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  2. Feast of Fools - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feast_of_Fools

    The Feast of Fools or Festival of Fools (Latin: festum fatuorum, festum stultorum) was a feast day on January 1 celebrated by the clergy in Europe during the Middle Ages, initially in Southern France, but later more widely. [1] During the Feast, participants would elect either a false Bishop, false Archbishop, or false Pope.

  3. Paris Carnival - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paris_Carnival

    The Paris Carnival (French: Carnaval de Paris) is an annual festival held in Paris, France. The carnival occurs after the Feast of Fools and has been held since the 16th century or earlier, with a long 20th century interregnum .

  4. La Farce de maître Pathelin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Farce_de_Maître_Pathelin

    The Feast of Fools was a medieval feast day on 1 January that the clergy in southern France started. The Feast of Fools later spread to other countries, and it consisted of plays of different sorts acted by secular guilds, called sociétés joyeuses, roughly meaning “company of fools," and other times known as confréries, which means ...

  5. Lord of Misrule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lord_of_Misrule

    Meanwhile, throughout the city of Amasea, although entry into the temples and holy places had been forbidden by the decree of Theodosius I (391), the festival of gift-giving when "all is noise and tumult" in "a rejoicing over the new year" with a kiss and the gift of a coin, went on all around, to the intense disgust and scorn of the bishop:

  6. Fool's Cap Map of the World - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fool's_Cap_Map_of_the_World

    The Fool's Cap Map of the World is an artistic presentation of a world map created by an unknown artist sometime between 1580 and 1590 CE. The engraving takes the form of a court jester with the face replaced by cordiform (heart-shaped or leaf-shaped) world map based on the designs of cartographers such as Oronce Finé , Gerardus Mercator , and ...

  7. Nigel de Longchamps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nigel_de_Longchamps

    Nigel de Longchamps, also known as Nigel Wireker, (fl. c. 1190, died c. 1200), [1] Neel de Longchamps, or Nigel of Canterbury, was an Anglo-Norman satirist and poet of the late twelfth century, writing in Latin.

  8. Quasimodo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quasimodo

    Quasimodo sneaks out of the cathedral during the Festival of Fools, where he is crowned the "King of Fools". While there, he meets Esmeralda, with whom he falls in love. Two of Frollo's guards ruin the moment by throwing tomatoes at him and binding him to a wheel to torment him, rousing a crowd of onlookers to join in. Frollo refuses to help as ...

  9. Feast of the Ass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feast_of_the_Ass

    The Feast of the Ass (Latin: Festum Asinorum, asinaria festa; French: Fête de l'âne) is a medieval Christian feast observed on 14 January, celebrating the flight into Egypt.