How Did April 1 Become “April Fools’ Day”?

two men in party hats hold a giant calendar page reading "April 1st"

For pranksters and mischievous older siblings all around the world, April Fools’ Day, also called All Fools’ Day, is as eagerly anticipated as Christmas.

After all, what other holiday encourages you to think up practical jokes and fool’s errands, from swapping your spouse’s keys to tricking your friend into thinking their car got towed? (Not cool, Steve.)

But how did this odd, prank-centric holiday come to be celebrated in the first place, and why is it called April Fools’ Day?

Where did April Fools’ Day come from?

The true origins of April Fools’ Day remain unknown and are probably lost to history, which means trying to solve the mystery is likely itself a fool’s errand. Nevertheless, theories abound, of course.

One story goes that April Fools’ Day began with France’s 1564 Edict of Roussillon, which decreed that New Year’s Day, historically observed on Easter by Christians, was moved to January 1 as France switched to the Gregorian calendar from the Julian calendar. Easter is a movable, lunar-based date but often falls in April, so it’s said that early adopters dubbed people celebrating the old New Year “April fools.”

Good one, guys.

Another theory suggests that April 1st became the fool’s holiday in the late Middle Ages due to Geoffrey Chaucer’s 14th century collection, The Canterbury Tales, wherein Chaucer includes a playful reference to “32 March,” or April 1st, in “The Nun’s Priest’s Tale.” However, most scholars consider it to have been a mere copying error.

The holiday also shares some striking similarities to some ancient antecedents, though. The ancient Roman festival Hilaria was also a joyful, springtime festival held on or around March 25. Yes, the word hilarious is, aptly enough, related.

Another analog is Holi, a Hindu spring festival celebrated in late March during which people can forgive and forget past faults by throwing colored powder and water on one another.

What’s all the colorful powder about? Discover a kaleidoscope of facts about the Hindu festival Holi.

Is it April Fool’s Day or April Fools’ Day?

Where does the apostrophe go? Originally, there was none!

The term April fool, for a victim of an April Fools’ Day prank, dates back to the 1600s. Early records of the holiday from the 1700s declare it April Fool Day, with an apostrophized April Fools’ Day recorded by the 1800s. This is also around when April fool came to refer to the trick itself.

Today, the holiday is stylized both as April Fool’s Day, emphasizing an April fool as a singular concept, and April Fools’ Day, indicating plural April fools, whether the people or the pranks.

And don’t forget to shout “April Fool!” when the prank is revealed.

Easy April Fool pranks

  • Add food coloring to milk
  • Freeze a bowl of cereal overnight to serve the next morning
  • Replace a glass of juice with a glass of jello
  • Change the computer’s default language
  • Change the screen saver to an error message, such as the Blue Screen of Death
  • Change a smartphone’s wallpaper to a photo of cracked glass
  • Flip the computer screen display upside down
  • Crank the mouse sensitivity all the way up or down
  • Turn all of the clocks ahead
  • Spread plastic bugs and spiders throughout the house
  • Putt confetti on the ceiling fan
  • Send an envelope full of glitter

April fools across the world

Yup, April Fools’ Day is celebrated all around the world. Because who doesn’t like playing an April Fools’ joke on their loved ones? Here are some examples:

In France, the fooled party is called the poisson d’avril, which literally means “April fish.” France’s customary prank involves pinning a paper fish to a friend’s back.

In Scotland, April Fools’ Day was traditionally called Gowk Daygowk being another name for the cuckoo, a common symbol of the fool. Pranks continued into April 2, Tailie Day, when celebrants traditionally attach a “paper tail” (or a “kick me” sign) to their friends’ backs.

Brazil celebrates April 1 as Dia da Mentira, or “Lie Day,” in which people try to fool their loved ones. Always for comedic effect, of course.

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The enigmas surrounding April don't stop at the first of April. Do you know where the name for the month came from?

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