When started celebration of april fool?
In Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales (1392), the “Nun’s Priest’s Tale” is set Syn March bigan thritty dayes and two.[2] Chaucer probably meant 32 days after March, i.e. May 2,[3] the anniversary of the engagement of King Richard II of England to Anne of Bohemia, which took place in 1381. However, readers apparently misunderstood this line to mean “March 32,” i.e April 1.[4] In Chaucer’s tale, the vain **** Chauntecler is tricked by a fox. In 1508, a French poet referred to a poisson d’avril (April fool, literally “April fish”), a possible reference to the holiday.[3] In 1539, Flemish poet Eduard de Dene wrote of a nobleman who sent his servants on foolish errands on April 1.[3] In 1686, John Aubrey referred to the holiday as “Fooles holy day”, the first British reference.[3] On April 1, 1698, several people were tricked into going to the Tower of London to “see the Lions washed.”[3] The name “April Fools” echoes that of the Feast of Fools, a Medieval holiday held on December 28.[5] In the Mid