Cora (name)
Cora is a given name, most commonly derived from the Ancient Greek Κόρη (Kórē), an epithet of the Greek goddess Persephone. Alternatively, but rarely, it may be rooted in the Gaelic cora, the comparative of cóir, meaning just, honest, virtuous or good.[1] Common forms of this name include Kora and Korra.[2]
Gender | Female |
---|---|
Origin | |
Word/name | Ancient Greek |
Meaning | girl, maiden, daughter |
Other names | |
Related names | Core, Corrine, Corrina, Corrin, Corey, Cory, Kora, Kore, Korra |
History
The current name Cora may be derived from a variety of origins. Its most prominent antecedents, however, lie in ancient Greece.
Ancient Greece
The Greek word κόρη (korē) can mean girl, maiden or daughter.[3] In the latter sense it came to be an alternate name given to Persephone to denote her being the daughter of Demeter, who accordingly carries the epithet Μήτηρ (Mētēr), mother. Κόρη was used when addressing Persephone not as queen of the underworld, but as vegetation goddess.
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Today’s pronunciation of Cora is foreshadowed in some Greek dialects. In both Doric and Aeolic κόρη becomes κόρα (kora), in Doric it also appears as κώρα (kōra),[3] thus phonetically resembling the current English name rather closely. The spelling κόρα is used especially in poetic writings,[4] as in the following instance by Aeschylus:
ἔμολε δ᾽ ᾧ μέλει κρυπταδίου μάχας δολιόφρων ποινά:
ἔθιγε δ᾽ ἐν μάχᾳ χερὸς ἐτήτυμος Διὸς κόρα—Δίκαν δέ νιν
προσαγορεύομεν βροτοὶ τυχόντες καλῶς—
ὀλέθριον πνέουσ᾽ ἐν ἐχθροῖς κότον.[5]
And he has come whose part is the crafty vengeance of stealthy attack,and in the battle his hand was guided by her who is in very truth daughter of Zeus,
breathing murderous wrath on her foes.
We mortals aim true to the mark when we call her Justice.[6]
As pointed out by H. Weir Smith, Δίκα (“Justice”) can be read as a contraction of Δι(ὸς) κ(όρ)α, “daughter of Zeus”.[6]
Metaphorically, κόρη and its variants can also refer to a puppet; the pupil of the eye, because a small image is mirrored within, and hence figuratively also the apple of one’s eye.[7]
Ancient Rome
In its current spelling, Cora appears as a Latinisation of Persephone’s epithet in Roman inscriptions. Fabia Aconia Paulina for example, who lived in the 4th century, was consecrated to Cora twice.[8]
Of different, namely Celtic, decent is Cora as toponym for a town and river (today la Cure) in the Roman province of Gaul.[9]
Modernity
In The Court of the Gentiles (1669), his extensive attempt to trace all ancient ideas and beliefs back to Hebrew scriptures, Theophilus Gale claims that Cora originated from the Hebrew הורה (hora).[10]
The name Cora gained prominence among a wider audience through Jean-François Marmontel's novel Les Incas of 1777, where it is given to an Inca girl consecrated as a virgin to the sun.[11] It is thus used much in accordance with the original Greek word. In view of his subject matter – the destruction of the Inca empire (“l’empire du Pérou”) following that of the Aztec empire[12] – Marmontel may have found another motive in the ethnic group of the same name, who resisted Spanish conquest until 1722,[13] some 200 years longer than their neighbours (together referred to by him as “l’empire du Mexique”).
Brought to fame by Marmontel, Cora inspired a series of other works, among them an opera by the French composer Étienne Méhul and a play by the German dramatist August von Kotzebue, Die Sonnenjungfrau (The Virgin of the Sun), both of 1791.
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Likely to have followed in this tradition, James Fenimore Cooper gave the name Cora to his heroine in The Last of the Mohicans of 1826.
People
- Cora Berliner (1890–1942), German economist and social scientist
- Cora Sue Collins (born 1927), American former child actress
- Cora Coralina (1889–1985), Brazilian poet
- Cora Camoin (1930–2018), French actress
- Cora Cané (1923–2016), Argentine journalist
- Cora Cohen (born 1943), American artist
- Cora Crane (1868–1910), American businesswoman, nightclub and bordello owner, writer and journalist
- Cora Linn Daniels (1852–?), American author
- Cora Diamond (born 1937), American philosopher
- Cora Alice Du Bois (1903–1991) American cultural anthropologist
- Cora Evans (1904–1957), American Mormon leader
- Cora Millet-Robinet (1798–1890), French agricultural innovator and silk producer
- Cora Pearl (1835–1886), nineteenth-century French courtesan
- Cora Ratto de Sadosky (1912–1981), Argentine mathematician, educator and militant activist
- Cora Sadosky de Goldstein (1940–2010), Argentine mathematician
- Cora Sandel (1880–1974), Norwegian painter and writer
- Cora L.V. Scott (1840–1923), American medium
- Cora Laparcerie (1875–1951), French comedian, poet and director
- Cora Schumacher (born 1976), German actress, model, racing driver and presenter
- Cora Skinner (born 1985), American glamour model and actress
- Cora Staunton (born 1981), Irish footballer
- Cora Stephan (born 1951), German writer
- Cora Waddell (born 1989), Filipino actress, fashion model, and video blogger.
- Cora Walton (1928–2009), birth name of Blues singer Koko Taylor
- Cora Witherspoon (1890–1957), American actress
- Kora Karvouni (born 1980), Greek actress
- Alex Cora (born 1975), professional baseball player and team manager
- Belle Cora (1827? –1862), Madam of the Barbary Coast
- Cat Cora (born 1967), Chef on Food Network's Iron Chef America
- Joey Cora (born 1965), professional baseball player
- Tayfun Cora (born 1983), Turkish footballer
- Tom Cora (1953–1998), American cellist
Fictional Characters
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- Cora, an alternate name for the Greek goddess Persephone
- Cora, the main character of the 1915 film of the same name directed by Edwin Carewe
- Cora Crawley, a character from the series Downton Abbey
- Cora Cross, a character from the United Kingdom soap EastEnders
- Cora Dithers, a character from the comic strip Blondie
- Cora Mills (also known as the Queen of Hearts), a character from the fantasy-drama series Once Upon a Time
- Cora Ann Milton, a character from The Ringer, by Edgar Wallace
- Cora Munro, heroine of The Last of the Mohicans, by James Fenimore Cooper
- Cora Tannetti, a character from the Netflix original series The Sinner
- Cora Cartmell, a character from Titanic
- Cora, protagonist of The Underground Railroad, by Colson Whitehead
- Cora, a shopkeeper in television commercials for Maxwell House coffee portrayed by Margaret Hamilton
- Cora Tull, a narrator and fictional character from Faulkner's As I Lay Dying
- Cora Thayer Prescott, aunt of the main character of the Netflix series Spirit Riding Free
- Korra, the main character of the animated television series The Legend of Korra
See also
- Cora (disambiguation)
- Kora (disambiguation)
References
- Dwelly, Edward (1902). Faclair Gàidhlìg air son nan sgoiltean : le dealbhan, agus a h-uile facal anns na faclairean Gàidhlig eile . Ardmór: E. Macdonald. p. 231.
- Campbell, Mike. "Meaning, origin and history of the name Cora". Behind the Name. Retrieved 2018-04-25.
- Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert (1961). A Greek-English Lexicon. Oxford University Press. pp. 980–981.
- "Perseus Search Results for κόρα". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved 2020-06-04.
- Aesch. Lib. 946
- Aeschylus, with an English translation by Herbert Weir Smyth, Ph. D. (1926). Vol. 2. Libation Bearers. Harvard University Press.
- Gemoll, Wilhelm (1954). Griechisch-Deutsches Schul- und Handwörterbuch, 9th ed. Munich. p. 447.
- CIL VI, 1780.
- Ihm, Maximilian (1899). "RE Band III,2, Sp. 2405, s.v. Chora".
- Gale, Theophilus (1672). The Court of the Gentiles, 2nd edition. p. 23
- Marmontel, Jean-François (1777). Les Incas ou la destruction de l’empire du Pérou. Paris. pp. 59-63.
- Marmontel, Jean-François (1777). Les Incas ou la destruction de l’empire du Pérou. Paris. p. 41
- Jáuregui, Jesús (2004). Coras. Mexico: Comisión Nacional para el Desarrollo de los Pueblos Indígenas (CDI), Programa de las Naciones Unidas para el Desarrollo. p. 11