Online Encyclopedia

HARBINGER

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 935 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HARBINGER  , originally one who provides a shelter or lodging for an

army . The word is derived from the M.E. and O.Fr. herbergere, through the
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Late
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Lat. heribergalor, formed from the O.H.Ger. heri, mod . Ger . Heer, an army, and
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bergen, shelter or defence, cf . " harbour." The meaning was soon enlarged to include any place where travellers could be lodged or entertained, and also by transference the person who provided lodgings, and so one who goes on before a party to secure suitable lodgings in advance . A herald sent forward to announce the coming of a king . A Knight Harbinger was an officer in the royal household till 1846 . In these senses the word is now obsolete . It is used chiefly in
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poetry and literature for one who announces the immediate approach of something, a forerunner . This is illustrated in the " harbinger of spring," a name given to a small plant belonging to the
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Umbelliferae, which has a tuberous root, and small white flowers; it is found in the central states of North
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America, and blossoms in March .

End of Article: HARBINGER
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