The Story About the Green Children of Woolpit According to the Medieval Chronicles of William of Newburgh and Ralph of Coggeshall

Michał Madej

Abstract


The Augustinian canon, William of Newburgh, who lived in the 12th century, in his chronicle Historia rerum Anglicarum described an unusual event how in the English village of Woolpit two children appeared that had green skin and spoke an unknown language. This same event was also reported by his contemporary – the Cistercian abbot, Ralph of Coggeshall, in the Chronicon Anglicanum. The main purpose of this paper is a comparative analysis of both versions of the story about the green children and its contextual interpretation. The conducted research indicates that despite relatively small differences between both versions, the story probably fulfilled a different function in the two chronicles. One can put forward a hypothesis in reference to Historia rerum Anglicarum that the fragment about the children from Woolpit is a medium of William of Newburgh’s inner anxiety and trauma – a man who considered himself an Englishman but lived in a Anglo-Norman society. In the case of the second chronicle this story could have had a didactic function and Ralph of Coggeshall probably wanted to draw the attention of his listeners towards what is different, unknown.


Keywords


green children of Woolpit; medieval England; Ralph of Coggeshall; Wilhelm of Newburgh

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References


Printed sources

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DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.17951/rh.2020.49.117-132
Date of publication: 2020-12-21 13:05:25
Date of submission: 2018-07-29 19:42:50


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