📖 À propos Odyssa
Odyssa est une forme féminine rare d’Ulysse, le rustre heros grec de l’Odyssee d’Homere (v. VIIIe s. av. J.-C.) dont le voyage de dix ans vers Ithaque a donne a la langue anglaise le mot 'odyssey' (odyssee) ; un prenom d’une profondeur litteraire exceptionnelle, evoquant l’endurance, l’intelligence et le desir de rentrer chez soi.
📍 Détails
- OrigineGreek
- Genre♀ Féminin
- SignificationFeminine form of Odysseus; long journey, one who suffers and causes pain
🔀 Variantes et Prénoms Associés
⭐ Personnes Célèbres
- Odysseus (Homer's hero) — Legendary king of Ithaca and hero of Homer's Odyssey (c. 8th century BC); celebrated for his cunning intelligence (the Trojan Horse was his idea), his ten-year journey home from Troy, and his encounters with the Cyclops, Circe, Sirens, Scylla and Charybdis, and the nymph Calypso; his name gave rise to the English word 'odyssey' as a synonym for any long, eventful journey.
- Odessa (city, Ukraine) — Major Ukrainian port city on the Black Sea, founded in 1794 on the site of the ancient Greek colony Odessos; named after Odysseus and for centuries one of the most cosmopolitan cities in Eastern Europe — a crossroads of Greek, Jewish, Ukrainian, Russian, and Ottoman cultures; its name is directly linked to the same Odysseus root as Odyssa.
- Penelope (Odysseus's wife) — Queen of Ithaca and wife of Odysseus in the Odyssey; celebrated for her fidelity and cunning during her husband's twenty-year absence (ten years at war, ten years journeying home); she delayed the importunate suitors by weaving and unravelling a shroud each day, and her name has become synonymous with loyal, patient devotion; her story is inseparable from the world that Odyssa's name evokes.
- The Odyssey (Homer) — One of the foundational texts of Western literature, attributed to Homer (c. 8th century BC); an epic poem of 24 books recounting Odysseus's ten-year journey home from Troy; its influence on Western storytelling is immeasurable — the word 'odyssey' entered the English language as a common noun for any long, eventful journey, and the name Odyssa carries all of this literary and cultural weight.