📖 Sobre Julien
Julien é a forma francesa de Juliano, ligada à gens Julia romana; foi o nome masculino mais popular na França de 1983 a 1988, com pico de 17.020 nascimentos em 1985, criando toda uma geração de Juliens franceses; carrega o prestígio literário do Julien Sorel de Stendhal, o arquétipo do jovem ambicioso.
📍 Detalhes
- OrigemLatin
- Gênero♂ Masculino
- SignificadoVariant of Julian. Youthful, downy-bearded
🔀 Variantes e Nomes Relacionados
⭐ Pessoas Famosas
- Julien Sorel (literary character) — The protagonist of Stendhal's novel Le Rouge et le Noir (The Red and the Black, 1830); a brilliant, ambitious carpenter's son who uses seduction and calculation to climb French society during the Restoration, only to destroy himself in a moment of passion; one of the defining characters in all of French literature and the archetypal portrait of frustrated social ambition.
- Julien Clerc — French singer-songwriter (born 1947), one of the most beloved and enduring figures in French pop music; his hits spanning from the 1960s to the 2010s include Ma préférence, Femmes... je vous aime, and Célibataire; known for his melodic elegance and emotional directness, he has sold over 20 million records.
- Emperor Julian (Julian the Apostate) — Roman Emperor (r. 361-363 AD), the last pagan emperor of Rome; an intellectual and military commander who attempted to reverse Constantine's Christianisation of the empire and restore traditional Greco-Roman religion; his failure marked the permanent Christian transformation of Rome; his epithet 'the Apostate' was given by his Christian critics.
- Julien Doré — French singer-songwriter and television presenter (born 1982), who rose to fame on the talent show La Nouvelle Star (2007) and became one of France's most successful contemporary pop artists; his distinctive style blending folk, pop, and French chanson earned him multiple Victoires de la Musique awards.
- Julien Green — French-American novelist (1900-1998), the first foreigner elected to the Académie française; born in Paris to American parents, he wrote almost entirely in French; his dark, introspective novels explore guilt, desire, and spiritual crisis; his diaries, kept for over 70 years, are considered a landmark of 20th-century French literature.