The word 'rigging' derives from the verb 'rig,' which entered English from a Scandinavian source — Norwegian 'rigga' (to wrap, to bind), Swedish 'rigga' (to rig), Danish 'rigge' (to rig a ship). The verb appeared in English around 1480 with the specific meaning of fitting out a ship with masts, yards, sails, and the network of ropes needed to support and control them. The noun 'rigging' — formed with the standard English verbal noun suffix '-ing' — appeared slightly earlier, around 1400, and designated the product of this activity: the entire system of ropes, chains, and cables that constitutes a sailing vessel's running and standing equipment.
The ultimate origin of the Scandinavian source is uncertain. Some etymologists connect it to Proto-Germanic *rik- (to bind, to tie), while others suggest a connection to *rīkijaz (powerful, ready, equipped), which would give 'rig' the fundamental sense of 'making ready' or 'equipping for action.' Either derivation is semantically plausible: rigging is both the binding of ropes to masts and the equipping of a ship for its purpose.
In sailing terminology, rigging is divided into two fundamental categories. 'Standing rigging' refers to the fixed lines that support the masts — stays (running fore and aft), shrouds (running from the mast to the ship's sides), and their associated hardware. Standing rigging is under constant tension and does not normally move during sailing. 'Running rigging' refers to the movable lines used to control the sails — halyards (which hoist sails up and down), sheets (which control the angle of sails to the wind
The complexity of rigging on a large sailing ship was staggering. A full-rigged ship (a vessel with three or more masts, all carrying square sails) might carry more than twenty miles of rope in its rigging, with hundreds of individual lines, each with a specific name and function. Learning the names and functions of every line — and being able to find and operate any one of them in darkness, in a gale, on a heaving deck — was the foundational skill of the professional seaman. This knowledge was acquired
A ship's 'rig' — the specific configuration of its masts and sails — defined its type and capabilities. A 'ship rig' (square sails on three masts) was the standard for large ocean-going vessels. A 'barque rig' (square sails on the fore and main masts, fore-and-aft sails on the mizzen) was efficient for long voyages with small crews. A 'schooner rig' (fore-and-aft sails on two
The verb 'rig' has developed important extended meanings in English. To 'rig' an election means to manipulate it dishonestly — the metaphor may derive from the idea of 'fitting out' or 'arranging' something to produce a desired result, or possibly from the related sense of 'rig' as a trick or swindle (attested from the eighteenth century). 'Jury-rigged' describes an improvised repair made at sea with whatever materials are available — the 'jury' element is probably from the French 'jour' (day), meaning a temporary fix for the day. The conflation of 'jury-rigged' with 'jerry-built' (cheaply
The phrase 'the whole rig' (the entire outfit or arrangement) preserves the nautical sense transparently. An 'oil rig' (a drilling platform) borrows the term for any complex structure of supports, platforms, and equipment. In theater, 'rigging' describes the system of ropes, pulleys, and counterweights used to fly scenery and lighting above the stage — a direct application of sailing technology to the enclosed world of the playhouse.
The word 'rigging' thus carries within it the entire technological world of the sailing ship — the vast, intricate, beautiful web of cordage that turned wind into motion and made the age of sail possible. Every line had a name, every name had a function, and the whole system worked as a unified machine of remarkable sophistication. The word itself, borrowed from Scandinavian sailors whose seamanship was the wonder of medieval Europe, preserves the vocabulary of a technology that dominated oceanic transportation for centuries.