, 1796. A "rout", or
rout-party, was in Georgian England a relatively informal party given by the well off to which large numbers of people were invited. The term covered a variety of styles of event, but they tended to be basic, and a guest could not count on any music, food, drink, cards, or dancing being available, though any of them might be. "Rout-cake" was a particular type, mentioned by
Jane Austen in
Emma. Often, all there was to do was talk.
James Gillray's caricature of 1796 shows
Lady Georgiana Gordon (1781–1853, presumably "Lady Godina"), not yet
Duchess of Bedford and indeed only about 16 at most, gambling at a game called
Pope Joan, with the winning "
Curse of Scotland" in her hand. At left is
Albinia Hobart, Countess of Buckinghamshire, perhaps the hostess. She was famous for hosting gambling parties. Behind the card-tables is a tight crush of people. The events sometimes became rather disorderly, and the name presumably originates as a metaphorical extension of the military term. "Rout" is often used to mean "an overwhelming defeat" as well as "to put to disorderly retreat" or "to defeat utterly". It is often used in sports to describe a
blowout. In English
common law, a rout is a disturbance of the public peace by three or more persons acting together in a manner that suggests an intention to
riot although they do not carry out the inferred act. As a
common law offence, it was abolished in England and Wales by the
Public Order Act 1986. Rout is personified as the eponymous deity in
Homer's
Iliad as the cowardly son of
Ares. "Rout" is also one of several
collective nouns for a group of
snails. == External links ==