Before Humpty Dumpty became the world’s most famous broken egg, he was simply a riddle wrapped in rhyme. Early versions of the nursery verse never mentioned eggs at all—Humpty Dumpty was a nickname for anyone short, round, or a bit hunchbacked, echoing through English satire long before he tumbled from a wall. Over the centuries, inventive minds tried to tie Humpty’s fall to grand historical moments: some saw Richard III’s defeat, others imagined Civil War cannons or siege engines. Yet, none of these stories hold up to scrutiny—no evidence links the rhyme to kings, battles, or lost artillery. Instead, the rhyme’s real trick lies in its riddle: describing an egg’s fate in playful, metaphorical terms. The wall becomes a shelf, the king’s men a poetic flourish, and the answer—an egg—remains hidden in plain sight. So Humpty Dumpty endures, not as history’s puzzle, but as folklore’s clever wink—a reminder that sometimes, the mystery is the message. #FolkloreFacts #NurseryRhymes #CulturalHistory #Culture