The thugs were professional assassins who rampaged across India for several centuries before being suppressed by the British in the 1830s.
This week, the All Blacks, in general, and Andrew Hore, in particular, became honorary members of the sect. Such was the ridiculous over-reaction to the stiff arm Hore applied to Welsh player Bradley Davies.
If this was an unfathomable act by a player whose previous 72 tests had shown no inkling of such behaviour, so much of the subsequent commentary, notably in the British media, was utterly incomprehensible.
This was not intentional foul play of the sort employed by practitioners of eye-gouging and the like. Nor did it pose such a threat to a player's wellbeing as Dean Greyling's forearm to Richie McCaw's face in Dunedin this year. Yet the Springbok was banned for just two weeks.