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Jane Foole
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Jane Foole, also known as Jane The Foole, Jane, The Queen's Fool, "Jeanne le Fol" or "Jane Hir Fole" (fl. 1537–1558), was an English court fool (distinct from a jester). She was the fool of queens Catherine Parr and Mary I, and possibly also of Anne Boleyn.
Today, entertainers sometimes perform as "Jane" in Renaissance-themed entertainments such as Renaissance faires.
Life
[edit]
Personal life
[edit]Jane's full name, birth year, and background are unknown. Beden the Fool also appears in related notes of the time, and it has been suggested that Beden was her surname.
Jane is believed to have had a learning disability.[1]
Career
[edit]In the accounts of Anne Boleyn, bills for caps supplied to her "female jester" are recorded in 1535–36.[2] The name of this female jester is not mentioned, but may have been Jane.[3]
In 1537, she is noted to be in service of Princess Mary.[4] As well as Jane, Mary also employed Lucretia the Tumbler.[5] Mary's account book records that shoes were bought for Jane and Lucretia in December 1542 and new smocks were made in January.[6] Lucretia and Jane are known to have performed together, and Lucretia may have been Jane's minder.[7] A barber was paid for shaving Jane's head in April, May, and June 1543. Jane was ill in July 1543.[8] In a paper from November 26-30th, 1544, it is mentioned that geese and a hen were purchased for Jane Foole.[9]
When Catherine Parr became queen in 1543, Jane may have been transferred to Catherine's household. Jane was a well-liked jester at the court of Catherine Parr, where she is mentioned by name as "Jane Foole" in 1543.[2] Catherine Parr bought her a red petticoat, gowns, and kirtles.[10] She may have been depicted in the painting of Henry the Eighth and His Family (1545), in which the man on the far right is identified as her colleague, court jester William Sommers. Jane is among several women suggested as the figure on the left, in the matching end panel to his. Catherine Parr died in 1548. Jane Fool apparently returned to Mary.
Court of Mary I
[edit]When Mary I came to the throne in 1553, Jane was in her employ. A warrant for clothes at the time of Mary's coronation includes gowns of purple gold tinsel and crimson satin rayed with thread of gold for Jane.[11] She apparently had a favoured position with Mary and was given a valuable wardrobe and an unusually large number of shoes. The queen's silkwoman, Marie Wilkinson, supplied some of her clothes. Wardrobe warrants from 1555 surviving in the Bodleian Library mention a gown of green figured velvet (similar to one made for Will Sommers) furred with white hare skins, black knitted hose, another green velvet gown dressed with tinsel cloth, and a fustian-lined Dutch or German-style gowns of crimson and purple striped satin and blue damask.[12] Another fool called Beden was given a Dutch gown of cloth. This style of gown, and the use of striped fabrics, may have made a costume deemed suitable for fools.[13]
Jane's head was shaved,[14] just as the heads of male jesters. Jane hurt her eye in 1557. Mary gave gilt silver salts as rewards to two women who looked after her, a Mistress Ayer and a woman from Bury St Edmunds who healed her.[15][16]
Mary still paid Jane even when Jane got sick and was unable to perform.[17]
It has been suggested that Jane was married to Will Sommers, but this has not been confirmed. It is known that Jane and Will Sommers often performed together, dressed in matching outfits: they are noted to have done so in 1555.[4]
It is not known what happened to her after Mary's death in 1558.
Fiction
[edit]Philippa Gregory's historical novel The Queen's Fool is focused on a female jester active in the court of Mary I, though the fictional character is not called "Jane Foole".
Jane Fool appears as a character in C. J. Sansom’s novel Lamentation.
Jane Fool appears as a character in Kathryn Lasky’s series Tangled in Time.
References
[edit]- ^ "The King's Fools - Disability in the Tudor Court". Historic England. Retrieved 11 January 2015.
- ^ a b Fraser, Antonia (1995). Henrik VIII:s sex hustrur [The six wives of Henry VIII] (in Swedish). Translated by Eklöf, Margareta. Stockholm, SE. pp. 255, 394. ISBN 978-91-37-10713-4.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Online ed.). Oxford: British Academy, Oxford University Press. 2004. ISBN 9780198614128. OCLC 56568095.
- ^ a b John Southworth (30 November 2011). Fools and Jesters at the English Court. History Press Limited. pp. 108–. ISBN 978-0-7524-7986-6.
- ^ Maria Hayward, Dress at the Court of Henry VIII (Maney, 2007), p. 312.
- ^ Privy Purse Expenses of the Princess Mary, pp. 93, 108.
- ^ "Fools". stgeorgebristol.org. Archived from the original on 4 December 2023. Retrieved 25 December 2025.
- ^ Privy Purse Expenses of the Princess Mary, pp. 113, 116, 119, 123.
- ^ "Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII | British History Online". www.british-history.ac.uk. Retrieved 14 September 2025.
- ^ Maria Hayward, Dress at the Court of Henry VIII (Maney, 2007), 309.
- ^ Nadia T. van Pelt, Intercultural Explorations and the Court of Henry VIII (Oxford, 2024), pp. 144–45.
- ^ Nadia T. van Pelt, Intercultural Explorations and the Court of Henry VIII (Oxford, 2024), pp. 142–43: William H. Turner, Calendar of Charters and Rolls Preserved in the Bodleian Library (Oxford: Clarendon, 1878), pp. xviii-xix, 150
- ^ Nadia T. van Pelt, Intercultural Explorations and the Court of Henry VIII (Oxford, 2024), p. 143.
- ^ Henry Ellis, Original Letters, Series 1 vol. 1 (London, 1824) p. 273.
- ^ John Nichols, llustrations of the manners and expences of antient times in England (London, 1797), pp. 27-8
- ^ "British Library Add. MS 62525 f.6r Queen Mary's gift roll".[permanent dead link]
- ^ Van Pelt, Nadia T. (30 June 2021). "Katherine of Aragon's Deathbed: Why Chapuys Brought a Fool". Early Theatre. 24 (1). doi:10.12745/et.24.1.4357. ISSN 2293-7609.
External links
[edit]- Zoe Screti, "A motley to the view: The clothing of court fools in Tudor England", Midlands Historical Review, 2 (2018).
- Selleck, Denise (Spring 1990). "On The Trail Of Jane The Fool". On the Issues. Retrieved 31 March 2011.
- Fragment of a Latin wardrobe account of Mary I mentioning clothes for Jane Foole, BnF Gallica Anglais 176
- Documentary about Jane Fool in Tudor court - Sarah Gordy blog article on playing Jane Fool in a documentary
- Who was Jane Foole? Mary 1st's jester and companion - King’s Fooles Docuseries on YouTube Verve Bee Media Ltd - filmed 2020
Jane Foole
View on GrokipediaEarly Life and Entry into Court
Origins and Identity
Little is known about the early life of Jane Foole, as no records of her birth or death dates survive, though she is documented as active in the English court from approximately 1535 to 1558.[2][4] Her origins remain obscure, with historians piecing together her identity from scattered court accounts rather than personal details.[3] Jane Foole is known by several variant names, including Jane the Fool and possibly Jane Beden, though scholars debate whether these refer to the same individual or distinct figures mentioned in privy purse expenses.[5][4] The surname "Beden" may have been a patronymic or alias, but its connection to Jane remains uncertain, contributing to ongoing discussions about her precise identity.[2][5] Classified as a "natural fool," Jane Foole likely suffered from intellectual disabilities or a childlike innocence that set her apart from "artificial fools," who were witty performers employing feigned simplicity for entertainment.[3][2] Natural fools like Jane were valued in the Tudor court for their perceived purity and sweetness, often seen as untainted by worldly cunning and closer to divine innocence, which elevated their status despite their disabilities.[2][3] Female jesters were exceedingly rare in 16th-century European courts, where the role was predominantly male, making Jane Foole one of the few documented examples in England during the Tudor period.[5][2] This scarcity highlights the exceptional nature of her position, as women were seldom employed in such capacities, underscoring the gendered dynamics of court entertainment at the time.[4][3]Initial Role under Henry VIII
Jane Foole's initial documented appearances in the royal court occurred during the mid-1530s under King Henry VIII, marking her entry as a female entertainer in a predominantly male domain of fools. Court wardrobe accounts from 1536, associated with Queen Anne Boleyn's household, record expenditures for attire suited to a jester, including "one green satin cap, lined with yellow sarsenet" for her "woman fool," widely identified as Jane. These records from 1535–1537 establish her as part of the queen's entourage, highlighting her early integration into the court's performative roles.[6] As a "natural" fool—distinguished by innate intellectual limitations rather than contrived wit—Foole's entertainments were modest and unscripted, focusing on storytelling, simple jokes, and occasional musical contributions to amuse the household. This suited her status, where her spontaneous behaviors provided light-hearted diversion without the sharp satire of artificial fools. Her presence underscored the Tudor court's tolerance for such figures as cherished, if unconventional, companions. Foole's role extended to practical duties within the privy chamber, as evidenced by 1544 payment records that allocated resources for her maintenance, including three geese at 16d and hempseed for parrots, suggesting involvement in light tasks like animal care alongside her jesting. These allocations reflect her embedded position in the royal domestic sphere.[6] Her significance is further illustrated in the c.1545 mural "The Family of Henry VIII" at Hampton Court Palace, where the woman on the far left, dressed in simple attire, is believed to represent Foole, positioned among the king, his family, and other household members to symbolize court harmony.[7] Following Anne Boleyn's execution in 1536, Foole's service continued seamlessly in Princess Mary's household, maintaining her courtly entertainments.Career as a Court Jester
Service with Anne Boleyn and Catherine Parr
Jane Foole entered royal service as a favored court fool during the tenure of Queen Anne Boleyn in 1535, where she was referred to as "her Grace’s woman fool."[2] Records from Anne's privy purse that year document expenses for Jane's attire, including a green satin cap and 25 yards of cadace fringe in morrey color to trim a gown, underscoring her status as a valued member of the queen's household.[6] These provisions indicate Jane's integration into the court's entertainments, a role she maintained until Anne's execution in May 1536.[8] Following Anne's downfall, Jane's household dispersed, but she transitioned to other royal establishments under Henry VIII, maintaining her position without political entanglement.[2] This adaptability allowed her continued presence at court amid the king's marital upheavals, as fools like Jane occupied a non-partisan niche focused on amusement rather than intrigue.[6] In 1544, during Catherine Parr's queenship (1543–1547), Jane joined the new queen's household, where she received privileges reflecting her established role.[8] Accounts from October 1544 record payments of 16d for three geese and 6d for a hen provided to Jane Foole, items likely tied to her daily sustenance or light duties.[6] Further, privy purse entries note Jane's responsibility for tending a small flock of chickens in the privy garden at Whitehall Palace, illustrating her incorporation into the queen's routine court life beyond mere performance.[2] In June 1546, warrants issued for two gowns and two kirtles for her use, affirming ongoing royal support.[8] Jane's survival through Henry VIII's later turbulent years, including Parr's tenure, highlights her resilience as a neutral figure in the shifting royal dynamics.[6]Time in Princess Mary's Household
Following the fall of Anne Boleyn in May 1536, Jane Foole was assigned to the household of Princess Mary, the daughter of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon, where she served as a dedicated companion and entertainer. This assignment is evidenced by payments from Mary's privy purse, with the earliest recorded one in December 1537. Jane remained primarily in Mary's service, with a temporary assignment to Catherine Parr's household from 1544 to 1547, before returning to Mary until her accession in 1553, receiving regular support from the privy purse for her maintenance, including clothing, personal care, and even provisions for a horse keeper. These payments underscore Jane's status as a valued member of the household, with expenditures such as 20d for hose and shoes in January 1537–1538, 7s for damask fabric in April 1538, and 10s for a gown in July 1538, reflecting ongoing care tailored to her role as a fool. During the reign of Edward VI (1547–1553), as Protestant reforms intensified and Mary's Catholic adherence led to political isolation and a reduced household, Jane provided steadfast companionship and amusement amid these tensions. Mary's privy purse continued to allocate funds for Jane's needs into the early 1550s, including multiple instances of payments for head shaving (a recurring expense totaling at least 1s 10d across documented entries) and clothing like smocks shared with other household entertainers, indicating Jane's enduring presence despite the princess's demoted status and financial constraints. Historical records portray Jane as a constant figure in this diminished entourage, offering levity and loyalty when Mary faced surveillance and restrictions on her religious practices. Aspects of daily life in Mary's household highlight the personal bond between Jane and the princess, with Jane likely sharing living quarters and participating in informal entertainments to alleviate Mary's stresses during her periods of disgrace. Payments for joint items, such as 11d for making smocks for both Jane and Lucretia the Tumbler—a fellow performer known for acrobatics—in January 1542–1543, suggest close companionship among the household's entertainers, though no evidence supports romantic connections between Jane and others like Lucretia. Speculation of romantic ties to Henry's fool Will Somers, a contemporary, lacks substantiation in primary records and appears to stem from later artistic depictions rather than historical fact. In July 1543, a substantial 22s 6d was disbursed for Jane's care during an illness, further illustrating the attentive, familial dynamic of her role. Upon Mary's ascension as queen in 1553, Jane's position was formalized as the official Queen's Fool.Role under Queen Mary I
Appointment and Duties
Upon her accession in July 1553, Queen Mary I formally appointed Jane Foole as her official court fool, referring to her in royal records as "Jane our fool," a title signifying personal affection and elevated status within the household.[6] This appointment built on Jane's prior service in Mary's household as princess but marked her unique position as the queen's dedicated entertainer, with documented provisions continuing until Mary's death in 1558.[6] Jane's primary duties centered on providing light-hearted entertainment through innocent jests, storytelling, and companionship, often in the queen's presence during meals, progresses, and court gatherings.[6] As a "natural" or "innocent" fool—likely with intellectual disabilities—her role emphasized unmalicious humor and companionship, offering comic relief amid the political stresses of Mary's reign, including religious conflicts and failed pregnancies.[6] She also participated in courtly activities such as riding alongside the queen and joining annual events like the Saint Valentine's Day lottery.[2] Her high status was reflected in privileges like freedom to roam the court unescorted and generous allocations from the privy purse, including fabrics for multiple gowns and petticoats in luxurious materials such as satin, silk, and lace, far exceeding those for other servants except the queen herself.[6] These provisions encompassed full living expenses, laundering services, needlework supplies, and special dietary items, underscoring Mary's fondness.[2] In 1555, during an eye illness, the queen covered costs for Jane's medical care, a dedicated caregiver, and temporary lodging at Bury St Edmunds, demonstrating the depth of her personal investment.[2] Unlike male fools such as William Sommers, who often employed sharp-witted satire, Jane's role as a female jester in a traditionally male domain highlighted a gentler, more intimate form of amusement, positioning her as a cherished companion rather than a mere performer.[6]Privileges and Court Incidents
As Queen Mary I's personal fool, Jane Foole benefited from the traditional privileges afforded to court jesters, including exemption from many formalities of court etiquette that constrained other household members. This allowed her a unique liberty in movement and interaction within the royal sphere, reflecting the esteemed yet unconventional status of fools in Tudor England.[9] Mary provided Jane with extensive personal support, ensuring her well-being through detailed household provisions until the queen's death in 1558. Jane received luxurious attire, such as damask gowns, fur-trimmed kirtles of red silk, and white satin garments—often more opulent than those allotted to some ladies-in-waiting—as well as multiple deliveries of 12 pairs of shoes annually. Additional expenses covered laundering services, needles for mending, and even Valentine's Day gifts, like three yards of black satin for courtier Mr. Harte in 1555 and similar fabric for Mr. Barnes in 1556. These records from Mary's privy purse accounts underscore Jane's favored position and the queen's commitment to her comfort.[5] Jane also enjoyed practical perks, including the upkeep of a personal horse and payments to its keeper, Hogman, which facilitated her presence alongside the queen during travels and daily routines. Her grooming was meticulously funded, with regular barber fees for head shaving—conducted twice monthly to maintain the bald appearance typical of natural fools—coupled with a tight-fitting cap for coverage. Such care highlights Mary's attentive oversight of Jane's needs, treating her as a cherished companion rather than mere entertainment.[5] Notable incidents reveal the depth of this bond and Mary's protective role. In 1556, when Jane sustained an eye injury, the queen arranged for her treatment by attendant Mrs. Ager and issued compensation for the caregiving, demonstrating prompt and personal intervention. Jane's endearing behaviors, including her participation in courtly amusements like storytelling, likely contributed to alleviating Mary's isolation amid political and personal hardships. These episodes portray Jane as a source of levity and loyalty in the royal household.[5] Following Mary I's death on November 17, 1558, no surviving records indicate that Jane received a pension, faced expulsion, or continued service under Queen Elizabeth I. This absence of documentation points to a possible quiet retirement or untimely death, leaving her later life shrouded in uncertainty. As one of the few documented female fools in English court history, Jane's tenure under Mary exemplifies the rare intimacy possible in such roles.[5]Legacy and Depictions
Historical Significance
Jane Foole's role as a "natural fool" in the Tudor court exemplified the employment of individuals with intellectual disabilities, often perceived as innocents whose unfiltered speech and behaviors provided entertainment while challenging contemporary notions of madness and moral purity in 16th-century England.[1] Natural fools like Foole were valued for their perceived divine simplicity, which allowed them to critique courtly vices without repercussions, thereby humanizing the monarchy and offering a counterpoint to the era's punitive approaches to mental difference.[10] This representation influenced historical understandings of disability as a form of courtly utility rather than mere spectacle, highlighting how such figures navigated social exclusion through royal patronage. As one of the few documented female jesters in English royal history, Foole's career illuminated female agency within predominantly male entertainment spheres, enabling women to wield influence through humor and proximity to power in a patriarchal Tudor society.[4] Her sustained service across multiple queens—from Anne Boleyn to Mary I—demonstrated how female fools could leverage their "innocent" status for relative autonomy, contributing to scholarly examinations of gender dynamics in early modern courts.[5] This rarity underscores her impact on studies of women in Tudor history, where jesters like Foole occasionally transcended traditional roles to embody subversive commentary.[11] Records from the Privy Purse Expenses of Princess Mary reveal the economic dimensions of fool patronage, with Foole receiving allowances for clothing, medical care, and upkeep equivalent to those of high-status servants, such as multiple pairs of shoes, hose, and payments for her horse's stabling.[8] These expenditures, including 4 pence twice monthly for head shaving and coverage for illnesses like an eye injury during Mary I's reign, indicate the court's substantial investment in her well-being, reflecting the cultural premium placed on fools as integral to royal leisure and morale.[6] Modern scholarship debates Foole's precise identity, with some confusion arising from potential overlaps with other female entertainers like Lucretia the Tumbler. Unsubstantiated claims of marriage to fellow fool William Sommers also exist.[4] Recent analyses, including a November 2025 article on female jesters, emphasize her as a benchmark for female jesters, arguing that such figures expanded definitions of courtly performance beyond male norms, though primary records remain sparse and interpretive.[4] Her depiction in the 1545 portrait The Family of Henry VIII further evidences her elevated status within the royal household.[12]In Art and Popular Culture
Jane Foole is believed to be depicted in the 1545 portrait The Family of Henry VIII by the British School, where she stands on the left side near the royal figures, her distinctive attire and shaved head suggesting her role as a court fool and symbolizing her inclusion in the household despite her status.[7] This positioning highlights her proximity to power, interpreting her as an integral, if unconventional, part of the Tudor court dynamic.[1] In literature and fiction, Foole appears in historical works that often romanticize her innocence and vulnerability, portraying her as a poignant figure amid political intrigue, such as in modern plays that draw on her life for dramatic effect. For instance, Barbara Blatner's Jane, Queen's Foole (2023) presents her as a developmentally disabled woman navigating the Tudor court, emphasizing themes of protection and humanity through her interactions with royalty.[13] These fictional narratives frequently reference her real-life bond with Mary I as a source of emotional depth, depicting it as a rare, protective friendship that humanizes the queen.[14] Modern media has brought renewed attention to Foole, particularly through documentaries examining disability in the Tudor era. The 2020 docuseries All The King's Fooles, produced by Verve Bee Media, dedicates an episode to her life as Mary I's jester, portraying her as a protected and cherished companion who provided levity and companionship in a turbulent court.[15] Theater productions have similarly emphasized this aspect, with staged readings and performances like Blatner's play underscoring her role as a symbol of overlooked resilience among women with disabilities in historical contexts.[16] Recent cultural revivals in 2025 have positioned Foole as an emblem of overlooked women in history, with discussions on female fools highlighting her as one of the few documented examples from the 16th-century English court, influencing broader conversations on gender, disability, and performance in royal households.[4] These interpretations evolve her image from a mere entertainer to a figure representing the complexities of inclusion and agency for marginalized individuals in early modern society.References
- https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Family_of_Henry_VIII_c_1545.jpg