewhere in Asia Minor in the sixth century BC. If, that is, he existed at all.

But European fables -- mostly Beast Fables -- have a marvelous tendency to accrete onto the collections claimed to be his. Being fables, they have rather obvious morals, which are sometimes (but not always) explicitly pointed out at the end.


Aesop's Fables is the Trope Namer for:

Tropes used in Aesop's Fables include: