The word 'cistern' is etymologically a box — an underground chest for storing not documents or treasure but something far more precious in the ancient world: water.
Latin 'cisterna' was derived from 'cista' (a box, chest, or coffer), which was itself borrowed from Greek 'kístē' (κίστη, a box, basket, or wicker chest). The suffix '-erna' in Latin typically indicated a place or container associated with the base word (compare 'taberna,' a shop or booth, from 'tabula,' a board). A 'cisterna' was thus literally 'a cista-place' — a box-like structure, specifically one used for storing water underground.
The Greek source word 'kístē' has its own interesting legacy. It produced Latin 'cista,' which evolved through Germanic languages into English 'chest' — one of those cases where the same Greek root entered English twice by different routes, producing 'cistern' (via Latin and French) and 'chest' (via Latin and Germanic). The medical term 'cyst' (an enclosed sac in the body) is yet another descendant of the same Greek root, borrowed directly into medical Latin.
The technology that 'cistern' names was crucial to civilization in arid and semi-arid regions. The earliest known cisterns date to the Neolithic period, roughly 8000 BCE, and were found in the Levant — the eastern Mediterranean region encompassing modern Israel, Palestine, Jordan, and Lebanon. In a landscape where rainfall was seasonal and rivers scarce, the ability to collect and store rainwater underground determined whether a community could survive the dry months.
The waterproof plaster that lined ancient cisterns was one of the great engineering achievements of the Bronze Age. Without an impermeable lining, water stored in rock-cut chambers would seep away through cracks and porous stone. The development of hydraulic plaster — lime-based mixtures that hardened under water — transformed the cistern from a leaky depression into a reliable reservoir. This technology spread across the Mediterranean and
Roman cisterns were among the most ambitious hydraulic structures ever built. The Piscina Mirabilis near Naples, built in the first century BCE to supply the Roman naval fleet at Misenum, was a vast underground chamber capable of holding 12,600 cubic metres of water. The Basilica Cistern in Constantinople (the Yerebatan Sarayi), built under Emperor Justinian in 532 CE, was larger still — a cathedral-like underground space supported by 336 marble columns, many of them repurposed from demolished pagan temples, capable of holding 80,000 cubic metres. This cistern was rediscovered in the sixteenth century by a French
The word entered English in the thirteenth century through Old French 'cisterne,' and its meaning has shifted with changing technology. In medieval and early modern English, a cistern was typically an underground or semi-underground water storage chamber, often fed by rainwater collected from rooftops. In modern British English, 'cistern' most commonly refers to the water tank above a toilet that supplies the flushing mechanism — a far more modest container than the vast Roman reservoirs that first bore the name.
In modern English, 'cistern' retains both its historical and technical senses. Architects and engineers use it for any large water storage container; historians use it for ancient water management systems; and plumbers use it for the modest tanks that supply toilets and cold-water taps. The word has not developed significant figurative senses — unlike 'well,' 'reservoir,' or 'fountain,' which have all been heavily metaphorized, 'cistern' remains stubbornly literal, a word for a container of water and almost nothing else.