Jacobo

"Variant of Jacob. Supplanter, holder of the heel"

β™‚ Masculino Β· Hebrew
biblical classic timeless variant

πŸ“– Acerca de Jacobo

Jacobo es la forma espaΓ±ola de Jacob, que significa 'suplantador'; conserva la forma latino-hebrea original con mayor fidelidad y fue llevado por dos figuras latinoamericanas descollantes del siglo XX: el presidente guatemalteco Jacobo Arbenz, derrocado por un golpe de la CIA en 1954, y el periodista argentino Jacobo Timerman, encarcelado durante la Guerra Sucia.

πŸ“ Detalles

  • OrigenHebrew
  • GΓ©neroβ™‚ Masculino
  • SignificadoVariant of Jacob. Supplanter, holder of the heel

πŸ”€ Variantes y Nombres Relacionados

⭐ Personas Famosas

  • Jacobo Arbenz GuzmΓ‘n β€” President of Guatemala (1951-1954) whose land reform programme redistributed United Fruit Company land to peasant farmers; his government was overthrown in a CIA-backed coup (Operation PBSUCCESS) in 1954, in one of the most consequential acts of Cold War interventionism in Latin America; his removal set off decades of Guatemalan civil conflict.
  • Jacobo Timerman β€” Argentine newspaper editor and journalist (1923-1999); imprisoned and tortured without trial during Argentina's military dictatorship (1976-1983); his memoir Prisoner Without a Name, Cell Without a Number became an international indictment of the junta's human rights abuses and won him global recognition as a champion of press freedom and human dignity.
  • Jacob (Biblical Patriarch) β€” Third of the Hebrew Patriarchs, son of Isaac and Rebekah; his famous nighttime wrestling match with a divine being ended with him receiving the name Israel ('one who struggles with God'); ancestor of the Twelve Tribes of Israel and the entire Jewish people; his story spans much of the Book of Genesis.
  • Jacobo de Voragine β€” Italian archbishop and hagiographer (c. 1230-1298) whose Golden Legend (Legenda Aurea) compiled lives of the saints and became one of the most widely read books of the Middle Ages, second only to the Bible; it shaped Catholic devotion and iconography for centuries.