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Rapparee - 5 dictionary results

rap⋅pa⋅ree

[rap-uh-ree]
–noun
1. an armed Irish freebooter or plunderer, esp. of the 17th century.
2. any freebooter or robber.

Origin:
1680–90; < Ir rapaire
rap·pa·ree   (rāp'ə-rē')   
n.  
  1. A freebooting soldier of 17th-century Ireland.
  2. A bandit or robber.

[Irish Gaelic rapaire, variant of ropaire, cutpurse, from ropaid, he stabs.]

Rapparee

Rap`pa*ree"\, n. A wild Irish plunderer, esp. one of the 17th century; -- so called from his carrying a half-pike, called a rapary. [Written also raparee.]

rapparee 
"Irish freebooter," 1690, originally "pikeman," from Ir. rapairidhe, pl. of rapaire "half-pike." Kind of soldier prominent in the war of 1688-92.

rapparee

any of the dispossessed native Irish who employed guerrilla methods to resist the English from the time of the English Civil Wars (1642-51) and more especially after the regular Irish army had surrendered in the Jacobite war (1689-91) in Ireland. They were termed rapparees after their weapons, short pikes (Irish: rapaire). The elusiveness of the rapparees confounded the British for a time, but superior forces, plus Britain's ability to insulate Ireland from foreign, particularly French, support, ended the insurgency.

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