There were five main personal name types in Greece:
Compound names Demosthenes is compounded from two ordinary Greek roots (a structure at least as old as
Proto-Indo-European):
demos "people" and
sthenos "strength". A vast number of Greek names have this form, being compounded from two recognizable (though sometimes shortened) elements:
Nikomachos from
nike "victory" and
mache "battle",
Sophokles from
sophos "wise, skilled" and
kleos "glory",
Polykrates from
poly "much" and
kratos "power". The elements used in these compounds are typically positive and of good omen, stressing such ideas as beauty, strength, bravery, victory, glory, and horsemanship. The order of the elements was often reversible:
aristos and
kleos give both
Aristokles and
Klearistos. Such compounds have a more or less clear meaning. It was already noted by Aristotle, that two elements could be brought together in illogical ways. Thus the immensely productive
hippos "horse" yielded, among hundreds of compounds, not only meaningful ones such as
Philippos "lover of horses" and
Hippodamas "horse-tamer", but also
Xenippos "stranger horse" and
Andrippos "man horse" and
Hippias (likely just meaning "horse"). There were, in turn, numerous other names beginning with
Xen- and
Andr-. These "irrational" compounds arose through a combination of common elements. One motive was a tendency for members of the same family to receive names that echoed one another without being identical. Thus we meet
Demippos, son of
Demotimos, where the son's name is irrational ("people horse") and the father's name meaningful ("people honour", i.e., honored among the people). A very common element found in Greek names was also the root
Eu-, from
eus meaning "well" or "good". This is found in names such as
Eumenes "good mind", and
Euphemos "good reputation". Similar looking prefixes include
Eury- "wide", as in
Eurydike "wide justice"
, and also
Euthy- "straight" as in
Euthymenes, "straight mind". Some of the most famous compound names were also created using the word
Andros "man", such as
Anaxandros "lord man"
, Lysandros "liberating man"
, Alexandros "defending man". The other forms include
Androkles "man glory" (or "glorious man"),
Andromachos "man battle" (or probably "man of battle") and
Nikanor "victory man". Another recurring element is
Lys-, from
lysis "releasing", found in names such as
Lysimachos "liberating battle"
, Lysanias "releasing from sorrow", and
Lysias "release" or "liberation"
. The root
Phil-, originating from the word
philos "loving", was also used widely among Greeks, and found in names such as
Philoxenos "lover of strangers" and
Philetairos "lover of companions".
Shortened names A second major category of names was shortened versions ("
hypocoristics," or in German
Kosenamen) of the compounded names. Thus alongside the many names beginning with
Kall- "beauty" such as
Kallinikos "of fair victory", there are shortened
Kallias and
Kallon (masculine) or
Kallis (feminine). Alongside victory names such as
Nikostratos "victory army", there are
Nikias and
Nikon (masculine) or
Niko (feminine). Such shortenings were variously formed and very numerous: more than 250 shortenings of names in
Phil(l)- ("love") and related roots have been counted.
Simple names Ordinary nouns and adjectives of the most diverse types were used as names, either unadjusted or with the addition of a wide variety of suffixes. For instance, some twenty different names are formed from
aischros "ugly", including that of the poet we know as
Aeschylus, the Latin spelling of
Aischylos. Among the many different categories of nouns and adjectives from which the most common names derive are colors (
Xanthos "yellow"), animals (
Moschos "heifer", and
Dorkas "roe deer"), physical characteristics (
Simos "snub nose";
Strabon "squinty-eyed"), parts of the body (
Kephalos, from
kephale "head", and many from various slang terms for genitalia). Few of these simple names are as common as the most common compound names, but they are extraordinarily numerous and varied. Identifying their origins often taxes the knowledge of the outer reaches of Greek vocabulary. Here the quest for dignity seen in the compound names largely disappears. Some, to our ears, sound positively disrespectful:
Gastron "pot belly",
Batrachos "
frog",
Kopreus "shitty", but these are probably by origin affectionate nicknames, in many cases applied to small children, and subsequently carried on within families.
Theophoric ("god-carrying") names Many Greeks bore names derived from those of gods. However, it was not normal before the Roman period for Greeks to bear exactly the same names as gods, but they did use adjectival forms of Divine names. For example
Dionysios "belonging to
Dionysos" and
Demetrios "belonging to
Demeter" (feminine forms
Dionysia and
Demetria) were the most common such names in ancient times. There were also compound theophoric names, formed with a wide variety of suffixes, of which the most common were
-doros "gift of" (e.g.
Athenodoros "gift of
Athena") or
-dotos "given by" (e.g.
Apollodotos "given by Apollo"). Many names were also based on cult titles of gods:
Pythodoros "gift of Pythios", i.e.
Apollo. Other less common suffixes were
-phon "voice of" (e.g.
Dionysophon "voice of Dionysos") and
-phanes "appearing" (e.g.
Diophanes, "
Zeus appearing" or "looking like Zeus"). Also common were names formed from the simple
theos "god", such as
Theodoros, or the feminine form
Theodora. All the major gods except the god of war, Ares, and gods associated with the underworld (
Persephone, Hades,
Plouton [=Latin Pluto]) generated theophoric names, as did some lesser gods (rivers in particular) and heroes. When new gods rose to prominence (
Asklepios) or entered Greece from outside (
Isis,
Sarapis), they too generated theophoric names formed in the normal ways (e.g.
Asklepiodotos,
Isidoros,
Sarapias).
Lallnamen This is the German word used for names that derived not from other words but from the sounds made by little children addressing their relatives. Typically, they involve repeated consonants or syllables (like English
Dada, Nana)—examples are
Nanna and
Papas. They grew hugely in frequency from a low base in the Roman period, probably through the influence of other naming traditions such as
Phrygian, in which such names were very common. ==Suffixes==