📖 Acerca de Kaius
Kaius es una variante escandinava y moderna de Caius/Gaius, uno de los tres praenomina más utilizados en la antigua Roma (junto a Marcus y Lucius), que significa "el que se regocija". Su portador más famoso, Cayo Julio César, dejó su nombre tan profundamente impreso en la historia que se convirtió en la raíz de Kaiser, Zar/Tsar y Shah — títulos de poder supremo a lo largo de dos milenios. Gaius Octavius se convirtió en el Emperador Augusto; Gaius Gracchus sacudió la República. La grafía K- tiende un puente entre la antigüedad romana y la onomástica escandinava moderna.
📍 Detalles
- OrigenLatin
- Género♂ Masculino
- SignificadoVariant of Caius. Rejoice
🔀 Variantes y Nombres Relacionados
⭐ Personas Famosas
- Gaius Julius Caesar — Roman general, statesman, and dictator (100–44 BC), the most famous Gaius in history; his name became the root of the words Kaiser, Czar/Tsar, and Shah — titles of supreme power across the Western and Slavic worlds for two millennia.
- Gaius Octavius (Emperor Augustus) — Born Gaius Octavius (63 BC–14 AD), the first Roman Emperor; his adoption by Julius Caesar gave him the name Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus before he took the title Augustus — the foundational figure of the Roman Empire.
- Gaius Gracchus — Roman tribune and reformer (154–121 BC), younger of the two Gracchi brothers who championed land reform and the rights of the plebeian class; a pivotal figure in the social and political upheavals of the late Roman Republic.
- Pope Caius (Saint Caius) — Pope of the early Christian Church (r. 283–296 AD), venerated as a saint in both Eastern and Western Christianity; one of the early bearers of the Caius name in Christian tradition.
- Gonville & Caius College, Cambridge — One of the oldest and most distinguished colleges of the University of Cambridge, founded in 1348 and refounded in 1557 by the physician John Caius — whose name (an anglicization of Gaius/Kaius) gives the college its distinctive identity.