History Revealed

Tails from the Deep

What image comes to mind when you hear the word ‘mermaid’? For many people, it will be Ariel, the redheaded Disney princess who trades her tail for legs and her voice for a chance to win herself a life on land. For others, the word will conjure the wan heroine of Hans Christian Andersen’s original fairytale who, unlike her Disney counterpart, is rejected by her prince and dissolves into sea foam, losing the chance to gain an immortal soul.

It’s largely thanks to the popularity of Andersen’s fairytale that mermaids have become standardised in the West over the past two centuries. Like Ariel, they are depicted as hybrid creatures, with the torso and head of a beautiful woman and the tail of a fish. They often carry a mirror and a comb, and have the speech and personality of a human woman. However, the history of the mermaid myth, and its many manifestations

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from History Revealed

History Revealed1 min read
Photo Finish
Few buildings in the world are as distinctive – or have a history as troubled – as Barcelona’s Sagrada Família. Nearly a century after its primary architect, Antoni Gaudí, died in 1926, the Basílica i Temple Expiatori de la Sagrada Família is only no
History Revealed2 min read
1675 St Paul's Is Started
INFOGRAPHIC: TIDY DESIGNS, ALAMY X1, GETTY X1 AD 604 The first cathedral on the site is built by Mellitus, a Roman. AD 675 A fire devastates the first building, but it is quickly rebuilt. AD 962 Viking invaders destroy the second cathedral. A replace
History Revealed1 min read
Did You Know?
Three-quarters of British women who entered the armed forces during World War I were volunteers. By comparison, volunteers made up less than one-third of the men who served in the armed forces during the conflict. Malnourished North Vietnamese soldie

Related