Merryweather
In the Disney version of the Sleeping Beauty, the three fairy godmothers are called Flora, Fauna and Merryweather. Merryweather dressed in blue, had black hair and was the shortest of the three. Flora dressed in red and Fauna in green. These particular fairies were Disney interpretations of the 1697 fairy tale by Charles Perrault. However, these characters do not appear in traditional folk versions of the tale.
(Merryweather is often found spelled in different ways, but this is the Disney spelling.)
'Maleficent'
Sleeping Beauty. Her birth name is Aurora. When she is sent into hiding, her fairy godmothers call her Briar Rose. When she is poisoned by the spinning wheel, she becomes Sleeping Beauty.
Sleeping Beauty's real name is Christabel.
Sleeping beauty is from a mine in the United States ( I think it is New Mexico) and is rare to find . The name of the mine is Sleeping Beauty. Persian is from Iran and the quality is not the same as the Sleeping Beauty. The Sleeping Beauty Mine is located in Globe Arizona not in New Mexico. Called Sleeping Beauty because if seen from a distance the mountains resemble a lady laying down on her back.
That is her name and it is aurora
merryweater [the blue fairy]
malificent
'Maleficent'
If you are talking about the Red Fairy her name is Flora
GDRF
Sleeping Beauty
There is no mention in the fairy tale that Sleeping Beauty had diabetes. Scientists researching if pancreatic stem cells exist have given the name "sleeping beauties" to the newly found cells because they are hard to wake up. The answer is no, Sleeping Beauty did not have diabetes.
cindarella snow white and sleeping beauty to name just a few
Sleeping Beauty. Her birth name is Aurora. When she is sent into hiding, her fairy godmothers call her Briar Rose. When she is poisoned by the spinning wheel, she becomes Sleeping Beauty.
Fairy tales don't need last names, so she doesn't have one.
In the original fairy tale by Charles Perrault, Sleeping Beauty's father is not given a specific name. He is generally referred to as "the King."
Rip Van Winkle did, in the story of the same name by Washington Irving. However, there are other characters who slept for a long time, notably Sleeping Beauty.