The English adjective 'blatant' has the rare distinction of being traceable to a single author, a specific text, and an exact date. Unlike the vast majority of English words, whose origins are lost in the fog of collective speech evolution, 'blatant' was invented by the poet Edmund Spenser and first appeared in print in 1596 in his allegorical epic The Faerie Queene.
Spenser created 'the Blatant Beast' — a monster with a hundred tongues that appears in Books V and VI of The Faerie Queene. The Beast represents slander, calumny, and the destructive power of malicious speech. It rampages through the poem attacking the reputations of the virtuous, and the knight Sir Calidore (representing Courtesy) pursues it in a quest that is never fully resolved — Spenser's acknowledgment that slander can be temporarily restrained but never permanently defeated.
The word's formation is debated. The most common theory connects it to Scots 'blatand' or 'blaitand' (bleating, bellowing), suggesting a noisy, animal-like quality. An alternative derivation from Latin 'blaterāre' (to babble, to chatter meaninglessly) has been proposed. Both theories connect the word to sound — specifically, to loud, meaningless, or offensive noise.
For roughly a century after Spenser, 'blatant' was used primarily to describe noisy clamor — a blatant crowd, blatant accusations, blatant calls. The word maintained its association with sound and speech, consistent with the many-tongued Beast from which it derived. During the eighteenth century, the meaning began to shift from 'noisily conspicuous' to 'offensively conspicuous,' broadening from auditory to visual and moral domains. A 'blatant lie' is not necessarily
The evolution from noise to conspicuousness is natural enough. Loud things are hard to ignore, and things that are hard to ignore are conspicuous. The metaphorical chain — loud → obvious → shameless — traces the word's passage from the specific (noisy speech) to the general (any kind of offensive obviousness).
The confusion between 'blatant' and 'flagrant' is common in modern English. Both words describe things that are conspicuously wrong, but they approach conspicuousness from different angles. 'Flagrant' (from Latin 'flagrāre,' to burn) implies heat and visibility — a flagrant offense blazes for all to see. 'Blatant' (from Spenser's Beast) implies noise and shamelessness — a blatant offense is committed loudly
Spenser's role as a word-coiner extends beyond 'blatant.' He is credited with introducing or popularizing 'braggadocio' (boastful behavior, named after a character in The Faerie Queene), 'elfin' (relating to elves), and 'derring-do' (daring action, which Spenser actually created through a misreading of an earlier text). His influence on English vocabulary, while modest compared to Shakespeare's, includes some of the language's most vivid and useful words.
The Blatant Beast itself — the many-tongued monster of slander — has proven prophetically relevant to every subsequent era. In the age of social media, where reputation can be destroyed by viral accusation and malicious speech reaches millions instantly, Spenser's invention of a monster representing the destructive power of uncontrolled language seems less like fantasy allegory and more like prediction.