Jaromir
Jaromír, Jaromir, Jaroměr is a Slavic male given name.
Origin and meaning[]
Jaromír is a West Slavic given name composed of two stems jaro and mír. The meaning is not definite:
- Polish jary (archaic) = „spry, young, strong“; mir = „prestige, good reputation“
- Upper Sorbian jara = „very“; měr = „peace“
- old-Ruthenian jaro = „sun“; mir = „peace, world“
False etymology[]
In the Czech, the name is seemingly composed from two other words. Word Jaro means „spring“ and word mír means „peace“.[citation needed]
Variations[]
- Jaroměr (Upper Sorbian)
- Jaromir (Polish)
- Jaromír (Czech, Slovak)
The female forms are Jaromira or Jaromíra. The short form is Jesko.
People known as Jaromir[]
Royalty[]
- Jaromir, Duke of Bohemia
- Jaromir (Bishop of Prague)
Others[]
- Jaromír Blažek, Czech football goalkeeper
- Jaromír Dragan, Slovak ice hockey player
- Karel Jaromír Erben, Czech writer
- Jaromír Funke, Czech photographer
- Jaromír Jágr, Czech ice hockey player
- Jaromír Ježek, Czech judoka
- Jaromír Kohlíček, Czech politician
- Jaromír Krejcar, Czech architect
- Jaromír Nohavica, Czech singer–songwriter
- Jaromír Paciorek, Czech football player
- Jaromír Štětina, Czech journalist and politician
- Jaromír Vejvoda, Czech composer
- Jaromír Weinberger, Czech American composer
- Jaromír Zápal, Czech illustrator
See also[]
- Little Mr Jaromir, a 2002 book by Martin Ebbertz
- Slavic names
Categories:
- Given names
- Slavic masculine given names
- Belarusian masculine given names
- Czech masculine given names
- Slovak masculine given names
- Polish masculine given names
- Ukrainian masculine given names
- Masculine given names