Xavier (given name)

The given name Xavier (/ˈzviər, ˈs-, ˈzævi/, Catalan: [ʃəβiˈe, ʃaviˈeɾ], Galician: [ʃaˈβjeɾ], Portuguese: [ʃɐviˈɛɾ], French: [ɡzavje]; Spanish: Javier [xaˈβjeɾ]; Basque: Xabier [ʃaβier])[1] is a masculine name derived from the 16th-century Spanish Navarrese Roman Catholic Saint Francis Xavier.

Xavier
The castle of Xavier, where Francis Xavier was born, was restored by the Jesuits.
GenderMale
Origin
Word/nameCatholic Church
Meaning"Castle" or "new house" in Basque language
Region of originSpain
Other names
Related namesJavier, Xaver, Xaveria, Xavi, Xavia, Xaviell, Xaviera, Xaviero, Xever, Xabier, Zavia, Zavier, Chavier

Etymology

Xavier comes from the name of the Jesuit missionary saint Francis Xavier, where Xavier stands for his birthplace of Javier (Xabier in Basque; Xavier in Old Spanish) in the Kingdom of Navarre. The toponym is itself the romanization of the Basque place-name (and surname) etxe berri, meaning 'castle', 'new house' or 'new home'.[2]

People

Arts

Law, military, and politics

Sports

Other

Fictional characters

See also

In other languages

  • Javier (Spanish, Portuguese)
  • Saverio (Italian)
  • Ksaverij (Ксаверий) (Russian, Ukrainian)
  • Ksawery (Polish)
  • Xabere, Xabel (Asturian)
  • Xabier (Basque)
  • Xavier (Catalan, English, French, Portuguese, Galician, Swedish)
  • Xaver (Czech, German, Slovakian)
  • Xavér (Hungarian)
  • Xaveriu (Romanian)
  • Xaverius (Dutch, Latin)
  • Xaveriοs (Ξαβέριος) or (Σαβεριος) (Greek)
  • Ksaveras (Lithuanian)

References

  1. "Xabier", Behind the Name.com.
  2. Manuel., Yáñez Solana (c. 1995). El gran libro de los nombres : con una breve biografía de todos los santos y los personajes más famosos correspondientes a cada nombre. Madrid: M.E. Editores. ISBN 8449502322. OCLC 37613128.
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