'Redan' (a
French word for "projection", "salient") is a term related to
fortifications. It is a work in a ''V''-shaped
salient angle toward an expected attack. It can be made from earthworks or other material.
Quoted from
West Links - North Berwick:
"The name 'Redan' comes from the Crimean War, when the British captured a Russian-held fort, or in the local dialect, a redan. A serving officer—John White-Melville—is credited on his return as describing the 6th (now the 15th - Ed.) like the formidable fortress, or redan, he had encountered at Sebastopol. Conquered only after nearly a year of attrition, which left over 20,000 British soldiers dead and four times as many French. The word 'Redan' is now part of the English language, and the definition given by the Oxford Dictionary is 'Fort—A work having two faces forming a salient towards the enemy.'"
The numbers "6th" and "15th" in the above quote refer to the hole named "Redan" on the
North Berwick West Links golf course (see below). At the time several
public houses in Britain adopted the name. The ''Redan Inn'' (now ''The Quarterdeck'') in
North Berwick shared its name with the famous hole on the golf course, while there is also a ''Redan Inn'' in
Chilcompton,
Somerset. There is a street in
London called Redan Street.
The Russians used redans on their left at the
Battle of Borodino against
Napoleon. The ''
Bagration fleches'' were three redans backwards in
echelon. The Shevardino Redoubt (another redan) was erected as an early warning post a mile in front of the Bagration flèches. (
Flèche, from the
French for arrow, is another term for redan).
The
census-designated place of
Redan, Georgia was most likely named for the redans built in the area during the
Atlanta Campaign of the
American Civil War.
The "redan hole" in golf
A 'redan hole' or 'redan' is an aspect of
golf course architecture commonly associated with golf architect
Charles B. Macdonald. The term alludes to the "redan" type of fortification. Specifically, a redan hole should have a green where the front angle is a "V" shape and which slopes downward and away from the point of the "V", and consequently from the golfer playing to the green from the tee or fairway.
Most if not all redan holes are flanked by a pair of deep bunkers, deep enough to be obscured from the green, and slope either to the left or the right. The original "redan" is the 15th hole on the West Links in North Berwick, a fearsome 192-yard par 3 which requires an accurate tee shot to an elevated, sloping green invisible from the tee. Golf architects around the world have created holes based on this signature challenge of the famous Scottish course.
External links and references
★
1911 ''Britannica'' on Redans
★
New York Museum and Veteran's Research Center Glossary: Redan
★
Civil War Fortifications on Redans