Difference between revisions of "The Pied Piper of Hamelin"

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The '''Pied Piper of Hamelin''' was an alias used by [[Puck]], "once upon a time".  ''([[Acquisitions|"Acquisitions"]])''
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The '''Pied Piper of Hamelin''' is a legend from the town of Hamelin, Germany. According to [[Owen Burnett]], the title character was, in fact, an alias of the [[Puck]], "once upon a time".  ''([[Acquisitions|"Acquisitions"]])''
  
 
==Real World Background==
 
==Real World Background==
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[[Category:Canon characters]]
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[[Category:Media]]
[[Category:Children of Oberon]]
 
 
[[Category:Real world characters]]
 
[[Category:Real world characters]]

Revision as of 06:56, 2 August 2024

The Pied Piper of Hamelin is a legend from the town of Hamelin, Germany. According to Owen Burnett, the title character was, in fact, an alias of the Puck, "once upon a time". ("Acquisitions")

Real World Background

Pied Piper of Hamelin – credit: National Galleries of Scotland.

According to legend, the Pied Piper came to the German town of Hamelin when it was overrun by rats, and offered to deal with the rats, in return for a fee. After the townspeople agreed, he used a magic pipe to lead the rats to the nearby river Weser, where they drowned. The townspeople refused to pay him afterwards, however; the Piper retaliated by using his magic pipe to lead all the children out of Hamelin and into a cave in the side of a local hill called Koppelberg, never to be seen again (except for a lame boy who failed to reach the entrance to the cave before it closed).

The tale goes back to the late Middle Ages. The earliest surviving version (written in 1384) only says that the Piper lured the children away (providing a specific date, June 26, 1284, and stating that the children numbered 130); the rats and the townspeople cheating the Pied Piper of his pay were added later, during the sixteenth century. (The lame boy was added still later, in the seventeenth century.) Some historians have speculated that the legend was based on a migration of young people from Hamelin to other parts of Germany, apparently recruited for colonization. The most familiar version of the story is Robert Browning's poem "The Pied Piper of Hamelin".

Hamelin's Hochzeitshaus, constructed in the 17th Century, features the story of the Pied Piper three times a day, every afternoon. Bronze doors open above the first floor showcasing figures of the Pied Piper and the rats as the building's glockenspiel and carillon of bells play.

See Also