In
the 12th century. a strange pair of children appeared in the village of
Woolpit, England. They were unaccompanied, spoke a language no one in
the village knew, and strangest of all, they were green.
The
green children’s story began when they emerged from one of the
wolf-trapping pits for which the town is named. The pits—designed to
lure and ensnare dangerous wolves—were likely at least twice as tall as
the children and a couple hundred square feet in area. A reaper
discovered the pair and took them into town, where Sir Richard de Calne
gave them a home. In time, they lost their iridescent pallor and
diversified their diets, though the boy became increasingly depressed
and sickly before succumbing to illness and dying.
The
girl eventually learned English and told her caretakers that the boy
was her brother. She related the tale of how they wandered into the pit,
but could not explain where they came from. The story survives thanks
to two different accounts, although neither writer actually met the
children. We don’t know where the children originated, or what made them
appear to be green, but
mental_floss offers several possible explanations. None involve aliens from another planet.
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