 Welcome to the Endless Knot. Today, we're taking part in the We Create EDU group collab all about colour. So, we'll be exploring the rainbow connections of colour words and uncovering how they're linked not only by dyes and pigments, but also by diseases, psychoactive drugs, Homeric epic, and monsters. The word colour comes into Middle English from Anglo-Norman and Old French, ultimately from Latin. Latin colore, in turn, comes from the old Latin form colos, meaning covering, from the Proto-Indo-European root cal to cover, conceal, save, also the source of such words as conceal, whole, hollow, and clandestine, as well as calypso, the name of the senior in Homer's Odyssey, who attempts to keep the hero Odysseus on her island Ogugia rather than let him return home, effectively concealing him from the world. The musical word calypso, by the way, comes from an unrelated African language, though perhaps influenced in form by the name calypso. But getting back to the word colour, the sense of the word developed from the idea of that which covers, emphasising the outer appearance of something. Now, before English adopted the word colour, one Old English word for the concept was hue, from which we get the modern word hue. And this highlights the fact that when we talk about colour, we're actually referring to a number of different parameters, including hue. In technical terms, hue is about the frequency of light, but there are other parameters that determine how we perceive a colour, such as saturation, lightness, and brightness. So for instance, pink is a pale red, and brown is a dark orange, and colours like white and black involve multiple frequencies of light. But for our purposes, looking at the language of colour, we want to consider what are called basic colour terms, rather than the physical properties of light. By basic colour terms, we mean distinct basic colours, so for instance, not dark green or forest green or emerald or lime. Some languages don't make a distinction between what are in English, the distinct colours green and blue, a category that is sometimes referred to by scholars as grue, which is referred to as buru in the language of the Himba people of Namibia, and other languages make finer distinctions that are made in English, such as Russian, which has distinct words for dark blue and light blue, Sini, and Guluboy respectively. So what are considered basic colour terms can differ from language to language and culture to culture, and this is a subject of much debate in the field of anthropological linguistics. Brent Berlin and Paul Kay wrote a very influential book in 1969 called Basic Colour Terms – Their Universality and Evolution, examining the colour words from many languages from around the world, and proposed that languages divide up colours in a predictable pattern depending on the number of basic colour terms the language has. Thus, according to their system, level one languages just make a distinction between black, dark, cool, and white, light, warm, and all languages have at least these two categories of colour. If a language has three basic colour terms, then the third one, in addition to black and white, is red. That's level two. With level three, either green or yellow is added to the list, and at level four both green and yellow. Level five adds blue to the list, and level six adds brown. At level seven, various other colours can be added in, such as purple, pink, orange, or grey. Now the work of Berlin and Kay has come under some criticism, and there is a general debate among scholars between the universalist view that colour cognition is universal in all humans and that colour categories follow a consistent pattern across all languages, as in the work of Berlin and Kay, and the relativist view, part of the larger domain of linguistic relativity, in which colour terms are culturally dependent. But for our purposes, we'll stick with those basic colour terms given by Berlin and Kay. Black, white, red, green, yellow, blue, brown, purple, pink, orange, and grey, though we won't follow that order, or the spectrum order found in the rainbow. But instead, move along the roots mapped out by some unexpected connections between them, and we'll start with that word hue. It comes ultimately from the Proto-Indo-European root k, that seems to have originally meant a kind of dark colour, and is the source of a number of different colour words in various languages. It's the source of Old English howan, a word meaning blue, which survives into early modern English as ha, a word which is still used in Scots. It's also the source of the Old English word har, which is the most common Old English word referring to the colour grey. That survives into modern English as hor, that's H-O-A-R, and it's now most commonly used to refer to grey hair, as well as the colour of frost, as in horfrost. And it's that sense of grey hair that lies behind the related German word her, meaning mister, from the idea of showing respect to someone who is old and grey haired. Old English did also have the word grey, which is now the basic colour term for that colour. The etymology of grey is uncertain, and while there are cognates in the various Germanic languages, the Romance language cognates, like Spanish gris, French gris, and Italian grigio, the last two of which wine lovers will know from Pinogri and Pinogrigio, are all borrowings from Germanic, not native Romance words. However, this Germanic root may go back to the Proto-Indo-European root ger, meaning to shine, glow, which is attested outside the Germanic languages. English cognates of grey include grizzled, which again usually refers to grey hair or fur in the case of the grizzly bear, and the word ambergris. Ambergris is a substance which was, until the more recent development of synthetic substitutes, frequently used in the manufacture of perfumes as a fixative making the scent last longer. It is produced, believe it or not, in the digestive system of sperm whales, where it appears to form as a coating for hard, sharp objects the whale ingests, such as giant squid beaks, until it is vomited up by the whale. So yes, perfume is made from whale vomit. Now the gris part of the word is from French gri. The first part of the word is in fact amber, the yellow or orange fossilized tree resin often used in jewelry, except originally the word amber referred to ambergris, coming from the Arabic word anbar, which referred to the whale vomit substance, not the fossilized tree resin, which only became associated with the word later. To sort out the confusion, the French began to refer to the whale substance as ambergris, gray amber, and the tree resin as amberjeune, yellow amber, and eventually the tree resin continued to be called amber, having usurped the word. To make matters more confusing, by way of folk etymology, the word ambergris came to be interpreted as either ambergris because of the greasy nature of the substance, or ambergris in the belief that it came from the country Greece. As for the fossilized tree resin, which typically came from the area under the Baltic Sea, you might wonder how it was referred to before it usurped the word amber. While in Greek it was called electron, which became Latin and English electrum, a word which could also refer to an alloy of gold and silver, which had a color similar to amber. The English word's electron and electricity came about because early experiments with electricity involved the rubbing of amber to produce a static electric charge. The ultimate etymology of Greek electron is uncertain, but one suggestion is that it might be related to the Greek word helios, meaning sun, and therefore also related to the English word helium, so-called because the element was first identified during an observation of a solar eclipse, again, because of its appearance, thus ultimately coming from the proto-Indo-European sauel, also the source of the English word sun. Now both amber and ambergris had a variety of other uses as well. In addition to perfume, ambergris was also used for medicinal purposes, such as burning it toward off the Black Death in medieval Europe, as well as a food or flavoring, as in the favorite dish of King Charles II of England, eggs and ambergris, and an ingredient in a cocktail from the 19th century, the English and Australian cookribo. In addition to its use as a jewel and a plot device in Jurassic Park, amber could also be used for its color, possibly as an ingredient in the varnish of Stradivarius violins. The recipe was a secret and is a matter of some scholarly debate, and was also used for its scent, being burned in ancient Chinese customs, though generally not actually used in perfumes, but instead the scent of amber being simulated through the use of other ingredients, such as the shrub resin called lubdenum, not to be confused with laudanum, though its name often appears as laudanum. Interestingly, actual laudanum, from the Latin verb laudare to praise, a kind of cure-all medicine invented by the Swiss alchemist Paracelsus, was made with both amber and ambergris, along with a number of other ingredients, such as crushed pearls, musk, saffron, castor and nutmeg, but the real active ingredient was opium. In addition to its medical uses, laudanum was also frequently taken as a recreational drug, with Samuel Taylor Coleridge famously being interrupted by a man from Porloch during his opium-fuelled hallucinatory dream, which became the poem Kublai Khan. He had become addicted to laudanum after taking it to treat his jaundice and rheumatic fever, and his medical condition, jaundice, brings us to our next colour, yellow, since it comes from that French word for yellow, jaune, which we saw earlier in amre jaune, and which goes back to the Latin colour word galbus, yellow or greenish-yellow. Ultimately from Proto-Indo-European gel, meaning to shine, a root with many colour word derivatives in various languages, including the word yellow itself through the Germanic branch. Other English words from this root include gold, a shiny metal, yoke, the yellow part of an egg, and words such as gleam, glitter, glow, and glass, all through Germanic. The word also passed into the Indo-Iranian branch of languages, becoming Old Iranian zarna golden, Middle Persian zarnica gold-coloured, and Syriac zarnica, meaning arsenic, which, after passing through Greek, Latin, and Old French, ends up as the English word arsenic. Arsenic has historically not only been used as a poison, but as a medicine as well, for diseases such as cancer and syphilis, and is even still used in some rare circumstances. It was also used as a gold-coloured pigment and dye in its mineral form, orpiment, a word which comes from Latin aurum, gold, and pigmentum, pigment, which was also used by alchemists trying to produce gold. In other forms, arsenic was used to make green pigments and dyes, specifically, shields green, invented by chemist Carl Wilhelm Schiel, which may have played a role in Napoleon's death because of the arsenic content in his favourite green wallpaper and the damp conditions in his exile home on the island St Helena releasing the poison, and Paris green, which was invented as an improvement over Schiel's green, though it ended up being very toxic anyway, and came to be used as a component of blue colourant in fireworks. The root gel also made its way into Greek as chloros, meaning pale green or greenish-yellow. Remember, in Berlin and K's levels, green and yellow come together, which comes into English in a number of ways, such as chlorophyll, the green substance in plants that allows for photosynthesis. It also produced the word melancholy, actually a combination with the Greek colour word melas, black, also a source of the words melanin and melanoma. You see, in Greek, the bodily fluid bile was called chole, also known in English as gall, also from that same root. In the ancient theory of the bodily humours, yellow bile was thought to make you short-tempered and irritated, whereas black bile was thought to make you quiet or even morose, and became associated therefore with feelings of depression, hence the word melancholy. Another way Greek chloros comes into English is in the word chlorine, coined by chemist and inventor Sahampri Devi. However, Devi wasn't the first to study the substance. The Flemish chemist Jan-Baptiste van Helmont, who accidentally coined the word gas from his Flemish pronunciation of the word chaos, was the first to recognise chlorine as a gas, and our friend Carl Wilhelm Schiel was the first to isolate chlorine, though he hadn't yet worked out that it was an element, not a compound. Schiel, by the way, who was referred to as hard luck Schiel by Isaac Asimov because of all the discoveries he made before others went public with them, thus gaining all the credit, was also the first to isolate oxygen. It was Joseph Priestly and Antoine Lavoisier, who beat him to publication, and had invented a bright yellow paint, which came to be known as Turner's Patent Yellow, after the man who stole the patent from under him. That's why he was so quick to cash in on Schiel's green in spite of knowing about the whole arsenic poisoning problem. Of course, today we primarily think of chlorine as a disinfectant and bleaching agent. In fact, it was the first modern bleaching agent. Bleaching by means of leaving textiles out in the sun has, of course, been around a long time, and sometimes substances like lye and sour milk were used to aid in the process. The word bleach itself goes back a long way too from Old English Blachon to bleach Whiten, ultimately from the proto-Indo-European root Bell to shine, flash, burn. But it was French chemist Claude-Louis Bertollet who first put chlorine to work as a bleaching agent, first as chlorine gas, and then as liquid bleach, Odejavel, named after the town he had his laboratory in and think also of the modern bleach brand Javex. However, the process wasn't very efficient and so an enterprising Scotsman, well, aren't they all, named Charles Tennant came up with an improvement producing bleaching powder and an industrial dynasty. Tennant enlisted several friends in his business ventures, including one Charles McIntosh, who helped with the development of bleaching powder. McIntosh's other claim to fame was the invention of a new type of waterproof fabric, what came to be known as the McIntosh Raincoat. He produced the fabric by using NAFTA, a byproduct of coal tar, to dissolve natural rubber and then sandwiched the solution between two layers of fabric. The word NAFTA is surprisingly old. It comes into English via Latin and Greek from Old Persian NAFTA, which could mean wet moist or petroleum, which in turn comes either or both from proto-Indo-European neb, cloud, or proto-Semitic NPT referring to the petroleum substance. The connection to the proto-Indo-Iranian water god apam napat, whose name might mean something like child of the waters, napat perhaps being related to the English word nephew. In the Byzantine Empire, NAFTA was used as a component of Greek fire, basically a 7th century flamethrower. And in the 20th century, the Americans perfected this horrific weapon in the form of napalm, a portmanteau of naphthenic and pulmitic, since it was made from NAFTA and pulmitic acid found in palm oil. Napalm was invented by American chemist Louis Feeser, whose less destructive contributions included the first synthesis of vitamin K and the synthesis and screening of quinones as anti-malarial drugs, which are also used in dyes and pigments and found in the matter plant and can be synthesized from coal tar. And he worked on steroids synthesizing cortisone. So these drugs, along with some of the other substances we've looked at so far, such as ambergris, laudanum, and arsenic, are important medical drugs connected to the search for pigments and dyes. The word drug comes from old French drogue, supply, stock, provision, perhaps from Middle Dutch drogue, dry, in reference to the dry wares and dry barrels they were preserved in, which in turn comes from the Germanic root drogue, dry, also source of the word dry. Now the ultimate source of this Germanic root is uncertain. It might come from the Proto-Neuropean root drogue to shake, tremble, or it might come from the root dare to hold support, and could thereby also be related to the old English words Dyrnane, to lie still or hidden, Dyrnane to hide conceal, and Dyrnane hidden secret. So another connection along with the word colour to the idea of something hidden or concealed. Now it may not surprise you to hear that another word that descends from bell to shine, flash, burn, the root behind the word bleach, is blonde, as well as the French colour term blonde white. And so does the Latin word flowers, meaning deep yellow, reddish yellow, gold coloured tawny, which comes into English in chemical terminology as riboflavin, the chemical term for vitamin B2. But more surprising is that it is also the root that lies behind the word black, from old English black, which wasn't the usual basic term for the colour, which was Swart, related to the basic colour term for black in other Germanic languages as well. Swart and modern English Sworthy come from the root Swardo, meaning black dirty, also the root behind the word sorted. The sense development of bell to black is from burning, and thus bright, to burnt, like coal, and thus dark. And what's more, another basic colour term which comes from the root bell is blue, which comes into English through old French blue, replacing the native old English word blauen, also from the same root. Though that's not a very common word in old English, with hawa and hauen, related to modern English hue, being the more common terms for the colour blue. So a lot of very different basic colour terms from the same root, that means shiny. Language is funny that way sometimes. Now as soon as you start looking into colour words in old languages, you'll probably see that the ancient Greeks couldn't see blue because the colour is never mentioned in ancient Greek texts like the epics of Homer. In fact, famously, Homer talks about the wine dark sea, which in Greek is oinops pontos, literally more like wine faced sea or wine looking sea. And because we aren't accustomed to thinking of the sea as the colour of wine, some people, in the first instance British Prime Minister William Gladstone, who wrote a book about the subject, have jumped to the wrong conclusion. The reality of the situation is that, as we've seen in one parameter in which we categorise colours, so the comparison of sea to wine here is not on the basis of hue, but probably on the way light reflects off both liquids as they move. Interestingly there is a kind of blue word in Greek, qianos, from which we get the English word cyan, and which might come from the Proto-Indo-European root quay, shining white. But for Homer, the word seems to have just meant dark, developing the sense of blue only later, being used to refer to the dark blue mineral, lapis lazuli. As for lapis lazuli, well the lapis part is Latin for stone, and the lazuli part comes through Arabic from Persian lajvard, which referred to the mineral as well as the town it came from, in modern-day Turkestan. Where that name comes from is uncertain, but one suggestion is that it's a compound from that shiny word gel which lies behind yellow and gold, and the root well meaning to press push. And this Persian word gives us another secondary colour word in English, having had the article al added to it in Arabic and becoming old Spanish azur, and eventually English azur. There are of course a number of other secondary colour words for particular shades of blue in English, and many of them are connected to pigments. Lapis lazuli was a much sought after pigment second only in value to gold for blue paint, which was called ultramarine because it was transported into Europe by ship from beyond the sea, from Latin ultra, beyond, and marinus of the sea. Turquoise is so called because it was transported into Europe through Turkey. Colour words are also often connected to the dyes that produce them. The word dye comes from Old English dye, colour dye, but its further etymology is appropriately murky. It seems to come from the protogemantic root dowgo colour shade, and is related to Old English deagle, hidden secret, much like the root kel to cover conceal that lies behind the word colour. Beyond that it might come from the proto-Indo-European root dew, dust, vapour, smoke. So, along with colour and drug, dye also seems to be connected with the idea of something hidden secret. Now, perhaps the most important ancient blue dye was woad from Old English wad, which is extracted from the Isatis tinctoria or woad plant. Proportedly, at least according to Julius Caesar when he invaded Britain, the Celtic people there either painted or dyed their skin with woad when they went into battle. If this is true there may in fact have been another reason for using woad since it's an astringent. Woad was also the primary dye for making blue textiles, at least until indigo dye became available. Indigo, as the name suggests, was imported from India and produced from the Indigo-Fera tinctoria plant, and is responsible for the blue in blue jeans. The word jeans, by the way, comes from jean, an old 16th century word that comes from the city name Genoa, and came to refer to a rugged type of cloth that came from there, where the word denim is derived from the French d'uneim, meaning from neem, a town in southern France. But another word for blue jeans, dungarees, comes from the name of a village in India, dungree, where a fabric dyed with indigo was produced. Indigo had been available to the ancient Greeks and Romans, but it was very rare in medieval Europe, so they had to settle for the woad dye instead, until Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama discovered a sea route to India in the 15th century. Now, indigo dye actually contains the same chemical as woad but in a much higher concentration, and that got all the woad producers upset because indigo threatened their woad profits. So, they started a smear campaign claiming that indigo was poisonous, it isn't, rotted yarn, it doesn't, and was the devil's dye. But in the end, there was no holding back the new indigo since people really liked their bluer than blue blues, and one person who made a mint by cornering the market on indigo dye in the 19th century was German businessman Heinrich Schleeman. But, funnily enough, this is not the reason he became famous. Schleeman who had grown up in poverty and was therefore unable to pursue his interests in ancient history by going to university instead made a number of quick fortunes for his sometimes underhanded business dealings. First, as a banker during the California gold rush, buying and selling gold dust and seemingly short changing his customers before hurriedly selling the bank and leaving town, and later on as a military contractor during the Crimean War by cornering the market on salt peter, sulfur, and lead used to make gunpowder and selling them to Russia. As a result of all this, he was able to retire at age 36 and then dedicate himself to archeological excavations of the locations in the epics, including most famously discovering the location of Troy. Though he obtained a PhD in absentia by submitting a dissertation, which is mostly copied from someone else's work, he was never properly trained, so his excavations were actually largely destructive. He in fact dug through and damaged the layer of Troy that was later found to coincide with the period of the Trojan War and looted some golden items from an earlier layer which he called Priam's treasure. So, indigo helped to uncover Troy even as Schleeman did as much harm as good. But another way that indigo is important to our story is not the dye, but the color itself because Isaac Newton, who did groundbreaking work on light and color, added it to the rainbow. What Newton had discovered is that white light was actually made up of the whole spectrum of colors by using a prism, which refracted the different colors from a beam of white light at different angles, showing all those component colors, and then recombined them back into white light. Newton decided that there should be seven colors because there were seven notes in the western major scale. So, he designated a color between blue and purple as indigo, as the East India Company had at the time just begun importing indigo dye into England, even though he acknowledged that the rainbow was an unbroken spectrum of colors. One of the reasons Newton was so keen on the numerological correspondence of the seven colors and the seven musical notes might have been the fact that seven was thought of as an important mystical number, and Newton was obsessed with the occult. It sounds strange now to think of Newton as being into the occult, but it seems that this work was even more important to him than his scientific and mathematical work. The word occult, by the way, comes from the root cal to cover conceal the same root that lies behind the word color, since it's hidden knowledge. The particular types of hidden knowledge that Newton was interested in were alchemy in the search for the philosopher's stone, decoding of the Bible to extract scientific information and also to make prophecies and theories of Atlantis, which he connected with the island of Ogugia, and Calypso kept Odysseus. In these regards, Newton was influenced by the Rosicrucians, a movement that stemmed from Hermeticism, one of the most important and influential occult traditions in Europe, which goes back to a set of Egyptian Greek wisdom texts called the Hermetica, written in the 2nd century CE and ascribed to Hermes Trismegistus, meaning literally thrice-great Hermes. This figure was associated with both the Greek god Hermes and the Egyptian god of wisdom, Toth, who became seen as the same god in Polymaic Egypt. The other Egyptian god frequently mentioned in the Hermetic corpus is Amun, who came to be the chief god in the Egyptian pantheon and whose name means appropriately enough for our story, hidden. Amun is sometimes depicted with ram horns and so fossilized cephalopods and snails came to be referred to as horns of Amun, which is reflected in the name Amonite, a prehistoric cephalopod. Another scientific name that was coined from Amun is Ammonia, because it was first obtained from the salt deposits, called Sal-Omoniac, found near a temple of Amun in Libya, which was used not only for ritual, but also for medical purposes. As for Ammonia itself, it was used for a wide variety of purposes historically, including in certain dying processes in the form of stale urine, and was first isolated by a number of chemists in the 18th century, including our friend Hardlock Shield, but its composition was first determined by Bleacher Bertolet. Today, Ammonia is important in a wide variety of applications, from fertilizers to window cleaners, but also, like chlorine, has disinfectant properties and is used to reduce or eliminate microbial contamination of beef. The word hermetic seal, by the way, comes from hermeticism because Hermes Trismegistus supposedly discovered how to create an airtight seal for alchemical purposes. Another English polymath and early scientist who worked in the hermeticist tradition was Thomas Brown, who wrote about the relationship between religion and science in his religio medici religion of a doctor, in which he also wrote about melancholia, and who coined a great number of scientific terms, such as hallucination, which is formed from Latin alukinari to wander in mind, talk unreasonably, ramble in thought, ultimately from Greek aluane to wander in mind. Think of Coleridge hallucinating about Kublai Khan. When Brown died, his extensive library which contained not only medical texts but also many occult books, was left to his eldest son Edward, but when he died, their combined collection went up for auction, and many of the books were purchased by physician, naturalist and noted collector, Hans Sloane. And when he died, he left his phenomenal collection to the British nation, which became the foundation of the British Museum, the British Library, and the Natural History Museum in London. Sloane's other claim to fame was the invention of chocolate milk, when he combined the cacao he was introduced to in Jamaica, which he initially thought was nauseating, with milk to make it more palatable. Hot chocolate sweetened and spiced with a variety of other ingredients had already been introduced to Europe, including one recipe that contained jasmine flowers, amber, musk, vanilla, and ambergris. Try adding some grey whale vomit to your hot chocolate today. Now in addition to Gael and Belle, there are a surprising number of other Proto-Indo-European roots that mean to shine. I guess if something is shiny you really want to talk about it. And many of these roots produce colour words in one language or another. For instance, there's arg, which leads to a Greek word for white, but also the Latin word for silver, argentum, and therefore all the silver comes from. And there's leuc, which becomes Greek leucos, clear white, giving us leukemia, a disease that affects white blood cells. The root cond, passing through Latin, gives us not only candle and incandescent, but also candidate, because a Roman running for political office would wear an extra white toga from Latin candidatus, clothed in white, and may also be partly behind the name Cassandra, the daughter of King Priam who prophesied the fall of Troy, though she was cursed to no one believing a prophesies. And there are a bunch more shiny roots, two of which we'll see later. As for the word white, well it comes from another shiny root, quate. The other main English word that comes from this root is wheat, with its white flower. Wheat was of course the transformative crop that allowed for the agricultural revolution and the formation of complex societies and large cities in places like Mesopotamia and Egypt. Wheat's importance can hardly be stressed enough and people became so dependent on this crop that when something went wrong with it it would starve and civilizations could fall. And one of the big threats to wheat is leaf rust, a fungal disease that affects not only wheat but other grains such as barley and rye. The Romans had an agricultural festival called Robigalia which was meant to propitiate Robigus, the god of rust diseases. And the festival would involve the sacrifice of a puppy often one with a red coat. It was sympathetic magic, the red blood from the red puppy to ward off the rust-coloured plant disease. You see, plant rusts get their name because they appear as rust-coloured spores on plant surfaces. And the word rust in both its senses and Robigalia for that matter are etymologically related to the word red. Red and rust come from the Proto-Indo-European root red, ruddy, both through the Germanic branch. Through Latin rubius, red, we also get ruby and rouge from the French word for red but now used in English to refer to the makeup. Robust, rambunctious, and corroborate also come from this root through Latin robor, red oak, because of the hardness and strength of the tree. And the word rubric comes from this root because of the red lettering and medieval manuscripts used to mark divisions or special sections. That's where we get the expression red letter day. The red ink was made from Minium, also known as red lead or lead oxide. The word Minium comes from the river Minius, now called Minio, at the Spanish-Portuguese border, and may ultimately come from the Proto-Indo-European root May to change, go, move. Also the source of words such as mad, mutate, communism, amoeba, and migrate. Minium gives us our English word miniature, which originally had nothing to do with smallness, and is unrelated to words like minute and minimum, through Italian minitura since sections in manuscripts were also divided off with ornate illustrated capitals. The other source of red ink was the mineral cinnabar or mercury sulfide, which was really popular with Roman women who used it as lipstick in spite of the fact that it contained poisonous mercury. Cinnabar was also sometimes referred to as vermilion in its prepared form. But true vermilion, also known as crimson, is a dye that comes from the insect, Kermes vermilio. The word vermilion from Latin Wermis, worm, is related to the word worm from the Germanic branch and comes ultimately from the Proto-Indo-European root Wermi, meaning worm, which has a rhyming variant, Kermi, also meaning worm, which passed into Sanskrit and was then borrowed into Arabic from which we get the word crimson. Cloth dyed with Kermes was also called scarlet, a very expensive woollen fabric in medieval Europe. The word scarlet comes into English through the Romance languages from Arabic sicillat, which referred to an expensive red silk cloth. The etymology behind that is uncertain, but it may actually come from Latin sicillatus, embossed in figures from sicillum, seal, from signum, marked token sign, also the source of the word sign. In turn, signum might come from the Proto-Indo-European root sequa to follow from the idea of a sign or standard one follows, or from sec to cut, from the idea of a sign or mark that is carved. This would be appropriate for scarlet cloth dyed with insect-based Kermes, since the word insect comes from this root because an insect's body is cut into three segments. And speaking of insects and threats to the wheat supply, locusts related to the word lobster were the other great danger in addition to the fungal rust, with many ancient references to plagues of locusts in ancient Egypt, the Book of Genesis, Homer's Iliad, Aristotle, Livy, and the Quran. Locusts are in fact just a particular species of grasshopper, though it's interesting to note that while grasses, that is the family Poaceae, of which wheat is a member, evolved in the early Cretaceous period, grasshoppers evolved some hundred million years earlier in the early Triassic. The family named Poaceae was coined from Greek poa, fodder, which comes from the Proto-Indo-European root peia, to be fat, swell, also the source of fat, pine, Irish, and Pinot, as in the word Pinot Grigio, or Pinot Gris, which we saw earlier. As for grasshopper and grass, well that word comes from the root gray, to grow, become green, also the source of the words grow, graze, possibly herb, and the basic color term green. Some other color words in the range of green include the green gem emerald, from for once a Semitic verb meaning to shine to add to our shiny roots, Barak, which was the basis of the noun Barakht, meaning gem. This made it into the vernacular languages of India, an important source of gems in the ancient world, asmaragada, and then into Greek as maragdos, green gem, and the variant form smaragdos, which passed into Latin as smaragdos, becoming post-classical Latin smaralda, and after becoming Spanish esmeralda, an old French esmerode, became English emerald, and the phrase emerald isle, in reference to Ireland, first appeared in 1795. Another precious, or rather semi-precious greenstone is malachite, which gets green color from its copper content. Malachite gets its name from the green leaves of the malo plant, malake, in Greek. You see, when copper is exposed to air or seawater, it gains a green patina called vertigris, also used as a pigment, which is why the Statue of Liberty is green. The word vertigris comes from old French vert de gris, which unlike ambergris actually does mean green of gris, though the word has been misinterpreted as meaning a green of gray, but what the connection with gris is uncertain. French ver, green, related to English verdant and verger, comes from Latin virides, green, whose further etymology is unknown. Another fungal blight on grasses, and in particular rye, is ergot. The problem is, if you eat something made from ergot-contaminated rye, you can contract ergotism, which causes convulsions, diarrhea and vomiting, gangrene, which is tissue death, and if you're wondering, the word gangrene has no etymological connection to the word green, as well as mental effects, such as melaria and psychosis. There have been numerous historical accounts of outbreaks of ergotism, and some researchers have posited connections between these outbreaks in events like the Salem witch trials, which had reports of bewitchment symptoms very similar to ergotism, such as convulsions, melancholia, and hallucinations. You see, ergot, like many fungi, contains alkaloids which can have powerful effects when ingested, sometimes fatal ones. Alkaloids can be poisonous or psychoactive, causing hallucinations, but also can be caused by things such as migraines, melaria and cancer, induced childbirth, and prevent postpartum hemorrhaging. Psychoactive alkaloids are not only used as illicit hallucinogenic drugs, but are also found in everyday food and drinks, such as caffeinated beverages and chocolate. Getting back to ergot specifically, some researchers have speculated that chukaion, an ancient Greek drink made from barley, when used as part of the Ellucinian Mysteries, an initiation rite for the cult of demeter and persephity, may have contained chukaion, thus accounting for the mystical experiences of the rite. Similarly, some researchers have suggested that the witch Cersei's magical potion in the Odyssey might have been an ergot contaminated chukaion, and that the magical herb Moly, which Hermes gives to Odysseus to protect him from her enchantments, could have been an actual plant, such as the snowdrop, that can prevent hallucinations. Also, author John Grigsby argues, based on evidence from bog bodies of Northern Europe, that there were fertility cults that used ergot in ways similar to the Ellucinian Mysteries, and that the poem Beowulf reflects the tension between such a fertility cult and the followers of Odin, idiosyncratically interpreting the name Beowulf as barley-wolf, rather than the standard interpretation as be-wolf, a kenning meaning bear. Grigsby's highly controversial fertility cult theory may be reflected in the sexualized interpretation of Grendel's mother, played by Angelina Jolie, in the 2007 film adaptation of Beowulf. The fact of ergot is that it can trigger a group of genetic diseases called porphyria, as can mercury and arsenic poisoning, with such symptoms as, depending on the type of porphyria, abdominal pain, vomiting, high blood pressure, rapid heart rate and neurological conditions such as muscle weakness, seizures, anxiety and hallucinations, and occasionally even overt psychosis, as well as in another form of the disease, light sensitivity to the skin causing pain and even blisters. There are a number of famous historical figures who seem to be referred from porphyria, such as Nebuchadnezzar, King of Babylon, Mary Queen of Scots, King George III of Great Britain, and Vincent van Gogh. Van Gogh, who had intermittent psychotic episodes and hallucinations, is the romantic ideal of the tortured artist, who is known for his use of vibrant colors and swirling brushstrokes, and also experimented with pointillism in some of his paintings. Pointillism is the use of small colored dots to build up an image. The words pointillism and point come from Latin punctum, meaning prick, puncture, ultimately from the proto- Indo-European root, peuk, to prick, which is also the source of the word pygmy, who in Greek mythology were a tribe of diminutive people mentioned in Homer's Iliad. It's also the source of the verb to pink, now mainly used in the phrase, pinking shears, which lead a zigzag pattern rather than a straight edge. And this may be the source of the color term, pink, since the dianthus flowers, which have perforated petals and are pink in color, were also called pinks. Though there is the alternate expression that it comes from a Dutch word, meaning small, also the source of the expression pinky finger, which was used in the phrase pink eyes, meaning small or half closed eyes, to refer to the flowers. In either case, pink was the last basic color term to be added to the English language, not appearing in the specifically color sense until the 18th century. As an interesting and interconnecting side note, the expression pink elephant, first recorded in 1913 in Jack London's autobiographical novel about his alcoholism, John Charlie Corn, refers to alcohol induced hallucinations. There are of course other color words which can refer to pink by way of comparison to pink things, so not basic color terms, such as rose from Latin rosa and Greek rodon, also the source of the flower name rhododendron, ultimately probably an eastern Mediterranean borrowing. And carnation, meaning literally flesh colored from Latin caro flash, which also came to refer to a pink flower. But getting back to porphyria, it's more directly connected to the basic color term purple. Porphyria gets its name because of one of the symptoms of the disease, the changing color of one's urine to purple, since porphyra is the Greek word for a purple dye that came from tire made from a type of sea snail of the murex genus. We don't know where this Greek word comes from, so it's probably a lone word, possibly from a Semitic source, but the word passed from Greek to Latin as porphyra, from which it became old English purple, through a process of dissimilation in which one of the r was used to the different L sound. Tyrion purple was highly valued in the ancient world, becoming associated with royalty, but during the Middle Ages it became unavailable due to the near extinction of the snail and the sacroconstantinople in 1204, so medieval dyers turned to various red dyes such as kermes, which could be used along with indigo to produce a sort of purple. Another common word for the color purple is violet, which comes from the name of the flower violet. Technically speaking, violet is actually the light having a specific wavelength, as purple is the blending of red and blue wavelengths. The word violet comes into old English through old French violette from Latin viola, which also refers to the flower. Though we don't know where this Latin word comes from, it seems to be etymologically related to the Greek word ion, which refers to the same flower. This Greek word makes its way into English in the word iodine, coined in English by Sir Humphry Davy from Louis Gelusac's French word for the element, iode. As to who gets the credit for this one, iodine was first discovered by French chemist Bernard Courtois, who is a producer of salt peter, a component of gunpowder. Courtois accidentally produced iodine in the process of making salt peter and figured he'd discovered a new element, but unfortunately lacked the funds to continue investigating it. So he gave out samples to a number of other chemists to work on, including Gelusac, who figured it was either a new element or an oxygen compound, came up with the name and publicly announced the discovery. Davy had gotten his hands on some iodine, experimented on it and noted its similarity to chlorine, and announced to the Royal Society of London that he'd identified a new element. Thus broke out an argument between Gelusac and Davy over who was the first to identify the new element, but both men gave credit to Courtois for being the first to isolate it. It was the surgeon Antonio Grosich who first proposed using a tincture of iodine for sterilizing skin before an operation, since iodine, like chlorine and ammonia, is a disinfectant. Courtois' other claim is that he had earlier isolated morphine, the alkaloid in opium from the opium poppy. In fact, this was the very first alkaloid to be isolated. Courtois had actually collaborated with Armand Seguin in the discovery of morphine, but after Seguin presented their findings to the French Institute in 1804, initially without giving credit to Courtois, the pair stopped working on their opium research and Courtois went back to making saltpeter. Morphine was then rediscovered by German pharmacist Friedrich Sertener, who gave it its name based on the Greek god of sleep, Morpheus, and he is now credited with pioneering the field of alkaloid chemistry. Sertener marketed morphine both as a pain suppressant and as a treatment for opium and alcohol addiction, though it later became clear that morphine is far more addictive than either opium or alcohol. As for Seguin, he went on to discover a faster and cheaper method of tanning leather and subsequently made a mint providing leather for Napoleon's armies, before of course he died from green wallpaper poisoning, whereas Courtois, in spite of starting a business manufacturing iodine and inventing iodine scarlet dye, ended up dying penniless. I guess he and hard luck Sheil could console each other in the afterlife at least. Now once again there are other words that are sometimes used to refer to particular shades of the color purple because they refer to purple things, such as amethyst, a purple colored quartz. The ancient Greeks believed that amethyst could prevent drunkenness, perhaps through sympathetic magic as the color was similar to that of wine. So they wore rings of amethyst and that's how the stone got its name, which in Greek is made up of the negative prefix and the word Methu, which means wine, coming from the Proto-European root mead, which also leads to the Germanic derived word mead, an alcoholic beverage made from honey. This root also leads to the word methanol with the second element coming from Greek wood, which is the simplest alcohol what is sometimes referred to as wood alcohol. The alcohol we drink is called ethanol, a contraction of ether alcohol. Of course alcohol is another example of a psychoactive drug. Remember those pink elephants but unfortunately amethyst isn't really effective at preventing drunkenness. You'd be better off with some holy moly. Now adding alcohol can help the medicine go down, so to speak, as in the case of the anti-malarial drug quinine, which is by the way another example of an alkaloid coming from the bark of the synconitry, which was mixed with gin and carbonated water to give us the gin and tonic. So during the period of British colonialism British officials were safe from malaria if a little tipsy from the alcohol. Well some things never change. But quinine was hard to get since it wasn't easy transporting and domesticating the synconitry so attempts were made to produce it artificially as we saw Napalm inventor Louis Fieser later did. One such 19th century chemist who was trying to do this was William Henry Perkin, who was trying to extract it from coal tar, that stuff that McIntosh got his raincoat material from. Well he failed to produce quinine but he accidentally succeeded in producing the world's first artificial aniline dye. He named his new purple dye mauveine, after the color word mauve which was the French word for the malo plant. Remember the green malachite. So malachite is reminiscent of the green leaves of the malo plant and mauve is reminiscent of the purple flowers and all the words malo from Old English Malwe, malachite from Greek Malake and mauve from Latin Malwa come from the same source word from an unknown and now lost Mediterranean language. But getting back again to the purple porphyria, you remember I said one of the symptoms was light sensitivity even to the point of skin blistering. Well one theory is that porphyria may be the source of the vampire legend. Additionally one treatment for porphyria involves blood transfusions which might be connected to the blood drinking element of vampire myths. Vlad the Impaler, also known as Vlad Dracula, was another possible historical case of porphyria and he was the inspiration for Bram Stoker's famous novel. Though some have criticized this theory as both medically implausible and based more on the fictional vampire than the folkloric one. Porphyria has also been linked to werewolf legends since the disorder can also cause hypertrichosis that is abnormal hair growth even including the whole face. Perhaps a more plausible explanation for werewolves are the Viking berserkers or rather the similar wolf headnar. You see the word berserk literally means bear shirt as berserkers would don bear skins just as the wolf headnar would don wolf skins. In both cases these warriors would channel the spirits of these animals for fighting and would enter into a trans-like fury in battle called berserker gang in which they would gnaw on their shields, fly into a rage and seem to possess inhuman strength. One explanation for this berserker gang is the ingestion of Amanita muscaria otherwise known as fly agaric in other words magic mushrooms or perhaps the plant henbane which both contain powerful alkaloids with psychoactive properties including hallucinations. The word wolf comes through the Germanic branch from the European root wolfwo meaning wolf which is also the source of Greek lucus wolf from which we get lichenthrope literally wolf man and Latin lupus from which we get the French word for wolf lu as well as the name of the autoimmune disease lupus so named in the 13th century because the rash it produced was thought to resemble a wolf spite. As for the word bear it comes through the Germanic branch from the root bear meaning bright or brown which is not only another one for our list of shiny roots also giving us the word burnish also the source of the basic color term brown. So bear literally means the brown animal as does the word beaver also from this root. The funny thing is bear is not the normal Indo-European word for bear which was instead earth co. This root comes into Latin as Ursus as an Urso minor the little bear and into Greek as Arctos bear from which we get the term arctic because the constellation Urso minor contains Polaris the north star so why did the Germanic languages end up with a different word for bear based on the color word brown? Well this is a case of taboo replacement rather than use the name of a powerful creature which might evoke its presence an alternate name is used remember the Vikings as well as other Germanic peoples venerated the bear this can also be seen in that canning name Beowulf literally Beowulf meaning bear because the bear eats the bees honey so Beowulf is a replacement of the replacement of the original word for bear. Talk about hidden now there are of course various brown pigments including sepia a brown ink made from the ink sack of a cuttlefish called sepia in Greek from the verb sepain to make rotten also the source of the words septic and antiseptic reminding us of all the disinfectants we've seen so far. Russet as a color term referring to a reddish brown color comes from the rough woolen cloth russet worn in the middle ages by peasants which was even required in England by a law passed in 1363 and by French and Friars to show their humility which was dyed with blue woad and the reddish dye matter to produce that dull brown color with the word russet coming ultimately from the root root that lies behind the word red and perhaps the most unusual brown pigment is the paint mummy brown actually made from ground up Egyptian mummies the word mummy comes from Arabic mumia embalmed body from the Persian word mum wax which was used in the embalming process but if you think paint is an odd use for Egyptian mummies you'll be floored to know that it was also used as an ingredient in medicines such as the medieval version of theriac a kind of cure-all like laudanum in fact Paracelsus himself worked with theriac the word theriac comes from Greek therion wild animal as it was a cure for venomous bites and would contain the flesh of venomous animals as well as other ingredients such as garlic, roses ginger, saffron and a variety of other herbs and spices though the main active ingredient was once again opium theriac has its origins in the cure-all mithridate supposedly invented by mithridates the sixth the king of Pontus because of the assassination of his father mithridates the fifth he developed this complex recipe of opium, myrrh, saffron, ginger, cinnamon and castor and 40 other ingredients as an antidote against all poisons he also took to exposing himself to sub-lethal doses of many poisons in order to build up an immunity inconceivable the story goes that after he was defeated and put to flight by the Roman general Pompey he tried to commit suicide by poison which didn't work because of his immunity to all poisons and so he had to have bodyguard and friend betuitus kill him by sword mithridates was a formidable enemy of Rome and at earlier encountered the general Sulla in the first mithridatic war but Sulla eventually had to come to terms with mithridates so that he could return to Rome to keep his political rival Marius from getting the upper hand Marius had been Sulla's commander in the Kimberian war between Rome and various Celtic and Germanic tribes most significantly the Kimberi and the Teutones Marius gained a boost to his political career when he took charge of the Kimberian war reorganizing the legions in the wake of the disastrous battle of Arousio in which the two generals proconsul Quintus Servilius Caipio and consul Nius Malleus Maximus who didn't get along failed to cooperate leading two separate armies you see Maximus was the consul for the year so he should have outranked Caipio but since Maximus didn't come from a noble family Caipio refused to serve under him this battle was fought near the Celtic town Arousio which took its name from the Celtic god Arousio a water deity like the Indo-Iranian Aparna Pat connected to Naptha and the Greek Calypso from Homer's Odyssey over time the Celtic named Marousio morphed into the French name Orange as it's now known seat of the House of Orange but the place name Orange is not the source of the color word Orange though it did affect its form the color term has its origin in India in the Dravidian word Nauru meaning fragrant this was borrowed into Sanskrit as the word Naranga meaning orange tree and it eventually made its way into Persian as Narang then Arabic Narang and because of the period of Arabic controlled Spain it became Spanish Narang now in French because of the similarity to the place name Orange in Narang essentially a Norange became re-racketed as an orange and orange the word arrived in English in the 14th century in reference to the fruit but eventually became a color term in the 16th century since there wasn't really any word for that color except for workarounds like Old English Yellow Rad literally but as a final note oranges are rich in vitamin C and because of this vitamin's connection to the immune system it has at least in the popular imagination become the modern day cure all for infections such as the common cold so from drugs to dies diseases disinfectants epics hallucinations and serendipitous discoveries by looking beneath the surface of our basic colors we've uncovered some of the hidden connections at the end of the rainbow thanks for watching if you can believe it there's still so much more to learn about colors so go check out the playlist from our WCE friends to find out about colors in animals toxic dyes and more if you've enjoyed these etymological explorations and cultural connections please subscribe and click the little bell to be notified of every new episode and check out our Patreon where you can make a contribution to help me make more videos I'm at alliterative on Twitter and you can visit our website alliterative.net for more language and connections in our podcast blog and more