## Revolution
*Revolūtiō* — a turning back, a rolling around. The Latin noun that gave us this word was, for most of its early life, a term of geometry and astronomy, not politics. That the same word now denotes the violent overthrow of governments is itself a story of semantic rupture — a revolution in meaning.
## Etymology and Origin
The word enters English in the late fourteenth century from Old French *revolucion*, itself drawn from Medieval Latin *revolūtiō* (genitive *revolūtiōnis*), a noun of action from the verb *revolvere* — to roll back, to turn around, to unwind. The verb compounds the prefix *re-* (back, again) with *volvere* (to roll, to turn). This *volvere* is the structural axis on which the entire word-family rotates.
*Volvere* descends from the Proto-Indo-European root *\*wel-* (to turn, to roll, to wind), attested across the Indo-European branches in stable form. The same root yields Latin *volūmen* (a rolled scroll — the ancestor of *volume*), Old English *wealwian* (to roll), Greek *eilyein* (to wrap, to roll around), and Sanskrit *val-* (to turn). The structural principle is always the same: circular motion, coiling, wrapping back upon itself.
## Historical Journey
In its earliest English attestations (c. 1390), *revolution* means exclusively the orbital movement of celestial bodies — the revolution of the planets around fixed points. Chaucer uses it in this astronomical sense. The word belongs to the vocabulary of the *spheres*, the medieval cosmological system in which the heavens turned in great circles above a stationary earth.
By the sixteenth century, the meaning had extended into any circular or cyclical motion, and from there into the cycles of time itself — the revolution of the seasons, the revolution of fortune's wheel. This last extension is significant: *Fortuna* was traditionally depicted turning a wheel, and the Latin *rota fortunae* (wheel of fortune) gave medieval writers a vocabulary for the rise and fall of earthly power. *Revolution* slid into this semantic space without friction.
The political sense crystallises in the seventeenth century. The decisive moment in English usage is 1688 — the *Glorious Revolution*, in which James II was displaced by William of Orange. The choice of the word was deliberate and ideologically precise: the propagandists of 1688 framed the event not as an overthrow but as a *restoration* — a turning back to constitutional order. A revolution, in the astronomical sense, returns to its starting point. This is the specific argument embedded in the terminology.
By the time of the American Revolution (1776) and especially the French Revolution (1789), the word had shed this conservative implication entirely. It now denoted rupture, not restoration. The wheel had, so to speak, spun off its axle.
## Root Analysis
The PIE root *\*wel-* bifurcates in Latin into two productive lines. The *volv-* line (through *volvere*) gives *revolūtiō*, *evolutiō*, *involvere*, *convolvere*, and through Vulgar Latin, Old French *voute* (vault, arch — a rolled structure), which becomes English *vault*. The *vol-* line gives *volūmen* (scroll), which becomes *volume* and, through its sense of a coiled mass, eventually *volute* (the spiral ornament in classical architecture).
The cross-linguistic connections here are structurally revealing. *Evolution* — from *ēvolūtiō*, an unrolling, an unscrolling — was originally a term for the unrolling of a manuscript. Darwin appropriated it for biology in the nineteenth century, and its original sense (the unfolding of what was already latently present) was not entirely abandoned. *Revolution* and *evolution* are thus cognate — both built from *volvere* — but they represent opposite directions of motion: revolution turns back around, evolution unfolds outward.
### Cognates and Relatives
- **Vault** — via Old French *voute* from Vulgar Latin *\*volvita*, a rolled or arched structure - **Volume** — from *volūmen*, a rolled scroll; the sense of quantity came from the thickness of the roll - **Voluminous** — of great volume, many rolls - **Involve, evolve, devolve, convolve** — all from *volvere* with directional prefixes - **Volute** — the spiral scroll on an Ionic capital - **Vulva** — from Latin *vulva*, from *volvere*, the notion of something that wraps or encloses - **Wallow**, **welter**, **whelm** — Germanic cognates through *\*wel-*
## Semantic System
From a Saussurean perspective, what matters is not the historical sequence alone but the *system of differences* in which *revolution* operates at any given moment. In medieval Latin, *revolūtiō* was defined by its contrast with *progressiō* (linear forward motion) — the revolution was cyclical, not progressive. In seventeenth-century political discourse, it was defined by its contrast with *rebellion* (mere resistance) and *usurpation* (illegitimate seizure) — a revolution claimed legitimacy through the notion of return. In post-1789 usage, it stands opposed to *reform* (gradual, internal change) and *evolution* (slow unfolding). The word has never
## Modern Usage
Today *revolution* operates simultaneously in political, scientific, industrial, and commercial registers — the *Industrial Revolution*, a *revolution* in consumer electronics, a *revolutionary* product. The metaphor has been stretched thin. What survives structurally in all these uses is the original astronomical sense: a complete, decisive turn — a before and an after with no smooth continuity between them. The wheel image persists beneath every usage, even where no speaker consciously reaches for it.
The word has turned full circle, one might say — though that observation is itself embedded in the very metaphor under analysis.