During harvest time in 12th-century Suffolk, villagers found two children huddled by a wolf pit. They spoke an unknown language, wore strange garments, and their skin was a vivid, unmistakable green. And this was recorded not as fiction, but as historical fact by serious chroniclers.
This episode explores the bizarre story of the Green Children of Woolpit, from their refusal to eat anything but raw beans to the surviving girl's tale of a sunless twilight land. It weighs competing theories spanning folklore, malnutrition, war refugees, and cultural allegory to ask what really happened.
Why independent chroniclers William of Newburgh and Ralph of Coggeshall lent the account unusual credibility
The children's survival on raw broad beans and the folklore linking beans to the food of the dead
The girl's account of St. Martin's Land, a green twilight realm reached through a cave
Paul Harris's theory of Flemish refugee orphans and green sickness, or chlorosis, from malnutrition
Jeffrey Jerome Cohen's reading of the story as an allegory for colonization and forced assimilation
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