Classic Books and Poems – Myths, Legends, Poems, and Books: Hansel and Gretel

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Most people are familiar with the story of Hansel and Gretel, a German fairy tale collected by the Brothers Grimm and published in their Grimm’s Fairy Tales in 1812.

In summary, the story goes as follows:

Hansel and Gretel are a brother and sister whose starving parents decide to abandon them in the forest. Hansel overhears his parents plotting and drops pebbles on the path so that he and Gretel can find their way home later. The family’s plight does not improve and a short while later the mother [or stepmother depending on the version] persuades the father to take the children into the forest again and leave them there. This time, Hansel drops a trail of breadcrumbs but the birds eat them and the two children become lost in the forest.

The starving children come across a gingerbread house and they begin to break off bits and eat it. The house, however, is a trap set by a wicked witch who captures the children, enslaves Gretel and locks Hansel in a cage. She sets about fattening Hansel up so that she can eat him.

Gretel saves Hansel by shoving the witch into the oven which she has heated up in order to cook Hansel. The pair escape and manage to find their way home with the witch’s treasure. In the meantime, their mother [or stepmother] has died and their father is a broken man having abandoned his beloved children. The family live happily ever after.

Hansel and Gretel - Wikipedia
Picture from Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hansel_and_Gretel

The real history behind this already rather grim story, is even more grim.

The true story of Hansel and Gretel may have its roots in the great flood and great famine of 1314. 1314 was a year of continuous rain and this continued throughout 1315 and 1316. The wet conditions resulted in crops rotting in the ground, harvests failing and livestock drowning or starving. Food prices increased dramatically as a result of severe food shortages.

The great famine is estimated to have effected 400,000 square miles of Europe, 30 million people and to have resulted in the deaths of up to 25 percent of the population in certain areas.

The famine was so bad that during the winter of 1315/1316, the peasants resorted to eating the seed grain they had stored for planting in the spring. People resorted to begging, stealing and even murder in their quest for food. Parents abandoned their children to fend for themselves and their were rumours of cannibalism. An Irish chronicler wrote that people “were so destroyed by hunger that they extracted bodies of the dead from cemeteries and dug out the flesh from the skulls and ate it, and women ate their children out of hunger.”

In the story of Hansel and Gretel, the pair are taken into the forest by their father and abandoned. They are taken in by an old woman living in a cottage. When the old woman starts to heat the oven, the children realise she is planning to roast and eat them. Gretel tricks the woman into opening the oven and pushes her inside.

It is interesting to note that this time of famine coincided with the end of the medieval warm weather period and the beginning of the little ice age. The changing climate with its cooler and wetter summers and earlier autumn storms damaged the harvests. Given the strange wet and cool summer South African is experiencing, coupled with severe cold in the northern hemisphere, this really is food for thought.

Another grim early tale along the lines of Hansel and Gretel is a Romanian story called The Little Boy and the Wicked Stepmother. You can read this story here: http://www.planetofbirds.com/the-story-of-the-little-boy-and-the-wicked-step-mother

The story of Hansel and Gretel was the inspiration for my recent twisted fairy tale Covid-19 cake which featured a gingerbread house and a witch who is trying to keep children out after they are declared to be vectors for the virus.

About Robbie Cheadle

Picture caption: Robbie Cheadle author photograph

South African author, photographer, and artist, Robbie Cheadle, has written and illustrated seventeen children’s books, illustrated a further three children’s books, written and illustrated four poetry books and written and illustrated one celebration of cake and fondant art book with recipes. Her work has also appeared in poetry and short story anthologies.

Robbie also has two novels and a collection of short stories published under the name of Roberta Eaton Cheadle and has horror, paranormal, and fantasy short stories featured in several anthologies under this name.

You can find Robbie Cheadle’s artwork, fondant and cake artwork, and all her books on her website here: https://www.robbiecheadle.co.za/

Social Media Links

Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/robbiecheadle.bsky.social
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVyFo_OJLPqFa9ZhHnCfHUA
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/15584446.Robbie_Cheadle
TSL Publications: https://tslbooks.uk/product-tag/robbie-cheadle/
Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/stores/Robbie-Cheadle/author/B01N9J62GQ
Unsplash profile: https://unsplash.com/@r_cheadle

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68 respuestas a «Classic Books and Poems – Myths, Legends, Poems, and Books: Hansel and Gretel»

  1. Avatar de derrickjknight

    I hadn’t known about the inspiration for the story, Robbie. And who better to illustrate it than Arthur Rackham. Thank you very much

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    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      I’m glad this interested you, Derrick 🩵🦋

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  2. Avatar de brazannemuse

    The history behind the sensory definitely makes it even “grimmer”…. And food for thought indeed… is global warming and cooling another cycle…! But right now I would definitely like to eat that cake..! Yummy…💞Suzanne

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    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      It is a very shocking back story. Worse than I anticipated when I looked it up. Thanks, Suzanne.

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  3. Avatar de shehannemoore

    Now I didn’t know the inspiration for this one, so thank you. As a child I remember thinking these ‘ fairy ales,’ were more like horror stories. This one especially. But good to see it again against this backdrop. Great post.

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    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      Hi Shey, it is rather an awful origin. The fairytale is quite horrific so I expected the origin to be grim but it was worse than expected.

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  4. Avatar de luisa zambrotta

    dear Robbie, this tale always scared me as a child.

    I didn’t know who or what inspired it!

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    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      Hi Luisa, I didn’t know the background until I researched it. It is very tragic.

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      1. Avatar de luisa zambrotta

        It happens to me too, when I prepare a post, to discover things that were unknown to me: it’s a wonderful thing

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      2. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

        🌈💞

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      3. Avatar de luisa zambrotta

        🙏🤗🙏

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  5. Avatar de Ephemeral Encounters

    Hi Robbie
    Thank you for sharing the back story to this tale..it is grim 🙄 to say the least.
    Your cake looks amazing btw 🤗

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    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      It is from and I didn’t know about it until I researched it. I’m glad you like the cake 🤗

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  6. Avatar de Dave Astor

    Fascinating history behind that story, Robbie! You’re right — VERY grim. 😦

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    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      It really is grim, Dave. I think one of the worst dark origins I’ve come across.

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  7. Avatar de Rosie Amber

    Thanks for the added facts behind the tale.

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    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      My pleasure, Rosie

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  8. Avatar de Liz Gauffreau

    The inspiration for the story is just horrific. I’m sure there would have been no «happily ever after.»

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    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      Well, no, it was a terrible period in history. Fairy tales were lessons for children in many ways.

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  9. Avatar de Author Jan Sikes

    It’s interesting to see how some of these fairy tales originated, and especially from real circumstances. When I was in elementary school, I read the Grimm’s Brothers Book of Fairy Tales from the school library so many times the librarian had to create a new check-out card for it. Thank you for sharing this Robbie!

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    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      Hi Jan, that is amazing. I read these fairy tales too but my repeat library checkout was Little House in the big Woods. I still love that book and all the others in the series.

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  10. Avatar de John W. Howell

    Thanks for the background, Robbie. So many children’s stories have unsavory backstories.

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    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      Yes, most are based on true events

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      1. Avatar de John W. Howell

        😊

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  11. Avatar de Violet Lentz

    And the moral of the story is- when you think that life could not possibly be less forgiving- read a fairy tale….

    Brilliant review, Robbie.

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    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      Thank you, Violet. It does make you count your blessings

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  12. Avatar de T. W. Dittmer

    Thanks for this informational post, Robbie. I’d never heard the history behind the Hansel and Gretel story.

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    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      It’s very tragic, isn’t it?

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      1. Avatar de T. W. Dittmer

        Yes it is, Robbie.

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  13. Avatar de Teri Polen

    I wasn’t aware of the real story Hansel and Gretel was based on, but it’s just as bleak as the fairy tale. Never was one of my favorites.

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    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      Hi Teri, it is a bleak and scary take

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  14. Avatar de Laura Lyndhurst
    Laura Lyndhurst

    Interesting story origins, Robbie; and I love the cake! 🙂

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    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      Thank you, Laura 😃

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  15. Avatar de thomasstigwikman

    My mother used to read Grimm’s fairytales to us so I certainly know the story and I believe you told us about the background story in another blog, if I don’t remember incorrectly. I’ve read about it somewhere. It is a good reminder that modern agricultural practices protect us from famine and make it possible to sustain such a large population. Your fondant art for covid-19 is beautiful and good reminder how we can easily be cruel to children.

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    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      Hi Thomas, I had some of this research in my book, Something Fancy about Christmas baking. I may have included something about it in one of the promo posts – I can’t remember whether I did or not.

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      1. Avatar de thomasstigwikman

        I don’t think I’ve read «Something Fancy about Christmas baking» (yet) but I am pretty sure I got it from your writing. Maybe it was a promo like you said.

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      2. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

        Yes, I may have used this story for a promo. I’ve also written about Hansel and Gretel before but it was a long time ago. Before you and I connected. It is a favourite finding of mine – smile!

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      3. Avatar de thomasstigwikman

        It is a fascinating but dark fairy tale

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  16. Avatar de memadtwo

    It’s a grim story, and the history you provide makes sense. And as you note, we are pushing the world towards more grim times. (K)

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    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      Hi Kerfe, I do wonder what lies ahead for us. The droughts and excessive rain combined with high diesel and fertilizer prices is making commercial farming challenging and unprofitable.

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      1. Avatar de memadtwo

        It’s the same here. Already too many are starving.

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      2. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

        In America? Are people starving? People are starving in southern Africa and its going to get much worse. Now, South Africa has major flooding in the Eastern Cape which is the poorest part of this country.

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      3. Avatar de memadtwo

        There have always been pockets of deep poverty in the United States. Hunger is even worse now because Trump cut the food stamp program so he could give tax breaks to his rich friends. People are losing access to medical care too. Food kitchens are overwhelmed.

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      4. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

        You know, Kerfe, my entire concept of life in America has changed since I started blogging and reading American literature like The Grapes of Wrath. It’s nothing like foreigners think.

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      5. Avatar de memadtwo

        I feel the same about other countries. We learn a lot from each other–that we are really not so different after all.

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  17. Avatar de beetleypete

    Nice to read about the dark history behind such a familiar story, Robbie. Shared on Twitter.

    Best wishes, Pete.

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    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      It is interesting and darker than I thought.

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  18. Avatar de Lauren Scott, Author

    What a grim fairy tale, Robbie, and thanks for sharing the inspiration too. Your cake looks delicious though. Can you share a piece, please? 🙂

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    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      I would love to share a piece, Lauren. Thank you for your comment. I hope your writing is going well.

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      1. Avatar de Lauren Scott, Author

        You’re welcome, Robbie, and I’ll just pretend about the cake. 🙂 My manuscript is finished, so I’m working on a query letter now and formatting for submission. I’m also working on a new poetry collection to submit. It all takes so much time. Have a wonderful Mother’s Day! 💕

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      2. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

        Yes, it does take a lot of time. I’m doing final edits on my book and it’s slow. Mind you, I also blog and create art so it’s my own fault if it’s slow 😆

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      3. Avatar de Lauren Scott, Author

        I don’t know how you do it all, Robbie, and you also have your family and job. You’re a genius with time management, and I’m not. 😂😂

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      4. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

        Or a workaholic 😉

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      5. Avatar de Lauren Scott, Author

        Haha! 🤣

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      6. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

        💗

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  19. Avatar de Edward Ortiz

    Definitely a classic, and I love your gingerbread house. 😋

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    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      Although it was a strange and scary time, I did create a lot during Covid.

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      1. Avatar de Edward Ortiz

        I have seen photos of your creations and they all look so good.

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      2. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

        Thank you. Now I paint. My passions change

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      3. Avatar de Edward Ortiz

        Awesome!

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      4. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

        🩵🦋

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  20. Avatar de Jennie

    Very grim, indeed!

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    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      💚

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  21. Avatar de dgkaye

    Wow Robbie, nice work on researching the story of Hansel and Gretel, and the times of the world and famine. I always had to wonder about children’s fairy tales like this, The Three Bears, Little Red Riding Hood, and more of its ilk. Lots of darkness behind these tales. 💜

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    1. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

      Hi Debby, yes, indeed, these stories served as instruction and warmings. Their origins, on the whole, are very chilling.

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      1. Avatar de dgkaye

        Yes they are.

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      2. Avatar de robertawrites235681907

        🩵🦋

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