Jacobin

Etymology
From, ultimately from.

Noun

 * 1)  A Dominican friar (because their first house in Paris was near the church of Saint-Jacques).
 * 2) A member of a radical French political club founded (at an old Jacobin convent) in 1789 and one of the driving forces of the French Revolution.
 * 3)  A political radical.
 * 4) A breed of domestic pigeon (known for its feathered hood over its head).
 * 1) A breed of domestic pigeon (known for its feathered hood over its head).

Translations

 * Danish: parykdue
 * French:
 * German: Perückentaube, Perückentauber, Perückentäuber, Perückentauberich, Perückentäuberich, Perückentäubin
 * Italian: colombo cappuccino, colombo cappuccio
 * Norwegian:
 * Bokmål: parykkdue
 * Nynorsk: parykkdue

Adjective

 * Of, or related to the radical French political club that was a driving force of the French Revolution.
 * 1)  Politically radical.
 * 2) * 2015, Matthew Quest, "George L. Mosse: Unconventional Historian", New Historian:
 * Mosse argued the most fascist and totalitarian in particular but also radical Jacobin regimes, continued to have an investment in not merely disciplining human bodies but harnessing their sense of glory toward worshiping themselves