Etymology

Company

The word originally meant people who break bread together.

Late Latin · 12th century
This entry is undergoing enhanced source verification. All research is complete and citations are being verified to our full sourcing standard.
Late Latin
companio
Old French
compagnie
Middle English
compaignye
English
company

The Late Latin companio combined com (with, together) and panis (bread) to describe a messmate, a person you shared a meal with. The word first appears in the sixth-century Frankish Lex Salica and is likely a translation of a Germanic word, the Gothic gahlaiba, literally "with-loaf."1

Old French transformed it into compagnie, meaning society, friendship, or a body of soldiers. When the word entered Middle English in the twelfth century, it carried both senses: the warmth of companionship and the structure of an organized group.2

The commercial meaning, a group of people united to conduct business, developed in the fourteenth century alongside the rise of trade guilds. The abbreviation "Co." dates from the 1670s. By the sixteenth century, company had acquired its full modern business sense, describing a legal entity formed to pursue profit.3

The East India Company, chartered in 1600, and the Dutch East India Company (VOC), chartered in 1602, were among the first to operate as joint-stock companies, pooling capital from multiple investors. The VOC is often cited as the first company to issue publicly traded shares.4

The word's military sense survives in modern armies, where a company is a unit of roughly 100 to 250 soldiers. Its root meaning survives in the word companion, which still carries the etymological memory of shared bread. The legal entity that now employs billions of people worldwide takes its name from an act as intimate as eating together.5

6th century
The Late Latin companio, meaning messmate or bread-fellow, first appears in the Frankish Lex Salica.
12th century
Old French compagnie enters Middle English, carrying meanings of both friendship and organized groups.
14th century
The commercial sense develops alongside the rise of trade guilds.
1600
The East India Company is chartered, becoming one of the first joint-stock trading companies.
1 Douglas Harper, "Company," Online Etymology Dictionary (etymonline.com).
2 Harper, "Company," Online Etymology Dictionary.
3 "Company," Oxford English Dictionary.
4 Niall Ferguson, The Ascent of Money: A Financial History of the World (New York: Penguin, 2008), Chapter 3.
5 Harper, "Companion," Online Etymology Dictionary.
Explore all entries →