Arie

As a Dutch name, Arie (pronounced /ˈaːri/) is generally a short form of Adrianus, but sometimes also of Arend or Arent, Arnout or Arnoud, or even Aaron.[1]

Arie is a masculine given name.

As a Hebrew, Jewish, or Israeli name, Arie (pronounced /ariˈE/) is a transliteration of the Hebrew word or name אריה, which means lion. Other transliterations include Arieh, Aryeh, and Ari.

People with the name include:

  • Arie Alter (born 1961), Israeli footballer
  • Arie Altman (1902–1982), Israeli politician (Aryeh)
  • Arie den Arend (1903–1982), Dutch composer
  • Arie Aroch (1908–1974), Israeli painter
  • Arie van Beek (born 1951), Dutch music teacher and conductor
  • Arie Belldegrun (born 1949), Israeli-American urologic oncologist (Aryeh)
  • Arie Bieshaar (1899–1965), Dutch footballer (Adrianus)
  • Arie Bijl (1908–1945), Dutch theoretical physicist and resistance member
  • Arie Bijvoet (1891–1976), Dutch footballer
  • Arie Bodek (born 1947), American experimental particle physicist and professor
  • Arie van den Brand (born 1951), Dutch GreenLeft politician
  • Arie van de Bunt (born 1969), Dutch water polo player (Arend)
  • Arie Carpenter or "Aunt Arie" (1885–1978), American woman portrayed in the play Firefox
  • Arie Deri (born 1959), Israeli politician (Aryeh)
  • Arie van Deursen (1931–2011), Dutch historian
  • Arie Duijvestijn (1927–1998), Dutch computer scientist (Adrianus)
  • Arie Dvoretzky (1918–2008), Russian-born Israeli mathematician (Aryeh)
  • Arie Eldad (born 1950), Israeli politician (Aryeh)
  • Arie Evegroen (1905–1988), Dutch schipper who prevented a flood in 1953
  • Arie Freiberg (born 1949), Australian legal academic
  • Arie Gamliel (born 1957), Israeli Olympic long distance runner
  • Arie van Gemert (born 1929), Dutch football referee
  • Arie de Geus (born 1930), Dutch business executive at Royal Dutch/Shell
  • Arie Gluck (1930–2016), Israeli Olympic middle distance runner (also known as Arie Gill-Glick)
  • Arie Lev Gruzman (born 1970), Israeli chemist
  • Arie de Graaf (1939–1995), Dutch track cyclist
  • Arie de Graaf (born 1947), Dutch politician
  • Arie Gur'el (1918–2017), Polish-born mayor of Haifa, Israel (Aryeh)
  • Arie Jan Haagen-Smit (1900–1977), Dutch chemist (Adrianus)
  • Arie Haan (born 1948), Dutch football player and coach (Arend)
  • Arie Nicolaas Habermann (1932–1993), Dutch computer scientist
  • Arie den Hartog (born 1941), Dutch road bicycle racer
  • Arie Hassink (born 1950), Dutch road bicycle racer (Arend)
  • Arie Haviv (born 1956), Israeli footballer
  • Arie Heijkoop (1883–1929), Dutch politician
  • Arie Hershkowitz (born ca. 1960), Israeli urban planner
  • Arie van Houwelingen (born 1931), Dutch bicycle racer
  • Arie Irawan (1990–2019), Malaysian golfer
  • Arie Itman, Canadian heavy metal singer and guitarist
  • Arie de Jong (1865–1957), Dutch physician, linguist and Volapük enthusiast
  • Arie de Jong (fencer) (1882–1966), Dutch fencer (Adrianus)
  • Arie Kaan (1901–1991), Dutch hurdler
  • Arie Kaplan, American writer and comedian
  • Arie E. Kaufman (born 1948), American computer scientist
  • Arie Klaase (1903–1983), Dutch long-distance runner
  • Arie L. Kopelman (born 1938), American businessman and philanthropist
  • Arie Kosto (born 1938), Dutch State Secretary for Justice
  • Arie Kouandjio (born 1992), American football player
  • Arie W. Kruglanski (born 1939), American social psychologist
  • Arie Andries Kruithof (1909–1993), Dutch physicist
  • Arie Frederik Lasut (1909–1993), Indonesian geologist and revolutionary
  • Arie Lamme (1748–1801), Dutch landscape painter and poet
  • Arie Johannes Lamme (1812–1900), Dutch painter and museum director
  • Arie van Leeuwen (1910–2000), Dutch hurdler
  • Arie van Lent (born 1970), Dutch footballer active in Germany
  • Arie Loef (born 1969), Dutch speed skater
  • Arie Luyendyk (born 1953), Dutch auto racing driver
  • Arie Luyendyk, Jr. (born 1981), Dutch-American auto racing driver; son of the above
  • Arie Machnes (born 1921), Israeli footballer
  • Arie Maliniak (born 1949), Israeli basketball player and coach
  • Arie Nehemkin (born 1925), Israeli Minister of Agriculture (Aryeh)
  • Arie van Os (born 1937), Dutch businessman and financial director
  • Arie Pais (born 1930), Dutch politician and economist (Aäron)
  • Arie van der Pluym (1906–1934), Dutch motorcycle racer
  • Arie Posin (born ca. 1972), Israeli-born American film director and screenwriter
  • Arie Priyatna (born 1982), Indonesian footballer
  • Arie Radler (born 1943), Israeli footballer and manager
  • Arie Zeev Raskin (born 1976), Chief Rabbi of Cyprus
  • Arie Reich (born 1959), Israeli legal scholar
  • Arie Rip (born 1941), Dutch social scientist
  • Arie Schans (born 1953), Dutch football manager
  • Arie Selinger (born 1937), Israeli volleyball coach (Aryeh)
  • Arie Shapira (born 1943), Israeli composer and music researcher
  • Arie Slob (born 1961), Dutch politician
  • Arie Smit (born 1916), Dutch-born Indonesian painter (Adrianus)
  • Arie van der Stel (1894–1986), Dutch cyclist
  • Arie Supriyatna (born 1984), Indonesian footballer
  • Arie Van de Moortel (1918–1976), Belgian violist and composer
  • Arie Vardi (born 1937), Israeli classical pianist
  • Arie van der Velden (1881–1967), Dutch sailor
  • Arie Vermeer (1922–2013), Dutch footballer (Adrianus)
  • Arie Verveen (born 1976), Irish actor
  • Arie van Vliet (1916–2001), Dutch cyclist and 1936 Olympic champion
  • Arie de Vois (1632–1680), Dutch Golden Age painter
  • Arie Vooren (1923–1988), Dutch racing cyclist
  • Arie Vos (born 1976), Dutch motorcycle racer
  • Arie Vosbergen (1882–1918), Dutch middle and long-distance runner
  • Arie de Vroet (1918–1999), Dutch footballer
  • Arie Wilner, nom de guerre of Izrael Chaim Wilner (1916–1943), Polish-Jewish resistance fighter
  • Arie de Winter (born 1915), Dutch footballer (Arend)
  • Arie Zaban (born 1961), Israeli Professor of Chemistry and President of Bar-Ilan University
  • Arie Zwart (1903–1981), Dutch painter (Adrianus)

References

  1. "Arie". Nederlandse Voornamenbank [Dutch First Name Database] (in Dutch). Amsterdam: Meertens Institute. n.d. Retrieved 5 December 2018.

See also

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