The word 'petroleum' is a hybrid compound — half Greek, half Latin — that names one of the most consequential substances in human history with an etymology of disarming simplicity. It means 'rock-oil': the oily liquid that seeps from rocks.
Medieval Latin 'petroleum' was assembled from Greek 'pétra' (πέτρα, rock, stone) and Latin 'oleum' (oil), a combination that violated the classical rule against mixing Greek and Latin elements in a single compound but was entirely standard in medieval scientific vocabulary, where practical clarity trumped linguistic purism. The term described a phenomenon that had been observed for millennia: in certain regions of the Middle East, the Caucasus, and elsewhere, a dark, viscous, flammable liquid seeped from rock formations, collected in pools on the ground surface, or even floated on water.
The Greek root 'pétra' has a distinguished progeny in English. 'Petrify' (to turn to stone), 'petroglyph' (a carving on rock), 'petrography' (the study of rocks), and 'saltpeter' (originally 'sal petrae,' salt of rock) all derive from it. Most famously, the name 'Peter' comes from the same root: Jesus renamed his disciple Simon as 'Pétros' (Πέτρος, rock), saying 'on this rock I will build my church.' The name of the apostle and the name of crude oil thus share
The companion root 'oleum' (oil) entered Latin from Greek 'élaion' (ἔλαιον, olive oil), which derived from 'elaía' (ἐλαία, olive tree). In the ancient Mediterranean, oil meant olive oil — the dominant fat, fuel, and cosmetic substance of Greek and Roman civilization. The extension of 'oil' to any viscous liquid (mineral oil, whale oil, essential oils) occurred later, and 'petroleum' was part of this semantic expansion: a substance that looked and behaved somewhat like olive oil but came from rock rather than olives.
Natural petroleum seeps were known in the ancient world. The Mesopotamians used bitumen (a heavy form of petroleum) as a waterproofing material and adhesive as early as the fourth millennium BCE. Herodotus described oil springs in the Persian Empire. The eternal flames of Zoroastrian fire temples in Azerbaijan were fueled by natural gas seeping from the ground. But ancient and medieval peoples had no conception of the vast subterranean reservoirs of liquid hydrocarbons that lay beneath their feet, or of the geological processes that produced
The word 'petroleum' appeared in English texts from the 1520s, initially as a curiosity of natural history. For centuries, petroleum was a minor commodity: collected from surface seeps, it was used in small quantities as a medicine (petroleum jelly descends from this tradition), a lubricant, and a fuel for lamps. Everything changed on August 27, 1859, when Edwin Drake struck oil at a depth of 69.5 feet near Titusville, Pennsylvania, demonstrating that petroleum could be extracted in commercial quantities by
The petroleum industry that followed Drake's discovery transformed the world more rapidly and thoroughly than any previous technological revolution. Kerosene — refined from petroleum — replaced whale oil as the dominant lighting fuel within a decade. The internal combustion engine, developed in the 1870s-1890s, created an insatiable demand for gasoline. The petrochemical industry, which emerged in the early twentieth century, uses petroleum feedstocks to produce plastics, synthetic fibers
The word itself generated a productive family of derivatives. 'Petrol' (the British term for gasoline) is a shortening of 'petroleum.' 'Petrochemical' describes chemicals derived from petroleum. 'Petrodollar' names the US dollars earned by petroleum-exporting countries. 'Petrostate' describes a country whose economy and politics are dominated by petroleum revenues. Each of these words carries the Greek 'pétra' (rock) as its hidden first element, a reminder that the entire modern energy economy is named after the
In the twenty-first century, 'petroleum' has become one of the most politically and environmentally charged words in the language. The climate crisis, driven largely by the combustion of petroleum and other fossil fuels, has given the word associations of ecological destruction that would have been unimaginable a century ago. The phrase 'post-petroleum economy' — describing a future in which humanity has moved beyond fossil fuels — would have been meaningless to the medieval scholars who coined the word 'petroleum' to describe an interesting oily substance that seeped from certain rocks.