Vladislav

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Ibadibam (talk | contribs) at 01:58, 13 August 2020 (→‎Origin: text formatting). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Vladislav
Vladislav II Jagello, King of Lithuania and Poland
Gendermale
Language(s)Slavic
Origin
Word/nameSlavic
Meaningpossessor of the glory, fame
Other names
Alternative spellingCyrillic: Владислав
Variant form(s)Vladyslav, Władysław
Related namesfemale form Vladislava
See alsoVladisav, Volodyslav, Ladislao, Ladislav, Ŭladzislaŭ, Ulászló, László

Vladislav[1] (Belarusian: Уладзіслаў (Uladzislaŭ, Uładzisłaŭ); Polish: Władysław, Włodzisław; Russian, Bulgarian, Macedonian, Serbian, Ukrainian: Владислав[1]) is a male given name of Slavic origin. Variations include Volodislav, Vlastislav, Vlaslav. In the Czech Republic and Slovakia the name is often spelled Ladislav.

Outside of the Slavic countries it is sometimes Latinized as either Vladislaus or Vladislas. Spanish forms include Ladislao and Uladislao. The Portuguese form is Ladislau. The Hungarian form is László.

In Russia it is sometimes colloquially shortened either as Vlad (Влад), Vladik (Владик) or Slava (Слава).

Feminine form of the name Vladislav is Vladislava, or in Polish spelling Władysława.

Origin

The name Vladislav literally means 'one who owns a glory', or simply 'famous'. It is a composite name derived from two Slavic roots: Vlad-, meaning either 'to own' (Ukrainian voloditi (володiти) means 'to own', Polish władać ('to possess'), Russian vladet (владеть 'to own'), or 'to rule' (another meaning of Polish władać is 'to rule', Ukrainian vlada (влада) means 'power', 'the government', in Slovak and Czech language, vláda means ruling body, government in modern form, vládnuť (vládnout) means 'to rule', vládca (vládce) is 'ruler'), and slav- meaning 'fame'/'glory'.

People with the name

Places

See also

External links

References