Miriam (given name)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Miriam, Miryam
Mariam, Mary, Maryam, Meryem

Miriam (Hebrew: מִרְיָם, Modern: Mīryam, Tiberian: Mīryām) is a feminine given name recorded in Biblical Hebrew in the Book of Exodus as the name of the sister of Moses, the prophetess Miriam.[1]

Spelling variants include French Myriam, German Mirjam, Mirijam; hypocoristic forms include

in Israel).[2]

The name's etymology is unclear. Since many

Egyptian origin, the name could come from the Egyptian mr "love", as in the Egyptian names mry.t-jmn (Merit-Amun) "beloved of Amun" and mry.t-rꜥ (Merytre) "beloved of Ra".[3]

An older Grecian pronunciation of this name,

Mary
.

"Miriam" is a common female name in countries that speak

Dutch as well as among Ashkenazi Jews. It is also fairly common in Scandinavian countries, Italy, Romania, Hungary, Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia and Croatia
.

Variant Maryam

St. Mary Magdalene
, are called by the same name.

In antiquity, it was variously etymologized as "rebellion", "bitter sea", "strong waters", "exalted one", "ruling one", "wished for child", or "beautiful".[3]

Eusebius of Caesarea, translates the name as "drop of the sea" (stilla maris in Latin
), from Hebrew מר mar "drop" (cf. Isaias 40:15) and ים yam "sea". This translation was subsequently rendered stella maris ("star of the sea") due to

Alternatively, the name can be interpreted "star of the sea" if taken as a contracted form of the Hebrew מאור ma'or "star" (lit. "luminary") plus ים yam "sea", yet this "strikes as a very free interpretation".[4]

Rashi, an 11th-century Jewish commentator on the Bible, wrote that the name was given to the sister of Moses because of the Egyptians' harsh treatment of Jews in Egypt. Rashi wrote that the Israelites lived in Egypt for two hundred ten years, including eighty-six years of cruel enslavement that began at the time Moses' elder sister was born. Therefore, the girl was called Miriam, because the Egyptians made life bitter (מַר, mar) for her people.[5]

Because of Mary's great religious significance, variants of her name are often given to girl children in both the Western and Arab worlds. In the

Latin
and from thence into many modern European languages.

Notable people named Miriam

Ancient

Medieval

Modern

Pseudonyms

  • Miriam Yeung, stage name of Yeung Chin-wah (楊千嬅, born 1974), Hong Kong singer-actress
  • Miriam (TV personality)
    , Mexican transgender television personality.

Notable people named Myriam

The letter y in the

palatal glide
/j/. The metathesized spelling Myriam has also gained some currency,[year needed] especially in France, alongside Miriam and Miryam.

The name of Israeli or Lebanese people called "Miriam" may be transliterated Miryam or Myriam depending on whether the context of the transliteration is French or English.

French-speaking

Others

Pseudonyms

  • Myriam François, pseudonym of Emilie François (born 1983), British writer, broadcaster, and academic; former actress

Fictional characters

See also

References

  1. .
  2. ^ Dan Isaac Slobin, The Crosslinguistic Study of Language Acquisition, p. 342
  3. ^ a b c "Though the meaning of Mary as derived from the Egyptian Mery, Meryt (cherished, beloved), is most suitable for an only daughter, such a derivation is only possible, or at best barely probable." A. Maas, "The Name of Mary",
    The Catholic Encyclopedia
    (1912)
  4. ^ "Jerome (4th century AD) suggested relations with the word מאור (ma'or), meaning star, from the verb אור ('or), to be light or shine. Combined with the word ימ (yam), sea, the name Miriam would translate to Stella Maris (star of the sea), but that strikes as a very free interpretation.", "Meaning, origin and etymology of the name Miriam", Abarim Publications
  5. ^ Rashi. "Commentary on Shir Hashirim (Song of Songs)". p. 2:13. "From the time that Miriam was born, the Egyptians intensified the bondage upon Israel; therefore, she was called Miriam, because they made it bitter (מַר) for them."

External links