The word 'passport' entered English in the late fifteenth century from Middle French 'passeport,' a transparent compound of 'passer' (to pass, to go through) and 'port' (port, gate, opening). The literal meaning is 'permission to pass through a port or gate,' and the word reflects the physical reality of medieval travel: cities were enclosed by walls, borders were patrolled, and travelers required written authorization to enter and exit controlled spaces.
The French verb 'passer' derives from Vulgar Latin *passāre (to step, to walk), formed from Latin 'passus' (a step, a pace), which itself comes from the past participle of 'pandere' (to spread, to stretch — the legs being spread in walking). The noun 'port' comes from Latin 'portus' (harbor, haven, gate), from PIE *per- (to lead, to pass through), a root of enormous productivity. Through 'portus' and related Latin forms, PIE *per- gave English 'port,' 'portal,' 'porch,' 'portico,' 'transport,' 'import,' 'export,' 'opportunity' (from 'ob portum,' toward the port — a favorable moment when the wind blows toward harbor), and 'important' (carrying significance into, as goods are carried into port).
The earliest documents functioning as passports were letters of safe conduct — written orders from a sovereign or authority commanding that the bearer be allowed to travel unmolested. Such documents existed in the ancient world: the Hebrew Bible's Book of Nehemiah (c. 450 BCE) describes Nehemiah requesting letters from King Artaxerxes I of Persia granting him safe passage to Judah. In medieval Europe, kings, bishops, and town councils issued similar letters. Henry V of England is often credited with one of the earliest uses of the word 'passport' in
The medieval passport was not primarily an identity document. It was an authorization — a command from the issuing authority to border guards, gate keepers, and officials along the route to let the bearer pass. The document described the traveler's purpose and destination but did not necessarily include a physical description; identity was established by the document's seal and the bearer's ability to present it.
The modern passport as a standardized identity booklet with a photograph is largely a product of the twentieth century. Before World War I, many European countries did not require passports for border crossing, and the documents that existed varied wildly in format and content. The outbreak of war in 1914 prompted rapid imposition of passport controls for security purposes. After the war, the League of Nations convened passport conferences in 1920 and 1926 that established international standards: a booklet format, a standardized size, a photograph, and specific personal data. The International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) later refined these standards, leading
German handles the concept through a partial calque: 'Reisepass' (journey-pass), combining the native 'Reise' (journey) with the borrowed 'Pass.' Other European languages borrowed the French compound more directly: Spanish 'pasaporte,' Italian 'passaporto,' Portuguese 'passaporte.'
The figurative use of 'passport' — meaning something that grants access or admission, as in 'education is a passport to success' — is attested from the sixteenth century. This metaphorical extension preserves the original sense of the word: a document that opens gates and allows passage into spaces otherwise closed. Whether the gate is a medieval city wall or a metaphorical barrier to social advancement, the passport functions identically — as written proof that the bearer has the right to pass through.