Romain

"Variant of Roman. Citizen of Rome"

♂ Masculino · Latin
classical imperial strong variant

📖 Acerca de Romain

Romain es la forma francesa de Roman/Romanus, del latín que significa "ciudadano de Roma". San Romain de Ruán (c.585-639), patrón de la capital normanda, estableció el nombre en la tradición católica francesa. En Francia experimentó una notable subida durante los años 80 — del puesto 8 (1983) al puesto 3 (1987-88), alcanzando un pico de 9.630 nacimientos en 1987 — convirtiéndolo en el nombre masculino definitorio de una generación francesa. Sus pilares culturales son el novelista Romain Gary (el único escritor en ganar el Prix Goncourt dos veces), el Nobel Romain Rolland, el superviviente de F1 Romain Grosjean y el actor Romain Duris.

📍 Detalles

  • OrigenLatin
  • Género♂ Masculino
  • SignificadoVariant of Roman. Citizen of Rome

🔀 Variantes y Nombres Relacionados

⭐ Personas Famosas

  • Romain Gary — French-Lithuanian novelist (1914–1980), the only writer to win the Prix Goncourt twice — first as Romain Gary for "Les Racines du ciel" (1956) and then pseudonymously as Émile Ajar for "La Vie devant soi" (1975); one of the most celebrated and enigmatic figures in 20th-century French literature.
  • Romain Rolland — French novelist, dramatist, and essayist (1866–1944), awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1915; author of the monumental ten-volume novel "Jean-Christophe" and a prominent voice for pacifism and humanist values through two World Wars.
  • Romain Grosjean — French-Swiss Formula One racing driver (born 1986), who competed for Lotus, Haas, and other teams through the 2010s; his dramatic fiery crash at the 2020 Bahrain Grand Prix, from which he miraculously escaped, became one of the most harrowing and celebrated survival stories in motorsport history.
  • Saint Romain of Rouen — Bishop of Rouen (c.585–639 AD), patron saint of the city; his feast (October 23) was historically marked by the unique tradition of pardoning a convicted prisoner in his honor — one of France's most distinctive medieval civic customs, lasting until the 19th century.
  • Romain Duris — French actor (born 1974), one of the most celebrated performers of his generation, known for roles in "The Beat That My Heart Skipped," "Russian Dolls," and "Populaire"; a defining face of French cinema in the 2000s–2010s.