Arne (name): Difference between revisions
imported>Arne Eickenberg m (→Men) |
imported>Arne Eickenberg mNo edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''[[Arne]]''' is a male [[Given name|forename]] of [[Germanic languages|Germanic]] origin, closely related to the name [[Arnold (name)|''Arnold'']]. Furthermore, ''Arne'' is | '''[[Arne]]''' is a male [[Given name|forename]] of [[Germanic languages|Germanic]] origin, closely related to the name [[Arnold (name)|''Arnold'']]. Furthermore, ''Arne'' is in use as a [[Surname|surname]], especially in [[English language|English]]-speaking countries. ''Arne'' can also be a female forename. In this case the name is of archaic [[Ancient Greek|Greek]] origin (''Ἄρνη''). | ||
==Etymology and meaning of the Germanic name== | ==Etymology and meaning of the Germanic name== |
Revision as of 12:28, 25 April 2007
Arne is a male forename of Germanic origin, closely related to the name Arnold. Furthermore, Arne is in use as a surname, especially in English-speaking countries. Arne can also be a female forename. In this case the name is of archaic Greek origin (Ἄρνη).
Etymology and meaning of the Germanic name
The first syllable of the name Arne (ger.: [ˈaʁnə], dan.: [ˈɑʶnə], engl. often: [æʁn]) probably stems from the Germanic *arn ("eagle"), which is the hypothetical preform of the Old High German aar and aro as well as of the Old Norse örn or ørn, which all have the same meaning. It has been proposed that *or- and *er respectively ("large bird", "eagle") are its proto-Indo-European root.
Some older books that deal with the origin of names identify Arne and some of the related variants (see below) as short forms of the Old High German Arnfried (aar and fried; "The peace-bringing eagle"). The more probable alternative however describes the name Arne as a contracted parallel development of Arnold, both of which go back to the Old High German name Arenwald (aro or aar and wald; "Has the strength of an eagle").[1] The Proto-Indo-European root of the second syllable is said to be *waldh- from the base *wal- ("to be strong", "to rule").[2]
In Scandinavia Arne is in widespread use as a forename, where it is often combined with other forenames, e.g. as Tor-Arne, Leif-Arne, John-Arne or Nils-Arne. In Germany the form Arno is more frequent. The German diminutive forms of Arne are Arnele or Ernele. In Switzerland the diminutive forms Ärneli and Ernle or Erndle are also known.
Name day
- July 13 (with Bishop Arn of Würzburg)
- additional possible name days:
- January 15 (with priest and fraternity founder Arnold Janssen)
- May 1 (with aristocratic cloistral founder Arnold of Hiltensweiler)
- July 18 (with musician and confesser Arnold of Arnoldsweiler or with Arnould of Metz, one of the Carolingian progenitors)
- August 14 (with Flemish cloistral founder Arnould of Soissons)
- September 19 (with bishop Arnoux of Gap)
- January 15 (with priest and fraternity founder Arnold Janssen)
- In Scandinavia the name day is often celebrated on August 4.
Notable persons
Women
- Arnê of Sithon (Ἄρνη)
- Arnê, daughter of Aeolus (Ἄρνη)
Men
- Arne Carl-August Beurling, Swedish mathematician
- Arne Helge Carlson, US-American politician
- Arne Eggebrecht, German egyptologist
- Arne Mattson, Swedish film director
- Arne Dekke Eide Næss, Norwegian philosopher
- John Arne Riise, Norwegian soccer player (Liverpool F.C.)
- Arne Schmidt, US-American film producer (Big Fish)
- Arne Wilhelm Kaurin Tiselius, Swedish biochemist (Nobel Prize 1948)
Arne as surname
- Thomas Augustine Arne, English compser of the 18th century
Fictional characters
- Arne Anka (comic character)
- Arne Saknussemm, the Icelandic alchemist in Jules Verne's novel Journey to the Center of the Earth
Variants
Forenames
Aarne, Aerni (also: Ärni, Swiss, originally an affectionate form), Anno, Arend (Frisian), Arild (dan.), Arin, Arn, Arnald, Arnaldo (ital.), Arnau (kat.), Arnaud (fr.), Arnaude (fr.), Arnault (fr.), Arnd, Arndt, Arné (fr.), Arnel, Arnell, Arness, Arni (Faroese), Árni (icel., far.), Arni (sw.), Arnie (engl. short form of Arnold), Arno, Arnoald, Arnoaldus (lat.), Arnold, Arnolt, Arnould (fr.), Arnoux (fr.), Arnuel (sp., port.), Ernemann (sw., affect.), Erni (sw., affect.), Ernie (engl.), Oke (East-Frisian), Onno (e.fris.), Ontje (e.fris.)
Surnames
Aerni, Erni, Erny
References
- ↑ The emergence of the low end-vowel is an equivalent to the Old English translations of the Germanic waltan ("to govern", "to possess", "to have control over sth./s.o.") as the Mercian weldan and the Early West Saxon wieldan or wealdan in Essex, as well as to its Lithuanian translation veldu.
- ↑ Possible genesis including hypothetical intermediate forms: *orwal(dh) > *arnwald(h) > *aarenwald > Arenwald > *Arnweld > *Arnwel > Arnel > Arne. The Spanish form Arnuel and the stress of the last syllable in Celtic-influenced southern France (Arné) support the intermediate *Arnwel and the origin from Arenwald.