Myron (given name)
Myron is a masculine given name used in English-spoking and Eastern European countries including Romania, Ukraine and Russia (in the countries of the former USSR it is usually spelled Miron, except for Ukraine whereas in Ukrainian language this name is spelled Myron). Non-religious or Christianized Jews have used this name as a Gentile replacement of the Jewish name Meir.
The name was originally in honor of the ancient Greek sculptor Myron (Greek Μύρων), whose name meant 'myrrh, perfume'.[1] The female equivalent of Myron is considered to be Myra. Among modern Greeks, it may be in honor of Saint Myron, archbishop of Crete (~250-350), and may take the form Myros, with the vocative Myro.
Notable people
- Myron, Athenian sculptor from the mid-5th century BC
- Saint Myron, archbishop of Crete (~250-350)
- Myron Walter "Moe" Drabowsky (1935–2006), American major league baseball pitcher
- Myron Floren (1919–2005), American accordionist and band leader
- Myron Markevych (born 1951), Ukrainian former football midfielder and current manager
- Myron Mathisson (1897–1940), Polish theoretical physicist
- Myron S. McNeil (1873–1944), American politician and state senator from Mississippi
- Myron Mitchell (born 1998), American football player
- Myron Scholes (born 1941), Canadian economist and Nobel Prize winner, a co-author of Black–Scholes model for option pricing
- Myron Waldman (1908–2006), animator and director at Fleischer Studios and Famous Studios
- Myron "Mike" Wallace (1918–2012), American television news reporter and anchor for 60 Minutes
References
- Evans, C.K. (2006). The Great Big Book of Baby Names. Publications International Ltd.
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