Freelancing
THE SURPRISING HISTORY
OF
FREELANCING
Researched by: Regina Abong
"FREELANCING HAS ALWAYS BEEN A BATTLE.
LITERALLY."
Talk to anyone who's looking for work these days, and you'll hear one word
repeated more and more: freelance. We're most familiar with the verb, which
refers to pursuing a career without making a long-term commitment to one
employer. Usually, people who freelance are self-employed; they decide who
they'll work for and for how long. You could call them corporate mercenaries,
working for the highest bidder—and if you did so, you wouldn't be too far
from the word's original meaning.
Our earliest written evidence for 'freelance' comes from Sir Walter Scott's
Ivanhoe, in which a lord refers to his paid army of 'free lances'.
When freelance first came into English in the early 1800s, it was used to refer
to a medieval mercenary who would fight for whichever nation or person
paid them the most. Our earliest written evidence for this use (so far, that is)
is in Sir Walter Scott's novel, Ivanhoe, where a feudal lord refers to the paid
army he's assembled:
I offered Richard the service of my Free Lances, and he refused them—I will
lead them to Hull, seize on shipping, and embark for Flanders; thanks to the
bustling times, a man of action will always find employment.
The evocative word took root quickly, and also swiftly gained broader
meanings: one referring to a politician without political affiliation (who we'd
call an independent these days), and one referring to a person who does any
type of work on one's own terms and without any permanent or long-term
commitment to an employer. Though freelancer is the noun we now usually
use to refer to this last set of people, it's a newer term than freelance. So while
"He's a freelance" may sound like modern jargon, it is the original term.
Interestingly enough, the phenomenon of freelances was well-documented
throughout medieval warfare (and earlier), even if the word freelance was a
19th-century creation. Hired soldiers were common after about 1000 A.D. and
were important pieces of major military campaigns between the 12th and
14th centuries. But most of the fancy words English has for these hired
soldiers in the Middle Ages came about well after the Middle Ages:
condottiere, which refers to a leader of a band of mercenary soldiers, and
lansquenet, which refers specifically to German hired soldier during the 15th
through 17th centuries, showed up only a hundred or so years before
freelance did. So what were freelances called before we had freelance? Latin
records from the Middle Ages show that most often, hired soldiers were
called stipendiarii (or stipendiaries, meaning they were given a stipend for
fighting), soliderii ("soldiers"), or simply mercennarius ("mercenaries").