Marie-Catherine Le Jumel de Barneville, countess d’Aulnoy (born 1650/51, near Honfleur, Fr.—died Jan. 14, 1705, Paris) was a writer of fairy tales and of novels of court intrigue, whose personal intrigues were commensurate with those described in her books.
Shortly after her marriage as a young girl in 1666, Marie d’Aulnoy conspired with her mother and their two lovers to accuse falsely Marie’s husband, a middle-aged financier, of high treason. When the plot miscarried, she was forced to spend the next 15 years out of the country, leading a peripatetic existence in Spain, the Netherlands, and England before returning to Paris and beginning her literary career in 1685. Her best-remembered works are Contes de fées (1697; “Fairy Tales”) and Les Contes nouveaux ou les fées à la mode (1698; “New Tales, or the Fancy of the Fairies”), written in the manner of the great fairy tales of Charles Perrault but laced with her own sardonic touch. Her pseudo-historical novels, which were immensely popular throughout Europe, include Hippolyte, comte de Douglas (1690; Hippolitus, Earl of Douglas), Memoires de la cour d’Espagne (1690; Memoirs from the Court of Spain), and Relation du voyage d’Espagne (1691; Travels into Spain). An English-language translation of her works, including the fairy tales, was published in four volumes in 1707. The fairy tales were frequently reprinted.