Johanan (name) explained

Yohanan (), sometimes transcribed as Johanan is Hebrew male given name that can also appear in the longer form of (), meaning "YHWH is gracious".

The name is ancient, recorded as the name of Johanan, high priest of the Second Temple around 400 BCE.

Adaptations

The Hebrew name was adopted as Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: Ἰωάννης (Iōánnēs) in Biblical Greek as the name of both John the Baptist and John the Apostle.

In the Latin Vulgate this was originally adopted as Iohannes (or Johannes – in Latin, J is the same letter as I).The presence of an h, not found in the Greek adaptation, shows awareness of the Hebrew origin. Later editions of the Vulgate, such as the Clementine Vulgate, have Ioannes, however.

The anglicized form John makes its appearance in Middle English, from the mid-12th century, as a direct adaptation from Medieval Latin Johannes,the Old French being Jean.The feminine form Joanna is also biblical, recorded in the form Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: Ἰωάννα as the name ofJoanna, wife of Chuza.[1]

The form Johanan, even closer to the Hebrew original than Latin Johannes, is customarily used in English-language translations of the Hebrew Bible (as opposed to John being used in English translations of the New Testament), in a tradition going back to Wycliffe's Bible, which uses John when translating from the Greek (e.g. of John the Baptist in Mark 1:4), but Johannan when translating from the Hebrew (as in Jeremiah 40:8).

People of that name

Hebrew bible (c. 7th – 5th century BCE)

Hasmonean period

Roman era (c. 1st century BC – 4th century AD)

Rabbinic sages

Middle ages (4th century – 15th century)

Modern period

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Hanks . Patrick . Hardcastle . Patrick Hanks . Kate . Hodges . Flavia . A Dictionary of First Names . 2nd . Oxford Paperback Reference . 2006 . . 978-0-19-861060-1 . 146.
  2. Chronicles 3:15
  3. Jeremiah 42:8–22
  4. Kings 25:23–26, Jeremiah 43:5–7
  5. Nehemiah 12:22–23