
audiobook
Preface.
Contents.
Bibliography.
Filipino Popular Tales. - Hero Tales and Drolls.
“Cay Calabasa: The Life of a Shepherdess born in a town, who became the Wife of a King because of a Pumpkin.”
The Story of Rodolfo.
“Edmundo.”
Story of the Four Brahman Brothers who Resuscitated the Lion.
The Goldsmith, the Carpenter, the Tailor, and the Hermit who Quarrelled about a Wooden Woman.
Who Invented Woman?
This volume gathers a dozen—or more—traditional stories that were told by villagers across the Philippine archipelago between 1908 and 1914. Collected in the native languages and rendered into clear English, each tale is accompanied by notes that identify its teller, hometown, and the region it comes from. The collection showcases the rich mix of influences—indigenous, Chinese, Indian, Spanish, and American—that shape Filipino imagination.
Readers will encounter familiar motifs—trickster heroes, enchanted animals, and moral riddles—reimagined within tropical villages and rice‑field landscapes. The editor’s careful commentary points out which elements seem native to the islands and which may have been borrowed from distant cultures, inviting listeners to trace the pathways of storytelling across centuries. Whether you are new to folklore or a seasoned lover of world myths, these narratives offer a vivid glimpse into a culture standing at the crossroads of East and West.
Language
en
Duration
~19 hours (1111K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Jeroen Hellingman
Release date
2005-06-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

by Zitkala-Sa

by William Elliot Griffis

by Angelo De Gubernatis

by William Henry Frost

by Joel Chandler Harris

by James S. (James Seguin) De Benneville

by E. T. A. (Ernst Theodor Amadeus) Hoffmann

by Daniel G. (Daniel Garrison) Brinton