📖 À propos Kyra
Kyra est un prénom de trois traditions indépendantes : perse (féminin de Cyrus/Kourosh, 'soleil' ou 'clairvoyante' — Cyrus le Grand libéra les Juifs de Babylone et promulgua la première charte des droits de l’homme de l’histoire) ; grecque (kyria, 'dame', racine de la prière du Kyrie) ; et irlandaise (anglicisation de Ciara, 'aux cheveux sombres') ; aujourd’hui surtout connue grâce à l’actrice Kyra Sedgwick de The Closer.
📍 Détails
- OriginePersian/Greek/Irish
- Genre♀ Féminin
- SignificationSun, far-sighted (Persian); lady, mistress (Greek); dark-haired (Irish)
🔀 Variantes et Prénoms Associés
⭐ Personnes Célèbres
- Kyra Sedgwick — American actress (born 1965), best known for her Emmy Award-winning lead role as Deputy Chief Brenda Leigh Johnson in the TNT crime drama The Closer (2005–2012), which became one of the highest-rated cable series in American television history; she is also notable as the wife of actor Kevin Bacon; her portrayal of a sharp, tenacious Atlanta detective defined a new archetype of female investigative leads.
- Cyrus the Great (root of Kyra in Persian tradition) — Persian king (c. 600–530 BC), founder of the Achaemenid Empire and one of history's most consequential rulers; conquered Babylon in 539 BC and freed the Babylonian Jews, an act recorded in the Hebrew Bible (Ezra 1:1–4, Isaiah 44:28); issued the Cyrus Cylinder, widely considered one of the earliest human rights declarations; his policy of tolerance toward conquered peoples was revolutionary; Kyra is the feminine form of his name.
- Saint Ciara of Killeedy — Irish abbess and saint (6th century), foundress of a monastery at Killeedy (Cell Ria) in County Limerick, Munster; one of the early Irish female saints venerated in the province of Munster; her name Ciara (meaning 'dark, dark-haired') is the Irish root of Kyra in the Gaelic tradition, sharing its ancestry with the Italian Chiara and Latin Clara.
- Kyria — Greek root — The Greek word kyria (feminine of kyrios, 'lord, master') gives Kyra its meaning of 'lady' or 'mistress' in the Hellenic tradition; kyrios is also the root of Kyrie eleison ('Lord, have mercy'), one of the most ancient Christian liturgical prayers, used in both Eastern and Western rites; the modern Greek honorific kyria (Mrs./Madam) preserves the same root, making the name Kyra a title of dignity as well as a given name.