Showing posts with label folklore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label folklore. Show all posts

November 18 - William Tell Shoots an Apple Off His Son's Head – Or Does He?

  Posted on November 18, 2021


This is an update of my post published on November 18, 2010:





William Tell is a folk hero of Switzerland. He is said to have broken an unreasonable rule of the Austrian man, Albrecht Gessler, who ruled his region with brutality. Gessler's punishment for Tell, we are told, was that Tell had to shoot an apple off the head of his son, Walter. If Tell didn't try the task, Gessler assured him, both he and his son would be executed. On the other hand, if William Tell succeeded, they would both freed.

So, on November 18, 1307, William Tell raised his crossbow and took two crossbow bolts from his quiver. He shot one of the bolts toward his son—and neatly split the apple in half. At this point, Tell and his son should have been freed.


However, Gessler was curious about why Tell had taken two bolts from his quiver. He asked, and Tell told him that, if he had failed at the marksman task and killed his son, he would have used the second bolt to kill Gessler.

Angry, Gessler broke his promise and had William Tell tied up and carried to a boat on Lake Lucerne. He intended to have Tell taken across the lake and locked up in his castle. However, a storm broke out, and, in the confusion, Tell managed to escape. He went by land to the castle and laid in wait for Gessler. When the latter arrived, Tell shot and killed him.


William Tell's accuracy as a marksman and bravery in escaping and assassinating a ruthless tyrant led, according to legend, to a rebellion and the eventual formation of the Swiss Confederation.

Legend or History?

Many people tell this story as a true historic event. Specific names are mentioned, and there is a very specific date tied to the main event as well. The story is widely repeated and has inspired at least one play as well as paintings and murals. It sounds legit, right?

However, there is apparently no good evidence that William Tell, his son Walter, or Albrecht Gessler ever lived. Perhaps most convincing that the story is a myth rather than a history is the fact that there is a very similar—but earlier—Danish legend. Only the names have been changed: a Danish man named Palnatoki was forced by King Harald Bluetooth to shoot an apple off his son's head. Palnatoki took several arrows from his quiver and, when asked why, he explained that if he had struck his son with the first arrow, he would have turned his bow on the king.

So...the story of William Tell is probably a fiction.



The “William Tell Overture”

A composer named Gioachino Rossini wrote an opera inspired by the legend of William Tell, and the instrumental beginning of this opera is pretty famous. It has been used, over used, and sometimes even abused in popular media—including becoming the theme song of the 50s TV show The Lone Ranger.

Have you ever heard this stirring composition?



Modern Heroes in Switzerland

One of the hugest science experiments of all times is happening right now in Switzerland, and the scientists (of many different nationalities) who work there are truly modern heroes. One American scientist, Katherine McAlpine, created a rap video about the Large Hadron Collider at CERN—and even though it is scientifically accurate, the video went viral!


(A viral video is one that is widely shared and spread “by word of mouth” on the internet. The “Large Hadron Rap” has been viewed more than eight MILLION times.)

By the way, in the video, McAlpine refers to CERN looking for the Higgs boson - and scientists did discover it, just as they had hoped to.






(Thursday of American Education Week)




(Thursday before Thanksgiving)





January 7 – Happy Birthday, Zora Neale Hurston

Posted on January 7, 2015

I like the sound of Zola Neale Hurston! She is an author (one of the best jobs in the world, in my opinion, but I think that partly because I'm one, too), an anthropologist (the study of humans is always fascinating), and best of all a folklorist!

A folklorist is someone who studies (not surprisingly) folklore—which is the traditional customs and stories and perhaps beliefs of a community or culture. It's the stuff that is passed down through the generations by word of mouth.




Born in Alabama on this date in 1891, Hurston called Eatonville, Florida, “home.” She moved there when she was just three years old, and it was one of the first all-black towns incorporated in the United States.

Unfortunately, Hurston's mom died when she was still just a young teenager, and her dad remarried and sent her off to boarding school. But at some point he stopped paying her tuition, so the school expelled Hurston. She had to work and ended up lying about her age to be able to enter a cost-free high school and earn her diploma. She went on to attend multiple universities and earned a BA in anthropology at age 37.

So what do anthropologists and folklorists do?

They travel. They talk to people and immerse themselves in local culture and customs. They write about people's traditions and beliefs, and they right down the songs that they sing and the stories that they tell.

Hurston did all this traveling and talking and listening and writing in the Caribbean and in the American South.


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December 3 – Happy Birthday, Te Ata Fisher

Posted December 3, 2013

For more than 70 years, Te Ata Fisher brought to life the stories and folklore of indigenous peoples to audiences in the U.S. and Europe. 

More than 70 years! No wonder Te Ata was named Oklahoma's first “Official State Treasure” - and no wonder she was inducted into Oklahoma's Hall of Fame!

Te Ata was born on this date in 1895 in the Chickasaw Nation (in what was then called “Indian Territory”). She was born Mary Thompson, a very boring non-Chickasaw-sounding name, huh? “Fisher” is her married surname, and “Te Ata,” which means “Bringer of the Dawn" (or Morning), is the native name she adopted.

Te Ata began to develop her talent for acting in college, and she became a professional actress, performing on Broadway and other places. As you can imagine, she faced difficulties because she was a woman and because she was Chickasaw - and most especially because she was a Chickasaw woman! However, she took what made success difficult - what seemed to be a liability - and turned it into an asset! She began to perform one-person shows in which she shared native legends, myths, chants, and rituals. She wore authentic traditional costumes, and she used tribal drums and rattles, music and dance. Te Ata also wrote some of this folklore in books for children.

And her shows were a hit! Te Ata performed for President Franklin D. Roosevelt and the King and Queen of Great Britain; she performed in England and Scandinavia as well as all across America; she taught about a variety of indigenous peoples while entertaining her audiences.

Te Ata died just a few days before her 100th birthday. She received many awards and honors while she was alive and has earned many more since her death in 1995.


Watch these cool videos about Te Ata.

Don't miss this one


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February 12, 2012 - Paul Bunyan Day


This statute in Bangor, Maine is
said to be the largest statue of
Paul Bunyan in the world.
I'll be celebrating Darwin Day and Lincoln's birthday, but I will ALSO be tipping my hat to Paul Bunyan, who was born on this date in 1834, in Bangor, Maine.

Well, except for the fact that he may have been born in one of several towns in Michigan, on some other date. Or maybe in Minnesota. Or Nebraska. Or Wisconsin.

All five of these states lay claim to the giant lumberjack named Paul Bunyan. The truth is, he's a fictional character—so he wasn't actually born anywhere, at any time!

Paul Bunyan is a character from folklore, someone that people told exaggerated or funny stories about, orally and then in written form. Some scholars have claimed that Bunyan is really a character in fakelore—that is, someone people didn't tell stories about until after he was famous as an advertising icon.

Here is a story about his birth. It's definitely a “tall tale” – everything is exaggerated to show that Bunyan was really, really large. 

Here is the Disney version of Bunyan's life. 

AmericanFolklore has some more stories about Paul Bunyan. 

Here are those same stories with pictures. 


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