Perrault was a French author so he set many of the tales in the French court of the past. The French are almost as chauvinistic as the Spanish. In the movie Versions, Anastasia"s rendezvous point ( in l997 film) is Paris, nor Berlin. like to have the UFO land in the back yard, or at least the local park. C'est la Vie Francaise!
Fairy tales
Charles Perrault wrote popular fairy tales such as "Cinderella," "Sleeping Beauty," "Little Red Riding Hood," and "Puss in Boots." His collection of stories, titled "Tales of Mother Goose," helped to popularize these fairy tales in the Western world.
Charles Perrault was inspired by oral folktales that were popular in 17th-century France. He was also influenced by Italian variations of the story, such as "The False Grandmother." Perrault's version was included in his collection of fairy tales, which aimed to entertain and educate children.
Fairy Tales
The Grimm Brothers were a set of brothers who are famous for the Fairy Tales they published. The fairy tales that most people are most familiar with were European fairy tales. It is important to note the Brothers Grimm did not write the fairy tales they published they just collected them from many parts the world.
The brothers Grimm didn't actually write fairy tales, they merely complied existing tales into an anthology.
Hans christian andersen
The Grimm Brothers were a set of brothers who are famous for the Fairy Tales they published. The fairy tales that most people are most familiar with were European fairy tales. It is important to note the Brothers Grimm did not write the fairy tales they published they just collected them from many parts the world.
The brothers Grimm did not write Cinderella, but rather recorded the story that had been shared through oral tradition. They recorded it in 1812 in Children's and Household Tales. There are over 700 Cinderella stories around the world, and the earliest one on record is known as Yeh-Shen, from China thousands of years ago. However, the traditional version of the story was published by Charles Perrault, in France, in the book Tales and Stories of the Past with Morals: Tales of Mother Goose in 1697. He is also credited with creating the genre of fairy tales as a whole.
As far as i can find, there are 200 fairytales and 10 children's legends.
Brothers Grimm (i think)
They have different levels, so yes and no.