This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (November 2024) |
Vladyslav (Ukrainian: Владисла́в, romanized: Vladysláv /u̯lɑdɪˈslɑu̯/) or Volodyslav (Ukrainian: Володисла́в, romanized: Volodysláv /wɔlɔdɪˈslɑu̯/) is a Ukrainian given name for males. The female variant is the same with the addition of 'a' at the end.
Gender | male |
---|---|
Origin | |
Word/name | Poland, Old-slavic native |
Meaning | possessor of the glory, fame, the one who is famous for order |
Region of origin | Ukraine |
Other names | |
Related names | Volodyslav, Vladislav, Ŭladzislaŭ, Władysław, Ladislav, László, Ladislao |
The name is of old Slavic origin and is mainly used in Poland. The name derives from the slavic words (Володіти (volodity) - to possess, + слава (slava) - glory, or слово (slovo) - word) meaning one who is a "possessor of glory, fame".[1]
Many of Poland's kings bore this name. Its variant in Russian is Vladislav; Belarusian - Ŭladzislaŭ (Ўладзіслаў); Czech - Ladislav.
In Ukraine and Russia this name became popular in the 1960s and 1970s as Polish culture became popular, as a way to be connected to Western culture that was permitted by the Soviet regime for the Soviet people.
References
edit- ^ Campbell, Mike (April 23, 2024). "Meaning, origin and history of the name Vladislav". Behind the Name. Retrieved 2024-11-08.