Welcome to the Historical Fiction Online forums: a friendly place to discuss, review and discover historical fiction.
If this is your first visit, please be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above.
You will have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed.
To start viewing posts, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
If this is your first visit, please be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above.
You will have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed.
To start viewing posts, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
High Diddle Diddle the Cat and the Fiddle.....Fairy tales, nursey rhymes
High Diddle Diddle the Cat and the Fiddle.....Fairy tales, nursey rhymes
I have always been interested in the historical origins of the Oral Folklore tales and rhymes....There must be thousands of these stories and rhymes....I know that all counties and cultures have contributed to these wonderful Folk tales....I'm more familiar with the Brothers Grimm and Hans Christian Anderson works and I prefer the older and darker tales.....Me thinks these oral/written traditional tales were not told/written for children..We can thank Mother Goose and Disney for sugaring/editing these stories for today's Children.....Many of the stories must have been about the times or a important experience or incident....Curious what others think...."Ring around the Rosy"
Last edited by chuck on Fri October 15th, 2010, 4:51 am, edited 1 time in total.
- Margaret
- Bibliomaniac
- Posts: 2440
- Joined: August 2008
- Interest in HF: I can't answer this in 100 characters. Sorry.
- Favourite HF book: Checkmate, the final novel in the Lymond series
- Preferred HF: Literary novels. Late medieval and Renaissance.
- Location: Catskill, New York, USA
- Contact:
A lot of the Mother Goose rhymes were originally political lampoons.
Browse over 5000 historical novel listings (probably well over 5000 by now, but I haven't re-counted lately) and over 700 reviews at www.HistoricalNovels.info
- Madeleine
- Bibliomaniac
- Posts: 5834
- Joined: August 2008
- Currently reading: "A Taste for Vengeance" by Martin Walker
- Preferred HF: Plantagenets, Victorian, crime, dual time-frame
- Location: Essex/London
Ring of Roses was about the plague if I remember rightly.
I think a lot of them have now been Disneyfied beyond recognition, I'm sure I read somewhere that the Seven Dwarves of Snow White fame were based on children who worked in the mines in the past.
I think a lot of them have now been Disneyfied beyond recognition, I'm sure I read somewhere that the Seven Dwarves of Snow White fame were based on children who worked in the mines in the past.
Currently reading "A Taste for Vengeance" by Martin Walker
Ring a Ring a Rosy is about Bubonic plague.
Much of Mother Goose is political lampoon, written or collected by one Elizabeth Vergoose who lived and was buried in Boston, Massachusetts.
The frequent theme of wicked stepmothers occurs everywhere from Scotland--Ashpittle and the Twa Brothers--across the whole of Europe, and reflects the reality of life before the 20th century: mortality rate among women was somewhere around 40% during childbirth and men often and generally remarried to provide a mother for their children. And this is true of the poor as well as the wealthy--J.S. Bach remarried for such a reason, for example--though in his case, happily for himself, his new wife and all his 20 children.
Much of Mother Goose is political lampoon, written or collected by one Elizabeth Vergoose who lived and was buried in Boston, Massachusetts.
The frequent theme of wicked stepmothers occurs everywhere from Scotland--Ashpittle and the Twa Brothers--across the whole of Europe, and reflects the reality of life before the 20th century: mortality rate among women was somewhere around 40% during childbirth and men often and generally remarried to provide a mother for their children. And this is true of the poor as well as the wealthy--J.S. Bach remarried for such a reason, for example--though in his case, happily for himself, his new wife and all his 20 children.
Ring a Ring a Rosy is about Bubonic plague.
That was recently debunked. http://www.snopes.com/language/literary/rosie.asp
This is a subject I've always been intrigued with and did a paper on it in college. There are a few story themes that repeat again and again in every culture thats rather fascinating when you take a look at them. The Grimm Brothers took many of them to creat their tales - which btw are much much darker than the sanitized disney variations. Since such stories were the only entertainment around, children were not exempt from them - they were often in the audience with their parents. And since so much of their world was violent, the violence in these probably didn't faze them, much. The Japanese illustrator Deni has some wonderful books of Japanese folk tales. I remember a book on Native American tales, there are several famous ones, but can't think of that title.
A few interesting fiction twists on fairytales include:
Kissing the Witch by Emma Donogue
Book of Lost Things by John Connely (warning, not for everyone, rather graphic)
Wicked, Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister, and Mirror Mirror all by Gregory Maguire
The Real Story of the Three Little Pigs as told by A. Wolf and The Horrid Little Pigs are hilarious send ups to the original children's story.
That was recently debunked. http://www.snopes.com/language/literary/rosie.asp
This is a subject I've always been intrigued with and did a paper on it in college. There are a few story themes that repeat again and again in every culture thats rather fascinating when you take a look at them. The Grimm Brothers took many of them to creat their tales - which btw are much much darker than the sanitized disney variations. Since such stories were the only entertainment around, children were not exempt from them - they were often in the audience with their parents. And since so much of their world was violent, the violence in these probably didn't faze them, much. The Japanese illustrator Deni has some wonderful books of Japanese folk tales. I remember a book on Native American tales, there are several famous ones, but can't think of that title.
A few interesting fiction twists on fairytales include:
Kissing the Witch by Emma Donogue
Book of Lost Things by John Connely (warning, not for everyone, rather graphic)
Wicked, Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister, and Mirror Mirror all by Gregory Maguire
The Real Story of the Three Little Pigs as told by A. Wolf and The Horrid Little Pigs are hilarious send ups to the original children's story.
Last edited by Ash on Fri October 15th, 2010, 3:47 pm, edited 2 times in total.
- sweetpotatoboy
- Bibliophile
- Posts: 1641
- Joined: August 2008
- Location: London, UK
- Vanessa
- Bibliomaniac
- Posts: 4351
- Joined: August 2008
- Currently reading: The Farm at the Edge of the World by Sarah Vaughan
- Interest in HF: The first historical novel I read was Katherine by Anya Seton and this sparked off my interest in this genre.
- Favourite HF book: Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell!
- Preferred HF: Any
- Location: North Yorkshire, UK
There's a lot of controversy about Humpty Dumpty. There are several different theories, one of which is to do with the English Civil War and another with Richard III. Funnily enough, it was the logo on my daughter's primary school jumper - Cardinal Wolsey being the inspiration as he lived in the village for a while (and also arrested at the castle) and there are road names with his name. They also have a Humpty Dumpty competition (as well as a scarecrow one which can frighten one to death when driving past)! 
Little Jack Horner is to do with land, taxes and deeds. And funnily enough again, my aunt had a copy of our family tree on her wall (I know it's supposed to be kept rolled up but she'd had it framed!) and at the top it said 'House of Horner'.
The Cat and the fiddle - rivalry between two farming families from Bolton Abbey in North Yorkshire - the Heys and the Moons. The Moons looked after the Abbey alms dishes and the Heys the annointing spoons. When the monastries were destroyed they chose opposite sides - the Heys choosing to go Protestant and thus 'jumping over' the Moons and taking most of their property. The Priory had two stone carved dogs and a son from one family eloped with a daughter of the other family (the dish ran away with the spoon).
The Crooked Man - General Sir Alexander Leslie of Scotland. The 'crooked sixpence' - Charles I. The 'crooked stile' - the border between England and Scotland. The 'crooked house' - Parliament.
Old King Cole - in AD 219 Coel, Duke of Britain began to build the city of Kaircoel (now Colchester). He had a daughter, Helen, who was a talented musician. King Cole died in 297 AD, hence the word 'old'.
As for Six a Song of Sixpence - one theory is that the 24 blackbirds are the hours of the day, the king was Henry VIII, the queen Katherine and the maid Anne Boleyn: the maid sinned and the blackbird snapping off her nose is the devil.

Little Jack Horner is to do with land, taxes and deeds. And funnily enough again, my aunt had a copy of our family tree on her wall (I know it's supposed to be kept rolled up but she'd had it framed!) and at the top it said 'House of Horner'.
The Cat and the fiddle - rivalry between two farming families from Bolton Abbey in North Yorkshire - the Heys and the Moons. The Moons looked after the Abbey alms dishes and the Heys the annointing spoons. When the monastries were destroyed they chose opposite sides - the Heys choosing to go Protestant and thus 'jumping over' the Moons and taking most of their property. The Priory had two stone carved dogs and a son from one family eloped with a daughter of the other family (the dish ran away with the spoon).
The Crooked Man - General Sir Alexander Leslie of Scotland. The 'crooked sixpence' - Charles I. The 'crooked stile' - the border between England and Scotland. The 'crooked house' - Parliament.
Old King Cole - in AD 219 Coel, Duke of Britain began to build the city of Kaircoel (now Colchester). He had a daughter, Helen, who was a talented musician. King Cole died in 297 AD, hence the word 'old'.
As for Six a Song of Sixpence - one theory is that the 24 blackbirds are the hours of the day, the king was Henry VIII, the queen Katherine and the maid Anne Boleyn: the maid sinned and the blackbird snapping off her nose is the devil.
Last edited by Vanessa on Fri October 15th, 2010, 4:23 pm, edited 4 times in total.
currently reading: My Books on Goodreads
Books are mirrors, you only see in them what you already have inside you ~ The Shadow of the Wind
Books are mirrors, you only see in them what you already have inside you ~ The Shadow of the Wind
[quote=""sweetpotatoboy""]Heavy Words Lightly Thrown: The Reason Behind the Rhyme by Chris Roberts is a recent, decent book on the story behind nursery rhymes.[/quote]
I second that recommendation. The author is a friend of mine, and knows his stuff. He also debunks the "Ring around the Roses"/Plague theory.
I second that recommendation. The author is a friend of mine, and knows his stuff. He also debunks the "Ring around the Roses"/Plague theory.