User Contributed Dictionary
Verb
purged- past of purge
Extensive Definition
In history and political
science, to purge is to remove people considered by the group
in power to be "undesirable" from a government, political
party, a profession, or from community or society as a whole,
often by violent means. Restoration of people from a purge is known
as rehabilitation.
Historical use of the term
The earliest use of the term itself was the English Civil War's Pride's Purge. In 1648, the moderate members of the English Long Parliament were purged by the army. Parliament would suffer subsequent purges under the Commonwealth including the purge of the entire House of Lords. Counter-revolutionaries such as royalists were purged as well as more radical revolutionaries such as the Levellers. After the Restoration, obstinate republicans were purged while some fled to New England.The term "purge" is often associated with the
Stalinist
and Maoist
regimes. Those who were purged (among them artists, scientists,
teachers, people in the military, but also many long-time communists who dared to
disagree with the party leadership) were sent to labor camps or
executed.
The most notorious of CPSU purges
was the Great Purge
initiated by Joseph
Stalin during the 1930s. Deng
Xiaoping was known for the distinction of returning to power
multiple times after surviving multiple purges.
After France's liberation by the Allies
in 1944, purges were processed by the Free French
and mostly the French
Resistance against former collaborationnists, the so called
vichystes.
The legal term was known as épuration
légale ("legal purge"). Similar processes in other countries
and on other occasions were denazification and
decommunization.
Purge in fiction
- In the Star Wars films, an event called Great Jedi Purge happened, when Sith Lord turned ruler of the galaxy Palpatine ordered his troops to chase and kill his enemy, the Jedi, under Order 66. Few survived the purge.
- In the TV series Lost, most DHARMA Initiative members were killed by a group they called "Hostiles" on an event called "The Purge" by Mikhail Bakunin.
See also
purged in Czech: Čistka
purged in German: Säuberung
purged in Spanish: Purga (política)
purged in French: Épuration (politique)
purged in Japanese: 公職追放
purged in Polish: Czystka
purged in Portuguese: Expurgo
purged in Slovenian: Čistka