Örjan

Örjan (OErjan) is an old Swedish male name originating from the Low German name Jurian or Jurien which is a variant of George. The Name Day in Sweden is July 9. The Norwegian version of the name is Ørjan.

Örjan
Pronunciation/ørjan/
GenderMasculine
Origin
Word/nameJurian
MeaningFarmer
Region of originSweden
Other names
DerivedScandinavian name, meaning "farmer"
Related namesØrjan, George

The name has been present in Sweden since the Middle Ages as (Yrian). The saint called St George elsewhere in Europe was then called Sankt Örjan or Riddar Örjan (Knight Örjan), (nowadays normally Sankt Göran). The name was very popular at this time. The name evolved during the 16th century to Jöran or Göran, and the original name became uncommon. In the mid 20th century the name had a brief renaissance.

In Sweden there were in total 3147 persons[1] with the firstname Örjan. The name is mainly only used in Sweden and Norway.

CountryMenBoys
AmountPercentRankAmountPercentRank
Norway Ørjan3,511 (2006)0.15 %151.45 (2006)0.15 %140.
Sweden Örjan5 898 (2013)0.13 %-- (2010)-(> 100.)

In Finland 41 men have been baptised to Örjan during 1920 to 2008.

Variants

  • Georg
  • George (English)
  • Georges (French)
  • Giorgio (Italian)
  • Göran/Jöran/Jörgen (Swedish)
  • Jorge (Spanish)
  • Ørjan (Norwegian)

Persons with the name Örjan/Ørjan

  • Örjan Birgersson, Swedish football player
  • Örjan Blomquist, Swedish cross country skier and winner of Vasaloppet
  • Örjan Fahlström, Swedish composer
  • Örjan Karlsson, bass player in the Swedish boy band The Pinks
  • Örjan Kihlström, Swedish coachman
  • Örjan Martinsson, Swedish football player
  • Örjan Modin, Swedish bandy player
  • Ørjan Nilsen, Norwegian music producer
  • Örjan Nordling, Swedish prisbelönt typsnittsdesigner
  • Ørjan Nyland, Norwegian footballer
  • Örjan Örnkloo, Swedish musician and producer
  • Örjan Ouchterlony, Swedish professor of bacteriology
  • Örjan Persson, Swedish football player
  • Örjan Ramberg, Swedish actor
  • Örjan Sölvell, Swedish professor
gollark: Regardless of what's actually happening with news, you can probably dredge up a decent amount of examples of people complaining about being too censored *and* the other way round.
gollark: With the butterfly-weather-control example that's derived from, you can't actually track every butterfly and simulate the air movements resulting from this (yet, with current technology and algorithms), but you can just assume some amount of random noise (from that and other sources) which make predictions about the weather unreliable over large time intervals.
gollark: That seems nitpicky, the small stuff is still *mostly* irrelevant because you can lump it together or treat it as noise.
gollark: Why are you invoking the butterfly effect here?
gollark: That would fit with the general pattern of governments responding to bad things.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.