Green Children of Woolpit
A 12th-century English chronicle describing two green-skinned children who appeared near the village of Woolpit, speaking an unknown language and claiming to come from an underground world.
INVESTIGATION OVERVIEW
The Green Children of Woolpit is a medieval mystery recorded by two 12th-century chroniclers, Ralph of Coggeshall and William of Newburgh. According to the accounts, during the reign of King Stephen (1135–1154), two children with green skin were found near the village of Woolpit in Suffolk. They spoke an unknown language and wore unfamiliar clothing. They were taken in by a local knight. The boy died, but the girl learned English and explained they came from a land called St. Martin's Land, where the sun never shone brightly and everything was green. She said they had followed the sound of bells through a cave and emerged in England. The green color gradually faded. Explanations range from Flemish orphans (Flemish cloth was often green-dyed) to supernatural or extraterrestrial origins.
KEY CLAIMS
The children were from an underground world (St. Martin's Land) where the sun never shines
They entered this world through a cave or tunnel from another realm
The green skin was a natural condition that faded with a normal diet
The children may have been extraterrestrial or from a parallel dimension
The story is a genuine account of an unexplained phenomenon
SUPPORTING EVIDENCE
Two independent chroniclers recorded the story within decades of the event
Both chroniclers were respected historians of their time
The girl learned English and provided detailed descriptions of her origin
The green skin fading with diet suggests a nutritional deficiency (chlorosis)
The story has persisted for 800+ years in local folklore
COUNTER ARGUMENTS
The children were likely Flemish orphans whose green-tinted clothing faded
The 'St. Martin's Land' could refer to a real place (Flanders or a nearby village)
The story is a medieval folktale, not a factual account
No archaeological evidence supports the existence of underground tunnels
The chroniclers may have embellished or allegorized the story
TIMELINE
Green children appear near Woolpit, Suffolk
Ralph of Coggeshall records the story
William of Newburgh records the story
KEY FIGURES
Ralph of Coggeshall
Chronicler who recorded the story
William of Newburgh
Chronicler who recorded the story
ORGANIZATIONS
Coggeshall Abbey
Religious
SOURCES
RELATED ENTITIES
PEOPLE
Ralph of Coggeshall
William of Newburgh
ORGANIZATIONS
Coggeshall Abbey
EVENTS
Green children appear near Woolpit, Suffolk
1135–1154
Ralph of Coggeshall records the story
1180s
William of Newburgh records the story
1190s
