There Was an Old Woman Who Lived Under a Hill

"There was an old woman lived under a hill" is a nursery rhyme which dates back to at least its first known printing in 1714.

In 1714 these lines: appeared as part of a catch in The Academy of Complements.

[2] In 1744 these lines appeared by themselves (in a slightly different form) in Tommy Thumb's Pretty Song Book, the first extant collection of nursery rhymes.

[4] One eighteenth-century editor, possibly Oliver Goldsmith, added a note: "This is a self evident Proposition which is the very Essence of Truth.

Edgar, in Shakespeare's King Lear, appears to refer to this version when he says "Pillycock sat on Pillycock hill," which indicates that the rhyme was known as early as the first decade of the seventeenth century.