The word 'indigenous' entered English in the mid-seventeenth century from Latin 'indigena' (a native, a person born in a particular land), with the adjectival suffix '-ous.' The Latin noun is composed of Old Latin 'indu' (in, within — an archaic form of the preposition 'in') and the root of 'gignere' (to beget, to produce, to give birth to), from PIE *ǵenh₁- (to give birth, to produce). An indigenous person is, at the etymological level, 'born within' — generated by the land itself.
The PIE root *ǵenh₁- is one of the most prolific in the Indo-European language family, producing hundreds of descendants across every branch. Through Latin 'gignere' and its nominal form 'genus' (birth, race, kind): 'gene' (a unit of heredity), 'generate' (to produce), 'generation' (those born at the same time), 'genius' (originally the spirit born with each person), 'gentle' (originally of good birth, well-born), 'genuine' (of authentic birth — not counterfeit), 'general' (of the whole kind or race), 'generous' (originally of noble birth, later liberal in giving), 'gender' (birth-kind), 'genesis' (origin, birth), 'genre' (a kind or type), and 'genocide' (killing of a race, coined 1944). Through Greek 'génesis' and 'génos': 'genealogy' (study of birth-lines), 'genetics
The word 'indigenous' differs from its near-synonyms in emphasis. 'Native' (from Latin 'nātīvus,' born) stresses the fact of birth in a place. 'Aboriginal' (from Latin 'ab orīgine,' from the beginning) stresses being in a place from the earliest times. 'Indigenous' stresses being generated by a place — born from within it,
In modern political and legal discourse, 'Indigenous' (often capitalized) refers specifically to the original inhabitants of a region and their descendants — peoples whose presence predates colonization. The United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (2007) uses the term to encompass First Nations, Aboriginal, Native, and Tribal peoples worldwide. The capitalization signals that 'Indigenous' names a political and cultural identity, not merely a botanical or zoological descriptor.
In ecology, 'indigenous' describes species that occur naturally in a region, as opposed to 'introduced' or 'exotic' species brought by human activity. Indigenous plants and animals have co-evolved with their ecosystems over millennia. When introduced species displace indigenous ones, the result can be ecological disruption — a biological parallel to the cultural disruption caused by colonialism.
The word's history thus tracks a path from a neutral Latin descriptor (born in a place) to a politically significant modern term that names peoples, rights, and the relationship between communities and the lands they have inhabited since before recorded history. The etymology — 'born within' — preserves the claim at the word's core: indigenous peoples are not merely present in a place but generated by it, part of its fabric in a way that later arrivals are not.