Rache/ˈrætʃ/, also spelled racch, rach, and ratch, from Old Englishræcc, linked to Old Norserakkí, is an obsolete name for a type of hunting-dog used in Britain in the Middle Ages. It was a scent hound used in a pack to run down and kill game, or bring it to bay. The word appears before the Norman Conquest. It was sometimes confused with 'brache', (also 'bratchet') which is a French derived word for a female scent-hound.
In Medieval hunting, in England and Northern Europe, pursuit of the hart or wild boar involved using a 'limer' or 'lyam hound' (a hound handled on a leash or 'lyam') to trace the animal from its footprints or droppings to where it was browsing or lying up. This became known as 'harbouring' the animal. When this had been done the huntsman reported back to his lord, who then brought the pack of raches to chase it down on its hot scent when it had been unharboured, 'rowsed' or 'upreared'. Sometimes pairs of raches were held at strategic points along where the quarry was expected to run, to be uncoupled when the huntsman blew the signal, or when the quarry was seen to come close. The bloodhound was typically used a limer, and the raches were normally smaller hounds. A lord's pack would include one or two limers to about twenty or more raches.
Bier war schlecht (Bier war schlecht)- Alkoholvergiftung - Krankenhaus - mit im Zimmer: ein Bulle (ein Bulle) - Beinbruch - nachts, als alles schlief, in seinen Tropf gepißt - ergo: Beinbruch und Biervergiftung - Scheißbulle!
“I’m especially delighted to present the ‘Rach 3’ — the first time our orchestra has performed this stunning piece,” said John LoPiccolo, the orchestra’s conductor and music director.