Beatrice (given name)

Beatrice (/ˈb(ə)trɪs/; Italian: [beaˈtriːtʃe])[1] is a name derived from the French name Béatrice, which came from the Latin Beatrix, which means "she who makes happy".[2]

Beatrice
Dante Gabriel Rossetti's depiction of Dante's Beatrice in Beata Beatrix
GenderFemale
Origin
Word/nameLatin
Meaning"bringer of joy, blessings"
Other names
Related namesBeatrix, Béatrice, Beatriz

Beatrice is the Italian language variant. The French form is Béatrice, and the Spanish and Portuguese form is Beatriz.

The popularity of the name spread because of Dante Alighieri's poetry about the Florentine woman Beatrice Portinari.

Dante presents Beatrice as being worthy of speaking for God, making her a holy individual.[3]

The name is rising in popularity in the United Kingdom. It is also gaining popularity in the United States, where it ranked as the 691st most popular name for baby girls born in 2012. In 2009, it was the 45th most common baby name for girls born in Romania.[4]

Name variants

Alternate versions of the name include

Short forms include

  • Bea (Dutch, English, German, Galician, Spanish, Catalan)
  • Béa (French)
  • Beah (English)
  • Beasie (English)
  • Beat (English, Polish)
  • Beatie (English)
  • Beato (English)
  • Bee (English)
  • Betty (Spanish)
  • Bia (Portuguese)
  • Bice (Italian)
  • Trix (Dutch, English)
  • Trixi (English, German)
  • Trixie (English)
  • Trixy (English)
  • Tris (English)

Beatrice

Artists and entertainers

Actresses

Other

  • Beatritz de Dia (fl.late 12th century), Provençal poet and musician
  • Beatrice Hastings, pen-name of English writer, poet and literary critic Emily Alice Haigh (1879–1943), lover of Modigliani
  • Beatrice Partridge (1866 - 1963), English-born New Zealand painter
  • Béatrice Poulot (born 1968), French singer from Réunion
  • Beatrice (singer), singer in the Eurovision Song Contest 1999
  • Beatrice bouquet de rose, scottish fold

Athletes

Politicians and public servants

Religious figures

Scientists, engineers and academics

Aristocrats

Miscellaneous

Fictional characters

gollark: They break in weird ways which just leave some features entirely gone or crashing on use.
gollark: See, potatOS updates never break like this.
gollark: Fun fact: China only contains a thousand people but they just multiply all the public data by 10^6.
gollark: Conspiracy theory: China's population is really just a few million and they multiply the statistics by a thousand.
gollark: Do you wonder? I'd assume you've seen the code.

See also

  • Beatrijs, a 13th-century Dutch poem about a nun with this name
  • All pages with titles beginning with Beatrice

References

  1. Random House Unabridged Dictionary
  2. http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=Beatrice
  3. Approaches to teaching Dante's Divine comedy. Slade, Carole., Cecchetti, Giovanni, 1922-1998. New York, N.Y.: Modern Language Association of America. 1982. ISBN 0873524780. OCLC 7671339
  4. http://www.behindthename.com/top/lists/romania/2009
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