The term 'rigor mortis' entered English medical literature in the 1830s as a direct borrowing from Latin, meaning literally 'the stiffness of death.' It is composed of two Latin words: 'rigor' (stiffness, rigidity, numbness), from the verb 'rigēre' (to be stiff, to be numb), and 'mortis,' the genitive case of 'mors' (death). The phrase names one of the most recognizable signs of death: the progressive stiffening of the body's muscles and joints that begins hours after death and persists for one to several days.
The phenomenon of rigor mortis was known to physicians in antiquity. Hippocratic writers noted that dead bodies became stiff, and the observation was common knowledge among those who handled the dead — embalmers, gravediggers, battlefield surgeons. But the systematic study of rigor mortis as a medical and forensic phenomenon began in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, when physicians sought to understand its timing, progression, and causes in order to use it as a tool for estimating time of death.
The Latin word 'rigor' derives from the verb 'rigēre,' which descends from Proto-Indo-European *reig- (to reach, to stretch, to be stiff). This root produced a family of English words centered on stiffness and strictness: 'rigid' (stiff, unyielding), 'rigidity,' 'rigorous' (strict, demanding — from the idea of inflexible standards), and 'rigor' itself (in its general sense of strictness or severity, as in 'academic rigor'). The connection between physical stiffness and metaphorical strictness is ancient: a 'rigid' person is, metaphorically, as unyielding as a stiff body.
The second element, 'mortis,' needs less introduction — it is the genitive of 'mors' (death), from PIE *mer- (to die), the root behind 'mortal,' 'mortuary,' 'mortify,' 'murder,' and a dozen other English words. The two-word Latin phrase 'rigor mortis' thus combines roots from two different PIE sources (*reig- and *mer-) to name a phenomenon at the intersection of physical stiffness and death.
The biochemistry of rigor mortis was not understood until the twentieth century. In life, muscles contract when actin and myosin filaments slide past each other, powered by ATP (adenosine triphosphate). After contraction, ATP is required again to release the cross-bridges between actin and myosin, allowing the muscle to relax. When a person dies, cellular metabolism ceases, and
The timing and progression of rigor mortis follow a roughly predictable pattern, making it valuable in forensic medicine. Rigor typically begins in the smaller muscles of the face and jaw two to six hours after death, then spreads to the larger muscles of the limbs and trunk over the next six to twelve hours, reaching full rigidity at approximately twelve hours. The condition then persists for one to three days before resolving as decomposition enzymes (autolysis) break down the muscle proteins that hold the cross-bridges in place.
However, the timing is significantly affected by environmental conditions. High temperatures accelerate rigor mortis; cold temperatures delay it. Strenuous physical activity immediately before death (which depletes ATP reserves) can cause rigor to begin almost immediately. Certain poisons and
The term entered forensic and detective fiction in the late nineteenth century and has since become one of the most widely recognized pieces of forensic vocabulary among the general public. Crime fiction from Arthur Conan Doyle onward has taught millions of readers that rigor mortis can help determine when a victim died. Television crime dramas use the term routinely, often with dramatic close-ups of a medical examiner testing a body's flexibility.
Across languages, the Latin term is used internationally in medical and forensic contexts. French medical literature often uses 'rigidité cadavérique' (cadaveric rigidity) alongside the Latin. German has 'Totenstarre' (literally 'death-stiffness'), a characteristically direct compound. Spanish and Italian retain the Latin phrase unaltered: 'rigor mortis.' The persistence of the Latin term in international medical usage reflects the role
The phrase 'rigor mortis' has also developed figurative uses, typically describing institutions, processes, or organizations that have become inflexibly rigid — implying that their stiffness is a sign of death rather than strength. A bureaucracy in 'rigor mortis' is one so ossified that it has ceased to function as a living organization. This figurative usage, while less common than the literal, exploits the same metaphorical logic that makes 'moribund' and 'mortify' effective: the language of death applied to institutions that have stopped changing, stopped adapting, and stopped, in any meaningful sense, living.