Triumph began as a drunken hymn. Greek thriambos was a song sung in honour of Dionysus during ecstatic ritual processions — loud, chaotic, and joyful. The Romans borrowed both the word and the concept, transforming it into triumphus: a rigidly choreographed military parade through the streets of Rome, granted only to generals who had won decisive victories. The honoured commander rode in a four-horse chariot, his face painted red to resemble Jupiter, while behind him a slave held a golden crown and whispered 'memento mori' — remember that you are mortal. The ceremony was Rome's highest honour, and the word absorbed that weight. Old French inherited triumphe, and Middle English adopted it in the 14th century. By then the word had loosened from its military specifics and could describe any great victory. Its influence on card games produced an unexpected descendant: the winning suit was called the 'triumph,' which players shortened to trump. Every trump card played in a hand of bridge is a distant echo of a general's chariot rolling through the Roman Forum.