Medieval scholars fused the Latin words for "what kind?" and "to make."
The word qualification entered English in the 1540s from Middle French, which borrowed it from Medieval Latin qualificatio.1 The root combined two Latin elements: qualis, meaning "of what sort," and facere, meaning "to make." To qualify originally meant to attribute a quality to something, to say what kind of thing it was.
The earliest English uses had nothing to do with credentials. To qualify meant to modify, limit, or describe. A qualifying statement was one that added nuance, not one that certified competence.
The shift toward the credentialing sense began in the 1530s, when qualify took on the meaning of having taken the necessary steps for holding an office.2 By the 1580s, it described being fit for a particular employment. Medieval universities had long issued degrees and licenses, but the idea that a person could be made qualified through a formal process was relatively new in the language.
The medieval licentia docendi, the license to teach, was among the earliest formal qualifications in Europe. Pope Alexander III mandated in 1179 that qualified teachers could not be denied the license on the basis of payment, an early attempt to separate competence from wealth.3
The University of Bologna, founded in 1088, and the University of Paris, formalized in 1231, developed systems in which the qualification itself became the product.4 Students worked toward degrees that certified not a specific skill but a passage through a prescribed curriculum. The qualification attested to time spent, not ability demonstrated.
By the nineteenth century, industrialized nations built professional licensing systems that required formal qualifications for entry into medicine, law, and engineering. The word that once meant "to describe the nature of something" now meant "to possess the credentials required by an institution."
In German, the word Qualifikation carries the same Latin roots. In Japanese, shikaku (資格) combines the characters for resources and status, framing qualification as an accumulation of recognized standing rather than a description of ability.