The word 'rum' is among the most etymologically uncertain of common English drink terms. It appears in the written record around 1651, in documents from the English colony of Barbados, where sugarcane cultivation and the distillation of its byproducts were rapidly developing into a major industry.
The leading etymology traces 'rum' to 'rumbullion,' a word attested in Barbadian records from the same period meaning 'uproar' or 'great tumult.' A 1651 document from Barbados describes the chief intoxicant of the island as 'Rumbullion, alias Kill-Divil.' The idea is that the name captures the raucous behavior the potent spirit induced. 'Rumbullion' itself may come
Alternative theories exist. One links 'rum' to Malay 'brum' or 'bram,' terms for a fermented sugarcane drink that Dutch traders encountered in Southeast Asia. Given the Dutch presence in both Southeast Asia and the Caribbean, this channel of transmission is plausible but unproven. Another suggestion derives it from 'rummer,' a large drinking glass, from Dutch 'roemer,' but this is generally considered less likely since the glass was associated with wine, not spirits.
The word spread rapidly. Within decades of its first appearance, 'rum' was established throughout the English-speaking world. It was adopted into French as 'rhum' (retaining the aspirated initial sound in the spelling), Spanish as 'ron,' Portuguese as 'rum,' and German as 'Rum.'
Rum's history is inseparable from the history of colonialism, slavery, and the Atlantic trade. Sugarcane plantations in the Caribbean, worked by enslaved Africans, produced molasses as a byproduct. This molasses was distilled into rum, which became a currency in the triangular trade: rum shipped to Africa was exchanged for enslaved people, who were transported to the Caribbean to produce more sugar and molasses.
The British Royal Navy's relationship with rum is legendary. After the capture of Jamaica in 1655, the Navy switched its daily alcohol ration from French brandy to Caribbean rum. This ration persisted for over three centuries, finally ending on July 31, 1970 — 'Black Tot Day.' Admiral Edward Vernon's 1740 order to dilute the rum ration with water produced 'grog,' named for the admiral's grogram cloak, which earned
Despite its murky origins, 'rum' has become one of the most globally recognized English loanwords, carried around the world by trade, empire, and the enduring human fondness for sugarcane spirits.