This tale is known throughout Europe, in such variants as
Iron John,
Georgic and Merlin, and
Guerrino and the Savage Man. A more widespread variant, found in Europe, Asia, and Africa, opens with the prince for some reason being the servant of an evil being, where he gains the same gifts, and the tale proceeds as in this variant; one such tale is ''
The Magician's Horse''.
Bashkir people In a tale from the
Bashkir people with the title "златовласый егет" ("The Golden-Haired Eget"), a kingdom is suffering from mysterious attacks in a swamp, and its king orders his soldiers to investigate. They capture an old man who was a tabib healer and take him to prison. One day, the king's son, a prince, sees the old man playing a pipe in his cell, which greatly interests him. The old man promises to give him the pipe if the prince finds him the key. The prince gets the key from his mother and releases the old man. He escapes, and the king punishes his wife. The prince takes the blame and is banished by the king to the swamp. The prince feels afraid for his life, but meets the same old man, who takes the boy to his swamp hut. One day, he directs the boy to a magic well in the swamp, then tells him to take a dip in it; the prince does and his hair turns gold. One year later, the old man gives the prince some potions that increase his strength, and asks him if he wants to be a gardener. The prince agrees and the old man takes him to a king's castle so he can work as a gardener, alongside the previous one. The second king hires him, and the prince plants apple trees in the garden. The king's three daughters, the princesses, take turns bringing food to the gardeners. One time, the third princess takes some food to them, and falls in love with the golden-haired one. Some time later, the second king announces that whoever proves himself to be the most valiant eget, shall marry a princess. The golden-haired gardener goes back to the old tabib healer in the swamp and asks him to make him a valiant eget so he can win the hand of the youngest princess. The old man dowses him with the strength potion and he returns to the kingdom. The next day, the king assembles a crowd of egets, riders and knights, and orders his eldest daughter to throw a golden apple to the crowd. The knights fight against each other to fetch the apple, and the gardener, in disguise, grabs it for himself, but, since he wants the youngest's, throws it to another person in the crowd. The middle daughter casts hers, then the youngest. The gardener grabs it and marries the third princess, with the people's approval. Later, the gardener, now king after his father-in-law, writes his own parents a letter telling he survived being abandoned in the swamp. ==See also==