jacquerie (n.)youdaoicibaDictYouDict[jacquerie 词源字典]
1520s, from Middle French jacquerie "peasants or villeins collectively," from Jacques, the proper name, which is used as Jack is used in English, in the sense of "any common fellow." So, also, "the rising of the northern French peasants against the nobles, 1357-8," from a French usage. Etymologically, Jacques is from Late Latin Iacobus (see Jacob).[jacquerie etymology, jacquerie origin, 英语词源]