Waldemar

{{Redirect|Valdemar}}

{{Wiktionary|Waldemar|Valdemar}}

{{Infobox given name

| name = Waldemar

| image = Valdemar den Store.jpg

| image_size =

| caption = Valdemar I of Denmark

| pronunciation =

| gender = masculine

| meaning = "power"+"fame"; "powerful and famous", "brightness"+"fame"; "bright and famous"

| region =

| language =

| origin = Germanic

| alternative spelling = Valdemar, Waldomar, Waldek

| nickname =

| variant forms = Valdamarr, Valdemārs, Valdimar, Voldemārs, Valdis, Voldemar, Woldemar

| related names = Vladimir, Volodymyr

| name day =

| derived =

| see also = Robert (name with a similar meaning)

| footnotes =

| wikt =

}}

Waldemar, Valdemar, Valdimar, or Woldemar is an Old High German given name. It consists of the elements wald- "power", "brightness" and -mar "fame".

The name is considered the equivalent of the Latvian name Valdemārs, the Estonian name Voldemar, and the Slavic names Vladimir, Volodymyr, Uladzimir or Włodzimierz.

The Old Norse form Valdamarr (also Valdarr) occurs in the Guðrúnarkviða II as the name of a king of the Danes. The Old Norse form is also used in Heimskringla, in the story of Harald Hardrada, as the name of a ruler of Holmgard (Veliky Novgorod).H. Munro Chadwick, Nora K. Chadwick (2010). The Growth of Literature. Cambridge University Press. [https://books.google.com/books?id=Ds2oBKF_FrUC&pg=PA118 p. 118].Alison Finlay (2004). Fagrskinna: A Catalogue of the Kings of Norway. Brill. [https://books.google.com/books?id=SmJ8v1ENhg4C&pg=PA236 p. 236]. The Fagrskinna kings' sagas also have Valdamarr, in reference to both Vladimir the Great and Vladimir Yaroslavovich.

People with the name include:

Royalty

:Ordered chronologically

:* False Waldemar (died 1356), an imposter who claimed to be Waldemar the Great

Others

=A–F=

=G–N=

=N–Z=

As a surname

References