📖 Sobre Jacques
Jacques é a forma francesa por excelência de Tiago e Jacob, que significa 'suplantador'; esteve entre os 10 primeiros na França no início dos anos 50, com mais de 13.000 portadores só em 1950, e permanece um dos nomes franceses de maior ressonância cultural, carregado por Cousteau, Chirac, Derrida, Brel e David.
📍 Detalhes
- OrigemFrench
- Gênero♂ Masculino
- SignificadoFrench form of James and Jacob. Supplanter, God is gracious
🔀 Variantes e Nomes Relacionados
⭐ Pessoas Famosas
- Jacques Cousteau — French naval officer, oceanographer, and filmmaker (1910-1997) who co-invented the Aqua-Lung (SCUBA) diving apparatus, pioneered underwater documentary filmmaking, and became a global ambassador for ocean conservation; his television series The Undersea World of Jacques Cousteau (1966-1976) introduced millions to the beauty of the deep sea.
- Jacques-Louis David — French Neoclassical painter (1748-1825), the dominant artistic figure of the French Revolution and Napoleonic era; his monumental works — The Death of Marat (1793), The Oath of the Horatii, and Napoleon Crossing the Alps — defined the visual imagery of revolutionary France and shaped Western history painting.
- Jacques Chirac — French politician and statesman (1932-2019) who served as President of France from 1995 to 2007 and twice as Prime Minister; known for opposing the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, championing French cultural exception, and his complex but defining role in late 20th-century French political life.
- Jacques Derrida — French-Algerian philosopher (1930-2004), founder of deconstruction; his works — Of Grammatology (1967), Writing and Difference — challenged assumptions about language, meaning, and presence, and transformed literary theory, philosophy, and the humanities in the late 20th century; one of the most influential and controversial thinkers of his era.
- Jacques Brel — Belgian singer-songwriter (1929-1978), one of the greatest performers in the history of French-language music; his emotionally devastating songs — Ne me quitte pas, Amsterdam, La Valse à mille temps — combine poetic lyrics with dramatic stage presence; his influence on French chanson and global popular music is immeasurable.