are morals lessons that are taught in fables
Who wrote famous fables with morals at the end of each one
The Panchatantra teach lessons/morals, just as Aesop's fables.
It installs morals and values in them.
Aesop has made over 600 fables and most of his fables were made up of animals with charictoristics of humans. The fables had morals to them. (such as don't try the imposible). He was a slave in Greece lived there and died at the age of 60.
Foxy Fables ended in 1988.
Perhaps not. The Greeks were no strangers to rhetorical devices and such subtle references would not be invisible to them. However you have asked a question where the answer is so lost to a very obscure past it is impossible to verify.
Kefu Ma has written: 'Dui niu tan qin' -- subject(s): Chinese Fables, Fables, Fables, Chinese 'He Shi bi' -- subject(s): Chinese Fables, Fables, Fables, Chinese
The main characteristic of a fable is the message or moral that the fable should show. Some are more obvious than others. Fables should also be interesting, so that you don't lose the readers.
Russell Edson Fables has written: 'What a man can see'
Aesop's fables were written around 300 B. C.
Andrew Calder has written: 'The Fables of La Fontaine' -- subject(s): Fables, French Fables, History and criticism
Yes, fables typically end with a moral or message that is meant to teach a lesson or provide insight into human behavior. These morals are often conveyed through the actions and consequences experienced by the characters in the fable.