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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › FableFable - Wikipedia

    In ancient Greek and Roman education, the fable was the first of the progymnasmata —training exercises in prose composition and public speaking—wherein students would be asked to learn fables, expand upon them, invent their own, and finally use them as persuasive examples in longer forensic or deliberative speeches.

  3. Sep 7, 2024 · His first collection of Fables in 1668 followed the Aesopian pattern, but his later ones, accumulated during the next 25 years, satirized the court and its bureaucrats, the church, the rising bourgeoisie—indeed, the whole human scene.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Mar 8, 2014 · Written by a former Greek slave, in the late to mid-6th century BCE, Aesop's Fables are the world's best known collection of morality tales. The fables, numbering 725, were originally told from person-to-person as much for entertainment purposes but largely as a means for relaying or teaching a moral or lesson.

  5. Folklore scholars think that fables probably originated among the Semitic peoples of the Middle East. The tales spread to India and then west to Greece. Many fables go back to an ancient Sanskrit collection from India called Pancatantra (“Five Chapters”). These stories were told and retold through many generations.

  6. Jan 13, 2024 · Ancient Beginnings. The roots of fables can be traced back to ancient civilizations such as Egypt, Greece, and India. One of the most famous figures associated with fables is Aesop, a Greek storyteller who lived around 600 BCE.

  7. Aesop, the supposed author of a collection of Greek fables, almost certainly a legendary figure. The probability is that Aesop was no more than a name invented to provide an author for fables centering on beasts, so that ‘a story of Aesop’ became synonymous with ‘fable.’

  8. Aesop's Fables, originating in ancient Greece around the 6th century BCE, stand as a cornerstone of global storytelling and moral education. Compiled by the legendary figure Aesop, these concise tales feature anthropomorphized animals navigating human-like dilemmas, delivering profound moral lessons in simple, relatable narratives.

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