Emine
Gender | Female |
---|---|
Origin | |
Word/name | Arabic |
Meaning | Faithful, truthful, trustworthy, courageous |
Region of origin | Middle East |
Other names | |
Nickname(s) | Emi |
Related names | Emin, Amina, Emmie |
Emine is an Arabic-origin given name used for females in Turkey.[1] It has three major meanings: (1) one in whom you can trust and believe, (2) one who is benign and innocuous, and (3) one who is fearless and courageous.[1] It is also argued that the word means beautiful.[2] The name is also used in Japanese (えみね), often with the kanji 笑音 meaning "smiling sound".
Origins and variants
[edit]The origin of Emine is Arabic, but its source word has not been clearly established, and two accounts are given.[3] It may be either the feminine form of Emin or a derivative of the African, Arabic, English, and Swahili name Amina.[4] Emmie is considered to be the Western version of the name.[2]
The name of a sixth-century Leinster-based Irish cleric was Émíne.[5] Emine was also the given name of the Roman emperor's daughter who was the lover of the Sultan of Babylon in Thomas Lodge's historical romance The History of Robert, Second Duke of Normandy.[6] The name was one of the 16th century Ottoman feminine names recorded in Istanbul.[7]
Given name
[edit]Notable people with that name include:
Female
[edit]- Emine Naciye Sultan, full name of Naciye Sultan (1896–1957), Ottoman princess
- Emine Arslan (born 1989), Turkish kickboxer
- Emine Ayna (born 1968), Turkish politician
- Emine Bilgin (born 1984), Turkish weightlifter
- Emine Bozkurt (born 1967), Dutch politician of Turkish descent
- Emine Çaykara (born 1964), Turkish historian and writer
- Emine Demir (born 1993), Turkish footballer
- Emine Ecem Esen (born 1994), Turkish footballer
- Emine Erdoğan (born 1955), wife of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan
- Emine Gökdemir (born 2003), Turkish handball player
- Emine Mebrure Gönenç (1900–1981), Turkish teacher and politician
- Emine Gümüş (born 1992), Turkish footballer
- Emine Hatun (died 1449), wife of Ottoman Sultan Mehmed I
- Emina Ilhamy (1858–1931), Egyptian royal
- Emine Işınsu (1938–2021), Turkish writer
- Emine Mihrişah Sultan (ca. ? – 1732), French-born second concubine of Ottoman Sultan Ahmed III, and the mother of Mustafa III
- Emine Nazikeda (1866–1941), principal consort of Sultan Mehmet VI, the last Ottoman sultan
- Emine Seçkin (borm 1980), Turkish para-badminton player
- Emine Semiye Önasya (1864-1944), Turkish writer
- Emine Sevgi Özdamar (born 1946), Turkish-German actress, director and author.
- Emine Ülker Tarhan (born 1963), Turkish jurist and politician
Male
[edit]- Emînê Evdal (1906–1964), Kurdish writer, linguist and poet
Middle name
[edit]- Suzan Emine Kaube (born 1942), Turkish-German writer, painter and pedagogue
Other usages
[edit]The word Emine has also been used for geographical areas and places. A headland at the Bulgarian Black Sea coast is called Cape Emine.[8] In addition, there is Emine Mountain or Emine Dagh in Stara planina in Bulgaria.[9][10] The other related geographical term is Emine Balkan, which was used by the Bulgarians instead of Rumeli (Roman country) to refer to the territory of Bulgaria where some Turkish tribes had lived since the 11th century.[9] Here, the word is derived not from Arabic, but from Greek (Haemus: Αἵμον [acc.]), where it is, in turn, a derivative of *Ἔμμωνα, Emona, discovered in documents of the early 14th century.[10] However, Maria Todorova claims that Emine Balkan is the literal Ottoman translation of "Haemus mountain" and that the term was also employed by the Ottomans who derived the word Emine from the Byzantine words "Aimos", "Emmon", and "Emmona".[11] In Ijevan, Armenia, a quarters is called Emine kışlağı.[12]
In the 16th century Ottoman Empire, emine was the term used for export tax.[13]
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Kişi Adları Sözlüğü. Emine". Turkish Language Association (in Turkish). Retrieved 23 November 2013.
- ^ a b Emmie Abadilla (3 June 2013). "Turkish Idyll Cappadocia's fairy chimneys & cave churches". The Orthodox Church. Archived from the original on 2 December 2013. Retrieved 23 November 2013.
- ^ Ursula Whitcher (22 December 2001). "Greetings from the Academy of Saint Gabriel!". Academy of Saint Gabriel. Retrieved 23 November 2013.
- ^ "Female Turkish Names". Names. Retrieved 23 November 2013.
- ^ Sabatino Moscati (1991). The Celts. New York: Rizzoli. p. 662. ISBN 9780847821938.
- ^ Samuel Lee Wolff (1912). The Greek Romances in Elizabethan Prose Fiction. New York: Columbia University Press. p. 459. ISBN 9781404771208.
- ^ Ursula Whitcher. "Sixteenth-Century Turkish Names". Academy of Saint Gabriel. Retrieved 23 November 2013.
- ^ Encyclopedia of Eastern Europe: From the Congress of Vienna to the Fall of Communism. New York: Garland. 2000.
- ^ a b Bogdan Sekuli (1999). "To Remove the Anathema of the Balkans". Politika Misao. XXXVI (5): 78–92.
- ^ a b Paul Wittek (1952). "Yazijioghlu 'Ali on the Christian Turks of the Dobruja". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies. 14 (3). doi:10.1017/s0041977x00088595.
- ^ Maria Todorova (1997). Imagining the Balkans. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 26. ISBN 9780195387865.
- ^ Erdal Karaman (2010). "Turkish place names in Armenia" (PDF). Journal of Qafqaz University. 29 (1). Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 December 2013.
- ^ James T. Shotwell; Francis Deák (1940). Turkey at the Straits: A Short History. New York: The Macmillan Company. ISBN 9781258349745.