Well, actually they "belong" to the world, they have been translated from the original Greek to Latin and now into most languages of the world including French, English, Russian, Japanese, Spanish, German and so many more.
Since they are attributed to Aesop, a Greek slave and storyteller from the 6th Century BC, you could suppose that Greece could claim the fables of Aesop "belong" to it, but the best answer is probably still that they belong to the world.
Aesop is believed to have written his fables in ancient Greek. His fables were passed down orally and later transcribed into written form by various scholars and writers.
Greece More exactly Corinth
Greece
The fables are called 'The Aesop Fables'. A weird name Aesop.
Because he was a weaner
You can find Aesop's Fables online on websites such as Project Gutenberg, AesopFables.com, or through popular ebook platforms like Amazon Kindle or Apple Books. These websites offer free or low-cost access to collections of Aesop's timeless tales.
Aesop was a slave and could neither read nor write. All his fables come down to us through oral traditions.
Aesop was famous for writing down fables, traditionally called "Aesop's fables."
It's been very difficult to answer this question. But from what I've found out many believed that Aesop didn't exactly write his fables or that he even ever existed at all.
Aesop is the author of esophagi fables.
Aesop is the author of esophagi fables.
This tale is adopted from the Aesop fables. Therefore the author is Aesop.
All Aesop's fables are in books.
No, Aesop did not write The Iliad and The Odyssey. These epic poems were written by the ancient Greek poet Homer. Aesop is attributed to writing fables, such as "The Tortoise and the Hare," which are short stories that teach a moral lesson.
A fable is a type of story. Aesop's fables are the fables invented by the famed fabalist Aesop.