📖 Sobre Malek
Malek é uma variante árabe de Malik (da raiz semítica m-l-k, 'rei, soberano'), um dos conceitos reais mais antigos nas línguas semíticas; Al-Malik ('O Rei Soberano') é um dos 99 nomes de Deus no Islã; como nome próprio carrega as esperanças reais do mundo arabofônico, e como título foi usado pelos poderosos sultões mamelucos do Egito, incluindo Baybars I que derrotou os mongois em 1260.
📍 Detalhes
- OrigemArabic
- Gênero♂ Masculino
- SignificadoVariant of Malik. King, sovereign
🔀 Variantes e Nomes Relacionados
⭐ Pessoas Famosas
- Al-Malik — divine name in Islam — One of the 99 Beautiful Names of God (Asma al-Husna) in Islamic theology, meaning 'The Sovereign King'; the attribute of absolute, unchallenged sovereignty over all creation; the Quran's final surah (An-Nas) opens with 'Malik of mankind'; in Sufi theology, the absolute kingship of God (mulk) makes all human kingship a pale reflection — giving the name Malek a divine resonance that elevates its bearer's aspirations beyond earthly power.
- Malek Bennabi — Algerian Muslim intellectual and philosopher (1905–1973), one of the most original Islamic thinkers of the 20th century; his major works include Vocation de l’Islam (1954) and Les Conditions de la Renaissance (1949), in which he developed the concept of 'colonisability' — the internal cultural conditions that make a society susceptible to colonisation — and argued that civilizational renewal required a transformation of values and thought, not just political independence; deeply influential in Algerian and Arab intellectual circles.
- Al-Malik al-Zahir Baybars I — Mamluk Sultan of Egypt (ruled 1260–1277), one of the most formidable military commanders of the medieval world; born a Cuman slave, he rose to become sultan and in 1260 defeated the Mongols at the Battle of Ain Jalut — one of the few decisive defeats in the Mongols' history of conquest — halting their advance into Africa and the Western Mediterranean; his regnal title Al-Malik al-Zahir ('The Manifest King') exemplifies how malik was used by the Mamluk sultans as a royal title.
- The root m-l-k across Semitic languages — The root m-l-k is one of the most widely distributed in Semitic languages: in Arabic (malik, king), Hebrew (melech, king — as in Elimelech and Abimelech of the Bible), Phoenician (melek), Aramaic (malka); it appears in the names of kings from Mesopotamia to Carthage and in the divine name Moloch; one of the oldest markers of sovereign authority in human linguistic history, giving the name Malek a depth that extends far beyond the Arabic-speaking world.