The Princess Who Would be a Prince | |
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Folk tale | |
Name | The Princess Who Would be a Prince |
Also known as | Iliane of the Golden Tresses; Helena Goldengarland; The Girl Who Pretended to be a Boy |
Aarne–Thompson grouping | ATU 514, "The Shift of Sex" |
Mythology | Romanian |
Country | Romania |
Ileana Simziana or Ileana Sînziana (also translated to English as The Princess Who Would be a Prince or Iliane of the Golden Tresses[1][2] and Helena Goldengarland[3]) is a Romanian fairy tale collected and written down by Petre Ispirescu between 1872 and 1886.[1] It tells the story of an unnamed youngest daughter of an emperor, who dresses up as a man, goes to serve another emperor and rescues the titular princess Ileana. During a quest of obtaining the Holy Water she is hit by a curse of a monk that causes her to transform into a man - Făt-Frumos (Prince Charming figure), who marries Ileana in the happy ending.