Slavomir
| Pronunciation | Serbo-Croatian: [slâʋomiːr] Czech: [ˈslavomiːr] Slovak: [ˈslavɔmiːr] |
|---|---|
| Gender | masculine |
| Origin | |
| Word/name | Slavic |
| Meaning | slava ("glory, fame") + mir ("peace, world") |
| Other names | |
| Alternative spelling | Slavomír |
| Nicknames | Slavo, Slávek and Slavko |
| Related names | Sławomir, Miroslav |
Slavomir (Cyrillic: Славомир) is a Slavic masculine given name. It is written Slavomir in Croatian and Serbian and Slavomír in Czech and Slovak. The Polish form of the name is Sławomir.
Th name consists of the Slavic elements slava ("glory, fame") and mir ("peace, world").[1][2]
The feminine form of the name is Slavomira or Slavomíra. Nicknames for the name include Slavo, Slávek and Slavko.
Notable people with the name
- Slavomir of Moravia, medieval duke
- Slavomir (Obotrite prince) (died 821), legendary tribal prince of the Obotrites
- Slavomír Bališ, Slovak football player
- Slavomír Bartoň, Czech ice hockey player
- Slavomir Gvozdenovici (born 1953), Romanian-Serbian writer, poet and politician
- Slavomír Kňazovický, Slovak sprint canoeist
- Slavomír Kica, Slovak football player
- Slavomir Miletić, Yugoslav sculptor from Bosnia and Herzegovina, now living in the Netherlands
- Slavomir Miklovš, Croatian cleric
- Slavomír Pagáč (born 7 January 1997), Slovak footballer
- Slavomír Pavličko, Slovak ice hockey player
- Jan Slavomír Tomíček, Czech writer
- Slavomir Vorobel (born 1971), Slovak ice hockey player