Paprika arrived in English from Hungarian, but its linguistic roots stretch back to ancient India. The Hungarian word derives from Serbian or Croatian papar (pepper), borrowed from Latin piper, which came from Greek peperi, itself from Sanskrit pippali — the long pepper vine native to the Indian subcontinent. The word pepper and all its European relatives trace this same ancient trade route.
The spice itself has a more recent and tangled history. Capsicum peppers originated in the Americas and reached Europe only after Columbus. Spanish and Portuguese traders brought them to the Ottoman Empire in the 16th century, and Ottoman routes carried the plants to the Balkans and Hungary. Hungarian farmers discovered that certain varieties thrived in the warm Pannonian climate, and by the 18th century, the Szeged and Kalocsa regions had become dedicated paprika-growing areas.
Early Hungarian paprika was fiercely hot. The sweet, mild variety that dominates international markets was developed in the 1920s when the Szeged brothers, farmers from the region, bred a pepper with the pungent core removed. This innovation transformed paprika from a sharp regional seasoning into a versatile cooking ingredient with global appeal.
Hungarian cuisine built its identity around paprika more than any other national cuisine has centered on a single spice. Goulash, chicken paprikash, and dozens of other Hungarian dishes depend on the spice for both flavor and the distinctive red color that marks the cuisine visually.
Albert Szent-Gyorgyi, working at the University of Szeged in the 1930s, isolated vitamin C from local paprika peppers in quantities large enough for laboratory analysis. His discovery contributed to the 1937 Nobel Prize and cemented paprika's reputation as more than just a flavoring — it was also a nutritional powerhouse hiding in plain sight.