The Green Children of Woolpit: 12th Century Legend of Visitors From Another World

The Children of Woolpit is an account dating back to the 12th century, which tells of two children that appeared on the edge of a field in the village of Woolpit in England. The young girl and boy are said to have had green-hued skin and to have spoken an unknown language.
The Green Children of Woolpit: 12th Century Legend of Visitors From Another World
A village sign in Woolpit, England, depicting the two green children of the 12th century legend. Wikimedia Commons
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The Children of Woolpit is an account dating back to the 12th century, which tells of two children that appeared on the edge of a field in the village of Woolpit in England. The young girl and boy are said to have had green-hued skin and to have spoken an unknown language.

The children became sick and the boy died, but the girl recovered and over the years came to learn English. She later relayed the story of their origins, saying they came from a place called St. Martin’s Land, which existed in an atmosphere of permanent twilight, and where the people lived underground. While some view the story as a folk tale that that describes an imaginary encounter with inhabitants of another world beneath our feet or even an extraterrestrial world, others accept it as a real, but somewhat altered account of a historical event that merits further investigation.

 

 

The account is set in the village of Woolpit located in Suffolk, East Anglia. In the Middle Ages, it lay within the most agriculturally productive and densely populated area of rural England. The village belonged to the rich and powerful Abbey of Bury St. Edmunds. 

The ruins of the Abbey of Bury St. Edmunds (<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bury_St_Edmunds_Abbey#mediaviewer/File:Abbey_Ruins_WM.jpg" target="_blank">Wikimedia Commons</a>)
The ruins of the Abbey of Bury St. Edmunds Wikimedia Commons