The Son of the Ogress

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
(Redirected from
The Son of the Ogress (Kabylian folk tale)
)

Der Sohn der Teriel (French: Le Fils de l'Ogresse; English: The Son of the Ogress) is a Berber folktale,[1] first collected in Kabylia in German by ethnologist Leo Frobenius and published in 1922.

Scholars relate the tale to the international theme of the Animal as Bridegroom or The Search for the Lost Husband, and recognize similarities to the Graeco-Roman myth of Cupid and Psyche.

Summary

A father is set to leave on voyage, but asks his four daughters what presents he can give them when he returns. The three elders say they want beautiful dresses, while the youngest asks for a peculiar present: a pigeon that dances alone in a meadow.

The father finds the dresses in the trip, but still haven't found the pigeon, nor has found anyone who could give him information about it. After he reaches the border of a forest and sees the little bird. He tries to jump onto it to capture it, but a mysterious booming voice orders him to stop his action. The father tries to explain that the bird is a gift for his daughter, and even offers to buy it, but the voice - that belongs to a person named Asphor'ulehóa, the son of a teriel - refuses. Asphor'ulehóa[a] relents and lets the man take the bird, and makes him promise to give him his youngest daughter for wife. The man knows that a teriel is a flesh-eater creature and fear for his daughter's life, but Asphor'ulehóa assures no harm shall be done to her, and tells him that he will come to their house in the shape of a camel.

The man returns and gives them the presents. When he is on his deathbed, he tells them that a camel shall appear. Some time later, the camel appears at their door. Every one of the four daughters climbs onto it, but it does not move. Only after the fourth daughter climbs onto it with the pigeon does the animal move and takes the girl to another place, already furnished. The girl notices someone comes to her bedroom every night and says she must not light any lamp.

Some time later, her sisters visit her, and she tells them she has lived a comfortable life, but she has never seen the true face of Asphor'ulehóa. Her sisters convince her to spy on him when he comes at night. That night, she lights a candle and conceals it with a pot lid. Her husband comes to bed and falls asleep. She takes off the pot lid and raises her torch at him: Asphor'ulehóa is a beautiful youth. She also notices some little angels ("malaika", in the original) near his body. The little angels tell her they are weaving a dress for Asphor'ulehóa's wife. Asphor'ulehóa wakes up with a startle and admonishes his wife for breaking his trust. He takes his garments and leaves in a hurry.

The girl follows after him, who hurries his steps towards his mother's house. When he arrives there, his human wife reaches him. Asphor'ulehóa tells her the place belongs to his mother, a teriel, who may devour her. So he lets her climb a nearby palm tree and tells her so stay there until his mother promises on his name not to do her any harm.

Asphor'ulehóa enters the house and his mother, the teriel, greets him. She says she will fetch some water to drink in a nearby fountain. She goes outside with a jar and sees the reflection of the girl in the water. Thinking there is a person in the water, she reaches into the reflected image to take it and devour it. She fails and breaks the jar. She goes home to get another jug and to try getting the girl she sees in the image. After some tries, she notices the girl on the tree and tries to convince her to climb down. The girl tells her she must first promise on her son's name not to harm her.

Asphor'ulehóa introduces the girl as his human wife. The next day, the teriel orders her to clean their wide courtyard as soon as she leaves, and not to leave any speckle of dust, otherwise she will devour her. The girl tells her husband about it; Asphor'ulehóa knocks on a rock to summon a large flood of water to clean up the courtyard in no time.

The next morning, the teriel mother orders her daughter-in-law to fill a cushion/pillow with feathers of all birds by nightfall. Asphor'ulehóa tells the girl to go up the hill and shout into the air that Asphor'ulehóa is sick and needs a pillow/cushion, and the birds shall appear to give her their feathers. The third task is for the girl to return every single feather to their original owner. Asphor'ulehóa tells her to go to the same hill, summon the birds, thank them for their help and return their feathers.

The next task is for her to separate water from milk that the teriel has mixed up. Asphor'ulehóa says they can't do it and admits his teriel mother has tried to kill her the past few days. That night, the teriel returns home and sees that the task was not done. Asphor'ulehóa tricks his mother to invite her sister for a feast with the girl as the main dish, but he hides his wife and roasts a bull. He opens up a pit in the dining room, fills it with fat and embers, and closes it with soil. He invites his mother and aunts to the dining room and directs them to stay on that spot. He reminds his mother of her oath and intends to enforce it: he commands the ground to open up and swallow the teriel and his aunts, who are consumed in the fire.

Asphor'ulehóa and his human wife leave the place forever and return to her father's house.[3][4]

Analysis

Tale type

Scholarship classifies the tale in the

Aarne-Thompson-Uther Index as type ATU 425, "The Search for the Lost Husband", and relate it to the ancient Graeco-Roman myth of Cupid and Psyche,[5][6][7][8]
as written down by author Apuleius in the 2nd century CE.

Motifs

The supernatural husband

The heroine's husband, Asfar Lehwa, is also the name of a male character from tales in the Kabylian oral repertoire.

weather phenomena, like a storm.[11]

The ogress antagonist

The teriel (tzeriel or tseriel) is described, in Kabylian folklore, as a frightening and monstrous creature with an anthropophagic appetite.[12] She appears to be the female counterpart of the Warzen, another creature, and both populate the Kabylian folktale corpus as antagonists.[13][14] In Western (French) works, she may be translated as ogresse or ogress.[15]

The heroine's tasks

German philologist Otto Weinreich compared the heroine's tasks in the tale to Psyche's in the Graeco-Roman myth: just like Psyche is given 4 tasks by her mother-in-law, Venus, the heroine of the Berber tale is given four tasks (three she accomplishes, and one - to separate water from milk - she fails).[16]

Swedish scholar Jan-Öjvind Swahn [sv] remarked that, in tales of "The Search for the Lost Husband" type, the task of sorting seeds or grains occurs in Mediterranean and Near Eastern variants of type ATU 425B, "The Witch's Tasks".[17] In this regard, linguist and Berberologist Henri Basset believed in the antiquity of the motifs of the grain-sorting and the ants as the heroine's helpers in Berber tradition.[18]

Variants

Commenting on an Italian translation of the tale (titled Lo sposo invisibile, or "The Invisible Husband"), professor Annamaria Zesi claims that the story is "diffusa" ("spread") in Kabyle among the Berbers.[19]

Scholarship locates at least 4 more variants in Kabylia: Gold Bud, The Bird of the Air and two homonymous tales titled The Bird of the Storm. Another version, titled Son of the Ogress, was collected from the

Arabic: Seffar Ihwa, 'whistling of the wind'), by Bezzazi.[20]

Kabylia

Gold Bud

In a Kabylian tale titled Azejjig Ireqqen (French: Bourgeon d'Or; English: Gold Bud), two brothers, one poor and the other rich, live next to each other with their families: the rich one has seven sons and the poor one has seven daughters. One day, the poor man, a woodcutter, goes to the forest to earn his living, when a strange rain begins to pour, and a voice warns him to leave the forest. The man answers that he needs to earn his living, and the voice gifts him a dish that always produces food. The man's sister-in-law borrows it, and the man returns to the forest. This time, the voice gives him a magic mill so he can feed his family. Again, the sister-in-law asks for the magic mill. The third time, the voice is visibly irritated, and demands the man's youngest daughter, Tiziri ("Moonlight"), to be delivered to the voice as its bride, in exchange for his family being fed with each sunrise. Tiziri is told of this and goes to the forest at night, where she is to wait for transportation. The girl is carried by a giant bird (her husband in avian disguise) to their joint house. They marry and he sets a prohibition on her: she must not light any lamp at night on the bridal chambers. Days pass, and Tiziri asks if she can visit her family, which her husband allows. The girl returns home and finds her family living in abundance. Her mother asks her about her mysterious husband, but she has never seen his face, so Tiziri's mother tells her to bring a torch to their bridal bed. Back home, she follows her mother's suggestion and betrays her husband, Gold Bud. He admonishes her, turns back into a giant bird and vanishes, back to his mother's house. In his rage at her betrayal, a great storm rages on for seven days and nights. After this period, Tiziri follows after him and passes by three shepherds, one grazing a herd of bulls, the second a herd of mares, and the third a herd of sheep and goats. Tiziri asks the shepherds whom the herds belong to, and they all say the animals would have belonged to Tiziri, had she been patient. She then passes by natural features that lead the way: a dried fountain and a normal one; a dead ash tree and a lush one. Finally, she reaches the house of a Teriel, her mother-in-law, who imposes tasks on the human girl: first, she is to clean the patio and the floor. Her husband advises her to lift a stone, and a stream of water will fulfill the task for her. Next, the Teriel orders her to sort a heap of mixed seeds, which a colony of ants fulfills for her. Thirdly, she is to collect feathers from all birds in five sacks; her husband asks her to shout at all the birds that their king is naked, so they will come to offer their feathers. Later, the Teriel orders her to return their feathers; Tiziri is advised to summon the birds again and tell them their king is clothed. Lastly, the Teriel, enraged, says she will let her ogress daughters devour her. Gold Bud appears in person to Tiziri and tells her to give some lamb legs to his sisters, since they are blind. While they are distracted, Gold Bud and Tiziri make their way across the air and fly back to the forest.[21][22][23][24]

The Bird of the Air

In a Kabylian tale titled L'Oiseau des Airs (

Kabylian: Asfuṛ l-lehwa, English: "The Bird of the Air"), a man has seven daughters. On the occasion of a festival, the man asks his daughters which presents he can brings them: the elder girls answer, save for the youngest. When pressed on, she reveals her request: a robe that dances alone in a meadow. The man then departs and searches for the robe, when he meets a merchant that offers him the present, in exchange for marrying the one the present is destined to, and announces his arrival will be marked by a heavy storm, with lightning, winds and rain. The man gets the robe and gifts his youngest daughter. Some time later, a heavy storm pours down on their house, and her fiancé, the Bird of the Air, comes to get his bride under the shape of a horse and takes her to their new home. In their marital home, the Bird of the Air, an ogre, talks to her without showing his face, and they have dinner in darkness. One day, she says her misses her family, and her mysterious husband allows her to visit them. She rides a horse back to her parents; during the visit, she tells her sisters she has never seen her husband; her sisters suggest her husband is a monster, and convince her to light a lamp to better see his true face. The girl returns home and, after preparing dinner, lights a lamp and sees her husband's face: an ogre's. He quickly transforms into a human shape, but admonishes his wife for her familial visit, and abandons her there. The girl decides to follow after him, and passes by stones, shrubs and shepherds, asking them the location of her husband. The Bird of the Air returns to his mother, an ogress's house, just as his wife appears there at the same time. The Bird of the Air meets his wife and warns her that his mother is an ogress that will devour the human. The ogress mother enters the room and senses a different smell; the Bird of the Air makes his mother promise not to devour the human, then introduces his wife. However, the ogress then relents on her promise, and plans the perfect opportunity to renege on her vow, by forcing her daughter-in-law in impossible tasks: first, the ogress mixes into a large heap beans, chick peas, peas, lentils, wheat and barley, and orders her daughter-in-law to separate the cereals. After she leaves, the Bird of the Air complains to his wife, but helps her: he uses his ring to summon a colony of ants to separate the grains. Next, the ogress gives the girl empty pillows and cushions and orders her to fill them with feathers. The Bird of the Air also helps his wife in this task: with his ring, he summons the birds to give her their feathers. Still wanting to devour her daughter-in-law, the ogress orders her to clean the entire house of any fleck of dust, to make it clean enough she can lick the floor. The Bird of the Air uses the ring to summon a flood of water to wash the floor, and a wind to dry it. At last, despite the trick his wife played on him, he made a vow to always protect her, turns into a horse and takes his wife back to her family, where a wedding is celebrated for seven days and nights.[25][26]

The Girl who Wanted a Golden Stone

In a Kabylian tale titled La fille qui voulait un caillou en or ("The daughter who wanted a golden stone"), a man has seven sons, and later a girl is born to him. Years later, he is ready to go to a souk (the market), and asks his children what presents he can bring them: the girl asks for a stone of gold. The man goes to the market and finds presents for his sons, but cannot find his daughter's. An ogress's son, who can change shape, tails behind him and transforms into a person who offers the golden stone. On the road, the ogress's son steals the golden stone, which the man notices is missing, then changes into another shape to offer the same stone, in exchange for the girl in marriage. The man accepts, and the ogress's son explains he will appear by his door and beg for alms, after the coming of heavy clouds, the season of winds, clouds and rains. The man comes home and gives the golden stone to his daughter. Some time later, the weather becomes heavy and stormy, and a beggar appears at their door, asking for food. The man orders his daughter to tend to the beggar, instead of his sons, and she vanishes with the beggar to another destination. In her new home, the girl has everything she could desire, but cannot see her husband, and lives like this for months. Time passes, and her mother has another child, a boy, and asks a crow to fly to her only daughter to inform her. The girl is told of her newborn little brother, and sighs that she cannot pay her family a visit. The son of the ogress notices her sadness and agrees to let her visit her family with gifts; and she has to mount on a mule (who is the ogress's son in another form) that will take her back to her family. It happens thus: the girl is welcomed by her family and spends two months and ten days there, then decides to return to her marital home. On the road back home, the mule orders his wife to break the candles she is bringing with herself (which were a gift from her sisters-in-law), which she does one by one, save for the seventh, which she keeps. After her husband retires to their chambers to sleep, she takes the opportunity to light the last candle and leave it there. The burning candle melts and drops on the sleeping ogress's son, who wakes up with a startle, revealing that he will visit his mother, since she has never seen her after his birth. The girl insists to join him, but he warns his ogress mother will devour her. He goes ahead of her, the girl follows him in secret through forests, river and mountains, until they reach his mother's house, where he advises his wife to suck on his mother's breast so the ogress trusts her. Inside the ogress's house, the creature spots her son and goes to hug him, but the girl jumps in front of the ogress to suck on her breast. The ogress's son then explains the girl is his wife. The woman makes a personal promise to devour the girl and, one day, begins to order her around: first, the ogress mixes wheat, barley, lentil, grains and other dry legumes into the ground and orders the princess to separate them - the ogress'son takes a jar of ants from his mother cabinet, releases the insects and they gather the grains for her. The next morning, the ogress orders the girl to sweep the farm from one side to the other - the ogress's son breaks part of a fountain to direct the water course to wash the patio. Thirdly, the ogress orders the girl to prepare a repast of legumes or pasta, in a way that it is cold in her mouth and hot when it enters her stomach - her son places some snow on her mouth, then pours the dish. At last, the ogress orders the girl to stay at a corner of the room. The ogress's son warns the girl she intends to devour her, and advises the human to run.

In the second part of the tale (which is type ATU 709A, "The Sister of Nine Brothers"),[27] the girl escapes the ogress's house and runs into the forest, where she takes shelter with a group of ogres who welcome her as their sister. One day, the ogres go on a hunt and warn her about their evil blind ogre uncle. When the embers burn out, she goes out to get some coals with the blind ogre, who gives some and secretly follows the girl home to devour her. However, the girl turns the tables on him, kills him and burns him in the coals, but he utters a curse before he perishes. Some time later, the girl goes to sweep the cinders, and prickles her finger in a bone that remained of the dead ogre, plunging her into a death-like sleep. The ogres return home and, instead of burying their adoptive sister, place her unconscious body inside a coffin, and the coffin on a camel. Another man sights the girl in the coffin and bring her home with him, where he dislodges the bone and awakens her. Safe at last, the girl marries her saviour.[28]

The Captive Princess and the Bird of the Wind

Professors Óscar Abenójar, Ouahiba Immoune and Fatima-Zohra Menas collected another Kabylian tale from a 90-year-old teller from Great Kabylia. In this tale, titled La princesa cautiva y el pájaro del viento ("The captive princess and the bird of the wind"), a sultan's daughter spends her days trapped at home. One day, while she is standing on a balcony, the bird of the wind flies in and steals her belongings, despite her trying to stop it: first, her veil, then a pin, a bracelet and a fu'a, among other things. The bird then vanishes. Some time later, the sultan's daughter asks her maidservant to fetch her water. On her way there, she finds some feathers on the ground, and sees some camels walking by the seashore. She grabs a camel by its tail and follows it, until it reaches a stable. The maidservant hides between the oxen and other animals, and watches as slaves come, have a meal then sleep, and the bird of the wind flies in to the stables and sing a song about the maiden locked in her room, as the animals cry with him. The bird then flies away. The maidservant leaves and rushes back to her mistress's palace to tell the other servants about the wondrous events she witnessed. The maiden in the room overhears it and, fueled by a sudden resolution, declares she will leave home and accompany the maidservant to the place where she was the other night. The duo follow the camels to the same stable and hide behind the animals; the bird of the wind flies in soon after and sings his sad song, but the animals begin to laugh, since the maiden the bird sings about is there with them. The maiden comes out of hiding and the bird notices she is there, then flies away. The maiden decides to rush after him: she passes by two trees (one lush and green and other dried); two fountains (one dried and other full of water); two tents where they sell silk (one full of customers and the other empty); two windmills (one milling the grain and the other not), and lastly by two cafés (one full of people and the other empty). She follows his trail and ends up at the café door. The bird of the wind comes out of the café tent, grabs the maiden and takes her to his house. They land, and the bird warns the maiden his mother is a cannibal ogress, but leaves her under his mother's care. The ogress, however, plans to eat the maiden, and sets her on hard tasks: first, to get bird feathers to fill a mattress for her, then clean all the feathers from the house (done by summoning all the birds); next, to sort out a mixed heap of grains (done by summoning ants), and sweep the patios (the bird of the wind commands the rivers to wash away the hay). The bird of the wind, then, tricks his mother to fatten the maiden and invite her ogress sisters to devour her, while he plots with the maiden. The ogress mother falls for her son's plan and gives food to the maiden and, after the latter seems plump enough, invites her sisters to feast on the human. The maiden offers to dance before the ogresses to distract them. After her dance, she smears their hair with gas and throws a firestarter at them. While the ogresses catch on fire, the bird of the wind takes the girl away with him through the air.[29]

Morocco

In a Moroccan tale titled Le Cheval Persan, collected by Dr. Françoise Légey from teller Jema'a, slave to Sultan Moulay-Ḥasan, a king has a daughter and a "cheval persan" (Persian horse). The princess regularly feeds the horse with a bucket of milk and some almonds. The horse - actually, a Roûḥânî (translated as "spirit") - tells the king he wants to marry the princess. The king overhears him and consents. Some time later, when the princess goes to feed it, she sees spectacular and extravagant wedding gifts. The king marries his daughter to the horse, but the queen, her mother, expresses her distaste to such a marriage. The horse takes off the equine skin and becomes a handsome youth. The queen approaches her daughter and tells her plan: a slave will come to wedding chambers, take the skin and burn it. However, the youth wears the skin again and escapes. The princess tries to follow him, but loses his track. She reaches a salt mine and sees a herd of donkeys carrying loads of salt. She inquires about their destination: the castle of the Persian horse, because he has married earlier. The princess reaches her husband's castle and her husband explains his mother, his sisters and his aunts are all "Ghoûles" (man-eating creatures). He advises her to suckle on his mother's breasts in order to earn her favour. She does that and the mother-in-law begrudgingly accepts her. Soon, she forces her to cover the walls of a room with bird feathers. Her husband, under an avian disguise, commands all birds to fulfill the task. Next, the Ghoûle mother gives the human princess two nuts and sends her to her Ghoûle sisters. On the road, the princess opens the two nuts and an orchestra of musicians escape from the nuts. Her husband, still under the avian disguise, summons the musicians back into the two nuts, and tells his wife that this task is a trap; she is to go to his aunts' house, throw the nuts at them and flee. Finally, the Ghoûle mother summons all Ghoûles for her son's wedding and places an oil lamp on the princess's hands, telling her that, as soon as the wick is out, the princess will be devoured. Again, on her husband's instructions, the princess takes the hairs of one of the Ghoûles to replace the wick. The hairs catch on fire and burn the Ghoûles. Cheval persan takes the princess back to her father's kingdom.[30][31]

In another Moroccan tale collected by Dr. Légey from Jema'a with the title Moulay Ḥammam, la Jeune Fille et les Ghoûles ("Moulay Hammam, the Maiden and the Man-Eaters"), a man has to go to Mecca on pilgrimage, but before he leaves he asks his seven daughters what he can bring them as gifts. The seventh daughter asks him to deliver her letter to "Moulay Ḥammam ou 'Imâm", and whispers a command on her father's mule's ear to not let him forget his promise. The man finds gifts for 6 of his daughters, but forgets about the seventh. The mule stops on its tracks, until the man remembers. He tries to find this "Moulay Ḥammam ou 'Imâm", and he talks to three Ghoûles (man-eating creatures). A third Ghoûle takes the letter and gives the man two walnuts, and explains that his daughter is to wash her bedroom, set the bed and toss a walnut into the fire. The man returns home, distributes the presents, and gives the walnuts to his seventh daughter with the instructions. The girl prepares her room and tosses one walnut into the fire. Moulay Ḥammam ou 'Imâm appears in her room

daughter-in-law. The girl holds the oil lamp and cries, a tear falling on Moulay’s cheek. He wakes up, takes off the oil lamp and takes his true human wife on his wings back to her kingdom.[32] French scholar Émile Dermenghem [fr] noted that this tale begins with the father's gifts for his daughters, and "ends like the tale of Psyche, with the mother-in-law's tasks".[33]

Palestine

Scholars Ibrahim Muhawi and Sharif Kanaana collected an Arab Palestinian tale titled Jummez bin Yazur, šex it-tyur ("Jummez Bin Yazur, Chief of the Birds"): a merchant has three daughters, the youngest named Sitt il-Husun (“Mistress of Beauty”). One day, he has to go to the hajj, and asks his three daughters what they want when he returns from the hajj. The youngest asks her father to bring her Jummez Bin Yazur, Chief of the Birds, and curses his camels not to returns if he forgets it. He meets a sheikh who directs him to Yazur’s house and a command to summon this person. He stands in front of the house and shouts that his daughter is looking for his son, Jummez Bin Yazur. Some time later, a bird arrives at Sitt il-Husun’s window and turns into a youth. Both converse until dawn, when he becomes a bird and is ready to depart, leaving a purse full of gold for her. The jealous sisters discover their sister’s luck. One day, Sitt il-Husun asks Jummez about what does him harm: pieces of broken glass. The sisters learn of this and break the glass in her window. Jummez flies in bird shape and hurts himself in the broken glass. Time passes, and Sitt il-Husun notices his absence, so she disguises herself as a beggar and tries to look for him. One time, she rests by a tree and overhears the conversation between two doves about how to cure Jummez. Sitt il-Husun kills a dove and mixes its blood and feathers. She reaches Jummez’s house and uses the remedy on him. They recognize each other, and she explains that his injuries were her sisters’ doing. They reconcile, but Jummez's sisters force Sitt il-Husun on some tasks: to sweep and mop the whole town, and to fill ten mattresses for the wedding with enough feathers. On this second task, Jummez advises her to go to the top of the mountain and shout at all the birds that “Jummez Bin Yazur, Chief of the Birds, is dead”, which will summon all the birds to give her their feathers. Lastly, Jummez’s sisters order Sitt il-Husun to get the straw tray hanging on the wall of the ghouleh’s house. Jummez advises Sitt il-Husun that she is to exchange the correct food for animals (meat for lions; barley for horses), to repair a fallen stone terrace of the house, get the tray and flee. After fulfillin the tasks, Jummez’s sisters consent with his marriage to Sitt il-Husun.[34] Muhawi and Kanaana classified the tale as type ATU 432, "The Prince as Bird", and noted that the tasks by Jummez's sisters parallel Venus's tasks in the myth of Cupid and Psyche.[35]

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ In another translation, his name is written Asfer n Ihwa, 'Whistling of the rain'.[2]

References

  1. ^ Swahn, Jan Öjvind. The Tale of Cupid and Psyche. Lund, C.W.K. Gleerup. 1955. p. 48.
  2. ^ Plantade, Emmanuel and Nedjima. "Libyca Psyche: Apuleius and the Berber Folktales". In: Apuleius and Africa. Editors: Benjamin Todd Lee, Luca Graverini, Ellen Finkelpearl. Routledge, 2014. pp. 180-181.
  3. ^ Frobenius, Leo. Atlantis: Volksmärchen und Volksdichtungen Afrikas. Band II: Volksmärchen der Kabylen, Band 2: Das Ungeheuerliche. Jena: Diederichs. 1922. pp. 281-293.
  4. .
  5. ^ Binder, Gerhard. Amor und Psyche. Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 1968. pp. 296-297.
  6. ^ Megas, Georgios A. Das Märchen von Amor und Psyche in der griechischen Volksüberlieferung. Πραγματειαι της Ακαδημιας Αθηνων, Volume 30. Athens: Grapheion Dēmosieumatōn tēs Akadēmias Athēnōn, 1971. p. 71 (footnote nr. 1).
  7. ^ Dermenghem, E. "Le mythe de Psyché dans le folklore nord-africain". In: Revue africaine 1º—2e trim., 1945, pp. 48-49.
  8. .
  9. ^ Proverbes Et Dictons Kabyles (in French). Alger: Editions Maison des Livres. 2002. pp. 54–55, 323.
  10. .
  11. ^ Lacoste-Dujardin, Camille [in French] (1996). Des mères contre les femmes: maternité et patriarcat au Maghreb (in French). Paris: La Découverte. pp. 215–218.
  12. ISSN 2165-6258
    .
  13. ^ Frobenius, Leo. Atlantis: Volksmärchen und Volksdichtungen Afrikas. Band II: Volksmärchen der Kabylen, Band 2: Das Ungeheuerliche. Jena: Diederichs. 1922. pp. 1-2.
  14. ^ Farida Boualit et Zahir Sidane, «La littérature orale berbère à l’épreuve de l’écriture de Nabile Farès: lecture de la culture en texte». In: Multilinguales [En ligne], 3 | 2014, §27, mis en ligne le 04 juillet 2018, consulté le 02 janvier 2022. URL: http://journals.openedition.org/multilinguales/1602 ; DOI: https://doi.org/10.4000/multilinguales.1602
  15. .
  16. ^ Swahn, Jan Öjvind. The Tale of Cupid and Psyche. Lund, C.W.K. Gleerup. 1955. p. 375.
  17. ^ Basset, Henri. Essai sur la littérature des Berbères. Alger: Ancienne Maison Bastide-Jourdan, 1920. p. 114.
  18. .
  19. ^ Plantade, Emmanuel and Nedjima. "Libyca Psyche: Apuleius and the Berber Folktales". In: Apuleius and Africa. Editors: Benjamin Todd Lee, Luca Graverini, Ellen Finkelpearl. Routledge, 2014. p. 177.
  20. ^ Plantade, Emmanuel and Nedjima. "Libyca Psyche: Apuleius and the Berber Folktales". In: Apuleius and Africa. Editors: Benjamin Todd Lee, Luca Graverini, Ellen Finkelpearl. Routledge, 2014. pp. 178-191.
  21. ^ Plantade, Emmanuel et Nedjima. «Du conte berbère au mythe grec: le cas d'Éros et Psyché». In: Revue des Études Berbères no 9, 2013, pp. 547, 548.
  22. .
  23. .
  24. ^ Nacib, Youssef (1986). Contes de Kabylie [Tales from Kabylia] (in French). Publisud. pp. 75–82.
  25. OCLC 970661297
    .
  26. .
  27. ^ Khater, Djouher (2007). La rose de lumiè̀re: contes de Kabylie (in French). Casbah éditions. pp. 53–74.
  28. ^ Abenójar, Óscar; Immoune, Ouahiba; Menas, Fatima-Zohra. La princesa cautiva y el pájaro del viento: Mitos y cuentos del norte de Argelia. Editorial Verbum, 2015. pp. 139-149 (tale nr. 22).
  29. .
  30. ^ Laoust, Émile [fr]. Contes berbères du Maroc: textes berbères du groupe Beraber-Chleuh (Maroc central, Haut et Anti-Atlas). Larouse, 1949. p. 213.
  31. .
  32. ^ Dermenghem, E. "Le mythe de Psyché dans le folklore nord-africain". In: Revue africaine 1º—2e trim., 1945, pp. 46-47.
  33. .
  34. .