The legend of the green children of Woolpit concerns two children of unusual skin
colour who reportedly appeared in the village of Woolpit in Suffolk, England,
sometime in the 12th century, perhaps during the reign of King Stephen.
The children, brother and sister, were of generally normal appearance except
for the green colour of their skin. They spoke in an unknown language, and the
only food they would eat was beans. Eventually they learned to eat other food
and lost their green pallor, but the boy was sickly and died soon after he and
his sister were baptised. The girl adjusted to her new life, but she was
considered to be "rather loose and wanton in her conduct’’. After she learned to speak English,
the girl explained that she and her brother had come from St Martin's Land, an
underground world inhabited by green people.
The only near-contemporary
accounts are contained in William of Newburgh's Historia
rerum Anglicarum and Ralph of Coggeshall's Chronicum
Anglicanum, written in about 1189 and 1220 respectively. Between then and
their rediscovery in the mid-19th century, the green children seem to surface
only in a passing mention in William
Camden's Britannia in 1586, and in Bishop Francis Godwin's fantastical The
Man in the Moone, in both of which William of Newburgh's
account is cited.
Two approaches have dominated
explanations of the story of the green children: that it is a folk tale
describing an imaginary encounter with the inhabitants of another world,
perhaps one beneath our feet or even extraterrestrial, or it is a garbled
account of a historical event. The story was praised as an ideal fantasy by the
English anarchist poet and critic Herbert
Read in his English
Prose Style, published in 1931. It provided the inspiration for his only
novel, The Green Child, written in 1934.
Sources
The village of
Woolpit is in the county of Suffolk, East Anglia, about 7 miles (11 km) east of the
town of Bury St Edmunds. During the middle Ages it belonged to the Abbey of Bury St Edmunds, and was part of one of the most densely populated areas
in rural England. Two writers, Ralph of Coggeshall (died c. 1226) and William of Newburgh
(c. 1136–1198), reported on the
sudden and unexplained arrival in the village of two green children during one
summer in the 12th century. Ralph was the abbot of a Cistercian monastery at Coggeshall, about 26 miles (42 km)
south of Woolpit. William was a canon at the Augustinian Newburgh
Priory, far to the north in Yorkshire. William states that the account given in his Historia rerum Anglicarum (c. 1189) is based on
"reports from a number of trustworthy sources"; Ralph's account in his Chronicum Anglicanum, written
some time during the 1220s, incorporates information from Sir Richard de Calne
of Wykes,[a] who
reportedly gave the green children refuge in his manor, 6 miles (9.7 km)
to the north of Woolpit. The accounts given by the two authors differ in some
details.
Story
One day at harvest time,
according to William of Newburgh during the reign of King Stephen (1135–1154), the villagers of Woolpit discovered
two children, a brother and sister, beside one of the wolf pits that gave
the village its name. Their skin
was green, they spoke an unknown language, and their clothing was unfamiliar.
Ralph reports that the children were taken to the home of Richard de Calne.
Ralph and William agree that the pair refused all food for several days until
they came across some raw beans, which they consumed eagerly. The children
gradually adapted to normal food and in time lost their green colour. The boy,
who appeared to be the younger of the two, became sickly and died shortly after
he and his sister were baptised.
After learning to speak
English, the children – Ralph says just the surviving girl –
explained that they came from a land where the sun never shone and the light
was like twilight. William says the children called their home St Martin's
Land; Ralph adds that everything there was green. According to William, the
children were unable to account for their arrival in Woolpit; they had been
herding their father's cattle when they heard a loud noise (according to William,
the bells of Bury St Edmunds) and suddenly found themselves by the wolf pit
where they were found. Ralph says that they had become lost when they followed
the cattle into a cave and, after being guided by the sound of bells, eventually
emerged into our land
According to Ralph, the girl was
employed for many years as a servant in Richard de Calne's household, where she
was considered to be "very wanton and impudent". William says that
she eventually married a man from King's Lynn, about 40 miles (64 km) from Woolpit, where she was
still living shortly before he wrote. Based on his research into Richard de
Calne's family history, the astronomer and writer Duncan Lunan has concluded that the girl was given the name
"Agnes" and that she married a royal official named Richard Barre.
Historical explanations
Many Flemish immigrants
arrived in eastern England during the 12th century, and they were persecuted
after Henry II became king in 1154; a large number of them were killed
near Bury St Edmunds in 1173 at the Battle of Fornham fought between Henry II and Robert de Beaumont, 3rd Earl of
Leicester. Paul Harris has suggested that the green
children's Flemish parents perished during a period of civil strife and that
the children may have come from the village of Fornham St Martin, slightly to the
north of Bury St Edmunds, where a settlement of Flemish fullers existed at that time. They may have fled and ultimately
wandered to Woolpit. Disoriented, bewildered, and dressed in unfamiliar Flemish
clothes, the children would have presented a very strange spectacle to the
Woolpit villagers. The
children's colour could be explained by green
sickness, the result of a dietary deficiency. Brian Haughton considers Harris's
explanation to be plausible, and the one most widely accepted. Although not without its difficulties.
For instance, he suggests it is unlikely that an educated local man like
Richard de Calne would not have recognised the language spoken by the children
as being Flemish. Historian Derek Brewer's explanation is even more
prosaic:
The likely core of the matter
is that these very small children, herding or following flocks, strayed from
their forest village, spoke little, and (in modern terms) did not know their
own home address. They were probably suffering from chlorosis, a deficiency
disease which gives the skin a greenish tint, hence the term "green
sickness". With a better diet it disappears.
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