The Garden of Glass: Rapunzel’s Mother’s Secret
The witch wasn’t a villain. She was the only one telling the truth.

In a medieval monastery record from Thuringia, monks mention a woman named Gothel von Gärtner, an herbalist who claimed to “cultivate immortality.”
She lived near a field where glass-like plants sprouted — translucent stalks that shimmered under moonlight. Nobles paid fortunes for them, believing they contained the elixir of youth.
One barren couple begged Gothel for a child. She refused. Desperate, they stole one of her glowing plants — and ate it. Within days, the woman conceived. But the child was born with hair like molten sunlight — and skin that reflected candlelight like glass.
Gothel demanded the girl in payment. She raised her in a tower built from the same crystal vines — to protect her, not to imprison her.
When soldiers raided the tower years later, they found it empty. The vines had melted into sand. Only a braid of golden hair remained, hardened like glass.
It still glows faintly in the Wittenberg Museum — though no light shines upon it.


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