The British Isles are a treasure chest of folklore and traditional tales. Successive waves of immigrants – the Celts, Anglo-Saxons, Vikings and Normans – brought to Britain their culture and their stories.

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The great folktale collectors of the 19th century would ask older people from different social classes about the tales, songs and customs they remembered from their youth. These oral tales were often scrappy and poorly remembered, but some were vivid and dramatically told. The collectors would write them down, often regularising the story structure, and moralising or sentimentalising them to appeal to Victorian tastes. Once collected, the tales were published in stout three-volume sets, and tended – until recently – to be locked away in libraries.

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