Paschal

"Variant of Pascal. Born at Easter"

β™‚ Masculino Β· Latin/Hebrew
intellectual easter french variant papal saintly

πŸ“– Acerca de Paschal

Paschal es la forma eclesiastica latina-inglesa del nombre enraizado en el hebreo Pesach (Pascua/Pesaj) β€” a traves del arameo, el griego y el latin β€” que significa 'nacido en Pascua'; nombra al nino de acuerdo con el evento central de la teologia cristiana (el Misterio Pascual), el Cordero Pascual, y fue llevado por dos papas medievales y el santo franciscano espanol Pascual Bailon.

πŸ“ Detalles

  • OrigenLatin/Hebrew
  • GΓ©neroβ™‚ Masculino
  • SignificadoVariant of Pascal. Born at Easter

πŸ”€ Variantes y Nombres Relacionados

⭐ Personas Famosas

  • Pope Paschal I β€” Pope from 817 to 824 AD, one of the great patrons of early medieval Christian art; commissioned the luminous gold-ground mosaics of the basilicas of Santa Prassede and Santa Maria in Domnica in Rome, which rank among the finest surviving examples of Byzantine-influenced Christian art in the West; his mosaics deliberately evoked the splendour of early Christian Rome.
  • Pope Paschal II β€” Pope from 1099 to 1118 AD, whose long pontificate was dominated by the Investiture Controversy β€” the defining struggle of medieval Europe between the papacy and Holy Roman Emperors over who had the right to appoint (invest) bishops and abbots; his complex negotiations with Emperor Henry V produced the temporary Concordat of Sutri (1111), one of the most controversial agreements in papal history.
  • Saint Paschal Baylon β€” Spanish Franciscan friar (1540–1592), born in Torre Hermosa, Aragon; known for his profound Eucharistic devotion and extraordinary humility; canonised by Pope Alexander VIII in 1690 and proclaimed by Pope Leo XIII in 1897 as patron of Eucharistic congresses and all Eucharistic associations worldwide; his feast day is May 17.
  • Paschal Lamb (Agnus Dei) β€” The sacrificial lamb at the heart of the Passover Seder β€” and its Christian reinterpretation as a symbol of Christ ('Behold the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world,' John 1:29) β€” is the deepest theological root of the name Paschal; the Agnus Dei became one of the most universal symbols of Christianity, appearing in art, liturgy, church seals, and heraldry across fifteen centuries.