Triboulet

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Portrait, c.1550
Le Roi s'amuse (The Fool and Death by Sarah Bernhardt
)
A triboulet at the Monthey carnival

Triboulet (1479–1536),[1] also known as Le Févrial or under his family name Ferrial,[note 1] was a jester for king Francis I.[2][3][4]

Biography

Little biographical information is available about Triboulet. It is known that in France, there have been at least three

jesters referred to as "Triboulet", with the first one serving René of Anjou and being also a playwright.[2] The second Triboulet served Louis XII; he died during his reign, and the third Francis I (and possibly also Louis XII), and those two became later confused as one person.[2]

According to Jean Marot, historiographer of Louis XII, this king's Triboulet had a physical deformity and was "as wise at thirty as the day he was born". When he died during the reign of Louis XII, Marot wrote a lengthy epitaph, describing the fool's talents as an entertainer, mime, dancer, and (a bad) musician, and above all, "a man of words".[2] Quickly after his death, Triboulet became a popular fictionalized character to whom numerous anecdotes and witticisms have been attributed, some copied from Italian sources like Ludovico Ariosto.[5]

Ferrial was born in France in 1479. In unknown circumstances, Ferrial found purpose in life as the court jester for King Francis I (and perhaps also earlier for Louix XII), who kept him on the court, together with François Bourcier, "governor of Triboulet" and his brother, Nicolas Le Feurial.[2] He was likely the Triboulet who accompanied Francis I to his Italy campaign of 1515. Poet Jean Visagier [fr] published two epitaphs of this Triboulet in 1538.[2]

Legacy

Triboulet appears as a character in the

Rigoletto.[6][7][8]

Triboulet appears as a character in

François Ier et Triboulet [fr] (The King and the Jester) is a surviving 1907 short film by Georges Méliès.

Triboulet is the subject of French writer

Michel Zevaco
's novel Triboulet.

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ Some modern sources claim that Triboulet was called Nicolas Ferrial, however the accounts of the court of Francis I mention "Nicolas Le Feurial, brother of Triboullet" besides the jester himself.

References

External links

Media related to Triboulet (1479–1536) at Wikimedia Commons