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Tumultus

Tumultus is a Latin noun meaning uproar, commotion, disturbance, or riot. In classical and late antique usage it could refer to the noise of a crowd, a chaotic situation, or general disorder, whether political, military, or social. The term thus covers both the auditory sense of loud disturbance and the broader sense of upheaval or confusion.

Grammatically, tumultus is a masculine noun of the fourth declension. In Latin dictionaries it is listed with

Etymology and cognates: tumultus is a native Latin term that gave rise to the English noun tumult

Usage in Latin literature: the word commonly appears in phrases such as tumultus plebis (the uproar of

In modern scholarship, tumultus is usually translated as tumult or uproar. The term remains a standard Latin

the
standard
fourth-declension
paradigm;
the
word
forms
follow
that
class’s
characteristic
endings.
This
places
tumultus
among
a
group
of
nouns
that
describe
events
or
states
of
disorder,
often
in
plural
or
compound
constructions.
through
later
Romance
intermediaries.
It
is
related
to
various
Romance-language
words
such
as
French
tumulte,
Spanish
tumulto,
Italian
tumulto,
and
Portuguese
tumulto.
These
cognates
retain
the
sense
of
noise,
disturbance,
or
upheaval
carried
by
the
Latin
core
meaning.
the
common
people),
tumultus
militum
(the
riot
of
soldiers),
or
tumultus
civium
(disturbance
among
citizens).
It
is
used
to
describe
both
immediate,
audible
disturbances
and
broader
social
or
political
turmoil,
including
reactions
to
elections,
wars,
or
public
spectacles.
lexeme
for
discussing
crowd
behavior
and
disorder
in
ancient
sources,
and
it
informs
discussions
of
political
and
social
upheaval
in
Roman
contexts.