The word 'damask' is one of three English words that owe their existence to the city of Damascus — alongside 'Damascus steel' and 'damson' (the plum). All three testify to the extraordinary commercial reputation of one of the world's oldest continuously inhabited cities.
Damascus (Arabic 'دمشق,' Dimashq; Latin 'Damascus'; Greek 'Δαμασκός,' Damaskos) has been inhabited since at least the third millennium BCE and possibly far earlier. Its position in a fertile oasis fed by the Barada River, at the crossroads of trade routes connecting Mesopotamia, Egypt, Anatolia, and Arabia, made it one of the great commercial cities of the ancient and medieval worlds. The city's name is of uncertain origin — it predates the Semitic languages and may be Amorite, Hurrian, or from an even older linguistic stratum.
The fabric called 'damask' entered European languages through the Crusades. European Crusaders who traveled to the Levant in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries encountered the luxurious patterned silks sold in the markets of Damascus and brought them back to Europe as prized possessions. The fabric's defining characteristic is that the pattern is woven into the cloth itself (using a combination of warp-faced and weft-faced satin weaves) rather than printed or embroidered on top. This produces a design that is visible as a contrast of matte and sheen on a
Whether Damascus itself was a major center of damask production or primarily a marketplace where fabrics woven elsewhere (in Persia, Central Asia, or China) were sold is debated. The medieval Islamic world had textile centers scattered across a vast geography, and Damascus's role as a commercial hub meant that goods from many origins passed through its souks. The 'Damascus' label may have functioned less as a certificate of origin than as a mark of quality — similar to how 'champagne' originally signified a region but came to imply a standard.
The same dynamic applies to 'Damascus steel' (also called 'wootz steel'), the legendary blade material with its distinctive wavy 'watered' pattern. The finest swords and knives of the medieval Islamic world were sold in Damascus, but the raw material — crucible steel — was largely produced in India and Sri Lanka. Damascus was the trading point, not the forge.
The 'damson' — a small, dark purple plum used for preserves and gin — has the same etymology. 'Damson' is a contraction of 'damascene,' from Latin 'prunum damascenum' (the Damascus plum). The plum may or may not have originated near Damascus, but it was associated with the city in Roman and medieval trade.
In textile terminology, damask is distinguished from brocade (which uses supplementary weft threads to create raised patterns) and jacquard (a broader term for fabrics woven on a Jacquard loom). Damask's reversibility — the pattern appears as a positive on one side and a negative on the other — is one of its defining properties, making it especially valued for table linens where both sides may be visible.
The word has also entered English as an adjective and a color: 'damask rose' (a deep pink rose variety, Rosa × damascena, cultivated in Damascus since antiquity), 'damask cheek' (a literary term for a rosy complexion, used by Shakespeare), and 'damasked' (having a damask pattern). All trace back to the same ancient city on the Barada River, a city whose name has been woven into the English language as thoroughly as the patterns are woven into the fabric.