## Suffrage: From Broken Potsherds to Broken Barriers
The word **suffrage** carries the weight of centuries of political struggle, yet its origins are surprisingly humble — and disputed. Its journey from Roman voting tablets through medieval prayer books to the barricades of the women's rights movement is one of the most dramatic semantic voyages in the English language.
Latin **suffrāgium** meant 'a vote' or 'the right to vote.' Roman citizens cast their votes using wax tablets or, in earlier periods, potsherds — broken pieces of pottery. The traditional etymology connects *suffrāgium* to **sub-** ('under, from below') + **frangere** ('to break'), from PIE ***bʰreg-** ('to break'). This would make *suffrage* literally 'a breaking underneath' — perhaps
The Roman scholar Festus connected it to *suffragines*, the hollow of the knee, suggesting voters 'went to their knees' — i.e., sat down to vote. Modern etymologists consider this folk etymology, but it illustrates how puzzling the word's origin was even to the Romans themselves.
When *suffrage* entered English around 1380, it had nothing to do with voting. It meant **'intercessory prayer'** — a petition to God made through the saints. This sense survives in Catholic liturgy: the 'suffrages of the saints' are prayers asking holy figures to intercede on behalf of the faithful. The connection to the Latin original is through the idea
By the 1530s, the political meaning reasserted itself. 'Suffrage' came to mean 'a vote' — an individual act of choosing. Then, by the late 18th century, particularly in the revolutionary atmosphere of the American and French Revolutions, it shifted again to mean **'the right to vote'** as an abstract principle.
### The Suffragettes
The most dramatic chapter in the word's history began in 1906. The **Daily Mail** coined the term **'suffragette'** to describe the militant women's suffrage activists led by Emmeline Pankhurst. The **-ette** suffix was deliberately diminutive — as in *kitchenette* or *novelette* — intended to belittle the movement.
The tactic backfired spectacularly. Pankhurst and the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) adopted the term with pride, and it became the defining word of one of history's most consequential civil rights movements. The activists' own preferred term, **'suffragist'**, was gender-neutral and had been in use since the 1820s, but *suffragette* — the word coined to mock them — is the one that endured.
### The Suffragan Connection
A **suffragan bishop** is a subordinate bishop who assists a diocesan bishop. This term shares the same Latin root, preserving the older sense of 'support, assistance.' The suffragan literally 'lends their vote' — their support — to the metropolitan bishop. This ecclesiastical usage bridges the word's dual life as both a prayer term and a political one.
### Universal Suffrage
The phrase **'universal suffrage'** — meaning the right of all adult citizens to vote regardless of property, race, sex, or other qualification — first appeared in English in the 1790s during debates about the French Revolution. It took over a century of struggle before this principle was realized in most democracies: New Zealand granted women's suffrage in 1893; the UK in 1918 (partially) and 1928 (fully); the US ratified the 19th Amendment in 1920.