PEOPLE KNOWN FOR: fable

  • arts, visual
  • education
  • entertainment
  • history and society
  • literature
  • philosophy and religion
  • sciences
  • sports and recreation
  • technology
People known for
fable
  • arts, visual
  • education
  • entertainment
  • history and society
  • literature
  • philosophy and religion
  • sciences
  • sports and recreation
  • technology
35 Biographies
Filter By:
Jean de La Fontaine, oil painting by François De Troy; in the Bibliothèque Publique et Universitaire, Geneva
French poet
Jean de La Fontaine was a poet whose Fables rank among the greatest masterpieces of French literature. La Fontaine was born in the Champagne region into a bourgeois family. There, in 1647, he married an...
Oscar Wilde
Irish author
Oscar Wilde was an Irish wit, poet, and dramatist whose reputation rests on his only novel, The Picture of Dorian Gray (1891), and on his comic masterpieces Lady Windermere’s Fan (1892) and The Importance...
Andersen, Hans Christian
Danish author
Hans Christian Andersen was a Danish master of the literary fairy tale whose stories achieved wide renown. He is also the author of plays, novels, poems, travel books, and several autobiographies. While...
Beerbohm, Sir Max
British humorist
Max Beerbohm was an English caricaturist, writer, dandy, and wit whose sophisticated drawings and parodies were unique in capturing, usually without malice, whatever was pretentious, affected, or absurd...
Ignacy Krasicki, detail of an oil painting by Per Krafft, 1767; in the National Museum of Warsaw.
Polish poet
Ignacy Krasicki was a major Polish poet, satirist, and prose writer of the Enlightenment. Born to an aristocratic but impoverished family, Krasicki was educated at the Warsaw Catholic Seminary and became...
akutagawa ryunosuke
Japanese author
Akutagawa Ryūnosuke was a prolific Japanese writer known especially for his stories based on events in the Japanese past and for his stylistic virtuosity. As a boy Akutagawa was sickly and hypersensitive,...
Gellert, lithograph
German writer
Christian Fürchtegott Gellert was a poet and novelist, a prominent representative of the German Enlightenment whose works were, for a time, second in popularity only to the Bible. The son of a pastor,...
Scottish author
Robert Henryson was a Scottish poet, the finest of early fabulists in Britain. He is described on some early title pages as the schoolmaster of Dunfermline—probably at the Benedictine abbey school—and...
Krylov, Ivan Andreyevich
Russian author
Ivan Andreyevich Krylov was a Russian writer of innocent-sounding fables that satirized contemporary social types in the guise of beasts. His command of colloquial idiom brought a note of realism to Russian...
János Mailáth, lithograph by J. Ruprecht.
Hungarian author
János, Count Mailáth was a Hungarian writer and historian, who interpreted Magyar culture to the Germans and who wrote a sympathetic account of the Habsburg monarchy. Mailáth, the son of Count Jozsef Mailáth,...
German writer, composer, and painter
E.T.A. Hoffmann was a German writer, composer, and painter known for his stories in which supernatural and sinister characters move in and out of men’s lives, ironically revealing tragic or grotesque sides...
Roman fabulist
Phaedrus was a Roman fabulist, the first writer to Latinize whole books of fables, producing free versions in iambic metre of Greek prose fables then circulating under the name of Aesop. A slave by birth,...
Chamisso, detail of an engraving by X. Steifensand after a drawing by D. Weiss
German-language lyricist
Adelbert von Chamisso was a German-language lyricist best remembered for the Faust-like fairy tale Peter Schlemihls wundersame Geschichte (1814; Peter Schlemihl’s Remarkable Story). When he was nine, Chamisso’s...
Ade, George
American playwright
George Ade was an American playwright and humorist whose Fables in Slang summarized the kind of wisdom accumulated by the country boy in the city. Graduated from Purdue University, Ade was on the staff...
English librarian
Richard Garnett was an English writer, librarian, and the head of the Garnett family, which exerted a formative influence on the development of modern British writing. From the age of 15 until his retirement...
Persian poet
Rūdakī was the first poet of note to compose poems in the “New Persian,” written in Arabic alphabet, widely regarded as the father of Persian poetry. A talented singer and instrumentalist, Rūdakī served...
Spanish poet
Félix María Samaniego was a poet whose books of fables for schoolchildren have a grace and simplicity that has won them a place as the first poems that Spanish children learn to recite in school. Born...
Italian author
Giambattista Basile was a Neapolitan soldier, public official, poet, and short-story writer whose Lo cunto de li cunti, 50 zestful tales written in Neapolitan, was one of the earliest such collections...
Drachmann
Danish author
Holger Henrik Herholdt Drachmann was a writer most famous for his lyrical poetry, which placed him in the front rank of late 19th-century Danish poets. The son of a physician, Drachmann studied painting...
Perrault, Charles
French author
Charles Perrault was a French poet, prose writer, and storyteller, a leading member of the Académie Française, who played a prominent part in a literary controversy known as the quarrel of the Ancients...
Clemens Brentano, detail of an etching by Ludwig Grimm, 1837
German author
Clemens Brentano was a poet, novelist, and dramatist, one of the founders of the Heidelberg Romantic school, the second phase of German Romanticism, which emphasized German folklore and history. Brentano’s...
Fouqué
German writer
Friedrich Heinrich Karl de la Motte, Baron Fouqué was a German novelist and playwright remembered chiefly as the author of the popular fairy tale Undine (1811). Fouqué was a descendant of French aristocrats,...
British scholar
Andrew Lang was a Scottish scholar and man of letters noted for his collections of fairy tales and translations of Homer. Educated at St. Andrews University and at Balliol College, Oxford, he held an open...
Countess d'Aulnoy, detail of an engraving by Basan after a painting by Élisabeth Chéron
French author
Marie-Catherine Le Jumel de Barneville, countess d’Aulnoy was a writer of fairy tales and of novels of court intrigue, whose personal intrigues were commensurate with those described in her books. Shortly...
James Stephens, 1925
Irish writer
James Stephens was an Irish poet and storyteller whose pantheistic philosophy is revealed in his fairy tales set in the Dublin slums of his childhood and in his compassionate poems about animals. Stephens...
Dutch author and physician
Frederik Willem van Eeden was a Dutch writer and physician whose works reflect his lifelong search for a social and ethical philosophy. Eeden studied medicine at Amsterdam and, with writers Willem Kloos...
Jonas Lie, engraving
Norwegian author
Jonas Lie was a novelist whose goal was to reflect in his writings the nature, the folk life, and the social spirit of his native Norway. He is considered one of “the four great ones” of 19th-century Norwegian...
American writer and illustrator
Howard Pyle was an American illustrator, painter, and author, best known for the children’s books that he wrote and illustrated. Pyle studied at the Art Students’ League, New York City, and first attracted...
American author
L. Frank Baum was an American writer known for his series of books for children about the imaginary land of Oz. Baum began his career as a journalist, initially in Aberdeen, South Dakota, and then in Chicago....
British author
Angela Carter was a British author who reshaped motifs from mythology, legends, and fairy tales in her books, lending them a ghastly humour and eroticism. Carter rejected an Oxford education to work as...
Hauff, engraving by Johann Wolfle
German writer
Wilhelm Hauff was a German poet and novelist best known for his fairy tales. Educated at the University of Tübingen, Hauff worked as a tutor and in 1827 became editor of J.F. Cotta’s newspaper Morgenblatt....
German writer
Johann Karl August Musäus was a German satirist and writer of fairy tales, remembered for his graceful and delicately ironical versions of popular folktales. Musäus studied theology at Jena but turned...
Italian writer
Gianfrancesco Straparola was an Italian author of one of the earliest and most important collections of traditional tales. Straparola’s Piacevoli notti (1550–53; The Nights of Straparola) contains 75 novellas...
George Macdonald, engraving
British author
George Macdonald was a novelist of Scottish life, poet, and writer of Christian allegories of man’s pilgrimage back to God. However, he is remembered chiefly for his allegorical fairy stories, which have...
English scholar
Joseph Jacobs was an Australian-born English folklore scholar, one of the most popular 19th-century adapters of children’s fairy tales. He was also a historian of pre-expulsion English Jewry (The Jews...