Cabinet originally meant a small private room. The word came from French cabinet, a diminutive of cabine (a small chamber), probably related to cabin through Late Latin capanna (hut). In 16th-century usage, a cabinet was an intimate space where a wealthy person kept valuable objects, private papers, and curiosities — a room that combined storage with secrecy.
The furniture sense developed naturally. If the cabinet was where you kept things, the cupboard or chest that organized those things inside the room inherited the name. By the 17th century, cabinet referred to a piece of furniture with doors, shelves, and sometimes drawers, designed for organized storage. The room meaning gradually faded in English, though Italian gabinetto and French cabinet still carry both senses.
The political meaning took a different path. When Charles II of England wanted to consult trusted advisors without the formality of the full Privy Council, he invited a small group to meet in his private cabinet at Whitehall Palace. Critics called this arrangement a cabinet council, using the word's association with secrecy and privacy to imply furtive, illegitimate governance. The label was intended as an insult but became the standard term. By the 18th century, the Cabinet (now capitalized) was an established institution of British government.
The same dual evolution occurred in other European languages. German Kabinett means both a display case and a ministerial body. Italian gabinetto means a small room, a bathroom (euphemistically), and a government cabinet.
Cabinet of curiosities — the Wunderkammer of early modern Europe — preserves the original room sense most clearly. These were private collections of rare objects displayed in dedicated rooms, ancestors of the modern museum. The word cabinet thus connects government ministers, kitchen storage, and museum history through a single small room in a 16th-century house.