Perhaps one of the most tragic upbringings is that of Cinderella. Her entire childhood up to adulthood is pure misery and abuse. She is constantly mocked by her evil stepmother and stepsisters. They made her a servant in her own house and even took all of her belongings.
Snow White is the typical, beautiful, gentle and innocent princess. The only thing she does in the movie is clean the house for seven guys and get saved by another one.
Pocahontas
Throughout the classic fairytale story, Pocahontas consistently shows kindness to her family, friends and animals but most of all, her act of kindness is peacefully stopping a war between the colonists and her tribe.
Snow White is the first Disney Princess and the first fictional female character with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. Given the title the "Fairest One of All", she has continued to inspire similar traits in future Disney heroines, such as singing and communicating with animals.
Princess Aurora
Aurora is probably the quietest of all the princesses, with only around 18 lines of dialogue in her own film, Sleeping Beauty, released in 1959. She's known for two things: her looks and her ability to sleep through pretty much anything, both of which might not be the best skills for the top job.
Despite "Moana" being the most-loved movie featuring a Disney princess, it's Cinderella whom Americans crown as their favorite Disney princess. Among U.S. adult citizens, 13% say Cinderella is their favorite Disney princess while 10% choose Snow White and 7% favor Belle from "Beauty and the Beast."
On Cosmopolitan's list of "the 14 Hottest Disney Princesses", Aurora was ranked 12th, with author Frank Kobola dismissing the character as "a snoozefest" and comparing her to "that girl in college who was always taking naps".
Mulan is astute, heroic, ambitious, and—surprisingly—very clumsy. Although Mulan's clumsiness doesn't keep her from saving the day, it often puts her in an awkward position. Some of Mulan's funniest moments come when she's disguised as Ping, and dealing with her growing infatuation with General Li Shang.
#1: Diana, Princess of Wales
Diana is arguably one of the most beloved members the British royal family has ever had, despite her eventual divorce from Charles. Her two sons, William and Harry are currently in line for the throne.
Snow White can be classified as having Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. The Princess meets all eight of the criteria listed in the DSM-V to diagnose PTSD (See Appendix A).
Elsa. Elsa, the Ice Queen, the sister with magical power from Frozen suffered from Major depressive disorder. She was unable to control her emotions which later hurt her younger sister Anna.
Jasmine becomes understandably enraged when she overhears her father discussing who she should marry with Jafar behind her back without taking her own feelings into account. Pocahontas gets angry about Chief Powhatan's racism toward white men by judging the many based on the actions of a few.
Rapunzel, Tangled
All hail the Princess of SASS.
In the 1989 animation, Ariel gives up her voice to Ursula the sea witch in exchange for legs.
Belle has always been the Disney Princess for girls who love to read. After all, the very first time that we meet Belle, she's headed to the bookstore (and to a scene that put 'sliding on a rolling bookcase ladder' on every bucket list).
Fairy tale
The mirror is key to her plots; it tells her Snow White's location, and after each attempt, she checks with the mirror and is again told that Snow White remains the fairest. At the very end, when Snow White is married, the mirror tells her that the young queen is the most beautiful.
Ariel appears as an adult in Return to the Sea and gives birth to a daughter named Melody, becoming the first, and currently, only, Disney princess to become a mother. Ariel is protective of her daughter, as Triton was of Ariel in the first film.
Tiana. It is now time for the top five places when it comes down to the most intelligent princesses from Disney! First up is Tiana.