The word 'commerce' entered English in the 1530s from French 'commerce,' which came from Latin 'commercium,' meaning 'trade' or 'the right to trade.' The Latin word is a compound of 'com-' (together, with) and 'merx' (genitive 'mercis'), meaning 'merchandise, wares, goods.' At its root, commerce is the act of bringing goods together — the mutual exchange that transforms isolated production into shared prosperity.
The Latin 'merx' generated a family of words that pervades English commercial vocabulary. 'Merchant' comes through Old French 'marchant' from Latin 'mercāns,' the present participle of 'mercārī' (to trade, to deal in). 'Market' comes from Latin 'mercātus' (a trading, a market), also from 'mercārī.' 'Merchandise' is from Old French 'marchandise.' 'Mercenary
The god Mercury (Mercurius) almost certainly takes his name from the same root. Mercury was the Roman god of trade, travel, communication, and — with characteristic Roman pragmatism — thievery. He was the divine patron of the marketplace, the messenger of the gods, and the guide of souls to the underworld. The planet Mercury, being the fastest-moving planet visible to the naked eye
Perhaps the most unexpected member of this family is 'mercy.' Latin 'mercēs' meant 'wages, reward, price paid.' In Vulgar Latin and early Christian usage, 'mercēs' developed the sense of 'favour, grace, pity' — the reward that God gives not because it is earned but because it is freely offered. Old French 'merci' inherited both the commercial sense (reward) and the spiritual sense (
In its early English usage, 'commerce' had a broader sense than mere trade. It meant any form of social intercourse, communication, or exchange between people. One could have 'commerce' with one's neighbours in the sense of social dealings, conversation, and mutual engagement. Shakespeare and his contemporaries used the word this way.
The rise of 'commerce' as a governing concept in Western thought owes much to the eighteenth-century Enlightenment. Montesquieu argued in 'The Spirit of the Laws' (1748) that commerce softened and civilised nations — his doctrine of 'doux commerce' (gentle commerce) held that trade created mutual dependencies that made war less likely and manners more refined. Adam Smith's 'The Wealth of Nations' (1776) placed commercial exchange at the centre of economic theory. The idea that free
The word has continued to evolve. 'E-commerce' (electronic commerce) emerged in the 1990s with the rise of the internet, and today 'commerce' increasingly refers to digital transactions, platform marketplaces, and global supply chains. Yet the Latin core remains: bringing goods together, the mutual exchange that defines economic life.