📖 Acerca de Kazimierz
Kazimierz es un ilustre nombre masculino polaco de profundas raíces eslavas, derivado de elementos que significan 'proclamador de la paz.' Inmortalizado por reyes medievales como Kazimierz el Grande, quien transformó Polonia y dio nombre al histórico barrio judío de Cracovia, evoca constructores, pacificadores y figuras del renacimiento. Aunque menos común hoy en día, sigue siendo un poderoso símbolo del patrimonio y legado real polaco.
📍 Detalles
- OrigenPolish, Slavic, Portuguese, Latin
- Género♂ Masculino
- SignificadoProclaimer of peace
🔀 Variantes y Nombres Relacionados
⭐ Personas Famosas
- Kazimierz III the Great — King of Poland (1333–1370), known for transforming Poland into a major European power, codifying Polish law, and fostering a tolerant, multicultural kingdom that welcomed Jewish refugees expelled from Western Europe.
- Kazimierz I the Restorer — Duke and King of Poland (r. 1039–1058) who restored Polish statehood after a devastating pagan revolt and Danish invasion, re-establishing the church and moving the capital to Kraków.
- Kazimierz Twardowski — Polish philosopher (1866–1938) who founded the Lwów–Warsaw School, one of the most influential analytical philosophy movements in 20th-century Europe.
- Kazimierz Pułaski — Polish-American military commander (1745–1779) who became a hero of the American Revolutionary War, known as the 'Father of the American Cavalry,' honored by a federal holiday in several U.S. states.
- Kazimierz Funk — Polish biochemist (1884–1967) who coined the term 'vitamin' and pioneered research into deficiency diseases, fundamentally shaping modern nutritional science.