Radoslav
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Radoslav | |
---|---|
Gender | masculine |
Origin | |
Language(s) | Slavic |
Meaning | "eager glory" |
Region of origin | Slavic Europe |
Other names | |
Short form(s) | Radan, Radič |
Derived | rad- ("happy, eager, to care") and slava ("glory, fame") |
Related names | Radosław, Radosav, Radič, Radu |
Radoslav (Cyrillic: Радослав) is a common Slavic masculine given name, derived from rad- ("happy, eager, to care") and slava ("glory, fame"), both very common in Slavic dithematic names. It roughly means "eager glory". It is known since the Middle Ages.[1] The earliest known Radoslav was a 9th-century Serbian ruler. It may refer to:
Contents
1 People
1.1 Royalty and nobility
2 Other
3 See also
4 References
People
Radoslav Bachev (born 1981), Bulgarian footballer
Radoslav Batak (born 1977), Serbo-Montenegrin football defender
Radoslav Brđanin (born 1948), Serbian war criminal
Radoslav Hecl (born 1974), Slovak ice hockey defenceman
Radoslav Katičić (born 1930), Croatian linguist, historian and culturologist
Radoslav Kováč (born 1979), Czech footballer
Radoslav Kvapil (born 1934), Czech pianist and composer
Radoslav Látal (born 1970), Czech footballer
Radoslav Lorković (born 1958), Croatian born musician (pianist, accordionist)
Radoslav Nesterovič (born 1976), professional basketball player in the NBA
Radoslav Rangelov (born 1985), Bulgarian footballer
Radoslav Samardžić (born 1970), Serbian retired football striker
Radoslav Stojanović, professor of law at the University of Belgrade and former member of the Founding Committee of the Democratic Party
Radoslav Suchý (born 1976), Slovak ice hockey defenceman
Radoslav Suslekov, Bulgarian boxer
Radoslav Židek (born 1981), Slovakian snowboarder
Royalty and nobility
Radoslav of Serbia, Prince of Serbia (r. 800–822)
Radoslav of Duklja, Prince of Duklja (r. 1146–48)
Stefan Radoslav (c. 1192–c. 1234), king of Serbia from 1228 to 1233
Radoslav Hlapen (fl. 1350–71), Serbian magnate
Radoslav, 13th–14th-century Bulgarian sebastokrator
Radoslav Čelnik, 16th-century duke (voivode) of Srem
Other
Radoslav Gospel, 1429 manuscript by Serbian scribe
See also
- Radosław (disambiguation)
- Radosav
- Radič
Radosavljević and Radoslavljević, patronymic surnames
This page or section lists people that share the same given name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change that link to point directly to the intended article. |
References
^ Myroslava T. Znayenko (1980). The Gods of the Ancient Slavs: Tatishchev and the Beginnings of Slavic Mythology. Slavica. p. 79. ISBN 978-0-89357-074-3.