selenak: (Fredersdorf)
selenak ([personal profile] selenak) wrote in [personal profile] cahn 2021-03-14 06:51 am (UTC)

Re: He's just a soul whose intentions were good: Morgenstern on FW. - B

So I've always seen this as the stereotypical description of what a court fool is supposed to do (and the Roman generals during their triumphs were supposed to have something similar), but do you know to what extent that reflected reality? I have no idea what the actual historical evidence for fools looks like.

With the caveat that I have no in depth knowledge on this: as far as I do know, there were two separate sets of fools - "natural" fools and "artificial" fools. "Natural" fools were fools that were either mentally or physically handicapped, and were kept as grotesqueries; they also usually came with minders, and at most did acrobatic tricks. Artificial fools were the ones supposed to be witty and truth-as-jest telling, a la the Fool in King Lear. Of historical examples who sound as if they actually did that:

Kunz von der Rosen, court fool of the Emperor Maximilian I. (his most famous jest in that spirit is when he's asked about his opinion on a new peace treaty that's supposed to last a century, and he asks back how old the questioner thinks he is; hearing the reply, Kunz von der Rosen says "wrong, for I must be at least over 200 years old, for in my life time, two such peace treaties were made); Joseph Fröhlich, who was August the Strong's court jester (and got possibly depicted more often by the artists of his time in Saxony than the King himself was; he survived August and was still around, if in retirement, when the Seven Years War started, at which pointed he and his family fled to Poland); Will Somers, Henry VIII's fool; and Archibald Armstrong, fool to James VI and I.

The last British king to have a court fool, btw, was Charles I, since Charles II. did not revive the office after the Restoration. As you can see, continental princes kept up the office for longer. There were also female fools - Mary Queen of Scots and Mary Tudor both had them, for example, and the entry for Nichola, Mary Stuart's fool, containes a great diss on Mary biograpaher John Guy. After stating that absolutely nothing is known about what kind of fool Nichola was, about her jests (or lack of same) or acrobatics, just about her extensive wardrobe, the entry says "Historian John Guy imagines her bantering with Mary, and the Queen indulging her "wicked sense of humor". Note the "imagines". Mary Tudor's fool, Jane Foole, seems to have done acrobatics, and might have worked for Anne Boleyn before Mary got her after Anne's death, but again, we don't know what kind of jokes she made, if any.

Leonora Dori Galigai was described as originally the court fool to Maria de' Medici in a historical novel I've read, but in actually she was first Maria's milk sister (i.e. her mother was Maria's wetnurse) and then her lady-in-waiting when Maria became the second wife of Henri IV. Leonora and her husband, Concini, who was most likely Maria's lover dominated her, and after Concini was toppled and killed at the end of Maria's regency, Leonora ended up being accused of having bewitched the Queen and being burned at the state for it. Her reply to this charge (having used spells to bewitch the Queen), which the English wiki entry doesn't quote but the German does, was: „Mon charme fut celui des âmes fortes sur les esprits faibles“, which even historians who suspect her of having been involved with the murder of Henri IV. and of having been a bad influence in general credit with having been one of the all time great truth-to-power tellings, so it's a shame I can't list her as a court fool as well.

Fredersdorf dodged a bullet there!

Evidently. Though this might have been the straw that broke the camel's back and have driven Fritz to patricide - first a boyfriend beheaded, then a boyfriend stolen?

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