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Artur

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Artur
PronunciationPortuguese: [aɾˈtuɾ]
Polish: [ˈartur]
GenderMale
Origin
Language(s)Latin or Celtic
MeaningBear-like, Baseball, Of Honour
Other names
See alsoArthur

Artur is a cognate to the common male given name Arthur meaning "bear-like", or “of honour”. It is believed to possibly be descended from the Roman surname Artorius or the Celtic bear-goddess Artio or more probably from the Celtic word artos ("bear"). Other Celtic languages have similar first names, such as Old Irish Art, Artúur, Welsh Arth - which may also be the source for the modern name. Art is also a diminutive form of the common name Arthur. In Estonian, and many Romance, Slavic and Germanic languages the name is spelled as Artur. The Finnish versions are Arttu and Artturi.

Avestan aṣ̌a/arta and its Vedic equivalent ṛtá both derive from Proto-Indo-Iranian *ṛtá- "truth",[1] which in turn continues Proto-Indo-European *h2r-to- "properly joined, right, true", from the root *h2ar. The word is attested in Old Persian as arta.

People named Artur

Composers

Performers

Politicians

Scientists

Sportsmen

Writers

Others

  • Artur Bordalo (born 1987), Portuguese street artist known as Bordalo II
  • Artur Fischer (1919–2016), German inventor
  • Artur Jorge, various people
  • Artur Mägi (1904–1981), Estonian legal scientist
  • Artur Phleps (1881–1944) Romanian-German military commander
  • Arthur Wong (born 1956), Hong Kong Film Awards-winning cinematographer, actor, screenwriter, film producer and film director
  • Arthur Yap (1943-2006), Singaporean poet, writer and painter

Legendary people

References

  1. ^ "AṦA (Asha "Truth") – Encyclopaedia Iranica". Iranicaonline.org. Retrieved 2013-02-21.