Aimar (name)
Aimar is a masculine given name of Germanic origin, common in mainly the Basque Country and Estonia (with 5,500 resp. 600 name bearers)[1] The name Aimar is also used as a surname, probably as a result of the name having been used as a patronymic.[2]
Etymology
The name Aimar is a Frankish form of the German name Agimar, composed by agi- (either from age 'reverence, discipline' or egg 'edge') and -mar ('famous').[3][4][5] An alternative interpretation is that the namne is composed by the words haim ('home') and hard ('hard').[6][7]
In Estonia, onomasticians have suggested that the name could be one of many versions of the popular name Aivar (in turn loaned from Latvian Aivars, a version of Scandinavian Ivar)[8]
History
There are references to the name in medieval texts from the 13th to 14th centuries in the Kingdom of Navarre.[9] In later years it has been assimilated as a Basque name, and it has become a popular name for boys in Basque Country and Navarre.[10]
People with Aimar as first name
- Aimar Altosaar (born 1959), Estonian sociologist, journalist and politician
- Hans Aimar Mow Grønvold (1846-1926), Norwegian civil servant
- Aimar-Charles-Marie de Nicolaï (1747–1794), French writer
- Aimar Moratalla (born 1987), Spanish football player
- Aimar Olaizola (born 1979), Spanish pelota player
- Aimar Sagastibelza (born 1984), Spanish football player
- Aimar Sher (born 2002), Swedish football player
- Aimar August Sørenssen (1823–1908), Norwegian politician
- Aimar V of Limoges (1135–1199), French nobleman
People with Aimar as surname
- Carlos Aimar (born 1950), Argentinian football player
- Lucien Aimar (born 1941), French cyclist
- Pablo Aimar (born 1979), Argentinian football player
References
- ^ Numbers from Spanish Instituto nacional de estadística and Estonian Eesti statistika. Retrieved 2022-02-20.
- ^ Lilljegren, Joakim (2021): "Namnet Aimar", Ortnamnssällskapets i Uppsala årsskrift, s. 15–20.
- ^ Kruken, Kristoffer & Stemshaug, Ola (2013): Norsk personnamnleksikon. Oslo: Samlaget. P. 23.
- ^ Seibicke, Wilfried (1996): Historisches deutsches Vornamenbuch Berlin: de Gruyter. Pp. 43–44.
- ^ Drosdowski, Günther (1968): Lexikon der Vornamen. Mannheim: Bibliographisches Institut. P. 29
- ^ Dauzat, Albert (1951): Dictionnaire étymologique des noms de famille et prénoms de France. Paris: Larousse. P. 4.
- ^ Bidegain, Xarles (2007): Izendegia/Nombres vascos. Donostia: Elkar. P. 73.
- ^ Rajandi, Edgar (1966): Raamat nimedest. Tallinn: Eesti raamat. Pp. 18–20.
- ^ (in Basque) Euskaltzaindiaren izendegiak
- ^ "INEbase / Demography and population / Municipal Register / Most common first names and surnames". Ine.es. Retrieved 2013-04-30.