21 February 2025
Silver is a chemical element with atomic number 47 and the symbol Ag. It is a soft, white, lustrous metal with the highest electrical and thermal conductivity of any metal. It has, of course, been known since antiquity. Besides its use in coinage and in jewelry and other decorative items, it has a wide variety of industrial uses, many coming from its conductivity.
Our present-day word silver is from the Old English seolfor or siolfor, which in turn is from a proto-Germanic root *silubra-. It has cognates in Celtic and Slavic languages, but interestingly, it does not come from a Proto-Indo-European root; it is a wanderwort, borrowed into these Indo-European languages from another source, probably via Bronze Age trade networks. The corresponding Proto-Indo-European root is *arg-, with a meaning of shining or white, which gives us the Latin argentum, and hence the chemical symbol Ag.
Here is an example of silver in the late ninth-century Old English translation of Pope Gregory the Great’s Cura pastoralis (Pastoral Care):
Witodlice ðæt ar, ðonne hit mon slihð, hit bið hludre ðonne ænig oðer ondweorc. Sua bið ðæm þe suiðe gnornað on ðære godcundan suingellan; he bið on middum ðæm ofne gecirred to are. Ðæt tin ðonne, ðonne hit mon mid sumum cræfte gemengð, ond to tine gewyrcð, ðonne bit hit swiðe leaslice on siolufres hiewe. Sua hwa ðonne sua licet on ðære swingellan, he bið ðæm tine gelic inne on ðæm ofne.
(Indeed brass, when one strikes it, is louder than any other material. So it is for one who complains a lot about divine chastisement; in the midst of the furnace he is turned to brass. Tin, then, when it is with a certain art alloyed and worked into pewter, then it is very deceptively in the likeness of silver. So then whoever is like that under chastisement, he is like tin in the furnace.)
So silver is as mysterious as it is beautiful.
Sources:
Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Germanic Online, 2010, s.v. *silubra-. Brill: Indo-European Etymological Dictionaries Online.
Fulk, R. D, ed. & trans. The Old English Pastoral Care. Dumbarton Oaks Medieval Library 72. Cambridge: Harvard UP, 2021, chapter 37, 282–85. Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Hatton 20.
Miśkowiec, Pawel. “Name Game: The Naming History of the Chemical Elements—Part 1—From Antiquity till the End of 18th Century.” Foundations of Chemistry. 1 November 2022. DOI: 10.1007/s10698-022-09448-5. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10698-022-09448-5
Oxford English Dictionary, second edition, 1989, s.v. silver, n. & adj.
Sweet, Henry, ed. King Alfred’s West-Saxon Version of Gregory’s Pastoral Care, vol. 1 of 2. Early English Text Society. London: N. Trübner, 1871, chapter 37, 266–69. Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Hatton 20. HathiTrust Digital Archive. https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.hngdrs&seq=274
Photo credit: Yerevantsi, 2024. History Museum of Armenia, Yerevan. Wikimedia Commons. Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.