Gringore, Pierre (c.1475-1538). Born in Normandy, a Rhétoriqueur, he was one of a group of writers used by Louis XII to produce propaganda. But he was best known for his association with a confrérie, the Enfants Sans Souci, as actor, producer, and writer, providing them with soties and moralités, like the Jeu du prince des sots (1512). His stage-name, ‘mère sotte’, is often used for his publications. He also wrote a lengthy mystery play, La Vie de monseigneur sainct Loys. Two of his most famous works, satirical, moralizing pieces, were the verse Folles Entreprises (1505, inspired by Brant's Narrenschiff) and Les Fantaisies de Mère Sotte (1516), which mixed verse and prose. The character Gringoire in Hugo's Notre-Dame de Paris is based on Gringore.
[Christine Scollen-Jimack]




