📖 À propos Raina
Raina est une forme mélodieuse de Regina (latin, 'reine'), aussi enracinée dans le slave Rayna ('céleste') ; elle porte l’esprit de l’héroïne nationale bulgare Raina Kniaginia — qui broda le drapeau révolutionnaire du soulèvement d’Avril 1876 — de la protée éspiegle de Shaw dans Les Bras de la guerre, et de la romancière graphique Raina Telgemeier, chérie par des dizaines de millions de jeunes lecteurs.
📍 Détails
- OrigineLatin
- Genre♀ Féminin
- SignificationVariant of Regina. Queen
🔀 Variantes et Prénoms Associés
⭐ Personnes Célèbres
- Raina Kniaginia — Bulgarian patriot and seamstress (1856–1917), who embroidered the revolutionary tricolour flag of the April Uprising of 1876 — the Bulgarian revolt against Ottoman rule — inscribed with 'Freedom or Death'; the uprising was crushed, but the resulting international outrage led to Bulgarian liberation in 1878; her flag is preserved in the National History Museum in Sofia and she is celebrated as one of Bulgaria's foremost national heroines.
- Raina (Arms and the Man) — Fictional protagonist of George Bernard Shaw's comedy Arms and the Man (1894), set during the Serbo-Bulgarian War of 1885; a young Bulgarian woman whose romantic, theatrical idealism about love and war is cheerfully deflated by the practical Swiss soldier Bluntschli; one of Shaw's most charming female characters and one of the earliest Bulgarian characters in major English literature.
- Raina Telgemeier — American graphic novelist and cartoonist (born 1977), whose autobiographical comics Smile (2010, about dental trauma and middle school) and Drama (2012) have sold tens of millions of copies worldwide; she spent years on the New York Times bestseller list simultaneously with multiple titles and is credited with transforming the graphic novel into a mainstream format for young readers.
- Regina (the root name) — The Latin word for 'queen' (from rex, king — related to Sanskrit raj and Celtic rix), which gives Raina its primary etymology; Regina was used as a given name from early Christianity (Saint Regina, martyred c. 251 AD) and remains in use across Catholic traditions as a title of the Virgin Mary (Regina Caeli, Queen of Heaven); Raina is the softened, melodic Slavic and international form of this ancient regal root.