Marcellus

"Variant of Marcel. Young warrior"

♂ Masculin · Latin
artistic french warrior variant papal

📖 À propos Marcellus

Marcellus est un diminutif latin de Marcus (Mars, dieu de la guerre), porté par le plus grand général romain des guerres puniques (‘L’épée de Rome’), deux papes et — musicalement — le pape qui inspira à Palestrina sa Missa Papae Marcelli, chef-d’œuvre de la polyphonie de la Renaissance.

📍 Détails

  • OrigineLatin
  • Genre♂ Masculin
  • SignificationVariant of Marcel. Young warrior

🔀 Variantes et Prénoms Associés

⭐ Personnes Célèbres

  • Marcus Claudius Marcellus — Roman general (c. 268–208 BC), called ‘The Sword of Rome’ for his aggressive command during the Second Punic War against Hannibal; captured the great Greek city of Syracuse in 212 BC (defended by Archimedes’ war machines), a siege that marked Rome’s decisive expansion into Greek cultural and military dominance in the western Mediterranean.
  • Marcellus (nephew of Augustus) — Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus Marcellus (42–23 BC), nephew and designated heir of Emperor Augustus; his early death at age 18 was mourned across the Roman world and immortalised by Virgil in a celebrated passage of the Aeneid (Book VI), where his shade appears as the most lamented of all the great Romans who will never live to fulfil their promise.
  • Pope Marcellus II — Catholic pope (1501–1555) whose 22-day pontificate inspired composer Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina to write the Missa Papae Marcelli (Mass of Pope Marcellus), one of the most admired works of Renaissance polyphony; according to tradition, Palestrina composed it to show the Council of Trent that sacred choral music could be reverent and intelligible, thereby saving the tradition of polyphonic church music.
  • Marcellus Wallace (fictional) — Fictional crime boss in Quentin Tarantino’s film Pulp Fiction (1994), played by Ving Rhames; one of the most memorable antagonists of 1990s cinema, his menacing authority and the film’s iconic scenes have made the name Marcellus synonymous with a certain cinematic cool and moral complexity.
  • Marcellus Williams — Missouri man (born 1961) whose case became a landmark in American criminal justice debates around the death penalty and wrongful conviction; his case attracted international attention and is regularly cited in discussions of prosecutorial misconduct and capital punishment reform in the United States.