📖 Über Jacques
Jacques ist die französische Form von Jakob und Jakobus mit der Bedeutung 'Verdränger'; er stand Anfang der 1950er Jahre in Frankreich unter den Top 10, mit über 13.000 Namensgebungen allein im Jahr 1950, und gehört zu den kulturell bedeutsamsten französischen Namen, getragen von Cousteau, Chirac, Derrida, Brel und David.
📍 Details
- HerkunftFrench
- Geschlecht♂ Männlich
- BedeutungFrench form of James and Jacob. Supplanter, God is gracious
🔀 Varianten & Verwandte Namen
⭐ Berühmte Persönlichkeiten
- Jacques Cousteau — French naval officer, oceanographer, and filmmaker (1910-1997) who co-invented the Aqua-Lung (SCUBA) diving apparatus, pioneered underwater documentary filmmaking, and became a global ambassador for ocean conservation; his television series The Undersea World of Jacques Cousteau (1966-1976) introduced millions to the beauty of the deep sea.
- Jacques-Louis David — French Neoclassical painter (1748-1825), the dominant artistic figure of the French Revolution and Napoleonic era; his monumental works — The Death of Marat (1793), The Oath of the Horatii, and Napoleon Crossing the Alps — defined the visual imagery of revolutionary France and shaped Western history painting.
- Jacques Chirac — French politician and statesman (1932-2019) who served as President of France from 1995 to 2007 and twice as Prime Minister; known for opposing the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, championing French cultural exception, and his complex but defining role in late 20th-century French political life.
- Jacques Derrida — French-Algerian philosopher (1930-2004), founder of deconstruction; his works — Of Grammatology (1967), Writing and Difference — challenged assumptions about language, meaning, and presence, and transformed literary theory, philosophy, and the humanities in the late 20th century; one of the most influential and controversial thinkers of his era.
- Jacques Brel — Belgian singer-songwriter (1929-1978), one of the greatest performers in the history of French-language music; his emotionally devastating songs — Ne me quitte pas, Amsterdam, La Valse à mille temps — combine poetic lyrics with dramatic stage presence; his influence on French chanson and global popular music is immeasurable.