Edgar

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Edgar seated between St. Æthelwold, Bishop of Winchester, and St. Dunstan, Archbishop of Canterbury. From an eleventh-century manuscript of the Regularis Concordia
. British Library MS Cotton Tiberius A iii.

Edgar is a commonly used

gar
"spear"). Like most Anglo-Saxon names, it fell out of use by the later medieval period; it was, however, revived in the 18th century, and was popularised by its use for a character in
Sir Walter Scott's The Bride of Lammermoor (1819). The name was more common in the United States than elsewhere in the Anglosphere during the 1800s. It has been a particularly fashionable name in Latin American countries since the 20th century.[1]

People with the given name

Fictional characters with the given name

People with the surname

Fictional characters with the surname

  • Judge Edgar
    , in the Judge Dredd comic strip
  • Jerome "Jerry" Edgar, in the Bosch book series as well as its TV adaptation
  • Earving Edgar
    , in the television series The Boys
  • Stan Edgar, in the 2019 television series
    The Boys

See also

  • J. Edgar Hoover, former head of the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation
  • Edgar, standard botanical author abbreviation for Elizabeth Edgar
  • Edgars (name), the Latvian language cognate of the English name
  • Edgaras, the Lithuanian language cognate of the English name
  • Edgardo, the Italian language cognate of Edgar

References

  1. ^ Evans, Cleveland Kent (1 January 2023). "Cleveland Evans: Why Edgar Was Once the King of Baby Names". omaha.com. Omaha World Herald. Retrieved 20 January 2024.
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