📖 À propos Leyla
Leyla est la graphie turque et azerbaïdjanaise de Layla, de l’arabe 'nuit' ; elle porte le poids du grand poème d’amour islamique Layla et Majnun (Nizâmi Gandjavi, v. 1188 apr. J.-C.) et reste l’un des prénoms féminins les plus aimés en Turquie, en Azerbaïdjan et dans le monde turcique.
📍 Détails
- OrigineArabic
- Genre♀ Féminin
- SignificationVariant of Layla. Night, dark beauty
🔀 Variantes et Prénoms Associés
⭐ Personnes Célèbres
- Layla (of Layla and Majnun) — Legendary figure of Arabic-Persian-Turkic poetry, the beloved of Qays ibn al-Mulawwah (Majnun, 'the mad one') in the 7th-century Arabic love story immortalised by poet Nizami Ganjavi (c. 1188 AD); her name became the archetype of the unattainable beloved in Islamic literary tradition, influencing centuries of Persian, Urdu, Turkish, and Azerbaijani poetry.
- Leyla Gencer — Turkish soprano opera singer (1928–2008), considered one of the greatest dramatic sopranos of the 20th century; known for her interpretations of Bellini, Donizetti, and Verdi; she performed at La Scala, the Vienna State Opera, and major opera houses worldwide and was celebrated as 'La Diva Turca' — the Turkish diva.
- Leyla Aliyeva — Azerbaijani public figure and diplomat (born 1985), Vice-President of the Heydar Aliyev Foundation and a prominent advocate for cultural and humanitarian causes in Azerbaijan; her name reflects the deep embedding of Leyla in Azerbaijani culture through the national epic Leyli and Majnun.
- Üzeir Hajibeyov — Azerbaijani composer (1885–1948) whose opera Leyli and Majnun (1908) — based on the love story of Leyla and Majnun — is considered the first opera composed in the Islamic world and the founding work of Azerbaijani classical music; his setting made the name Leyla central to Azerbaijani national cultural identity.
- Leyla Lyons — Contemporary name-bearer illustrating the name’s spread across the English-speaking world; the Leyla spelling has been adopted by parents in the UK, US, and Australia as a variant of Layla, retaining the poetic Arabic-Turkish heritage while fitting naturally into modern Western naming conventions.