Online Encyclopedia

FORLORN HOPE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 667 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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FORLORN

HOPE  (through Dutch verloren hoop, from Ger. verlorene Haufe=" lost troop "; Haufe, " heap," being
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equivalent in the 17th century to "
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body of troops "; the French equivalent is enfants perdus) , a military
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term (sometimes shortened to " forlorn "), used in the 16th and 17th centuries for a body of troops thrown out in front of the
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line of
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battle to engage the hostile line, somewhat after the fashion of skirmishers, though they were always solid closed bodies . These troops ran
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great risks, because they were often trapped between the two lines of battle as the latter closed upon one another, and fired upon or ridden down by their friends; further, their
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mission was to facilitate the attacks of their own main body by striking the first blow against or meeting the first shock of the fresh and unshaken enemy . In the following century (18th), when lines of masses were no longer employed, a thin line of skirmishers alone preceded the three-deep line of battle, but the term " forlorn hope " continued to be used for picked bodies of men entrusted with dangerous tasks, and in particular for the storming party at the assault of a fortress . In this last sense " forlorn hope " is often used at the
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present time . The misunderstanding of the word " hope " has led to various applications of " forlorn hope," such as to an enterprise offering little chance of success, or, further still from the
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original meaning, to the faint or desperate hope of such success .

End of Article: FORLORN HOPE
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