- A freebooting soldier of 17th-century Ireland.
- A bandit or robber.
[Irish Gaelic rapaire, variant of ropaire, cutpurse, from ropaid, he stabs.]
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[Irish Gaelic rapaire, variant of ropaire, cutpurse, from ropaid, he stabs.]
rapparee, an 18th-cent. Irish Jacobite irregular, from ropairí (half-pikes), the customary weapon of the Catholics who attacked Protestants in the period of the Williamite War. At the collapse of the Jacobite cause in Ireland the term became largely synonymous with the more commonplace tory, a highwayman or bandit.
Rapparees (from the Irish, ropairí, plural of ropaire, actually meaning
There was a long tradition of irregular warfare in Ireland before the 1690s. Irish guerrilla fighters in the 16th century were known as ceithearnaigh choille, "wood-kerne", a reference to native Irish
foot-soldiers called ceithearnaigh, or "kerne". In the Irish Confederate
Wars of the 1640s and 50s, irregular fighters on the Irish Confederate side
were known as "tories", from the Irish word tóraidhe (modern tóraí) meaning "pursued man". The tories were
usually Confederate soldiers whose units had broken up and who regrouped in small bands in rugged country such as the
Similar outlaws were to be found in contemporary Scotland, known as mosstroopers.
In the 1690s, during the Glorious Revolution, the label "tory" was insultingly given to the English supporters of
Throughout the campaign, the rapparees caused major logistical problems to the Williamite army, raiding their rear areas and killing their soldiers and supporters. Many rapparee bands developed a bad reputation among the general civilian population, including among Catholics, for robbing indiscriminately. George Story, a Williamite officer, tells us that the rapparees hid their weapons in bogs when Williamite troops were in the area and melted into the civilian population, only to re-arm and reappear when the troops were gone. The rapparees were a considerable help to the Jacobite war effort, tying down thousands of Williamite troops who had to protect supply depots and columns. The famous rapparee "Galloping Hogan" is said to have guided Patrick Sarsfield's cavalry raid that destroyed the Williamite's siege train at the siege of Limerick (1690).
Most rapparees surrendered at the end of the war; Hogan, for instance, surrendered and was amnestied after agreeing to help
track down other rapparees but was murdered by his former associates. Many rapparee bands operated in Ireland well into the
18th century. Famous figures include Count
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