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  • 10th century jester Jing Xinmo

  • may have overstepped when he got chased by a dog,

  • then teasingly told the Chinese emperor

  • that he shouldn't let his kids go around biting people.

  • The emperor took offense and trained an arrow on Jing.

  • But instead of begging for his life, Jing cracked another joke.

  • Luckily, this pun landedso the emperor's arrow did not.

  • Contrary to common belief,

  • jesters weren't just a medieval European phenomenon,

  • but flourished in other times and cultures.

  • The first reliably recorded jester is thought to be You Shi,

  • of 7th century BCE China.

  • He declared that, as a jester, his words could not give offense.

  • This privilege was important to the jester's position

  • but was sometimes violated.

  • Jesters had unique relationships to power:

  • they could be viewed as objects of mockery

  • and also as entertainers and trusted companions.

  • People became jesters by various routes.

  • They could be appointed due to physical or neurological differences,

  • plucked from a pool of entertainers, or recruited by a traveling courtier.

  • Such was the case when a royal servant

  • wrote King Henry VIII's chief minister in the 1530s.

  • He recommended a young boy to replace the king's aging jester, Sexten,

  • with the assurance that he'd be much more pleasant than Sexten ever was.

  • Some jesters boasted unique talents, like Roland the Farter,

  • of Henry II's 12th Century court.

  • Every Christmas, he performed a special routine,

  • the finale of which was a simultaneous jump, whistle, and fart.

  • Additionally, jesters could influence important decisions.

  • For example, if the clowns of thebatulabal nation

  • of the Sierra Nevada mountains

  • thought a chief was leading poorly,

  • they could apparently get the elders to appoint a new one.

  • And, of course, Jing Xinmo knew how to sway the Chinese emperor.

  • A local magistrate once requested that the emperor stop trampling farmland

  • during his hunting sprees.

  • Infuriated, the emperor had the magistrate hauled before him.

  • Jing facetiously suggested that the magistrate be put to death immediately

  • and that the emperor let the peasants starve

  • instead of harvesting the land and paying taxes,

  • all so he could gallop about freely.

  • Presumably seeing the absurdity of his own behavior,

  • the emperor laughed and pardoned the magistrate.

  • In 1596, a French man was condemned to death.

  • But Mathurine, one of the relatively few female jesters on record,

  • intervened in return for payment.

  • With her help, the man's wife successfully pleaded with King Henry IV

  • for her husband's life.

  • Although rare, jesters were sometimes fired or even killed

  • for taking their mockery or criticism too far.

  • In 1638, Scottish jester Archy Armstrong

  • worsened his already contentious relationship

  • with the Archbishop of Canterbury.

  • The Archbishop had recently revised the Scottish Book of Common Prayer

  • an act that garnered strong opposition and incited riots.

  • Taking the opportunity to further humiliate him,

  • Archy asked the Archbishop, “Who's the fool now?”

  • For which he was banished from the court.

  • Three years later, after the Archbishop's arrest,

  • a pamphlet began circulating that ridiculed him,

  • which was said to be the work of none other than Archy.

  • Meanwhile, some jesters openly mocked their royal bosses without consequence.

  • 11th century Persian jester Talhak suggested the sultan was a cuckold,

  • implying his wife was unfaithful to him.

  • One day, as the sultan rested his head on Talhak's knee,

  • he is said to have inquired, “What is your relation to cuckolds?”

  • To which Talhak replied, “I am their pillow.”

  • And when 19th century Persian shah asked whether there was a food shortage,

  • jester Karim Shir'ei joked,

  • Yes, I see Your Majesty is eating only five times a day.”

  • Even when rulers were considered divinely appointed,

  • some jesters managed to speak truth directly to power,

  • and revealin so many riddles, jokes, or skits

  • who the real fools were.

10th century jester Jing Xinmo

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How dangerous was it to be a jester? - Beatrice K. Otto(How dangerous was it to be a jester? - Beatrice K. Otto)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2023 年 08 月 08 日
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