The word "magnet" reaches back to the ancient world, connecting modern physics to Greek geography, myth, and the earliest stirrings of scientific inquiry. Its origin lies in the region of Magnesia (Μαγνησία), an area of ancient Thessaly in northeastern Greece, from which the remarkable stone that could attract iron was said to have been first obtained.
The Greek term was "lithos Magnetis" (λίθος Μαγνῆτις), meaning "Magnesian stone" — the stone from Magnesia. This was shortened to "magnes" (μάγνης) and eventually adopted into Latin as "magnes" (genitive "magnetis"). The form "magneta" appears in medieval Latin, and Old French rendered it as "magnete," from which Middle English borrowed the word in the fifteenth century, with earliest attestations around 1400.
There were actually two places called Magnesia in the ancient Greek world: Magnesia ad Sipylum and Magnesia ad Maeandrum, both in western Anatolia (modern Turkey), in addition to the original Magnesia in Thessaly. Which Magnesia gave its name to the magnetic stone has been debated since antiquity. Pliny the Elder attributed the discovery to a shepherd named Magnes, who noticed that the iron nails in his shoes and the iron tip of his staff clung to certain rocks while he tended his flock on Mount Ida. This folk etymology is almost
The mineral in question is magnetite (Fe₃O₄), a naturally occurring iron oxide that is the most magnetic of all naturally occurring minerals. Some specimens of magnetite are permanently magnetized and can attract iron without any external influence — these are called lodestones (from Middle English "lode," meaning "way" or "course," because they could be used to determine direction). The lodestone was one of the great wonders of the ancient world, puzzling natural philosophers from Thales of Miletus (who reportedly believed the stone had a soul) to Lucretius, who attempted a materialist explanation involving streams of atoms.
The word "magnet" has proven extraordinarily productive in English. "Magnetic" appeared in the early seventeenth century, "magnetism" shortly after, and "magnetize" by the late eighteenth century. "Electromagnetism," coined in the early nineteenth century following Hans Christian Ørsted's discovery of the relationship between electricity and magnetism, married the Greek word for amber (elektron) with the Greek word for the Magnesian stone, creating a compound that links two ancient observations about the mysterious forces inherent in certain materials.
The figurative use of "magnet" to describe anything that attracts — a person of great charisma, a popular tourist destination, a source of controversy — dates to the sixteenth century and has become so common that it barely registers as metaphorical. "Magnetic personality," "crowd magnet," and similar phrases all draw on the lodestone's seemingly magical power to attract iron at a distance. The word "magnetism" itself shuttles fluidly between its scientific and figurative senses.
The region of Magnesia also gave its name to magnesium (the element) and magnesia (magnesium oxide), both named after minerals found in the region. The same geographical root thus produced words fundamental to both physics and chemistry, making Magnesia one of the most etymologically productive place names in the scientific vocabulary.
There is a remarkable conceptual continuity in the word's history. The ancient Greeks marveled at a stone that could exert force at a distance, without visible contact. Twenty-five centuries later, physicists still grapple with the nature of magnetic fields — the mechanism by which magnets exert force through empty space remains one of the deep puzzles of fundamental physics. The word "magnet" carries within it not only a geographical reference but an enduring sense of wonder at one