Aaron (given name)
Aaron is a hellenized Hebrew masculine given name. The 'h' phoneme in the original Hebrew pronunciation "Aharon" is dropped in the Greek, Ααρών, from which the English form, Aaron, is derived.
Aaron the brother of Moses is described in the Torah, the Quran and the Bah'ai Iqan.
The origin of the biblical name is uncertain; however, an Ancient Egyptian origin may indicate "aha rw" meaning "warrior lion",
or from Aaru, the Egyptian heaven ruled by Osiris.
According to other different theories, the name could be derived from various Hebrew roots meaning "high mountain", "mountain of strength", "exalted","enlightened",or "bearer of martyrs". The name Aharon may itself be a variant of Haran, the name given to the older brother of Abraham in the book of Genesis.
The given name was used by Jews and early Christians, then became exclusively Jewish in the Middle Ages, taken up by Gentiles in the 17th century, and popular among both in the end of the 20th century. Aaron was most popular in the United States in 1994 peaking as the 28th most popular name. Aaron is also a Jewish surname. St. Aaron's day is on July 1 and is celebrated in French speaking countries and Poland. The name is generally recognisable around the world as referring to the biblical Aaron and cognate forms in other languages include Aarón in Spanish; Aarão in Portuguese; Aron in Irish, Danish, Norwegian, Swedish and Croatian; Árón in Czech; and Harun in Arabic. The variant used in the Russian language is "Ааро́н", with "Аро́н" being its colloquial form; diminutives include "Ааро́нка", "Аро́нка", and "Ро́на". The patronymics derived from this first name in Russian are "Ааро́нович" and its colloquial form "Ааро́ныч", and "Ааро́новна".
"Aaronite" is a noun referring to the biblical tradition and modern genetic line of Kohanim claiming descent from the biblical Aaron. "Aaronic" is an adjective referring to their traditional priestly attributes such as attention to detail, respect for tradition, and religious dogmatising. For example, biblical texts focussed on rules and traditions such as Leviticus are considered aaronic.
Pronunciation
In its original Hebrew, Aharon is pronounced as three syllables, a-ha-ron. This Hebrew pronunciation is still used in modern Hebrew in Israel today. The Hebrew sound had no direct equivalent in Greek, when Jewish scriptures were translated by Greek-speaking Jews in Alexandria around 200 BCE to form the septuagint, so these translators used a pair of Greek alpha letters to approximate the same sound, "Ααρών". This was translated again by St. Jerome from the Greek to the Latin Vulgate as "Aaron" in the fourth century CE. It is thought that the Greeks and Romans would pronounce Aaron similarly to the Hebrew, as the Catholic Latin pronunciation is still defined this way.The English pronunciation of the biblical Aaron's name was derived by anglicising the Latin during the Church of England's translation of the Authorized King James Bible in 1611. The modern Church of England Pronunciation Guide, the BBC pronunciation guide, the Mormon pronunciation guide, the Oxford English Dictionary, the Longman pronunciation guide, and Harper Collins Biblical Pronunciation Guide all define this modern English pronunciation as /ɛərən/. This pronunciation is used in the 1956 film The Ten Commandments featuring the biblical Aaron, by UK chief rabbi Jonathan Sacks when speaking in English, and in the BBC production of Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus.
The English name "Aaron" is sometimes confused with the English name "Aron" which is also derived from the biblical Aaron but through translation routes other than the Church of England and pronounced /ærən/. It is further sometimes confused with the names Arran and Aran which are also pronounced /ærən/ but derive from various sources unrelated to the biblical Aaron such as the Scottish Isle of Arran and Irish Aran Islands. Aeron is another unrelated name, pronounced air-ron, of an old Celtic god and the Aeron chair.
In the 20th century, ambiguity over the pronunciation of "Aaron" was created by naming children after Elvis Aaron Presley rather than after the biblical Aaron. Presley's middle name was originally "Aron" on his birth certificate and pronounced /ærən/ by his parents to rhyme with his stillborn brother's name, Garon. Presley later legally amended his middle name to be spelt "Aaron" to match the English biblical Aaron, but without changing the pronunciation. Naming children after Presley effectively created an alternative de facto pronunciation which can now be found in the Oxford American English Dictionary, along with /eɪrɪn/ which is heard in the American deep south. However the difference in these pronunciations in American English is often small or nonexistent due to its longer "a" than British English, as can be heard in American media such as episodes of Lost, recorded interviews with Aaron Copland, or Hollywood's 1999 Shakespeare movie, Titus.
Notable people
Religion
- Aaron, biblical elder brother of Moses, Hebrew patriarch, Islamic prophet, Orthodox saint
- Aaron of Aleth, 6th-century saint
- Aaron of Auxerre, a bishop of Auxerre locally venerated as a saint
- Aaron of Caerleon, saint; British martyr
- Aaron of Pinsk, rabbi and author of Tosafot Aharon
- Aaron , abbot of St. Martin, Cologne, Germany
- Aaron, a Miaphysite Coptic saint
- Aaron, a Jaredite king mentioned in the Book of Mormon
- Aaron, a Lamanite mentioned in the Book of Mormon
- Aaron, the Nephite missionary mentioned in the Book of Mormon
- Aaron, a saint of the Coptic Church
- Aaron the Illustrious , an Armenian saint
- Teófilo Vargas Sein aka Aaron, Puerto Rican religious leader
- Aaron Jean-Marie Cardinal Lustiger, Archbishop Emeritus of Paris
History
- Aaron I Khazar
- Aaron II
- Aron of Bulgaria, Bulgarian noble
- Aaron the Upright or Harun al-Rashid, Abbasid Caliph
- Y-chromosomal Aaron, the hypothesised most recent common ancestor of many Kohanim
Science
- Aaron Ciechanover, Israeli Nobel laureate biologist
- Aaron Cohen, Deputy director of NASA
- Aaron Klug, British chemist and astrophysicist, Nobel laureate
- Aaron Sloman, artificial intelligence scientist
Arts
- Aaron Aedy, rhythm guitarist of English doom metal band Paradise Lost
- Aaron Barrett, lead guitarist/vocalist of Reel Big Fish
- Aaron Carter, American singer
- Aaron Copland, American composer, composition teacher, writer, and conductor
- Aaron Dismuke, American voice actor
- Aaron Eckhart, American actor
- Aaron Funk, breakcore artist most popularly known as Venetian Snares
- Aaron Freeman, American singer, songwriter
- Aaron Gillespie, drummer/vocalist of UnderOath and live drummer of Paramore
- Aaron Christian Howles, American actor
- Aaron Kwak, American singer and sub-vocalist of NU'EST
- Aaron Lewis, member of band Staind
- Aaron McCusker, Northern Irish actor
- Aaron Morris, English comedian, presenter
- Aaron James Murphy, New Zealand actor
- Aaron Neville, American singer
- Aaron Paul, American actor
- Elvis Aaron Presley, American singer
- Aaron Solowoniuk, member of band Billy Talent
- Aaron Sorkin, American screenwriter, producer and playwright
- Aaron Spelling, American film and television producer
- Aaron Stern, American musician
- Aaron Tveit,, American singer and film and theatre actor
- Aaron Charles Wills, aka P-Nut member of band 311
- Aaron Dontez Yates, American rapper, also known as Tech N9NE
- Aaron Matts, lead vocalist of the French deathcore band Betraying the Martyrs
- Aaron Webber, PR and Social Media Manager for the Sonic the Hedgehog franchise
Politics and business
- Aaron Aaronsohn, Romanian-born Jewish scientist, traveller, entrepreneur, and politician
- Aaron Burr, American politician
- Aaron Fechter, engineer and founder of ShowBiz Pizza Place
- Aaron Levie, founder and CEO of Box
- Aaron Montgomery Ward, American businessman
- Aaron Swartz, American writer, internet campaigner, and entrepreneur
- Aaron Bradford Stutts Rothschild, Entrepreneur and Founding Member of ABS LLC
Sport
- Aaron Altherr, American professional baseball player
- Aaron Boone, American baseball player, manager
- Aaron Crawford , Canadian football player
- Aaron Doornekamp, Canadian basketball player
- Aaron Downey, Canadian ice hockey player
- Aaron Ekblad, Canadian ice hockey player
- Aaron Feinstein, Estonian chess player
- Aaron Feltham, Canadian water polo player
- Aaron Fernandes, Canadian field hockey player
- Aaron Finch, Australian cricket player
- Aaron Fotheringham, American wheelchair athlete
- Aaron Garcia, American boxer
- Aaron Grant, American football player
- Aaron Gray, American basketball player
- Aaron Green , American football player
- Aaron Hill, American former professional baseball player
- Aaron Hoey, Louth Gaelic footballer
- Aaron Holiday, American basketball player
- Aaron Hughes, Northern Irish footballer
- Aaron Jones , American football player
- Aaron Judge, American baseball player
- Aaron Kernan, Armagh Gaelic football
- Aaron Krickstein, tennis player, world # 6
- Aaron Lennon, English footballer
- Aaron Loup, American professional baseball player
- Aaron McConnell, American football player
- Aaron Miller, retired American ice hockey player
- Aaron Milton, Canadian football player
- Aaron Mooy, Australian footballer
- Aaron Morris, Welsh footballer
- Aaron Murray, American football player
- Aaron Nola, American baseball player
- Aaron Parchem, American figure skater
- Aaron Peirsol, American swimmer
- Aaron Poreda, American major league baseball player
- Aaron Pryor, American boxer, a former world boxing champion
- Aaron Ramsey, Welsh footballer
- Aaron Rodgers, Green Bay Packers quarterback
- Aaron Rowand, American former professional baseball player
- Aaron Schoenfeld, Major League Soccer player
- Aaron Sparrow, American football player
- Aaron Stinnie, American football player
- Aaron Wilbraham, English footballer
- Aaron Whitchurch, Australian Rugby League player
- Aaron White , American basketball player
- Aaron Whitefield, Australian professional baseball player
- Aaron Woods, Australian Rugby League player
Academia
- Aaron Ben-Ze'ev, Israeli philosopher and President of the University of Haifa
- Aaron Twerski, American lawyer and the Irwin and Jill Cohen Professor of Law at Brooklyn Law School, as well as a former Dean and professor of tort law at Hofstra University School of Law
Crime
- Aaron Alexis, American mass murderer and perpetrator of the 2013 Washington Navy Yard shooting
- Aaron Saucedo, main suspect in the Maryvale serial shooter case
Fictional characters
- Aron Trask, one of the main protagonists in East of Eden by John Steinbeck
- Aaron Hotchner, one of the main protagonists in Criminal Minds
- Aaron the moor, fictional character in Titus Andronicus by Shakespeare
- Aaron, fictional character in Beyblade
- Aaron, the first of four leaders in the Elite Four in Pokémon Diamond and Pokémon Pearl and Pokémon Platinum
- Aaron Dingle, fictional character in British soap Emmerdale
- Sir Aaron, a character in the film Pokémon: Lucario and the Mystery of Mew
- Aaron Fox, one of the Lego Nexo knights
- Aaron, a main character in Lunar Knights
- Aaron, son of Claire in Lost
- Aaron, a friend of Elena Gilbert in The Vampire Diaries
- Aaron Warner, a character in Shatter Me series
- Aaron, Alexandria safe-zone recruiter in The Walking Dead
- Aaron, a character in film Saw VI