The word 'jury' is deceptively simple — four letters, two syllables — yet it carries inside it the entire conceptual architecture of Western law. Its root, the Latin 'iūs' (law, right, oath), is one of the foundational words of Roman legal thought, and its descendants populate the legal lexicon of every language that has been touched by Roman law or Norman French.
Latin 'iūs' (genitive 'iūris') meant not just law in the abstract but right in the sense of what is proper, owed, or ritually correct. Its Proto-Indo-European ancestor *yewes- carried connotations of fitness, binding formula, and sacred obligation — the oath was not merely a promise but a ritual act that bound the speaker in a quasi-sacred way. From 'iūs' came 'iūrāre' (to swear), and from 'iūrāre' came the Anglo-French past participle 'juré,' meaning 'sworn.' A jury was originally the body of people who had been sworn — the jurors, the sworn ones.
The Latin family of 'iūs' is extraordinarily rich. 'Iustitia' (justice) is 'rightness' or 'the quality of conforming to iūs.' 'Iudex' (judge) is a compound of 'iūs' and 'dīcere' (to say) — the judge is 'one who says what the law is.' 'Iurisdictio' (jurisdiction) literally means 'the saying of the law,' and 'iniuria' (injury) means literally 'something contrary to right.' 'Periurium' (perjury) is 'swearing falsely' — 'per' here indicating perversion
The jury as a legal institution has roots in both Frankish administrative practice and Norman custom. The Normans used sworn inquests — groups of local men sworn to answer questions under oath — for administrative and fiscal purposes, most famously in the Domesday Survey of 1086. The English common law gradually adapted this practice into the criminal trial jury, and by the thirteenth century juries were delivering verdicts in serious criminal cases. The Magna Carta of 1215 enshrined the principle that no free man should be imprisoned or dispossessed except by 'the lawful judgment of his peers' — language that was later
The specific word 'jury' in the modern sense — a body of twelve persons sworn to decide questions of fact in a criminal trial — appears in Anglo-French legal records from the mid-thirteenth century and in English texts from around 1350. The number twelve had roots in both Anglo-Saxon and Norman practice and acquired an almost mystical status in common law theory.
The word also jumped beyond legal usage. By the nineteenth century 'jury' was used for any group appointed to judge a competition — exhibition juries, prize juries, competition panels — retaining the sense of sworn or authorised judges but losing the criminal-law context. The adjective 'jury-rigged,' meaning improvised or makeshift (as in 'jury-rigged repair'), is entirely unrelated, coming from a nautical term of uncertain origin, probably from Old French 'ajurie' (help) or a corruption of 'joury mast.'