Embassy traces back to a Celtic word that Julius Caesar wrote down two thousand years ago. In De Bello Gallico, Caesar described the ambacti of Gaulish society — dependents or retainers who owed service to their chieftains. This Gaulish word ambactos, meaning servant or one sent on a mission, survived the Roman conquest of Gaul and entered Medieval Latin as ambactia (a mission or service).
From Medieval Latin, the word passed into Old Italian as ambasciata (a diplomatic message or mission), then into French as ambassade and embassade. English borrowed it in the 16th century as embassy, with the meaning shifting gradually from the mission itself to the permanent office and residence where ambassadors conduct their work.
The word ambassador followed the same path and carries the same Celtic DNA. Both words preserve the ancient Gaulish concept of someone sent out on behalf of a powerful person to conduct business at a distance.
Modern embassies function as sovereign territory of the sending state by diplomatic convention, though not technically by international law in the way that popular culture often claims. The Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations of 1961 established the legal framework that makes embassy premises inviolable — host country officials cannot enter without permission. This principle of inviolability is one of the oldest norms in international relations, predating the modern word by centuries.
The physical buildings that house embassies have become increasingly significant as architectural symbols. Countries invest heavily in embassy design to project national identity. The American embassy in London, the French embassy in Lisbon, and the Nordic embassies complex in Berlin are all notable architectural commissions. The word has thus expanded from a Celtic servant's errand to encompass buildings, institutions, and the entire system of permanent diplomatic representation between