Question:

What is the orgin of "Ring Around the Rosie?"?

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plzplzplz answer this rite away

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  1. Wrapping the May Pole on May Day events.


  2. It comes from the time when there was whooping cough epidemic killing children, and one of the symptoms was having red rings on the skin i.e. ring o' roses, and the 'a-tissue' was sneezing, and then "all fall down" was the dying. Pretty morbid really!

  3. It originated from the bubonic plague and the posies were carried to cover up some of the awful odor of death, not for protection.

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  5. Many have associated the poem with the Great Plague of London in 1665, or with earlier outbreaks of bubonic plague in England. Interpreters of the rhyme before the second world war make no mention of this;[15] but by 1951 it seems to be well established as an explanation of the form of the game which had become standard in Britain. The Opies then remarked:[16] ‘The invariable sneezing and falling down in modern English versions have given would-be origin finders the opportunity to say that the rhyme dates back to the Great Plague. A rosy rash, they allege, was a symptom of the plague, posies of herbs were carried as protection, sneezing was a final fatal symptom, and “all fall down” was exactly what happened.’[17] Variations of the same theory then let it be applied to the American version of the rhyme and to medieval plagues.[18] In its various forms, the interpretation has entered into popular culture and has been used elsewhere to make oblique reference to the plague.[19] (For 'hidden meaning' in other nursery rhymes see Mary, Mary, Quite Contrary and c**k Robin.)

    Folklore scholars regard the theory as baseless for various reasons:

    the late appearance of the explanation means that it has no tradition, only the value of its content;[15]

    the facts described do not fit especially well at least with the Great Plague;[17][20]

    the great variety of forms makes it unlikely that the modern form is the most ancient one, and the words on which the interpretation are based are not found in many of the earliest records of the rhyme (see above);[18][21]

    European and 19th century versions of the rhyme suggest that this 'fall' was not a literal falling down, but a curtsy or other form of bending movement that was common in other dramatic singing games.[22]

  6. It's about the Bubonic Plague.

  7. Bubonic plague.

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