Aestole
Aesop
Aesop for one, but I'm sure there were many more.
Aesop did not write any books himself. He was a Greek fabulist credited with creating a collection of fables, which were later compiled and written down by others. The collection is known as "Aesop's Fables."
Greek writers taught people important lessons about life by writing myths and fables to explain the experiences and many famous poets and sometimes commoners wrote theses.
Greek gods and goddesses are all myths, fables, and epics. There are so many stories about these entities that the stories themselves can be all of those things.
Two Fables has 64 pages.
Well, actually they "belong" to the world, they have been translated from the original Greek to Latin and now into most languages of the world including French, English, Russian, Japanese, Spanish, German and so many more. Since they are attributed to Aesop, a Greek slave and storyteller from the 6th Century BC, you could suppose that Greece could claim the fables of Aesop "belong" to it, but the best answer is probably still that they belong to the world.
Aesop wrote many fables that are okay for children to read. Collections of his fables can be bought quite cheaply online.
The complete subject is "many fables." Fables are fictional stories that often involve animals or inanimate objects that teach a moral lesson or a practical truth.
You can find 500-word fables in books of fables, online websites that specialize in fables or short stories, and in collections of short stories that feature fables as part of their content. Many literature websites and platforms also offer fables in various lengths, including 500 words.
The Dog And His Reflection was credited to Aesop. He was a Greek fabulist credited with a collection of stories known as Aesop's Fables. There have been several changes made over the years: The Dog and the Bone; The Greedy Dog Story, are two examples, with changes made to the original Aesop text. The fable has also been made into cartoons. Whichever version you read or view, the moral of the story is: Do not be greedy, or Greed is a curse. Obviously, with so many different versions, there are also many authors credited with each version.
The name of the fox in Aesop's fables is often simply referred to as "the fox." The fox is a common character in many of Aesop's fables and is often depicted as cunning and clever.