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RIBALD , a word now only used in the sense of jeering, irreverent, abusive, particularly applied to the uses of low, offensive or mocking jests . It has an interesting earlySee also: history, of which Du Cange (See also: Gloss. s.v
.
Ribaldi) gives a full account
.
It is one of those words, like the See also: Greek tiysavvos, an unconstitutional ruler, and the Latin latro, a hired soldier, mercenary, later robber, which have acquired a degraded and evil significance
.
The ribaldi were See also: light-armed soldiers, on whom See also: fell the duty of being first in attack, the enfans perdus or " forlorn hope " of the armies of the French See also: kings; thus Rigordus, in his contemporary history of the reign of See also: Philip
See also: Augustus, for the See also: year 1189, speaks of the Ribaldi
.
. . qui primos impetus in expuguandis munitionibus facere consueverunt
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Later we find the ribaldi among the See also: rabble of See also: camp-followers of an army, and Giovanni See also: Villani, in his 16th-century See also: Chronicle (11, 139), speaks of ribaldi et i raguazzi del See also: hoste, and See also: Froissart of the ribaux as the lowest ranks in an army
.
Ribaldus (ribaut) was thus a See also: common name for everything ruffianly and abandoned, and See also: Matthew See also: Paris (See also: Ann
.
1251) says: Fures, exules, fugitivi, excommunicali, quos omnes Rihaldos Francia vulgariter consuevit appellare
.
The name (ribaldae or ribaldi) was particularly applied to prostitutes, brothel-keepers and all who frequent haunts of See also: vice, and there was at the French See also: court from the 12th century an official, known as Rex Ribaldorum, See also: king of the ribalds, changed in the reign of
See also: Charles VI. to Praepositus Hospitii Regis, whose duty was to investigate and hold judicial inquiry into all crimes committed within the precincts of the court, and control vagrants, prostitutes, brothels and gambling-houses
.
The etymology of the word has been much discussed, and no certainty can be arrived at
.
The termination —ald—points to a Teutonic origin, and connexion has been suggested with O.H.Ger
.
Hripd, M.H.Ger . Ribe, prostitute, with Ger. reiben, rub, or with rauben, rob . Neither See also: Skeat nor the New See also: English See also: Dictionary find any relation to the English " bawd," procuress, pander
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