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2005-03-18 4:48 AM finally, a holiday is coming that I can celebrate... Mood: exuberant Read/Post Comments (0) |
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Hehe...and all I wanted was the license to practice law!?!? Hey, Rob: Hello, my name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die. : ) APRIL FOOL'S DAY IS COMING!!! As you have likely figured out, I enjoy giving the histories of the holidays as they are anticipated. In that tradition, here is a bit of knowledge of April Fool's Day: Thanks to the Encyclopedia Britannica for this info... (A)lso called All Fools' Day in most countries the first day of April. It received its name from the custom of playing practical jokes on this day—for example, telling friends that their shoelaces are untied or sending them on so-called fools' errands. Although the day has been observed for centuries, there are different explanations for its origin. It resembles festivals such as the Hilaria of ancient Rome, held on March 25, and the Holi celebration in India, which ends on March 31. The modern custom may have originated in France when the Gregorian calendar, which moved New Year's Day from March 25 to January 1, was adopted in 1582. Those who continued to celebrate the end of New Year Week on April 1 were referred to as fools. The timing of the day also may be related to the vernal equinox (March 21), a time when people are said to be fooled by sudden changes in the weather. There are variations between countries in the celebration of April Fools' Day, but all have in common an excuse to make someone play the fool. In France, for example, the fooled person is called poisson d'avril (“April fish”), perhaps in reference to a young fish and hence to one that is easily caught; it is common for French children to pin a paper fish to the backs of unsuspecting friends. In Scotland the day is Gowkie Day, for the gowk, or cuckoo, a symbol of the fool and the cuckold, which suggests that it may have been associated at one time with sexual license; on the following day signs reading “kick me” are pinned to friends' backs. In many countries newspapers and the other media participate—for example, with false headlines or news stories. And thanks to ICC for these tidbits... APRIL FOOL’S DAY The first of April some do say Is set apart for All Fools' Day; But why the people call it so, Nor I, nor they themselves, do know, But on this day are people sent On purpose or pure merriment. -Poor Robin's Almanac (1760) The Most Widespread Theory: The history of April Fool's Day, also called All Fool's Day, remains clouded. The theory about the reform of the Gregorian calendar in the late sixteenth-century, is likely to be the most widespread and most accepted. France was the first country to switch from the Julian to the Gregorian calendar in 1582. Pope Gregory XIII introduced the calendar for the Christian world. The significance of this switch was that the beginning of the year has moved from April 1st to January 1st. However, there were some people who did not hear about the switch or did not believe it or just refused to accept the change of the date and they continued to celebrate New Year's Day on April 1st. Others took this opportunity to play tricks on them and called them "April Fools". In essence, they tried to make them believe that something false was actually true and send them on a "Fools Errand". Today in France, April 1st is called "Poisson d'Avril", April Fish. The children of France fooling their friends by taping a paper fish to their friends back and when they discover the prank, the prankster yells "Poisson d'Avril", (April Fish!). "The first of April is the day we remember what we are the other 364 days of the year. " - American humorist Mark Twain The calendar change hypothesis could be the possible explanation why April 1st was the choice of April Fools Day, but the theory does not explain how April Fool's Day spread from France to the protestant countries such as England, Scotland and Germany. The Gregorian calendar had not been adopted until the eighteenth-century by this countries, but the tradition of April Fool's Day was long establish by that time throughout Europe. Ancient Roots, possible early, pre-sixteenth-century sources: In ancient times, foolery and trickery had been widely included in the celebrations of festivals. For example, the Roman winter festival, Saturnalia, and the end of December, was most important to the Romans. The festival involved drinking, dancing, gift exchange and mostly having a good time. Slaves were allowed to pretend to rule their master and a mock king the Saturnalicius princeps (or Lord of Misrule) was allowed to role for that day. Later, at the end of the fourth-century AD, Saturnalia changed into January 1st, New Years Day celebration, and many of the traditions were incorporated into the observance of Christmas. In late March, the Romans celebrated Hilaria the resurrection of Attis, son of the Great Mother Cybele. This celebration involved rejoicing and the donning of disguises. In India, Holi, the street festival of color. During the celebration they threw tinted powder at each other until everyone was covered in garish colors from head to toe. Holi was held on the full-moon day of the Hindu month of Phalguna (usually the end of February or the beginning of March). Another ancient festival honors Lud, a Celtic god of humor, in northern Europe. The celebration has many similarities between April fooling. Some say, that this custom originated as a day on which people poked fun at the Druidic hierarchy. Medieval Roots: The Festus Fatuorum (the Feast of Fools) was celebrated during the middle ages with its origin coming from Saturnalia. This celebration was mostly observed in France. Celebrants elected a mock pope and parodied church rituals. Of course, the church tried to discourage this holiday, but it lasted until the sixteenth-century. Once the festival had been suppressed, merrymakers focused their attention on Mardi Gras and Carnival. Also, during the middle ages, there was the medieval figure of the Fool, the symbolic patron saint of the day. In late medieval Europe, Fools became very prominent. They were practicing their craft in town squares and royal courts. Fools wore distinctive clothing, a horned hat, multi-colored robe, sceptre and bauble. Mythical Roots: Biblical history may have a place of April Fools Day. The first story tells of the day to Noah's mistake sending a dove out from the ark before the flood waters had subsided. The second story tells that the day commemorates the time when Jesus was sent from Pilate to Herod and back again. The phrase "Sending a man from Pilate to Herod" is an old term for sending someone on a fool's errand. Pluto, the God of the Dead, in Roman mythology, abducted Proserpina and brought her to live with him in the underworld. Proserpina was the daughter of Ceres, Goddess of grain and the harvest. When Proserpina called out for help, her mother Ceres could only hear the echo of her daughters voice and her search was in vain. The never-ending search for her daughter (commemmorated during the Roman festival of Cerealia), points sometimes to the mythological antecedent of the fool's errands popular on April 1st. In British a folklore, a link had been made to April Fools Day to the town of Gotham a legendary town of fools located in Nottinghamshire. The legend reveals that in the thirteenth-century, any road on which the King travelled became public property. The Gotham citizens did not wanted to loose their main road to the King, spread a false story to stop King John from travelling through heir town. King John learning about the deception send a messenger to Gotham and demanded an explanation. When the messenger arrived in Gotham he noticed that the town was full of lunatics who were engaged in foolish activities, such as drowning fish, attempting to cage a birds in roofless fences, etc. (though, of course, their foolery was all an act). The King fell for the ruse and declared the town too foolish to warrant punishment. And ever since then, April Fool's Day has commemorated their trickery. Anthropological Roots: Another theory comes from the Anthropologists, who speculate that April Fool's Day may have arrived from the celebration of the Vernal Equinox. The "Cycle of the Season", is the tradition behind the festival, the Vernal Equinox festival is characterized by temporary inversions of the social order. During the brief moment of transition, all rules are suspended. When the old world dies and a new cycle is born, normal beheavior is no longer governs. The "upside down turning of status is expected", trickery and raucous partying are allowed, slaves rule their master and children play tricks on their parents. In France, an abundance of fish was found in the streams and rivers during early April when the young fish had just hatched. The linkage to April Fool's Day traces back to that time as the young fish were easy to fool with a hook and a lure. Therefore, the French called them 'Poisson d'Avril' or 'April Fish.' Soon it started a custom to fool people on April 1st as a way of celebrating the abundance of foolish fish. The French still use the term 'Poisson d'Avril' to describe the unfortunate victims of April Fool's Day pranks. Misrule and Mayhem: Paradoxically annual celebrations of misrule and mayhem, such as April Fool's Day, help to reaffirm communal values. They act as a safety valve, giving people a chance to vent their social antagonisms in a harmless way. In addition, they give people a chance to temporarily step outside of accepted rules of behavior. People can then choose either to voluntarily return to a state of order, thereby reaffirming society's values, or to remain in a state of anarchy. Inevitably, they choose order. This mirrors the larger change that is simultaneously occurring in the natural world. Will the cycle of the seasons renew itself once again, or will the world be plunged into a permanent, wintery darkness? The seasons have always returned, but the fear that lurks at the heart of such celebrations is that order will not return, that mayhem and chaos will rule forever. However big the fool, there is always a bigger fool to admire him. - Nicolas Boileau-Despréaux [Politicians] never open their mouths without subtracting from the sum of human knowledge. -- Thomas Reed Sometimes one likes foolish people for their folly, better than wise people for their wisdom. - Elizabeth Gaskell Let us be thankful for the fools. But for them the rest of us could not succeed. - Mark Twain ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Read/Post Comments (0) Previous Entry :: Next Entry Back to Top |
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