## Quiver
The word *quiver* — the portable case for carrying arrows — carries a quiet but telling history, travelling from Old French into Middle English during the high medieval period, when the arrow-case was an essential military object and its name a direct borrowing from the Norman conquerors of England.
## Historical Journey
### Old French and Anglo-Norman Origins
The English word derives from Old French *quivre* or *cuivre*, attested in the 12th century, itself drawn from Anglo-Norman and continental Old French *quiveir*, *coivre*. The Old French forms appear in texts describing military equipment during the Crusading era and the Norman feudal period, when archery remained central to warfare.
The word entered Middle English as *quiver* during the 13th century. The earliest English attestations appear around 1290–1300, coinciding with the period when English was consolidating its enormous lexical debt to French after the Norman Conquest of 1066.
### Germanic Roots
Behind the Old French form lies a Frankish source: reconstructed *\*koker*, a Germanic word for an arrow-case or sheath. This same root appears in Old High German *kohhar* (arrow-case), Middle Dutch *coker*, and Old English *cocur* — though curiously, the Old English form was largely displaced by the French borrowing in the later medieval period rather than surviving on its own trajectory.
The Germanic *\*koker* descends from Proto-Germanic *\*kukraz* or *\*kokraz*, a term for a container or case, particularly one cylindrical in form.
### Proto-Indo-European Connections
Proto-Indo-European provides a speculative background. Some etymologists connect it to PIE *\*geu-* (to curve, to arch), which produced Latin *cucuma* (pot), though this connection remains contested. What is more secure is the Germanic-Frankish transmission: the word was native to the Germanic languages in the sense of a sheath or case well before it entered Old French via Frankish influence.
## Cultural Context
### The Arrow-Case Across Civilisations
The object itself is ancient beyond the word's specific etymology. Quivers appear in Egyptian tomb paintings from at least 1350 BCE, in Assyrian relief carvings, and throughout the classical world. The Greek word was *pharetra* (φαρέτρα), the Latin *pharetra* or *corytos* — neither of which survived into the major vernacular languages of Western Europe.
In the medieval English context, the quiver was central to the longbowman's kit. The English and Welsh longbow tradition, decisive at Crécy (1346) and Agincourt (1415), made the arrow-case a familiar and important object. Standard issue for an English archer included 24 arrows — a sheaf — and the quiver to carry them.
### Iconographic Significance
The quiver carries strong iconographic weight: it is the attribute of Artemis and Diana (goddess of the hunt), of Eros and Cupid (whose arrows cause love), and of Apollo in some representations. The quiver crossed from military utility into allegory and heraldry, where it signified readiness, martial virtue, and divine power.
Biblical Hebrew used *ashpah* (אַשְׁפָּה) for the quiver, and the line from Psalm 127 — *'blessed is the man whose quiver is full of them'* — uses the arrow-case as a metaphor for having many sons. This passage entered English culture through the King James Bible (1611) and helped fix the word's metaphorical range.
## Cognates and Relatives
- **Old High German** *kohhar* — arrow-case - **Old English** *cocur* — arrow-case (pre-Norman, later displaced) - **Middle Dutch** *coker* — sheath, case - **Modern German** *Köcher* — quiver (direct descendant of Old High German)
The German *Köcher* is the closest living relative, carrying the same meaning in an unbroken line from Proto-Germanic. English took the detour through French before arriving at essentially the same object and meaning.
## The Homophone
The verb *quiver* (to tremble or shake) is entirely unrelated, deriving from Middle English *quiveren*, likely from an Old English base related to *cwiferlice* (nimbly, actively) — a false friend that has no etymological connection to the arrow-case despite identical modern spelling and pronunciation.
## Modern Usage
In modern English, *quiver* as a noun remains semantically stable — it still means a case for arrows, and the physical object persists in archery sport and hunting. The metaphorical use from Psalm 127 ('a full quiver') remains active in religious discourse. The word has not undergone the dramatic semantic drift common to many medieval military terms.