What is the first children's book? Who wrote it?
Prior to the children's books we know today, children, of course, learned to read with books of fables, fairy tales, and basic primers. Or by looking at a manuscript of letters and numbers. Much like we do today with teaching the next generation to read.
"Puer ad Mensam is ascribed to John Lydgate, about 1430, and is in the Lambeth Manuscripts. The Babees Book, in the Harleian Manuscripts, was written about 14th, for children of royal or noble blood then serving as pages in palace or castle. The English version is translated from the original Latin, but both author and translator are unknown."
The most common celebrated "father" of children's books is John Newbery, who wrote A Little Pretty Pocket-Book Intended for the Instruction and Amusement of Little Master Tommy and Pretty Miss Polly, published in 1744. It was accompanied by a pincushion for girls and a ball for boys.
While there is no clear answer on who wrote the first children's book and what the first children's book was, it was fascinating to read some rhymes and themes that were common in the first "wave" of children's book publishing.
In the coming months, I'll be sharing what I learn about children's books. What burning questions do you have about children's books?
For more in depth information about the history of children's books, check out the Atlantic and British Library.
What an interesting post. We take children's books so for granted these days, it's hard to imagine when they were all about mores and behavior and such.
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