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The Origin of April Fool’s Day
The debate over the origins of April Fool's Day has been long-standing and entirely inconclusive. Joseph Boskin, a History professor at Boston University, added a scholarly voice to this debate by explaining to a reporter from the Associated Press that April Fool's Day had begun during the Roman Empire. According to him, a court jester had boasted to Emperor Constantine that the fools and jesters of the court could rule the kingdom better than the Emperor could. In response, Constantine decreed that the court fools would be given a chance to prove this boast, and he set aside one day of the year upon which a fool would rule the kingdom. The first year Constantine appointed a jester named Kugel to rule who immediately decreed that only the absurd would be allowed in the kingdom on that day. Therefore the tradition of April Fools was born. The Associated Press reporter transmitted Boskin's story to news media throughout the country who ran it in their papers. However, not a word of this history was true, which Boskin admitted two weeks later. Boston University issued a statement apologizing for the joke, and many papers published corrections.
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everyone knows it come from the pagan new year!
Posted by Isaac in Over there on Sat Apr 02, 2005 at 10:16 PM
It looks like Prof. Boskin got an offer he couldn't refuse from a homicidal albino monk of Opus Dei... Next they'll force someone to claim that the early Church martyrs in the centuries before Constantine didn't worship Mary Magdalene after all. 
Posted by Rex on Wed Apr 04, 2007 at 11:05 AM
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