The noun 'hierarchy' entered English in the late fourteenth century from Old French 'ierarchie,' from Medieval Latin 'hierarchia,' from Greek 'hierarkhia' (rule of a high priest, the office of a high priest), from 'hierarkhēs' (high priest, leader of sacred rites), a compound of 'hieros' (sacred, holy, supernatural) and 'arkhein' (to rule, to begin, to lead). The Greek root 'hieros' is of uncertain Proto-Indo-European etymology; 'arkhein' traces to PIE *h₂erǵ- (to begin, to rule).
The word's origin is religious, not organizational. In its earliest English usage, 'hierarchy' referred exclusively to one of two things: the ranked orders of angels in heaven or the ranked orders of clergy in the Church. Both senses derived from the enormously influential works of Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite, a mysterious Christian writer of the late fifth or early sixth century who was long believed to be Dionysius, the Athenian convert of St. Paul mentioned in Acts
Pseudo-Dionysius wrote two treatises on hierarchy: 'The Celestial Hierarchy' and 'The Ecclesiastical Hierarchy.' In the celestial work, he arranged the nine orders of angels into three triads. The highest triad — Seraphim, Cherubim, and Thrones — existed closest to God and received divine illumination directly. The middle triad — Dominations, Virtues
The ecclesiastical hierarchy mirrored the celestial one. Bishops, priests, and deacons formed a ranked order, each with specific functions in transmitting sacred knowledge to the laity. For Pseudo-Dionysius, the Church's hierarchy was not a human invention but a reflection of the divine order — the earthly shadow of the celestial pattern.
This theological concept proved remarkably adaptable. By the seventeenth century, 'hierarchy' had escaped its religious context and was being applied to any ranked system. A hierarchy of social classes, a hierarchy of values, a hierarchy of needs — each usage extends the original metaphor of a graded, ranked structure in which higher levels have authority over lower ones.
Abraham Maslow's 'hierarchy of needs' (1943) is one of the most famous modern applications. Maslow proposed that human needs form a pyramid: physiological needs at the base, then safety, love and belonging, esteem, and self-actualization at the apex. The hierarchical structure implies that lower needs must be satisfied before higher ones can be pursued. Maslow's model has been widely critiqued — its empirical
In computer science, hierarchical data structures — trees, directories, taxonomies — organize information in nested levels. The file system on a computer is a hierarchy: folders contain subfolders contain files. The Domain Name System (DNS) of the internet is hierarchical: .com contains google.com contains mail.google.com. The concept
The Greek root 'hieros' (sacred) appears in several other English words. 'Hieroglyph' (sacred carving) names the writing system of ancient Egypt. 'Hieratic' (priestly) describes both a form of Egyptian cursive writing and anything relating to priests or sacred rituals. 'Hierophant' (one who shows sacred things
Critiques of hierarchy have a long history. Anarchist political theory (from 'an-' + 'arkhein' — without rule) explicitly rejects hierarchical organization. Feminist theory has analyzed patriarchy as a hierarchy based on gender. Postcolonial theory examines racial and cultural hierarchies imposed by imperialism. In each case, the critique targets the assumption that ranked ordering is natural or inevitable — that some beings or groups are inherently above others
The word itself has thus become contested. To some, hierarchy is a neutral organizational principle — a practical way of structuring complex systems. To others, it is an ideology that naturalizes domination by presenting it as order. The tension is already present in the etymology: 'sacred rule' implies that hierarchy is divinely ordained, that the ranks reflect a cosmic order rather than a human construction