Synesthesia is a rare perceptual condition causing unusual sensations, which are
triggered by the stimulation of otherwise unrelated modalities (e.g., the sensation of
colors triggered when listening to music). In addition to the name it takes today, the
condition has had a wide variety of designations throughout its scientific history. These
different names have also been accompanied by shifting boundaries in its definition, and
the literature has undergone a considerable process of change in the development of a term
for synesthesia, starting with “obscure feeling” in 1772, and ending with the first
emergence of the true term “synesthesia” or “synæsthesiæ” in 1892. In this article, we
will unpack the complex history of this nomenclature; provide key excerpts from central
texts, in often hard-to-locate sources; and translate these early passages and
terminologies into English.