The word 'brick' enters English surprisingly late — around 1416 — from Middle French 'brique,' itself borrowed from Middle Dutch 'bricke' or 'brike' (a brick, a tile, a fragment). The Dutch word is possibly related to 'breken' (to break), making a brick etymologically 'a broken piece' or 'a cut fragment' — clay divided into uniform pieces for construction.
The late arrival of the word reflects a remarkable gap in English architectural history. The Romans were prolific brick-makers and introduced sophisticated brick construction to Britain during their occupation (43-410 CE). The Latin word for brick was 'later' (brick, tile), but the broader term 'tēgula' (a tile, a covering) was borrowed into Old English as 'tīgele' and used for both roof tiles and wall bricks. When the Roman administration collapsed in the early 5th century
Brick-making was reintroduced to England in the late medieval period, heavily influenced by Flemish and Dutch builders who had maintained the tradition continuously. It is fitting, then, that the English word 'brick' comes from Dutch via French, rather than from the Latin tradition that had provided the earlier word 'tile.' The technology and its vocabulary both arrived from the Low Countries.
The oldest fired bricks date to approximately 3000 BCE in the Indus Valley civilization (Mohenjo-daro and Harappa), where standardized brick sizes and sophisticated drainage systems demonstrate advanced masonry. Sun-dried (adobe) bricks are much older — dating to at least 7500 BCE in the Near East. The Great Wall of China, the ziggurats of Mesopotamia, and the Roman aqueducts all employed brick in various forms.
In English, 'brick' has developed rich metaphorical uses. 'To be a brick' means to be a reliable, solid, dependable person — British slang dating from the 19th century. 'To hit a brick wall' means to encounter an insurmountable obstacle. 'Brickbat' — originally half a brick used as a missile — means a critical remark. 'Brick by brick' means gradually and methodically, invoking the patient labor of the bricklayer. 'Built like a brick house' means powerfully and solidly
The compound 'bricklayer' dates from the 15th century and was one of the essential medieval building trades. A 'brickyard' or 'brickfield' was where bricks were manufactured — raw clay was dug, shaped in molds, dried, and fired in kilns. The characteristic red color of most bricks comes from iron oxide in the clay, which turns red when fired in an oxidizing atmosphere. 'Brick-red' has been a recognized color