## Obsidian
Obsidian is a naturally occurring volcanic glass, formed when lava cools rapidly without sufficient time for crystal growth. The word entered English in the mid-17th century from Latin *obsidianus*, but this form is itself a scribal error — one of the most consequential mislabellings in the history of natural history terminology.
## Etymology and Historical Journey
The Roman polymath Pliny the Elder, writing his *Naturalis Historia* around 77 CE, described a black volcanic stone called *lapis obsianus* — the stone of Obsius (or Obsidius), a Roman who allegedly discovered it in Ethiopia. The name appears in Pliny's text as *obsianus lapis*. When medieval scribes copied the manuscript, they misread or altered *obsianus* to *obsidianus*, inserting a *d* that was never in the original. This error propagated through the manuscript tradition uncorrected.
The Latin *Obsianus* itself derives from a personal name — a Roman cognomen, possibly *Obsius* or *Obsidius* — attested nowhere else in classical sources. Whether this discoverer was real or a Plinian invention is unknown. The 1601 English herbalist Philemon Holland, translating Pliny, rendered the term as *obsidian*, cementing the corrupted form in English usage.
Medieval Latin texts from the 12th century onward use *obsidianus* consistently. By the time systematic mineralogy emerged in the 16th and 17th centuries, the word was too entrenched to correct.
## Root Analysis
Unlike most mineralogical terms, *obsidian* has no reconstructible Proto-Indo-European root in any meaningful sense — it is a Latin proper name derivative rather than a descriptive term.
Comparable naming conventions in Latin mineralogy include *lapis lazuli* (from a place name via Arabic and Persian) and *magnes* (from Magnesia, a Greek region). The pattern of naming stones after their discoverers or regions of origin was common in ancient natural history.
### The Word Obsidianus in Manuscripts
The earliest secure manuscript attestation of *obsidianus* (with the intrusive *d*) appears in 9th-century Carolingian copies of Pliny. The Vatican manuscript tradition preserves *obsianus* in some codices, which is how modern philologists reconstructed the original error. The corrupted form dominated print editions from the 15th century onward.
## Cultural Context and Semantic Reach
Obsidian itself — the material — has a history vastly older than the word for it. Archaeological evidence places human use of obsidian blades at over 700,000 years ago in Africa. Mesoamerican civilisations prized it for surgical blades, weapons, and mirrors used in divination. The Aztec god Tezcatlipoca was associated with a smoking obsidian mirror (*tezcatl*, mirror + *popoca*, smoke) used to see hidden truths.
In ancient Anatolia, Çatalhöyük traders distributed obsidian from the Cappadocian volcanos across hundreds of kilometres as early as 7500 BCE — making it one of the earliest traced long-distance trade commodities. The word *obsidian* thus arrived millennia after the material had shaped surgical technique, warfare, and religious practice across multiple independent civilisations.
European alchemists and natural philosophers of the 16th century classified obsidian alongside gems, and it appeared in lapidaries — catalogues of stones and their medicinal or magical properties. Francis Bacon mentioned volcanic glasses in his writings on natural history.
## Cognates and Relatives
Because the term is a personal-name derivative, it has no true linguistic cognates — no related words branching from a shared root. German *Obsidian*, French *obsidienne*, Spanish *obsidiana*, and Italian *ossidiana* all track the English/Latin form directly as co-borrowings.
The alternative historical term *Iceland agate*, used in some 18th-century mineral catalogues for obsidian, was eventually displaced.
## Modern Usage vs. Original Meaning
Modern usage is geologically precise: obsidian refers specifically to rhyolitic volcanic glass with a vitreous lustre and conchoidal fracture, typically black or very dark green. Pliny's usage was broader — he may have been describing several different dark volcanic glasses, and his geographical attribution (Ethiopia) is disputed by modern geologists who point to likely Anatolian or Italian sources.
The word has migrated into popular culture as shorthand for impenetrable darkness or sharp lethality — a semantic drift from the material's actual defining properties. Obsidian surgical blades, refined to a single molecule's thickness, are sharper than any steel scalpel: the popular association with toughness inverts the material's actual character of extreme sharpness combined with brittleness.