This page contains a considerable amount of unverified information. You can help the Wiki of Westeros by adding relevant references.
|
- "Do you hear my lady, Ser Dontos? From this day, you shall be my new fool."
- ―King Joffrey Baratheon
A fool[1] is a performer employed to provide entertainment to members of a king or lord's court.
Known fools[]
- {Dontos Hollard}, known as "Dontos the Red", a knight stripped of his title and forced into the role by King Joffrey Baratheon. Executed by a single crossbow bolt by the order of Lord Petyr Baelish, after aiding in Sansa Stark's escape from King's Landing.
In the books[]
In the A Song of Ice and Fire novels, there are several fools besides Dontos Hollard:
- Moon Boy, the other resident fool at the Red Keep
- Butterbumps, the obese fool of House Tyrell
- The mad Patchface, a former slave at Volantis, the court fool of Stannis Baratheon, who was purchased and made free by Lord Steffon Baratheon during the time of the Mad King
- Lord Walder Frey employs his own lackwit grandson, Aegon - son of Ser Stevron Frey - who is dubbed "Jinglebell".
Medieval societies were not "politically correct" by modern standards, and frequently forced the mentally and physically handicapped into demeaning positions as court jesters for the petty amusement of the court - often the term "court fool" literally referred to a "fool", i.e. mentally handicapped person. In Westeros and beyond, dwarfs are also often used as court jesters - unlike mentally handicapped fools such as Jinglebell Frey, dwarfs are physically but not mentally handicapped, which means they are often expected to come up with witty jests and japes to entertain the court. This is a demeaning position for the mentally/physically handicapped, but better than simply being left in the woods to die as an infant. Tyrion directly explains to Jon Snow that centuries of dwarfs serving as court fools and jesters have made people used to the idea that dwarfs can say whatever critical japes they want - the result being that Tyrion usually just says whatever witty insults happen to pop into his head, without fearing the repercussions.
Due to their lowly status, however, fools are often ignored by nobles at court, leaving them in the perfect position to overhear secrets. More than a few court fools at King's Landing are on the payroll of Littlefinger or Varys (or both).
References[]
- ↑ Game of Thrones: Season 2, Episode 1: "The North Remembers" (2012).