Mother Goose's name was identified with English collections of stories and nursery rhymes popularised in the 17th century. English readers would already have been familiar with
Mother Hubbard, a stock figure when
Edmund Spenser published the satire ''
Mother Hubberd's Tale'' in 1590, as well as with similar fairy tales told by "Mother Bunch" (the pseudonym of
Madame d'Aulnoy) in the 1690s. An early mention appears in an aside in a versified French chronicle of weekly events,
Jean Loret's
La Muse Historique, collected in 1650. His remark,
comme un conte de la Mère Oye ("like a Mother Goose story") shows that the term was readily understood. Additional 17th-century Mother Goose/Mere l'Oye references appear in French literature in the 1620s and 1630s.
Speculation about origins In the 20th century, Katherine Elwes-Thomas theorised that the image and name "Mother Goose" or "Mère l'Oye" might be based upon ancient legends of the wife of King
Robert II of France, known as "Berthe la fileuse" ("
Bertha the Spinner") or ''Berthe pied d'oie'' ("Goose-Footed Bertha" ), often described as spinning incredible tales that enraptured children. Other scholars have pointed out that
Charlemagne's mother,
Bertrada of Laon, came to be known as the goose-foot queen (
regina pede aucae). Stories of Bertha with a strange foot (goose, swan or otherwise) exist in many languages including Middle German, French, Latin and, Italian.
Jacob Grimm theorised that these stories are related to the Upper German figure
Perchta or Berchta (English Bertha). Like the legends of "Bertha la fileuse" in France and the story of Mother Goose Berchta was associated with children, geese, and spinning or weaving, although with much darker connotations. in
Boston, Massachusetts Despite evidence to the contrary, it has been stated in the United States that the original Mother Goose was the
Bostonian wife of Isaac Goose, either named Elizabeth Foster Goose (1665–1758) or Mary Goose (d. 1690, age 42). She was reportedly the second wife of Isaac Goose (alternatively named Vergoose or Vertigoose), who brought to the marriage six children of her own to add to Isaac's ten. After Isaac died, Elizabeth went to live with her eldest daughter, who had married Thomas Fleet, a publisher who lived on Pudding Lane (now Devonshire Street). According to Early, "Mother Goose" used to sing songs and ditties to her grandchildren all day, and other children swarmed to hear them. Finally, it was said, her son-in-law gathered her jingles together and printed them. No evidence of such printing has been found, and historians believe this story was concocted by Fleet's great-grandson John Fleet Eliot in 1860.
Iona and Peter Opie, leading authorities on nursery lore, give no credence to either the Elwes-Thomas or the Boston suppositions. It is generally accepted that the term does not refer to any particular person. ==Nursery tales and rhymes==