The Shocking True Story Behind Little Red Riding Hood

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  • Опубліковано 11 жов 2024
  • 🌲 Explore the dark origins of Little Red Riding Hood in this mesmerising journey through folklore and history. Uncover the secrets behind the cautionary tale as we delve into its macabre beginnings and the tantalising possibility of truth lurking within its shadows.
    Join me on an enthralling expedition through ancient forests of myth and legend as we unravel the winding path that led to the creation of this timeless story. But brace yourself for a truth more unsettling than you ever imagined!
    In the Brothers Grimm's version, Little Red Riding Hood's journey takes a dark turn as she encounters a sly wolf in the woods. Watch as we dissect the chilling encounter and uncover the hidden messages within.
    But the tale doesn't end there. We'll also explore earlier versions of the story, including Charles Perrault's cautionary tale and the ancient folklore that inspired it. Discover the unsettling truths behind the iconic red cloak and the dark secrets hidden within its folds.
    From werewolf trials to rabid wolves terrorising Paris, the historical context of Little Red Riding Hood's origins is as fascinating as it is chilling. Join me as we unravel the mysteries of this timeless tale and uncover the truths hidden within its shadows.
    Subscribe for more dark fairy tale explorations, and let me know which story you'd like me to delve into next. Don't forget to share your thoughts in the comments! 🐺📖✨
    CHAPTERS
    01:10 The Brothers Grimm
    05:15 Charles Perrault
    08:04 The Red Cloak
    08:51 The False Grandmother
    10:46 Occult Themes
    13:34 The Werewolf of Bedburg
    18:39 The Wolves of Paris
    20:46 Ancient Roots

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,1 тис.

  • @The-Resurrectionists
    @The-Resurrectionists  5 місяців тому +204

    Welcome, Darklings, to the next instalment of our journey into the origins of fairytales, this time we delve into the dark depths of Little Red Riding Hood. I hope you find this exploration captivating! 🐺📖
    If you enjoyed this video and would like to support the continuation of our adventures, I'm always grateful for a cup of coffee ☕ Your generosity keeps the candles burning and the mysteries unravelling:
    buymeacoffee.com/theresurrectionists
    Yours in darkness and discovery,
    L x

    • @mrgreen...9643
      @mrgreen...9643 5 місяців тому +12

      Amazing in depth analysis as always. Folk lore, fairy tales and superstitions there is usually more lurking beneath the surface it's amazing what stands the test of time

    • @sammansfield21
      @sammansfield21 5 місяців тому +11

      You've out done yourself again ❤

    • @M.C.G.
      @M.C.G. 5 місяців тому +5

      i like to now from you wich tale in this modern world is the real ali baba and the 40 bandits. if you dont now you can ask.

    • @charlesburnham603
      @charlesburnham603 5 місяців тому +5

      Love this!! There is an especially amusing version of this story in revolting rhymes by Roald Dahl u should check it out

    • @synthWizkid
      @synthWizkid 5 місяців тому +6

      ❤️ you are awesome 😎

  • @1323WTF
    @1323WTF 5 місяців тому +531

    " Young girl as you'r Pretty, so be Wise -
    A Wolf may lurk in any Guise.
    It is now, as was then Truth,
    The Sweetest tongue hides Sharpest Tooth."

    • @annkerr5996
      @annkerr5996 5 місяців тому +21

      Loved to read that

    • @armintamzarian8256
      @armintamzarian8256 4 місяці тому +5

    • @mojrimibnharb4584
      @mojrimibnharb4584 4 місяці тому +11

      Thank you, Angela Lansbury.

    • @mightylibrarian8569
      @mightylibrarian8569 4 місяці тому +27

      @@mojrimibnharb4584You might actually thank Angela Carter, the author who actually wrote Company of Wolves.

    • @Skylark123
      @Skylark123 4 місяці тому +19

      This poem is an excellent warning to all young women!

  • @Vasislaw
    @Vasislaw 5 місяців тому +453

    The time and effort spent in researching these tales and poems is a testament to the love you have for them. Please don't stop.

    • @ChunksPlace
      @ChunksPlace 5 місяців тому +14

      Here here!

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  5 місяців тому +41

      Thank you so much for your kind words! It means a lot :) 🖤

    • @Heartwing37
      @Heartwing37 5 місяців тому +18

      Agree! This is my childhood. I grew up hearing these tales because my mother loved to read to us. It’s great fun knowing the history and Lore behind it.

    • @armintamzarian8256
      @armintamzarian8256 4 місяці тому +5

      Amen ❤

    • @armintamzarian8256
      @armintamzarian8256 4 місяці тому +3

      ​@The-Resurrectionists
      You have a great talent for your work❤

  • @techno-phobe3000
    @techno-phobe3000 5 місяців тому +195

    Little girls, there seems to say,
    Never stop upon your way,
    Never trust a stranger friend,
    No-one knows how it will end,
    As you're pretty, so be wise,
    Wolves may lurk in every guise,
    Now as then, 'tis simple truth,
    Sweetest toungue, has sharpest tooth.

  • @brightmoon7132
    @brightmoon7132 5 місяців тому +190

    In college I learned that nearly all fairytales were originally stories for adults that have been changed and rewritten for children over many years. I am especially interested in this aspect of them. Thank you for an excellent video. 😊🌻

    • @Enki1013
      @Enki1013 4 місяці тому +18

      Likewise, the late Christopher Lee had said in a movie documentary that horror films are actually fairy tales for adults. He is not the only one to have said this, but he is one of the first I heard say this.

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  4 місяці тому +7

      You're very welcome! Thank you for watching :) 🖤

    • @KeithPrince-cp3me
      @KeithPrince-cp3me 3 місяці тому +4

      This would appear to be the case. As adults began to believe in them less and less so they were left to children who in time also stopped believing them to be actually true. Reginald Scot in his 1584 The Disvoverie of Witchcraft, questioning the contemporary belief in witchcraft, wrote that in his grandma's time people believed in the reality of hobgoblin and Robin Goodfellow, but now when such characters are derided by children still witches are feared by old fools. Nursery rhymes too were once the preserve of adults. In a time when for most common people illiteracy was high rhymes were often a way of conveying social or political information of the time, such as ridiculing the king or some noble, when overtly making such statements could have serious consequences. As time moved on the relevance became lost and eventually remained in children's rhymes.

    • @KeithPrince-cp3me
      @KeithPrince-cp3me 3 місяці тому

      @@Enki1013 I take it by your use of Enki, ruler of the Abzu, you are familiar with Sumerian mythology.

    • @lorellgingrich6603
      @lorellgingrich6603 3 місяці тому

      @@KeithPrince-cp3me Interesting. During this account of how humans and animals are very wary of strangers I was thinking that, given the general populaces' dismay at mass immigration, fear of strangers, for a variety of reasons (threat, disease, displacement of existing populations) is a human instinct and not necessarily invalid

  • @samueldavidrucker7514
    @samueldavidrucker7514 2 місяці тому +16

    God am I glad I get to live now and not back then. Even the Grimm brothers' stories are full of violence and macabre behavior. Thanks for this scholarly presentation. It was fascinating

  • @saddaddrummer
    @saddaddrummer 5 місяців тому +135

    A huge amount of research has gone into this one, and the quality hasn't dropped one iota. You L are a superb orator.

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  5 місяців тому +14

      Thank you! I'm thrilled to hear that! :) I really appreciate your support and I'm so happy you enjoyed it 🖤

    • @saddaddrummer
      @saddaddrummer 4 місяці тому +1

      @@MY-zx6lz If you ever go on the TV programme Mastermind, I will know it's you by your specialist subject round being Stating the obvious...

    • @WildWoodsGirl65
      @WildWoodsGirl65 4 місяці тому +1

      ​@@MY-zx6lz Okey dokey, grumpy pants, that is what research is. But finding the root sources, doing all the reading & investigation into the changing meaning of wording & symbolism that takes place over the ages, creating a riveting narrative presenting the results of that work, making a video & sharing this with others is actually quite similar to but really above & beyond what would constitute a doctoral dissertation on children's literature or myth & legend in literature & earn someone a doctorate's degree. So you may put forth an effort yourself & produce results to educate people or you may quietly simmer in silence, for you are no wolf as you seem to seek to be, you are merely the mat outside grandma's door, placing yourself for people to wipe their boots on, for whatever else could be our response to such lowly and fruitless curmudgeoning?

    • @saddaddrummer
      @saddaddrummer 4 місяці тому

      @@WildWoodsGirl65 Beautifully put friend.....I myself prefer the Go F yourself approach to people that type in capitals and annoy more than educate. I am old, and know quite a lot about the history of nursery rhymes and the meanings of certain phrase's, but I love this channel and will continue to enjoy the contents despite those that try to bring it down.

  • @altair8598
    @altair8598 5 місяців тому +101

    I think it is all three of the themes you conclude with: a reflection of historical context accompanied by a reflection of the human psyche, then morphing into a cautionary tale. Superb video.

  • @andydavis8437
    @andydavis8437 5 місяців тому +135

    Once 70% of Europe & Britain was covered in forest, to get to the next village could take days, you would have to sleep out in the woods on your journey and there were not only wolves but outcasts that inhabited them. It must have been must have been quite daunting and people most likely traveled in groups for safety. If someone left their village, how would anyone ever know if they arrived at their destination.

    • @Kevin-bl6lg
      @Kevin-bl6lg 3 місяці тому +3

      Simple. Once you arrived at the next village, just text or call home. That what we do with our kids, even as today we don't have large forests anymore.

    • @bernardedwards8461
      @bernardedwards8461 2 місяці тому +5

      The last British wolf was killed in Scotland around 1760, and before that they were rare animals really only a danger to livestock. To find a Britain where wolves were fairly common you would have to go back to pre-Norman times. It is extremely rare for wolves to attack humans, and bears were more dangerous. There were also wild boar, which seldom attack people but in defence of their young can be dangerous. They were re-introduced about 50 years ago, and some nutters want to re-introduce the wolf as well! As you suggest in your comment, the most dangerous thing to threaten travellers in the forest were other humans.

    • @twilightgardenspresentatio6384
      @twilightgardenspresentatio6384 Місяць тому

      Rule no1… don’t split the party.

  • @sallybalkin8507
    @sallybalkin8507 3 місяці тому +22

    Very enlightening video. As a 57 year old, I remember when victims of paedophilia were treated very differently than now. Often not believed, but sometimes (too often) blamed. The part of the video that addressed the wide prevalence of victim blaming of victims of sexual assault, along with accusations of witchcraft, made me feel physically sick. Predators will do anything, say anything, to get away with their crimes. And their enablers will back them up. Enabling harm is akin to committing it. If evil exists, that is it. Not occult practices. As a species, the human race still has a long way to go, in terms of creating a fair and compassionate society, but we have also come a long way. And thank (insert own ethical belief here) for that. And regardless of whether someone's beliefs incorporate the devil or demonic beings, remember and remind people, interference from supposed supernatural beings (different to mental illness) can't make you commit atrocities, that in the depths of your psyche you don't want to do.

    • @crystalh450
      @crystalh450 Місяць тому +1

      To be fair, two things can be true at once. While I agree with you that peados are evil, that doesn't mean that the occult somehow isn't. I do think that witchcraft has previously been an excuse to accuse others that one doesn't like to enable that person to "get rid of" someone, but that doesn't mean witchcraft is inherently good or that it is just "misunderstood." Both can be evil at the same time.

  • @TheUberSchattenjager
    @TheUberSchattenjager 5 місяців тому +75

    Pray to tell: how does the most interesting channel on all the UA-cams not have 1M subs? Fantastic writing, and I could listen to the wonderful narrator read my obituary with rapt attention. Love this!

    • @rawilliams5881
      @rawilliams5881 5 місяців тому +11

      More people who enjoy the content have to leave a like and a comment, and subscribe. That is what boosts the algorithm's performance.

    • @dkdisme
      @dkdisme 5 місяців тому +9

      One can only hope that she is discovered by some producer and made famous!

    • @AoibheannDoyle-SoulTherapist
      @AoibheannDoyle-SoulTherapist 4 місяці тому +2

      Deep thinkers, artists & creative Souls are a small pool of people here. Popularity proves nothing. Quality over quantity.

    • @WildWoodsGirl65
      @WildWoodsGirl65 4 місяці тому

      ​@@MY-zx6lz🙄🤨😒😂

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  4 місяці тому +2

      Thank you for making my day brighter with your comments! 🖤Thank you for your support :)

  • @greybeardcanadian1036
    @greybeardcanadian1036 5 місяців тому +121

    I had never heard about the 1450 wolf attack on Paris. Even if the story is exaggerated, it shows how terrifying the events were.

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  5 місяців тому +24

      Yes I quite agree!

    • @acewickhamyoshi8330
      @acewickhamyoshi8330 5 місяців тому

      Oh yes ,, as a decendent of all 12 European areas ,,my British relies spoke of the drowning wolf,, French side from 1500 same wolf Gang like the 4 parts of Prussia .. so when Brothers Grimm sensationalised 8 stories into one .. also my year 1400 Ukrain /
      Russian slavic family called politicians the wolf ,, as blue blooded fire eye Jackles .. is about nobility ,, the fox was the prince in disguise ,, the phesant or crow as servant... ,,lol.. like how Lewis Carol.. took russian stories of humans as animals,,
      .. exagerating their 250 concubines,, well Alice in wonderlands author was mischievous wolf,,
      but my fav is scandinavian xmas time wolf santa hypnotising people to be santas xmas dinner..

    • @cherylharris5695
      @cherylharris5695 5 місяців тому

      True

    • @sirseigan
      @sirseigan 4 місяці тому +21

      It also bare resemblence to the much later wolf attacks in the Soviet Union (in the 40s?) where wolfs due to starvation during exceptional harsh winters had several pack uniting inro superpacks numbered several hundred wolfs. These wolves then went after lifestock and pets and when there were no more of thoose the went after children.
      It is a extreme behaviour that only happens during exceptional circumstances. The incident in the 40s, and later similar but in much smaller scale in Mongolia and Siberia, are well documentedand can give good insights into what causes these "superpack events". One thing that differs between wolfs and dogs is that wolves get a hormonial shift during winter making them much much more agressive.
      It has also been shown that European wolves used to be much more agressive then for example North American wolves, even though American wolves could be larger.
      Different populations of carnivors can show different behaviours and hence also levels of aggresivness depending on the local conditions and competition for food. For example European brownbears and Sibirian brownbears are different population of the same speices (divided by distance) but the Siberian bears are in general much much more aggressive (and carnivorius) in their behaviour. It has been theoretizised that it is due their fierce competion with Siberian Tigers that favours agressive individuals to be more successful. The same might be true for the wolves. This is also an argument for culling the most aggressive and intrucive individuals of carnivourus speices, favouring the more shy and non-aggressive individuals and make them more successful breeding.
      So the behaviour we observe today in European wolves do not nessecerly reflect the historical behaivours of European wolves - rabies infection put aside.

    • @annhodnett6027
      @annhodnett6027 27 днів тому

      They made a film based on the Beast of Gevaudan. Brotherhood of the wolf.

  • @drysori
    @drysori 5 місяців тому +129

    Rabid wolfs infecting humans causing them to go insane. That sums up the werewolves legend pretty well.

    • @Hondenzijngevaarlijk
      @Hondenzijngevaarlijk 5 місяців тому

      Dogs. Over 99% of humans who get rabiës are infected by dogs.

    • @anthonyturlington4438
      @anthonyturlington4438 4 місяці тому +1

      ​@@purplewabbit7848🤦

    • @Amphitera
      @Amphitera 3 місяці тому +2

      and rabid bats biting humans, who then turned into "vampires" before dying. The truth behind the myth is often scarier than the legend.

    • @Elora445
      @Elora445 2 місяці тому +1

      Or rabid dogs, for that matter. Dogs or wolves.

  • @dkdisme
    @dkdisme 5 місяців тому +33

    This is the first I ever heard of Peter Stump and the persecution of werewolves. Thank you for a delightful descent into medieval depravity.

    • @francesbernard2445
      @francesbernard2445 2 місяці тому

      Werewolves are only fictional beasts easy enough to fear while enjoying a fairy tale at the same time being read to us.

  • @HitomiKitage
    @HitomiKitage 5 місяців тому +60

    I pulled this video up at dinner, and my son said that he wants a channel where they talk about all the messed up fairy tales like this. I told him that was this channel and to be quiet and listen to the video. Amazingly, he did. So you have done the impossible. You have impressed a 10-year-old boy. Lol! Amazing work, as always. So much information I didn't or hadn't thought of (like the Thor and Loki story).

    • @graveyardbaby6204
      @graveyardbaby6204 Місяць тому +2

      You let a 10-year -old boy listen to this video where there is sexual assault, incest, extreme violence, murder etc.??
      There was literally a part where some girl was burned to death when her father had an incestuous relationship with her and she was accused of seducing the father. The father's mistress was also burned alive.There was a part where some village man killed and ate 14 children, and two women. He sa'd and murdered some more women. The was a part where the wolf mauled the grandma to death and fed her meat to red riding hood to eat and her blood to riding hood to drink. The grandma's cat called her a slut for consuming them.
      One serial killer man who worshipped satan was placed on a torture wheel and his flesh was torn off with hot pinchers, his limbs were dislocated and his head was cut off and placed on a stake. There was a part where the wolf took red riding hood to bed, removed her clothes and stuff. When she wanted to pee, the wolf told he to relieve herself in the bed.
      Ma'am...

  • @labwuh
    @labwuh 5 місяців тому +16

    Ive just discovered this wonderful channel. This lady's narrative voice is SUBLIME.

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  4 місяці тому

      Thank you for the lovely comment! :) I'm so glad you're enjoying my channel 🖤

  • @jasonuren3479
    @jasonuren3479 5 місяців тому +43

    Always look forward to your videos!

  • @GrandOldMovies
    @GrandOldMovies 5 місяців тому +31

    Thanks for this terrific video, so well researched and presented. I had heard of the Peter Stumpf story, though I hadn't connected it to the Red Riding Hood tale; but you can see how its influence might have been dispersed into folklore tales. The story of the wolves attacking Paris was new to me and sounds horrific; France seems to have experienced various animal attack episodes, such as the famous Beast of Gevaudan incident. What surprised me the most was that the metaphorical use of wolf for a sexually predatory man goes back so far, and is not a 20th century invention (even though, oddly enough, wolves are known to mate for life). The one outcome from all this is that I feel very sorry for wolves, who seem to be such misunderstood creatures!

  • @marcduhamel-guitar1985
    @marcduhamel-guitar1985 5 місяців тому +123

    When I was a kid, my family, as well as my two uncles and 4 cousins and grandparents stayed at one of my uncles' houses out in the country side for a family gathering. In the middle of the night, there were howls and unearthly sounding cackles which sounded like a witch. Pretty much all of us kids were terrified, and our parents upset, except my grandfather who said, "That's a fox with rabbies." I can understand how similar bone chilling shrieks from rabbid animals might have been interpreted as supernatural in nature... Thanks for the research on this awesome video! Cheers !

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  5 місяців тому +17

      Thank you for sharing your insights; that makes so much sense! Glad you enjoyed it! :) 🖤

    • @juniorjames7076
      @juniorjames7076 5 місяців тому +23

      Before we had artificial (electric or gas) light, the world was a mysterious, terrifying and magical place!

    • @Loralanthalas
      @Loralanthalas 5 місяців тому +31

      Haha. Poor old grandpa didn't want to tell you the truth: a fox in heat sounds like an ungodly murder is happening. He couldn't say they were calling for mates and getting it on with a bunch of kids around. So he said that what you were hearing is rabies. Made sure to keep your butts inside too. 😂 love grandpa.

    • @marcduhamel-guitar1985
      @marcduhamel-guitar1985 5 місяців тому +6

      @@Loralanthalas hahaha you didn't know my grandpa!! 🤣🤣🤣

    • @SarahHodgins
      @SarahHodgins 5 місяців тому +3

      Terrifying

  • @willashby2250
    @willashby2250 5 місяців тому +19

    Yet another beautifully narrated tale of dark folklore! I love this channel!

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  5 місяців тому +1

      Thank you! I'm so happy you're enjoying my channel :) 🖤

    • @oliviastar3812
      @oliviastar3812 5 місяців тому

      Shows just how long evil's been pursuing children through any means, method or media.

  • @graywolf7
    @graywolf7 5 місяців тому +84

    Do one for Hansel and Gretel pls!

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  4 місяці тому +7

      Yes, I'm really looking forward to diving into Hansel and Gretel! I'm aiming to release that video next month-stay tuned! :)🖤

    • @jolaajtak7861
      @jolaajtak7861 3 місяці тому +1

      What I have heard it is from the time of the 30 year long war where people were starving so much at the end that they ate each other.

    • @RedheadLondon
      @RedheadLondon 2 місяці тому

      @@The-Resurrectionists Have you done Rapunzel?

    • @goofygrandlouis6296
      @goofygrandlouis6296 2 місяці тому

      They were eaten. The end.

  • @zatoth13
    @zatoth13 5 місяців тому +90

    One theory on werewolves I read was they are explanations of serial killers in the medieval

    • @kellidinit3725
      @kellidinit3725 5 місяців тому +17

      In some instances, I’m sure you are correct. It dates back in many various cultures, each with their own unique versions. Though I cannot remember the regions specifically, I believe it is Russia that believes werewolf’s are not bitten, just become them either by their own will or a curse of some sort. Their mention, in various myths, date back to Ancient Greece and Rome.

    • @kelllefae3026
      @kelllefae3026 5 місяців тому +14

      Dog headed men seems to be a thing in medieval stories too .... even st Christopher originally had a dogs head ... are those descriptions just well behaved werefolk lol

    • @kellidinit3725
      @kellidinit3725 5 місяців тому +3

      @@kelllefae3026 😂😂

    • @varanid9
      @varanid9 5 місяців тому +6

      Gilles de Rais.

    • @juniorjames7076
      @juniorjames7076 5 місяців тому +7

      It's well known the medical schools/ institutions paid good money in the black market for "fresh bodies", no questions asked from medieval era up until the 19th century.

  • @eldarrissman4172
    @eldarrissman4172 3 місяці тому +7

    Neat story.
    I always thought that anyone who read or heard this story would assume that a mother who sends her child into a forest alone did not want the child to return. Infanticide was common in remote areas of Europe. Having an unwanted child be eaten by a predator was one way of getting this ghoulish job done - without attracting much suspicion.
    Giving the kid food (which the predator could smell) and adorning the kid with red (a very bright color in a green forest) would probably have accelerate the kid's demise.

  • @mandywescott707
    @mandywescott707 5 місяців тому +14

    Was SO excited seeing the pop up! Thank you!!

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  5 місяців тому +1

      Thank you! Your support makes all the hard work worth it :) 🖤

  • @liamhollin8265
    @liamhollin8265 5 місяців тому +442

    Jimmy Jones used to tell a joke about this, it goes as follows, little red riding hood was of to her grand mother's house when she heard a rusling in the bushes, she turns round and asks " who's there, who's there" and the wolf scampers off. She's gone hundred yards when she hears the same rusling in the bushes, she asks again" who's there who' there" again the wolf scamper off. She's gone about another hundred yards and hears the same rushing in the bush', she turns round and again asks "who's there , who's there" this time the wolf shouts out" why don't you piss off, I'm trying to have a shit!"😀😀😀

  • @heisag
    @heisag 5 місяців тому +91

    At 14:07 ish, the most likely reason for Peter Stubb (stump) is spoken. He was a wealthy farmer, and someone with power wanted his lands. Which is also why his mistress and child needed to be killed , so they could not inherit it. At least that is the version i've heard.
    RIP Peter.

    • @Mailed-Knight
      @Mailed-Knight 5 місяців тому +19

      That's usually the reason people were accused of being werewolves/witches.

    • @ttx3
      @ttx3 5 місяців тому +3

      you don’t consider the fact that Peter was probably a medieval psycho serial killer who lived a life of debauchery together with his women. A medieval Charles Manson but much more hardcore. This was the kind of people who suffered the worst punishments in those times. Like life in prison without parole nowadays 😅

    • @heisag
      @heisag 5 місяців тому +14

      @@ttx3 I don't consider confessions given just after a torture sessions on the rack a fact. Not even probable facts. Just an attempt for the accused to prevent another session.
      To accept Peter's confession as fact, one would also have to belive in werewolves, succuby, demons and (the) devil. And i don't.
      Could he have been a serial killer? Yes. But so could many others at Bedburg , given the same "treatment".
      The townsfolk were chasing a wolf when they came upon Peter were they thought the wolf was, and brought Peter in for "questioning".
      Peter said he had used a magical belt for the transformation, even said where it was, but it was not found. Which could indicate at least part of his confession was false.
      Still, this story is old, and may have changed over time, some in favor of Peter, some in disfavor. Hard to tell what was the actual facts.
      What seems to be facts, he gave his confession on the 28th of october 1589, and was executed on october 31st, 1589. Helloween...

    • @ttx3
      @ttx3 5 місяців тому

      @@heisag if you’ll read the diary of Franz Schmidt, executioner of Nuremberg in the same period in which Peter Stump has been executed (aprox. 1578-1617), you’la note that despite the cruel nature of the capital punishments, the judges were surprisingly fair in their reasoning process back than. They were always aiming to convict the right perpetrator, not just anyone and were always very reasonable with first-time offenders. The judges were inteligent guys and most of them quite good-hearted persons, not fanatical stupid beasts..
      My personal opinion is that, despite the supernatural aspects (deals with the devil, shape shifting etc), which were a ‘must have’ in heinous murder cases back than, the convict was almost always really guilty. Just imagine a Ted Bundy or a Jeffrey Dahmer in those times, what stories would have been extracted under torture from such deranged guys.. We’ll never know if Stump was indeed the real serial killer who committed those crimes, but my opinion is that he really was the right guy.
      If a serial killer confesses crazy aspects under torture, this doesn’t mean he’s innocent. Of course the judges knew the psychology of a tortured man, that he would state anything just to avoid another session, that’s why torture was applied along with other psycholical tricks to make the suspected narcisistic psychopath to confess something that was obvious for some very good reason. It’s like they put OJ Simpson under torture to confess something anyone knew it’s true..

    • @Badficwriter
      @Badficwriter 4 місяці тому +6

      @@ttx3 I wouldn't say "his women" as if his child were a willing participant.

  • @mjc8248
    @mjc8248 5 місяців тому +3

    Until i found your channel i had never really thought too much about the stories from my childhood. I really enjoy the research you do, and you have a pleasant voice that keeps me coming back.

  • @lisasakser7560
    @lisasakser7560 3 місяці тому +8

    I really like Sam the Sham & the Pharaohs:
    Who's that I see walkin' in these woods?
    Why, it's little Red Ridin' Hood!
    Hey there, little Red Riding Hood
    You sure are lookin' good
    You're everything a big bad wolf could want
    Listen to me, little Red Ridin' Hood
    I don't think little big girls should
    Go walkin' in these spooky old woods alone

  • @tech10k14
    @tech10k14 5 місяців тому +23

    I'd have thought Little Red Riding Hood's first reaction would be '@#^£# hell! A talking wolf!' 😄

    • @---zc4qt
      @---zc4qt 4 місяці тому +1

      It's like Genesis chapter 3, a TALKING animal is not normal.

    • @cfltheman
      @cfltheman 3 місяці тому

      @@---zc4qt And Numbers 22. At least Eve had the excuse of basically being a child and not knowing that snakes do not talk.

    • @jennifersilves4195
      @jennifersilves4195 3 місяці тому

      ​@@---zc4qt That's an unfortunate mistranslation in Genesis.

  • @Story-Voracious66
    @Story-Voracious66 5 місяців тому +11

    For me this was the most enjoyable episode so far.
    Ever since I read Angela Carter's "Bloody Chamber", and then watched "The Company of Wolves",
    I have had a deeper appreciation of this tale.
    Thank you for this *deep* dive in it's origins.
    I can only add that I agree wholeheartedly with the complimentary comments of other listeners.
    ❤️ Aaooo! 🐺🐺🐺

    • @lyamainu
      @lyamainu 5 місяців тому +2

      I loved Company of Wolves! So creepy, but so good!

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  4 місяці тому

      You're very welcome! Thank you for watching :) 🖤

  • @schiz0phren1c
    @schiz0phren1c 5 місяців тому +45

    Man eating wolves also plagued a Russian area during WW1, they mainly chose Children as victims and it was a harrowing time.

    • @Loralanthalas
      @Loralanthalas 5 місяців тому +15

      You mean the war destroyed their eco system and wolves were forced to hunt what they could to survive. It was a VERY harrowing time for them too. It's not like they want or prefer hunting humans. We forced that.

    • @birdlover9082
      @birdlover9082 5 місяців тому +6

      @@Loralanthalas Thank you, that's exactly what happened! Just getting worse for all animals every year!

    • @tumslucks9781
      @tumslucks9781 3 місяці тому +2

      ​@@Loralanthalas
      The Khazarian Mafia who started the war were the worst wolves of all..

  • @varanid9
    @varanid9 5 місяців тому +17

    Wolves are NOT "timid" animals. In my time in Alaska, I know first hand of a wolf attack on a soldier while I was there. There's also a series of wolf attacks on villages in Russia before WW2 that mirror the Parisian attack stories.

    • @GnomeInPlaid
      @GnomeInPlaid 4 місяці тому

      I agree. Wolves are over populating and are attacking and eating alive chained up dogs in fenced in yards here in the north, and the DNR has a whistleblower that says the numbers have been lied about for years. The deer population has nearly dropped off a cliff here and now the wolves are showing up not even a mile from town on security and game cameras. The loggers are now taking someone else with them in the woods - I.E. not going alone anymore - because of the danger. They have a lookout while they work. There was a DNR officer in the woods and she was surrounding by a pack she had to shoot one to get out alive. The DNR fired her and told her to shut up about it.

    • @jennifersilves4195
      @jennifersilves4195 3 місяці тому +2

      Alaska wolves will eat you.
      Different species have different temperaments.

  • @PaulMellender
    @PaulMellender 5 місяців тому +15

    I’d like to add another set of roots to this story. The stranger wolf, red girl and huntsmen originates with the star Sirius (often deemed red in ancient sources and interchangeable with Venus-the morning star), the constellation Orion (the huntsman), and the wolf or werewolf (outlaw, alien, or the estranged). The wolf or werewolf (also wolf’s head, outlaw, and part of the tradition of “strangers”) is a common description of the Constellation “Hyades” in Norse and Germanic myth and folklore (it is the solution to the Iceland rune poem for “Ur” as both wolf and the hyades). Hati the wolf swallowing the moon at Ragnarok after chasing it across the sky (this happens twice a year in March and November when the full moon sits in the mouth of the Hyades). The wolf figure and the wolf skin connected with strangers is an ancient practice connected with the Grail story of Percival the Weilsc (stranger), berserks, even Adam and Eve after being expelled from the garden. The wolf skin and animal men were connected with cannibalism (as in Arcadia and the story of Lykaion). The red maiden, shares roots with Kore (the maiden) and the Mystery religion at Eleusis. The star Sirius was the star of Kore (or Ishtar or Æster-Eater or Isis-Ast whose emblem was an egg). The tradition of finding “the lost maiden” or the Easter egg was a wide spread tradition in when Sirius, Orion, and the Hyades disappear below the horizon their until midsummer dawn emergence from the underworld. The hood is a well known feature and ancient symbol of the underworld or being beneath the ground. This still appears as a feature in both weddings and funerals as a veil, with variations as a parasol (as in the Skiraphoria-the skira or “white earth” related to the word “shire”-procession), and drapery over the head (as at the Flammen). The huntsman as Orion the hunter is explicit enough for now, though the relationship between the huntsmen and hyades is worth exploring. The moon associated with not only menstruation but also the triple character of the maiden, mother, and crone as phases of the moon as Selene, Luna, Proserpina,but notably Hecate. In March and November at the full moon you can see the story of little red riding hood by looking at the star Sirius, next to the constellation Orion, as the Moon is swallowed by the Hyades.

    • @Rockstar97321
      @Rockstar97321 5 місяців тому +3

      Sirius B and his appearance in the sky in July and August is associated with heat, fire, and fever by the ancient Greeks. As the main star in the constellation Canis Major, he is referred to as the Dog Star. This relates to the Dogon of Mali, Africa.

    • @Badficwriter
      @Badficwriter 4 місяці тому +2

      Interesting! One of the reasons for old stories based on stars is a mnemonic to remember directions, times of year for planting/harvesting, et cetera.

    • @Egill2011
      @Egill2011 2 місяці тому +1

      Pagan Scandinavians believed in werewolves and other were things already in the first millennium AD. Some historical persons were believed to be capable of turning into wolves or other animals. Anglo-Saxons and some other Germanic tribes had similar beliefs, as far as I can remember. The belief in werewolves is consequently much older than mediaeval Christian Europe and Hollywood.

  • @D.Fay_Coe
    @D.Fay_Coe 5 місяців тому +8

    one of the most interesting and entertaining episodes yet. nicely done.

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  5 місяців тому +2

      So happy you enjoyed it! And thank you for your comment! :) 🖤

  • @KeithPrince-cp3me
    @KeithPrince-cp3me 5 місяців тому +65

    The film A Company Wolves, based on the tale, has the motif of straying from the path to convey a moral warning aimed at girls, with the 'wolf' a handsome man in fine clothes who eventually transforms completely into a wolf. It was once commonplace for people to sleep naked before nightclothes were invented, with their wear initially limited to wealthier classes, so taking all of one's clothes off before getting into bed would have been quite normal. Mayhew criticises the practice, found among the labouring classes of London, as late as 1851. It was also healthier from a hygiene point of view. As for the French gestation of the story there was also the famed account of the Beast of Gevaudan, could this have played into the red riding hood story? One reason why wolves were feared was not so much the danger posed to people but to sheep, which were formerly economically important. Finally, there was a time when members of Germanic tribes wore wolf pelts to convey some of the power of the animal to their enemies and intimidate foes. Fear of these raiders could plausibly also lie in the distant background of the tale.

    • @RictusHolloweye
      @RictusHolloweye 5 місяців тому +3

      Christina Ricci was in a short version of the story where she was trying to escape and insisted she had to go outside to relieve herself. Not the most gripping short film, but I'll watch anything with her in it.

    • @SiiriCressey
      @SiiriCressey 5 місяців тому +1

      @@RictusHolloweye Title?

    • @RictusHolloweye
      @RictusHolloweye 5 місяців тому

      @@SiiriCressey - I can do better than a title. ua-cam.com/video/sHUvdG-fCx0/v-deo.html

    • @techno-phobe3000
      @techno-phobe3000 5 місяців тому +2

      Of my favourite films! The Wolf Girl story always makes me cry! Beautiful film, great soundtrack too. ❤

    • @SiiriCressey
      @SiiriCressey 5 місяців тому +2

      @@techno-phobe3000 Is that the title? The Wolf Girl?

  • @paulchambers3142
    @paulchambers3142 5 місяців тому +3

    Excellent presentation.
    A lot of research and detail making this a truly enjoyable one.
    My feeling is that the tale is meant to be a warning to the unsuspecting innocent young lady.
    Fascinating to listen to....I shall watch again.
    Many thanks for your great work team!
    Best wishes....the 🐺 ❤

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  4 місяці тому

      I'm so glad you found it enjoyable! Thanks for being here 🖤

  • @mauricebate5069
    @mauricebate5069 5 місяців тому +5

    Yet again a wonderful video so deep in its story telling !!! It's my favourite channel can't wait for you next one you put so much work into making them !! Thank you 👍🏼

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  4 місяці тому

      That's wonderful to hear! I'm so happy you're enjoying my channel :) 🖤

  • @TristanTzara100
    @TristanTzara100 5 місяців тому +9

    Thank you so much for this. Excellent presentation. Have you read Angela Carter's "The Company of Wolves", or, indeed, seen the very fine film of the same name? Like most stories of this sort, it continues to be told in different ways by each generation.

  • @mollydooker9636
    @mollydooker9636 5 місяців тому +27

    Oh there was never any innocent facade, thats why children love it. Its raises the hairs on the backs of their necks....heckles if you will. If anyone has not had the pleasure i would recommend Angela Carters short story ' The Company of Wolves"... a never forget...' 'a man is just a wolf who is hairy on the inside' . Great content, thank you!

    • @Badficwriter
      @Badficwriter 4 місяці тому +1

      That is a quote from one of the real life werewolf trials. They literally cut him open to check.

    • @whssy
      @whssy 3 місяці тому

      I was going to recommend this too.

    • @charlottewagner715
      @charlottewagner715 Місяць тому

      hackles...

  • @gilliankirby
    @gilliankirby 5 місяців тому +6

    This is absolutely fascinating! I had no idea of the context and the symbolism involved in the story. The part about Rabies was particularly interesting! Thank you for all the research and presentation!

  • @daddyg5654
    @daddyg5654 4 місяці тому +6

    Humm...I must of had a different upbringing. My parents ended the story with "Grandma poped up with her Benelli M4 and the rest of the wolves knew to leave them alone after that." "Now go to sleep!" 😄

  • @sandyhenderson441
    @sandyhenderson441 5 місяців тому +3

    Oh, this channel just gets better! Here we have yet another fascinating video, meticulously researched and clearly presented; really excellent work! Thanks so much! Until we meet again...

  • @subrosa7mm
    @subrosa7mm 5 місяців тому +13

    This little piggy would be a good one to learn. I’m wondering why one is eating roast beef. Now I’m realizing it’s not about pigs but people.

  • @MrBusby
    @MrBusby 5 місяців тому +4

    I always enjoy seeing a new episode pop-up. Thank you.

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  5 місяців тому +3

      I'm thrilled to hear that! Thank you for your support 🖤

  • @jpendowski7503
    @jpendowski7503 5 місяців тому +3

    Such beautiful art examples with which you illustrate the macabre tales.

  • @Xianne027
    @Xianne027 5 місяців тому +71

    Many decades ago I had a full-blood wolf as a pet. She was as loving of a pet as any dog, and it greatly disturbed me how this version of the Red Riding Hood story left people fearing and maligning real wolves for generations to come. The reality is they are generally not aggressive toward humans.
    I could never understand how people could be so ignorant as to apply a tale with symbolic meaning to a real wolf.
    Thanks for sharing your research of the historical roots of this story. Yes, it was always clear to me that it had more to do with a human sexual predator than of an actual animal.

    • @SarahHodgins
      @SarahHodgins 5 місяців тому +3

      When I was a child I was terrified of wolves from stories like this one, moreso because I heard stories of rabies with no cure back in the old days

    • @birdlover9082
      @birdlover9082 5 місяців тому +6

      You are so correct, when I read to my Sons I never said big bad wolf and I taught them as soon as they could understand about loving animals! They are grown and they love animals as much as I do!

    • @Xianne027
      @Xianne027 5 місяців тому +2

      @@birdlover9082 That's great, that you explained it to them like that.

    • @jdhenge
      @jdhenge 5 місяців тому +8

      A friend of mine told me this story. There was a man who had a half-dog/half-wolf as a pet. He said it was just as mild mannered as a dog until one day when the man came home with a limp from a work injury. Instinct kicked in and the animal attacked and mauled him. You can believe it or not

    • @SarahHodgins
      @SarahHodgins 5 місяців тому +13

      @@jdhenge wolves and even big coyotes have killed people lately in Canada, mostly when the people were out jogging alone i.e. running away

  • @jenniferfinney7533
    @jenniferfinney7533 5 місяців тому +3

    BEAUTIFULLY ARTICULATED! You have a rare talent. " spinning a yarn" truly a masterful level story teller my dear. The amount of detail and research 👌. A1.

  • @Robert-cr8bq
    @Robert-cr8bq 5 місяців тому +5

    Having, in the past, read and watched 'A Company of Wolves' by Angela Carter, it has been interesting to see where a lot of her ideas for the initial short story originated from.
    Thank you once again for a masterful insight into the origin of this fairytale.

  • @Heartwing37
    @Heartwing37 5 місяців тому +184

    I feel like the wolf could’ve saved himself a lot of time and effort by just eating Little Red Riding Hood right off the bat.

    • @rawilliams5881
      @rawilliams5881 5 місяців тому +13

      Then he'd have missed the entree and had only his dessert.

    • @awegner6465
      @awegner6465 5 місяців тому +3

      He couldn't because it saw her as dessert!!!

    • @lightningbug276
      @lightningbug276 5 місяців тому +2

      😂😂😂

    • @burneyvisser
      @burneyvisser 5 місяців тому +1

      Very engaging

    • @burneyvisser
      @burneyvisser 5 місяців тому +4

      Any links between Bear and wolf berserker cults of Northern Europe?

  • @skeaneable
    @skeaneable 5 місяців тому +30

    There was a 2011 movie Red Riding Hood which suggests the wolf was actually a werewolf

    • @hackman669
      @hackman669 5 місяців тому +4

      Yeah

    • @jjkhawaiian
      @jjkhawaiian 5 місяців тому +7

      with Amanda Seyfried and Gary Oldman.

  • @IRSA1
    @IRSA1 5 місяців тому +9

    This was stunningly good, from every point of view. As a matter of fact, I really believe that this is actually too good to be limited to the script to a youTube video. You really should approach a publisher and turn your outstanding work into a proper compilation book for people to enjoy. Be confident !

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  4 місяці тому +2

      Thank you so much! It's a dream of mine to publish a book about the origins of nursery rhymes and fairy tales in the future, and it's one I'm determined to make a reality! 📚✨

  • @jeanettewishall6362
    @jeanettewishall6362 5 місяців тому +5

    I love your voice. And I so appreciate the tales you weave through your research.

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  5 місяців тому +2

      Thank you for your lovely comment! :) So glad you enjoyed it! 🖤

    • @Mallarkey
      @Mallarkey 3 місяці тому

      ​@@The-Resurrectionistsyes, so relieved to hear a real voice. So much better than the all-too-common AI voice-overs we get now that really turn me off; you keep it up. 👍

  • @zeebramannandfriends5158
    @zeebramannandfriends5158 Місяць тому

    That was wonderful. I truly enjoyed listening to not only the origins of LRRH, but also the tales and myths of ancient times. I look forward to other stories in the future.

  • @silva7493
    @silva7493 5 місяців тому +5

    Fascinating!!! I had only heard about the first (Brothers Grimm) version of the story before. I sure was wondering how the "wolves of Paris" story could possibly have come to be. Rabies had completely slipped my mind!!! A likely explanation, indeed.

  • @spocko2181
    @spocko2181 5 місяців тому +70

    That wolf was a heavy sleeper.

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  5 місяців тому +9

      😂

    • @Heartwing37
      @Heartwing37 5 місяців тому +15

      No joke! To sleep through major abdominal surgery???

    • @awegner6465
      @awegner6465 5 місяців тому +10

      And a big eater!!!

    • @Loralanthalas
      @Loralanthalas 5 місяців тому +8

      The whole weird immortal not feeling any pain and then suddenly dying is a theme of these stories that's jist hard to accept. Its like these people lived in cartoons before they figured out how to draw fantasy.

    • @lyamainu
      @lyamainu 5 місяців тому +6

      Sounds like my dad after he eats Thanksgiving Turkey…

  • @blackbird5634
    @blackbird5634 5 місяців тому +9

    Let us NOT forget that BBW (Big Bad Wolf) got to Granny's house BEFORE LRRH (Little Red Riding Hood) because he ran through the woods. He made his own way . He wasn't confined to the well beaten path.
    BBW is a free thinker, a rebel, he's bound to terrify the meek, he's sure to frighten the timid and mild. 😎
    And that ain't his fault!😉

    • @sarahletterman7561
      @sarahletterman7561 2 місяці тому +1

      That’s an interesting perspective, but I don’t think BBW is feared for being a rebel but rather a crafty predator. Just like criminals of today and throughout history they prey on those who follow societal rules and break said rules to gain advantage.

  • @deboralee1623
    @deboralee1623 5 місяців тому +37

    "Stay on the path."
    -- Little Red Riding Hood's mother
    "Stay on the road. Keep clear of the moors."
    -- _An American Werewolf in London_

    • @thoughtfulwatcher
      @thoughtfulwatcher 5 місяців тому +5

      Wasn't David wearing a red coat? I never thought of that, but with the dark humor of the film, it might have been intentional.

  • @angeloflight5148
    @angeloflight5148 5 місяців тому +5

    Found that very interesting and thought provoking, well done 👏

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  5 місяців тому +1

      Thank you! I'm so happy you enjoyed it :) 🖤

    • @angeloflight5148
      @angeloflight5148 5 місяців тому +1

      You are welcome, great to hear the truth coming out. 😀

  • @lyamainu
    @lyamainu 5 місяців тому +18

    Absolutely BRILLIANT, as always. Being a bit of a folklore nerd myself, I always love learning new tidbits and connections!
    I never thought of Red’s questions as a strip tease, I always thought it was her buying time to figure out how to escape. Knowing middle age people, though, the striptease was probably the intent.
    I will say, regarding human’s relationships with wolves, the difference between wolf behavior in the America’s and Europe is fascinating. Natives respected and admired wolves, and never really had issues with them. I wonder if the lack of livestock was part of that? They wouldn’t have any reason to draw closer and closer to human settlements in search of easy prey?

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  4 місяці тому

      Thank you so much! I'm thrilled to hear you enjoyed the video! 😊 Yes, I completely agree with you-it was indeed because of livestock and farming. The presence of farmed animals attracted hungry wolves, and since these animals were people's livelihoods, they couldn't afford to lose them to predators. Unfortunately, this led to the hunting of wolves to extinction in many areas.

  • @katherinelarini8514
    @katherinelarini8514 5 місяців тому +3

    another excellent delve into one of our favorite childhood fairy tales... so, when are you going to do a BOOK on the origins of these tales?.. or better yet, a book on tape so that we can listen to your exquisite renditions...

  • @OldSchool1947
    @OldSchool1947 4 місяці тому +1

    Incredible! Such a depth of research it’s mind boggling! Thank you for doing so much work to present these tales with a historical twist! Greatly appreciated. The tales that accompany each tale will be revisited again and again!

  • @theBorealShepherdess
    @theBorealShepherdess 3 місяці тому +4

    Another aspect to consider - I remember reading years ago that wolf attacks increased as a result of the bubonic plague. There were so many dead, that wolves began to consume the bodies when they came across them, and thus became accustomed to eating human flesh. Gradually going from consuming dead bodies, to nearly dead people . . . to easy targets such as children and the elderly. This was a gradual loss of their natural fear of man, learning to see humans as prey, which they had not done previously.

    • @moonhunter9993
      @moonhunter9993 Місяць тому

      They should have been infected then...

  • @oldsoullikemine23143
    @oldsoullikemine23143 5 місяців тому +2

    Oh wow!!! I love all of these so much! I have watched everyone now, and I just have to say, you do a phenomenal job 👏
    Can't wait for the next one.
    Thank you for your hard work on these!

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  4 місяці тому

      Thank you! Your support makes all the hard work worth it :) 🖤

  • @MrXiphoid1
    @MrXiphoid1 5 місяців тому +5

    I never thought to connect Thrymskvida with Little Red Riding Hood. Very interesting indeed.

  • @davidbrewer9030
    @davidbrewer9030 5 місяців тому +17

    A person I knew did research on werewolves in 17th Century France. There are records of men and women who claimed to be werewolves who defended their villages by going out and hunting down and killing witches and vampires.

    • @hackman669
      @hackman669 5 місяців тому +1

      Poor witches are just misunderstood!😎

    • @icequeen9417
      @icequeen9417 4 місяці тому

      ​@@hackman669Witches originated in the Middle East and Africa before it spread to Europe. It was religious fanatics accused thousands of innocent people of being witches .

    • @Badficwriter
      @Badficwriter 4 місяці тому +2

      Kind of odd because in old days it was thought you became a werewolf by making a deal with a devil or being a witch. Vampires and werewolves were interchangeable in some places (Vrykolakus kind of means both). More like "My devil cult is defending our territory from that OTHER devil cult." 😄

    • @matovicmmilan
      @matovicmmilan 4 місяці тому

      ​@@Badficwriter
      Reminds me of one of many pretexts stated by the Americans when attempting to justify the occupation of Iraq: "We're only there to save the poor people from the malicious influence of the ...Shliits... Shytis... Shaytes... of those darn evil Iranians"😂😂

  • @marilynmcmahon5932
    @marilynmcmahon5932 5 місяців тому +5

    Interesting look at the story; I would like to hear about the 3 bears.

  • @brendasmart553
    @brendasmart553 4 місяці тому +1

    Loved this style of archetypical teachings!! First time viewer, subbed & liked tremendously! In gratitude I look forward to more!

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  4 місяці тому +1

      That's wonderful to hear! Thanks for being a part of the community 🖤:)

  • @ColleenLytle-sq8tx
    @ColleenLytle-sq8tx 5 місяців тому +8

    I love your voice - I think you were supposed to read fairy tales - you have the refined, feminine, bedtime narrator I'd choose to read my stories aloud. You have a gift, thank you.

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  4 місяці тому +1

      Thank you so much! That's incredibly kind and sweet of you to say :) 🖤

  • @bedsidearts
    @bedsidearts 5 місяців тому +2

    This channel is like my secret gem I love so much. Keep going with these amazing historical deep dives.

  • @daniellewillis2767
    @daniellewillis2767 5 місяців тому +8

    You should cover the "salon des fees" (sorry if I butchered the French), which was a literary salon of aristocratic ladies who wrote fairy tale based stories, much to the displeasure of Perrault, who felt their heroines weren't nearly chaste and timid enough....😊

  • @bjornivarant
    @bjornivarant 5 місяців тому +2

    Most surprising to me was the possible connection to the Loki and Trym story which I always found very amusing. The dialog where the wolf comes up with clever answers to Riding Hoods questions resembles and echoes the quick mouthed Loki's responses to the jotne.

  • @JohnGardnerAlhadis
    @JohnGardnerAlhadis 4 місяці тому +44

    We really did wolves dirty, didn't we?

    • @wandaleister2091
      @wandaleister2091 3 місяці тому +2

      And women

    • @JohnGardnerAlhadis
      @JohnGardnerAlhadis 3 місяці тому +2

      @@wandaleister2091 In many respects, we're still doing that...

    • @raycharles704
      @raycharles704 3 місяці тому

      I mean the most feminist forward time in the history and there's always people Still complaining women aren't equal even though men actually have it worse yea sure we can go outside at night by ourselves but I can't sell pictures of my tits to get my kids through college​@@JohnGardnerAlhadis

    • @erikaquatsch2190
      @erikaquatsch2190 3 місяці тому +2

      and cats

    • @oldyeller6518
      @oldyeller6518 3 місяці тому +1

      @@erikaquatsch2190especially cats

  • @elizabeth9134
    @elizabeth9134 3 місяці тому

    That was fantastic, fascinating! I was utterly transfixed! And your voice is just so transporting! I'm going to listen to this again tonight! Thank you!

  • @LordRogerPovey
    @LordRogerPovey 5 місяців тому +6

    Another great and informative video!

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  5 місяців тому +2

      Thank you! :) It means a lot to me that you enjoyed it! 🖤

  • @anzwertree
    @anzwertree 5 місяців тому +1

    Your storytelling is unrivaled, and you are criminally under subscribed. You should at least be over a million.

  • @mikecatcher50
    @mikecatcher50 5 місяців тому +10

    Wonderfully told and Researched, but You missed the 20th century retelling by James ThUrber, in which a beautiful, thoroughly prepared modern young lady quickly determines that the figure in the bed cannot possibly be her Grandmother, takes her .45 caliber pistol from her basket and makes quick work of the wolf. Can't provide the citation this moment, but ( if I remember) it is a New Yorker piece included in "The Thurber Carnival".

    • @thoughtfulwatcher
      @thoughtfulwatcher 5 місяців тому

      I think I read that version in "Of Wolves an Men" by Barry Lopez. Obviously he was quoting it from another source, but I remember correctly-that's one place it popped up.

  • @annikafrolander7903
    @annikafrolander7903 2 місяці тому +1

    Thank you for this great work! Happy to have found your channel!❤

  • @anthonycalbillo9376
    @anthonycalbillo9376 5 місяців тому +9

    Lucky 13 here, knowing that I am going to have a good time!

  • @TRDGE
    @TRDGE 4 місяці тому +1

    I blame you for me here right now in line at a Whataburger drive thru. I listen to these videos on my way home from work but your voice makes me hungry.

  • @basilbaby7678
    @basilbaby7678 5 місяців тому +16

    Recently, a clip went viral, where women were asked if they would rather encounter a bear, or an unknown man in the woods. Most women chose the bear. Their consistent response to the question, has generated a lot of controversy.
    Anyway, the viral thought-experiment made me think of the Red Riding Hood allegory, and so, I was pleased to see your video.

    • @catamoul
      @catamoul 4 місяці тому +1

      Am i the only one who feels sorry for the bear?

    • @basilbaby7678
      @basilbaby7678 4 місяці тому +1

      @@catamoul, better hope the bear has his own “Man Cave”….

    • @jennifersilves4195
      @jennifersilves4195 3 місяці тому +2

      The number of men who wish women harm for choosing the bear is terrifying.

    • @basilbaby7678
      @basilbaby7678 3 місяці тому +2

      @@jennifersilves4195 , their lack of self-awareness, in an ironic confirmation of the female bias is also terrifying.

    • @jennifersilves4195
      @jennifersilves4195 3 місяці тому

      @@basilbaby7678 Not as terrifying as the fact that men are most deadly to women they know, especially when the women are trying to leave.

  • @saralang9677
    @saralang9677 5 місяців тому +2

    Fascinating. Very well researched and beautifully narrated. A delight.

  • @jenniferfinney7533
    @jenniferfinney7533 5 місяців тому +5

    If you have never seen the movie called 'In the Company of Wolves' which was the American title starring Stephan Rhea, I highly suggest you see it if you were at all intrigued by the allure of the beast that dwells in the human heart. A cautionary tale for sure.

    • @cherylT321
      @cherylT321 3 місяці тому

      I remember that film!

  • @joanhoffman3702
    @joanhoffman3702 5 місяців тому +1

    Another excellent video and narration of a dark fairy tale. I am pleased to be one of your Darklings. 💞🌹

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  4 місяці тому

      That's wonderful to hear! Thanks for being a part of the community 🖤:)

  • @DEVILTAZ35
    @DEVILTAZ35 5 місяців тому +3

    Hello, it’s pouring with rain here on a late Friday afternoon here in Oz. The perfect time to be curled up on a recliner with a cup of cocoa engrossed in another of your dark tales of wonder 😁

  • @sandrag3854
    @sandrag3854 5 місяців тому +2

    Thank you for another great video!
    Perrault's hairstyle is indicative of his era.
    👑🇫🇷

  • @deboralee1623
    @deboralee1623 5 місяців тому +4

    the cat going under Grandmother's bed is 👍🏾.
    (2:54-3:00)

  • @Atomicsaurian
    @Atomicsaurian 4 місяці тому +4

    "Little girls, it seems they say
    Never stop along the way.
    Never trust a stranger/friend
    No one knows how it may end.
    Now you're pretty, so be wise
    Wolves may lurk in every guise.
    Now, as then, is simple truth
    Sweetest tongue hath sharpest tooth."

  • @jessicab7059
    @jessicab7059 2 місяці тому

    I had a class in university called French Fairy Tales, and this was one of the fairy tales they covered. You did a thorough job and discussed everything we learned about it in the class. I'm looking forward to watching more of your videos now that I've discovered them, because that was my favorite class in university.

  • @gazza2933
    @gazza2933 5 місяців тому +7

    Was I naive in childhood or what!?
    Incredible! 👍

  • @sebastiangruffydd2765
    @sebastiangruffydd2765 4 місяці тому

    Very well done. This is the most well written and thought-out overview of this legend I have ever run across. There are many omissions in it, but on the whole, it makes its point as to a typical evolution of folklore very well indeed. Congratulations. I would love to see more of these stories as I believe they are most helpful in given a healthy understanding of human behavior. ❤🎉😊

  • @lesliecarr312
    @lesliecarr312 5 місяців тому +5

    The story of Little Red Riding Hood may have actually begun in 771 or 775 B.C., the proposed birth of the twin sons Romulus and Remus, who were rescued and and suckled by a mother (or she-) wolf. Romulus killed his brother in an argument, and the City of Rome was founded in 753 B.C. From that point on, the Romans behaved almost like a pack of wolves, devouring the coasts of the Mediterranean Sea and France, Spain, lower England, and part of Germany. Red was a favorite color of the Roman aristocracy and the army, and to this day, red is displayed in the uniforms army in countless reenactments in film and theater. Eventually, though, Rome lost its power and sovereignty to the wolves in surrounding territories, but it's influence conquered the world in architecture, law, and medicine. Hooray for the wolves of Rome. SPQR

  • @patricedesvarieux2856
    @patricedesvarieux2856 5 місяців тому +2

    I couldn’t wait until you got to Little Red Riding hood (Le Petit Chaperon Rouge). A lot of people don’t know about 1450 Paris and was really happy you discussed it. I didn’t know very much about the werewolf angle. I did like that part. I really didn’t put the Loki and Thor story with Freya together with Little Riding Hood. Mind blown! This is probably my favorite one that you have done. As always, thank you for another great video. ☺☺ Have a wonderful day.

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  5 місяців тому

      Thank you! I'm so happy you enjoyed it and learnt something new :) Your continued support means everything to me, really appreciate you being here! 🖤

    • @patricedesvarieux2856
      @patricedesvarieux2856 5 місяців тому

      @@The-Resurrectionists Delighted!

    • @donnadees1971
      @donnadees1971 5 місяців тому

      For sure it is so good to have this information. As for what was best…hard to figure.

    • @Mimi-ln1pm
      @Mimi-ln1pm 5 місяців тому

      First school i went was located in rue de la breche au loups in Paris 12 arrondissement,

  • @emimon2351
    @emimon2351 4 місяці тому +3

    Perrault's warning is even more relevant today than his own era, as if we didn't have twisted predators today. Also I was told her hood is red because she's a girl who's had her menstruations before. In other words, who's old enough to have children. As for the myth of the big bad wolf, or werewolf, it comes from the dogman found in the central mountainous region of Gevaudan in France in the 18th century. The wolf also symbolizes the predator.

  • @evelee3409
    @evelee3409 5 місяців тому +2

    Thank you. I've shared this to my Facebook hoping others can enjoy your amazing channel. Your narrative is mesmerizing. Well done. Rabies seems to be one answer to the mysteries of supernatural possession. ❤

    • @The-Resurrectionists
      @The-Resurrectionists  4 місяці тому

      Thank you so much for your support 🖤It means a lot to me that you enjoyed it! :)

  • @grandadmiralahab9085
    @grandadmiralahab9085 5 місяців тому +3

    Fun FACT... A hungry wolf encountering a lone, unarmed person in the woods IS NOT a timid creature. Multiple wolves, otherwise know as a "pack" that encounter several unarmed people in the woods are even further from timid.
    The exact moment a wolf thinks you are easy prey, you become prey. Your views on how kind and gentle wolves are will not help you.
    Welcome to the real world.

  • @whiterabbit-wo7hw
    @whiterabbit-wo7hw 5 місяців тому +1

    Madame,
    These tells are indeed chilling and macabre. But, interesting at the same time.
    I have always been curious about the times of which you speak and the frantic ideas of the European people.
    Not to mention our own witch hunt in Salem, Massachusetts, in the late 1600s.
    You have once again out done yourself in telling of this classic tell.
    I will go with the second tell.
    There is always some dark secret that lies beneath a childhood tell or rhyme.
    Thank you for these amazing tells in their true darkness.

  • @DaveHeard-f5x
    @DaveHeard-f5x 5 місяців тому +5

    All old stories have an element of truth, they were meant to be oral traditions passed down for all ages as cautionary teaching tales.

  • @kslinaz5668
    @kslinaz5668 3 місяці тому

    Always enjoy these twists on tales we all grew up hearing. Keep up the fantastic work. ❤

  • @CriticalMass-yu1ec
    @CriticalMass-yu1ec 5 місяців тому +3

    Thanks for sharing 🖤

  • @skylx0812
    @skylx0812 5 місяців тому +13

    Another Greek tale has a father murder his son, prepare a feast out of him then invites the gods to a diner. When they realize they're consuming human flesh the gods punish the man by turning him into a half man, half wolf creature.
    Its interesting that the first Hollywood wolfman film centers on the subject of daddy issues. That the one version of the Red Riding Hood story has the wolf trick the girl into eating a bit of her grandmother is a little similar to the Greek story.