The English word 'tower' has one of the deepest and most mysterious etymological histories of any architectural term. It entered Middle English primarily from Old French 'tur' (later 'tour'), though Old English already had a related form 'torr' borrowed directly from Latin. Both forms descend from Latin 'turris,' meaning a tower, high building, or citadel.
The Latin word itself was borrowed from Greek 'tyrris' or 'tyrsis,' a term whose ultimate origin is one of the persistent puzzles of historical linguistics. Most scholars classify it as a pre-Greek substrate word — that is, a term inherited from one of the languages spoken in the Aegean region before the arrival of Greek-speaking peoples around 2000 BCE. The word has no convincing Indo-European etymology, and its phonological shape (the 'tyrr-' cluster) is characteristic of pre-Greek Mediterranean vocabulary.
Some linguists have connected it with the ethnic name Tyrrhenian (Greek 'Tyrrhēnoi'), the name the Greeks gave to the Etruscans. The Etruscans were famous builders of walled cities and towers, and it is possible that the Greeks borrowed both the architectural technique and the word from these non-Indo-European neighbors. This remains speculative, however, and the connection cannot be proven with current evidence.
The word's journey through Latin into the languages of Western Europe mirrors the expansion of Roman military architecture. Roman legions built watchtowers ('turres') across their empire, from Hadrian's Wall to the North African frontier. When the Latin word entered the various Romance and Germanic languages, it carried with it the prestige and practical importance of Roman fortification technology. French 'tour,' Spanish 'torre,' Italian 'torre,' Portuguese 'torre,' German
In English, the word has a dual history. Old English borrowed 'torr' directly from Latin, probably through contact with Roman Britain's surviving fortifications. After the Norman Conquest of 1066, Old French 'tur' reinforced and eventually replaced the older form. The Middle English spellings 'tour,' 'tur,' and eventually 'tower' (with the '-er' ending perhaps influenced
The most famous tower in English history is the Tower of London, begun by William the Conqueror in 1066 as a demonstration of Norman power. Its original structure, the White Tower, gave its name to the entire fortress complex. The word 'tower' thus carries in English a particular association with royal power, imprisonment, and political drama that colors its use to this day.
The diminutive 'turret' (from Old French 'tourete,' small tower) entered English separately in the fourteenth century. 'Turret' preserved a closer connection to the original Latin 'turris' through its French diminutive form, while 'tower' had already diverged phonologically.
In modern English, 'tower' has extended metaphorically to mean any tall structure: clock towers, bell towers, cooling towers, control towers, cell towers, and the tower blocks of mid-twentieth-century urban housing. The verb 'to tower' (to rise to a great height, to loom) appeared in the sixteenth century, and 'towering' as an adjective meaning impressively tall or overwhelmingly intense ('towering rage') followed shortly after.