Ignatieff (W3)
(E?)(L?) https://web.archive.org/web/20160731232838/http://www.billcasselman.com/whats_in_a_canadian_name/wiacn_five_ignatieff.htm
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"Ignatieff" is a Russian patronymic surname whose literal meaning is "son of or descendant of Ignatius". As a given name, "Ignatius" or Slavic versions of it, prospered even in the face of the fact that the Russian Orthodox Church disapproved of the first Jesuit, "Saint Ignatius of Loyola" (1491-1556), founder of the Society of Jesus.
The Slavic Ignatius surnames (there are more than a dozen) honour a different, earlier "Ignatius", "Saint Ignatius of Antioch". "Saint Ignatius of Loyola" took his name from an apostolic church father, Ignatius, a bishop of Antioch who wrote seven letters to various Christian communities around AD 125 that give us useful portraits of Christian life in the years immediately after the age of the apostles. "Ignatius" is shown in Koine Greek as "Ignatios".
"Ignatia" and "Ignatz" stem from Latin "ignatus" = "in" = 'not' + "natus", "gnatus" = 'born.'
However, the literal meaning of the elements must be added to, since the adjective did not mean "not born" but "low-born", "of humble birth". And so when "Ignatius" came to be a male given name in postclassical Latin, its humility made it an apt one for early Christians. There was also a Roman family name, a variant of "Ignatius", "Egnatius".
A possibly far-fetched but intriguing suggestion is that one orthographical variant of the Greek version of the name, "Iknatos", might be a much later Greek borrowing of the ancient Egyptian king's name "Ikhnaton" (1375-1358 BC), the XVIII Dynasty ruler who introduced monotheism into a polytheistic muddle of deities with his worship - exclusively - of "Aten", the Egyptian sun-god. "Ikhnaton" or "Akhenaten" means "Aten is pleased" or "he who serves the Aten" in ancient Egyptian.
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Erstellt: 2024-04