The English word 'romantic' encapsulates one of the most remarkable semantic chains in any language: from a city (Rome), to a people (the Romans), to their language (Latin), to its descendants (the Romance languages), to stories written in those languages (romances), to the emotional quality of those stories (romantic), to an entire artistic and philosophical movement (Romanticism). Each link in this chain transformed the word's meaning, and the full journey spans two thousand years.
The chain begins with Latin 'Rōma' (Rome), whose own etymology is uncertain — possibly Etruscan, possibly from an early Latin or Italic word for 'river' or 'strength.' From 'Rōma' came 'Rōmānus' (Roman) and Late Latin 'Rōmānicus' (of or pertaining to Rome). In the declining centuries of the Western Roman Empire, a crucial linguistic distinction emerged between 'Latīnē' (in Latin — meaning the formal, literary language of educated Romans) and 'Rōmānicē' (in the Roman manner — meaning the everyday spoken language of ordinary people, the Vulgar Latin that was diverging into what would become French, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, and Romanian).
By the early medieval period, 'Rōmānicē' or 'rōmancē' had become a label for the vernacular languages of formerly Roman territories. In Old French, 'romanz' (later 'roman') meant 'in the popular language' and by extension 'a work composed in the popular language' — as opposed to serious scholarly works written in Latin. The earliest French 'romans' were verse narratives based on classical subjects: the 'Roman de Thèbes,' the 'Roman d'Alexandre,' the 'Roman de Troie.' The word simply indicated the language of composition,
The decisive semantic shift occurred in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, when the French 'roman' became associated with a specific genre: the chivalric romance. Works like Chrétien de Troyes's Arthurian romances ('Lancelot,' 'Yvain,' 'Perceval') combined adventure, magic, courtly love, and idealized heroism in a narrative form that captivated medieval audiences. Because these stories were the most popular and characteristic products written in the Romance vernaculars, the word 'romance' absorbed the qualities of the genre: adventure, fantasy, emotional intensity, and above all love. By the late
The adjective 'romantic' was coined in the seventeenth century (first attested in English around 1659) to describe things 'resembling or characteristic of a romance.' Initially it was often pejorative, meaning 'fanciful, unrealistic, extravagant' — the qualities of fiction rather than reality. Samuel Pepys, writing in 1667, called a scene 'very romantic' meaning it was like something out of a novel, almost too picturesque to be real. Landscapes that resembled the settings of romances — rugged, wild
The Romantic movement of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries claimed 'romantic' as its banner, giving the word its most culturally significant meaning. German writers, particularly the Schlegel brothers, Friedrich Schiller, and Novalis, theorized 'das Romantische' as the antithesis of 'das Klassische': where classical art valued order, reason, and formal perfection, romantic art valued emotion, imagination, and organic expression. The distinction mapped onto the ancient/modern divide: classical art looked to Greece and Rome, while romantic art drew on medieval Christianity, folk traditions, and the natural world. In England, the Romantic poets
The popular modern sense of 'romantic' — pertaining to love, especially idealized or passionate love — developed in parallel with the literary movement but eventually overwhelmed it in everyday usage. A 'romantic evening,' a 'romantic gesture,' a 'romantic relationship' — these phrases use 'romantic' in a sense that would have been intelligible to a medieval reader of romances, where love was the central theme, but that has little to do with Wordsworth's daffodils or Caspar David Friedrich's windswept cliffs. The love-centered meaning is now so dominant that many English speakers are surprised to learn that 'Romanticism' was primarily an artistic and philosophical movement rather than a celebration of romantic love.
The word 'romance' itself underwent a parallel journey from language label to literary genre to love affair. In modern English, 'romance' can mean a love story (genre), a love affair (experience), the Romance languages (linguistics), or a medieval chivalric narrative (literary history). The plural and divergent meanings all trace back to the single Vulgar Latin adverb 'rōmānicē.' The related word 'novel' — now the standard English term for long-form prose fiction — originally distinguished itself from 'romance' by
The broader family of 'Rome' words in English is extensive. 'Roman' (of Rome), 'Romance' (the language family), 'Romanesque' (the architectural style), 'Romania' (the country, literally 'land of the Romans,' preserving the memory of Roman rule), and 'Romany' (the Romani people, possibly from a Romani word meaning 'man' rather than from Rome) all connect, directly or tangentially, to the Latin name of the Eternal City. That a single city's name could spawn a word for love, a word for an artistic revolution, and the names of an entire family of languages spoken by a billion people is a testament to Rome's unmatched influence on Western civilization — and to the unpredictable creativity of semantic change.