Lucianus

"Variant of Lucius. Light"

♂ Männlich · Latin
ancient literary luminous variant

📖 Über Lucianus

Lucianus ist die vollständige lateinische Form von Lucian, von lux (Licht); sein bedeutendster Träger ist Lukian von Samosata (ca. 125–180 n. Chr.), der syrisch-griechische Satiriker, dessen Wahre Geschichte — eine Reise zum Mond und zurück — als das früheste Science-Fiction-Werk der Weltliteratur gilt, mit einem Witz, der Voltaire würdigt.

📍 Details

  • HerkunftLatin
  • Geschlecht♂ Männlich
  • BedeutungVariant of Lucius. Light

🔀 Varianten & Verwandte Namen

⭐ Berühmte Persönlichkeiten

  • Lucian of Samosata — Syrian Greek writer and satirist (c. 125–c. 180 AD), one of the most brilliant prose stylists of antiquity; his Dialogues of the Dead and Dialogues of the Gods mocked the absurdities of mythology and philosophy with devastating wit; his True History — a fantasy voyage to the moon — is widely considered the earliest known work of science fiction in world literature.
  • Saint Lucian of Antioch — Christian theologian and martyr (died 312 AD) who founded a renowned theological school in Antioch and produced a critical revision of the Greek Septuagint Bible; deeply influential on later Arian theology; martyred under Emperor Maximinus Daia and venerated as a saint in both Catholic and Eastern Orthodox traditions.
  • Lucian Freud — German-British painter (1922–2011), grandson of Sigmund Freud and one of the greatest figurative painters of the 20th century; his unflinching, psychologically intense portraits — often depicting nude figures with merciless realism — challenged and redefined the tradition of portraiture; his painting Benefits Supervisor Sleeping (1995) sold for $33.6 million in 2008.
  • Lucian Blaga — Romanian poet, playwright, and philosopher (1895–1961), widely considered the greatest Romanian-language poet of the 20th century; his verse explored myth, nature, and the unconscious with a unique metaphysical depth; he was also a distinguished academic philosopher, nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature.