Wednesday, June 11, 2003

Word History


Apropos of looking the word up at dictionary.com

assassin
  1. One who murders by surprise attack, especially one who carries out a plot to kill a prominent person.
  2. Assassin A member of a secret order of Muslims who terrorized and killed Christian Crusaders and others.
[French, from Medieval Latin assassnus, from Arabic hassassin, pl. of hassas, hashish user, from hasis, hashish. See hashish.]
Word History: At first glance, one would be hard-pressed to find a link between pleasure and the acts of assassins. Such was not the case, however, with those who gave us the word assassin. They were members of a secret Islamic order originating in the 11th century who believed it was a religious duty to harass and murder their enemies. The most important members of the order were those who actually did the killing. Having been promised paradise in return for dying in action, the killers, it is said, were made to yearn for paradise by being given a life of pleasure that included the use of hashish. From this came the name for the secret order as a whole, hassassin, "hashish users." After passing through French or Italian, the word came into English and is recorded in 1603 with reference to the Muslim Assassins.


Sometimes, knowledge for knowledge's sake is just damn cool.


hassassin, hassis, hasas are poor renderings of the actual images displayed in dictionary.com's entry. YMMV.

No comments: