Igor (given name)
Igor (Russian: Игорь, romanized: Igor' [ˈiɡərʲ]; Ukrainian: Ігор, romanized: Ihor [ˈiɦor]; Belarusian: Ігар, romanized: Ihar [ˈiɣar]; Serbian Cyrillic: Игор, pronounced [îɡor]) is a common given Slavic name derived from the Norse name Ingvar, that was brought to ancient Rus' by the Norse Varangians, in the form Ingvar or Yngvar. Igor (son of the Varangian chief Rurik) was left as a child with Rurik's distant relative (supposedly) first Grand Prince of Kiev - Oleg and later, after the death of Oleg replaced him on Kiev's throne.[1] Outside of the Slavic language sphere, the name has also become common in Brazil and Portugal, and in the Basque-speaking part of Spain.
Igor of Kiev, first from right. Illumination from the Radziwiłł Chronicle | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Origin | |
Word/name | Old Norse |
Meaning | Protected |
Region of origin | Kievan Rus' |
Other names | |
Related names | Gregory, Ingvar, Ingrid, Ingram |
People
Igor
- Igor of Kiev, ruler of Kievan Rus' from 913 to 945
- Igor II of Kiev (died 1147), Grand Prince of Kiev (1146)
- Igor the Assassin, name given to one of the alleged assassins of Alexander Litvinenko
- Igor Akinfeev (born 1986), Russian football goalkeeper
- Igor Andreev (born 1983), Russian tennis player
- Igor Angulo (born 1984), Basque-Spanish footballer
- Igor Antón (born 1983), Basque-Spanish cyclist
- Igor Arnáez (born 1991), Basque-Spanish footballer
- Igor Astarloa (born 1976), Basque-Spanish cyclist
- Igor Bobček (born 1983), Slovak ice hockey defenceman
- Igor Bogdanoff (born 1949), French science fiction author
- Igor Boki (born 1994), Belarusian Paralympic swimmer
- Igor Cavalera (born 1970), Brazilian musician
- Igor Chernykh (1932–2020), Russian camera operator
- Prince Igor Constantinovich of Russia (1894–1918), Russian royalty
- Igor Chugainov (born 1970), Russian football player and coach
- Igor M. Diakonoff (1915–1999), Russian historian, linguist, and translator
- Igor Dodon (born 1975), Moldovan politician and current outgoing president of Moldova
- Igor de Camargo (born 1983), Brazilian / Belgian footballer
- Igor Gabilondo (born 1979), Basque-Spanish footballer
- Igor Gaydamaka, Soviet sprint canoer
- Igor Girkin (born 1970), Russian army artillery veteran
- Igor Golomstock (1929–2017), London-based Russian art historian
- Igor González de Galdeano (born 1973), Basque-Spanish cyclist
- Igor Julio dos Santos de Paulo (born 1998), Brazilian footballer
- Igor Kholmanskikh (born 1969), Russian government appointee and former factory worker
- Igor Kokoškov (born 1971), Serbian basketball coach
- Igor Kunitsyn (born 1981), Russian tennis player
- Igor Kurnosov (1985–2013), Russian chess grandmaster
- Igor Larionov (born 1960), Soviet and Russian retired ice hockey player
- Igor Luzhkovsky (1938–2000), Russian swimmer
- Igor Markevitch (1912-1983), 20th-century Ukrainian-born composer and conductor
- Igor Martinez (born 1989), Basque-Spanish footballer
- Igor Matovič (born 1973), Slovak politician
- Igor Medved (born 1981), Slovenian ski jumper
- Igor Menshchikov (born 1970), Russian football player and coach
- Igor Merino (born 1990), Basque-Spanish cyclist
- Igor V. Minin (born 1960), Russian physicist
- Igor Nesterenko (born 1990), Israeli-Ukrainian basketball player in the Israel Basketball Premier League
- Igor Nikitin (ice hockey) (1966–2013), Russian ice hockey player
- Igor Oistrakh (born 1931), Ukrainian violinist
- Igor Olshanetskyi (born 1986), Israeli Olympic weightlifter
- Igor Olshansky (born 1982), Ukrainian-born American National Football League player
- Igor Omura Fraga (born 1998), Japanese-born Brazilian racing driver and eSports racer
- Igor Pavlov (athlete) (born 1979), Russian pole vaulter
- Igor Rasko (born 1966), Russian ice hockey player
- Igor Savitsky (1915–1984), Russian art collector and art museum director.
- Igor Severyanin (1887–1941), Russian poet
- Igor Shuvalov (born 1967), Russian politician
- Igor Sijsling (born 1987), Dutch tennis player
- Igor Sikorsky (1889–1972), Ukrainian-born American pioneer of aviation in both helicopters and fixed-wing aircraft
- Igor Smirnov (born 1941), Transnistrian politician
- Igor Stravinsky (1882–1971), Russian-born composer of Ukrainian descent
- Igor Subbotin (born 1990), Estonian footballer
- Igor Svyatoslavich (1151–1201/1202), Ukrainian prince
- Igor Ursov (1927–2002) Russian phthisiatrist, scientist
- Igor Yebra (born 1974), Basque-Spanish dancer
- Igor Zubeldia (born 1997), Basque-Spanish footballer
Ihor
- Ihor Bazhan (born 1981), Ukrainian footballer
- Ihor Chuchman (born 1985), Kazakhstani footballer
- Ihor Della-Rossa (born 1939), Ukrainian racewalker
- Ihor Huz (born 1982), Ukrainian politician, member of Parliament
- Ihor Kalynets (b. 1939), Ukrainian poet and dissident during Soviet times
- Ihor Kharatin (born 1995), Ukrainian footballer
- Ihor Kharchenko (born 1962), Ukrainian diplomat
- Ihor Kirienko (born 1986), Ukrainian footballer
- Ihor Kohut (born 1996), Ukrainian footballer
- Ihor Kolykhaiev (born 1971), Ukrainian politician and entrepreneur
- Ihor Kolomoyskyi (born 1963), Ukrainian businessman
- Ihor Kononenko (born 1965) Ukrainian businessman and politician
- Ihor Kyrylenko (born 1991), Ukrainian singer, songwriter, producer and DJ, member in a number of musical bands
- Ihor Kyryukhantsev (born 1996), Ukrainian footballer
- Ihor Lytovchenko (born 1966), Ukrainian businessman and entrepreneur
- Ihor Lutsenko (politician) (born 1978), Ukrainian journalist and politician
- Igor Melnik (born 1997), Russian footballer
- Ihor Melnyk (footballer, born 1983), Ukrainian footballer
- Ihor Melnyk (footballer, born 1986), Ukrainian footballer
- Ihor Nasalyk (born 1962), Ukrainian optoelectronic engineer and politician
- Ihor Olefirenko (born 1990), Ukrainian long distance runner
- Ihor Pavlyuk (born 1967), Ukrainian writer, translator and research worker
- Ihor Plastun (born 1990), Ukrainian footballer
- Ihor Podolchak (born 1962), Ukrainian film director and visual artist
- Ihor Prokopchuk (born 1968), Ukrainian diplomat
- Ihor Rainin or Raynin (born 1973), Ukrainian politician
- Ihor Reptyukh (born 1994), Ukrainian cross-country skier and biathlete
- Ihor Rybak (1934–2005), Ukrainian weightlifter
- Ihor Reznichenko (born 1994), Ukrainian figure skater
- Ihor Sahach (born 1956), Ukrainian diplomat
- Ihor Shcherbak (1943-2002), Soviet long-distance runner
- Ihor Shevchenko (born 1971), Ukrainian politician, government minister, and lawyer
- Ihor Ševčenko (1922–2009), Polish-born philologist and historian of Ukrainian origin
- Ihor Sorkin (born 1967), Ukrainian banker, chairman of the National Bank of Ukraine
- Ihor Surkis (born 1958), Ukrainian businessman
- Ihor Tsvietov (born 1994), Ukrainian Paralympic athlete with cerebral palsy
- Ihor Tyschenko (born 1989), Ukrainian footballer
- Ihor Yukhnovskyi (born 1925), Ukrainian physicist and politician, and a member of the Presidium
- Ihor Zubko (born 1991), Ukrainian footballer
Ihar
- Ihar Hermianchuk (1961–2002), Belarusian journalist and political activist.
- Ihar Hershankou (1981—2018), convicted Belarusian murderer and fraudster
- Ihar Makarau (born 1979), Belarusian judoka
- Ihar Maystrenka (born 1959), Belarusian former rower
- Ihar Razhkow (born 1981), Belarusian footballer
- Ihar Rynkevich (born 1968), Belarusian legal and political expert, journalist and human rights activist
- Ihar Stasevich (born 1985), Belarusian footballer
- Ihar Tarlowski (born 1974), Belarusian footballer and coach
- Ihar Truhaw (born 1976), Belarusian footballer and coach
- Ihar Tsaplyuk (born 1970), Belarusian footballer
- Ihar Zyankovich (born 1987), Belarusian footballer
- Ihar Zyulew (born 1984), Belarusian footballer and coach
See also
References
- Melvin G. Wren "The Course of Russian History"
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