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Greek Name Generator

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Greek Name Generator

Generate authentic Greek names — the personal names of the Greek people (Έλληνες, Hellenes), an Indo-European ethnic group and nation with one of the world's oldest continuous civilisations. Modern Greece has a population of approximately 10.7 million people, with Athens (Αθήνα) as the capital — the birthplace of democracy, philosophy, and much of what we call Western civilisation. Greek (Ελληνικά) has been written continuously for approximately 3,000 years — from Linear B (Mycenaean Greek, c. 1450 BCE) through Classical Greek (the language of Homer, Plato, and Aristotle), the New Testament, Byzantine Greek, and into Modern Greek. Greek names reflect the country's layered history: ancient names like Alexandros (Alexander the Great) and Theodoros from the Classical and Byzantine periods survive alongside Christian saints' names and modern international choices. Greek surnames typically combine a patronymic root with a characteristic regional suffix: -opoulos (son of, Peloponnese), -akis (Crete and the islands), -idis/-iadis (Pontus and Asia Minor), -oglou (Turkish-Greek heritage), and -oulis (western Greece). This generator produces authentic Greek given names combined with compound surnames built from patronymic roots and the characteristic Greek surname suffixes.

Greek Name

Kiriaki Spitereli
Flora Strakopoulou
Iliana Calide
Filio Kairatou
Pandora Banalli

Your History

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About the Greek Name Generator

The Greek Name Generator produces authentic modern Greek names — the personal names used in contemporary Greece (Ελλάδα, Elláda) and the Greek diaspora worldwide. Greece is a country of approximately 10.7 million people in southeastern Europe, occupying the southern tip of the Balkan Peninsula and numerous islands in the Aegean and Ionian seas. Athens (Αθήνα, Athína) is the capital and largest city. The modern Greek state was founded in 1821–1830 following the successful Greek War of Independence against the Ottoman Empire.

Modern Greek (Νέα Ελληνικά, Nea Elliniká) is the official language of Greece and Cyprus and is spoken by approximately 13 million people. It is the direct descendant of ancient Greek — one of the world's oldest continuously recorded languages, with a written history stretching back over 3,400 years (to the Linear B writing of Mycenaean Greek, c. 1450 BCE). Modern Greek has inherited enormous vocabulary, much of the grammatical structure, and the same alphabet from ancient Greek, making it the longest-attested European language.

Greek naming traditions have been shaped by the ancient Greek heritage, the Byzantine Christian Orthodox tradition, and the Ottoman period. Modern Greek names therefore reflect a fascinating layering of ancient Greek names revived in the nationalist period, Orthodox saints' names from the Byzantine tradition, and Hellenised forms of international names.

Greek Naming Traditions

Greek Given Names

Modern Greek given names come from several sources. Orthodox saints' names are the most traditional category: Giorgios/Georgios (George — possibly the most common Greek male name), Nikos (Nicholas), Dimitrios/Dimitris, Konstantinos/Kostas, Ioannis/Giannis (John), Vasileios/Vasilis (Basil), Panagiotis (all-holy, a Marian epithet), Apostolos, Stavros (cross), Christos, Evangelos. Female Orthodox names include Maria/Marika, Eleni (Helen), Aikaterini/Katerina, Sophia, Anastasia, Despina, Panagiota, Evangelia, Chrysoula. Ancient Greek names revived in the modern nationalist period: Alexandros (Alexander), Periklis (Pericles), Themistoklis, Leonidas, Odysseas, Achilleas, Elektra, Iphigenia, Artemis, Athina. The Greek tradition of naming children after grandparents (the first boy after the paternal grandfather, the first girl after the paternal grandmother) is deeply rooted and means family names recycle across generations.

Greek Surnames

Greek surnames have characteristic endings that often indicate regional origin. The endings -opoulos/-opoula (son/daughter of — originally Peloponnesian, now widespread: Papadopoulos, Alexandropoulos), -akis/-aki (Cretan and island origin: Venizakis, Kazantzakis — the novelist), -idis/-idou (Pontian Greek and Asia Minor refugee origin: Konstantinidis), -is/-i (common across Greece: Makris, Papadakis), -os/-a (general: Karamanlis, Papandreou). Descriptive/occupational prefixes are common: Papado-/Papadis (from papas = priest — indicating priestly ancestry), Kara- (dark/black, from Turkish kara — indicating dark complexion or Ottoman period origin), Mavro- (black), Megalos- (great). The -opoulos ending is so common in the Peloponnese that it became associated with mainland Greece generally — both Prime Ministers Papandreou and Karamanlis had -opoulos/lis surname structures.

Name Days and Orthodox Tradition

In Greece, the Orthodox Christian "name day" (εορτή, eorti) is traditionally celebrated more than the birthday. Each day of the Orthodox calendar is dedicated to one or more saints, and people named after those saints celebrate on their saint's feast day. A person named Giorgios celebrates on St George's Day (April 23), Nikolaos on St Nicholas's Day (December 6), Maria on the feast of the Dormition of the Virgin Mary (August 15), and Eleni on St Helen's Day (May 21). Name days are celebrated with open house gatherings — friends and family visit without invitation, bringing sweets and gifts. Unlike birthdays (which vary by year of birth), everyone named Giorgios celebrates on April 23, regardless of when they were born. This tradition means that knowing someone's name allows you to know when to celebrate with them — the entire nation might seem to stop for major name days like that of Giorgios or Maria.

Byzantine and Ottoman Heritage

Modern Greek naming traditions were profoundly shaped by the Byzantine Empire (330–1453 CE), the Eastern Roman Empire with its Greek-speaking Orthodox Christian culture, and by the subsequent Ottoman period (1453–1821). The Byzantine naming tradition preserved and transmitted many ancient Greek names in Christianised forms (Konstantinos from the Emperor Constantine, Theodoros from Theodorus, Anastasios from the Resurrection) while also introducing names from the Orthodox martyrology. The Ottoman period left traces in some Turkish-origin elements in Greek surnames (the prefix Kara-, meaning black, is from Turkish). The 19th-century Greek nationalist movement actively revived ancient Greek names — classical names that had fallen out of use (Periklis, Leonidas, Themistoklis, Achilleas) were reintroduced as part of constructing a national identity connecting modern Greeks to their ancient past. This revival created a distinctive feature of modern Greek naming: a mix of ancient classical names and Byzantine Christian names coexist in contemporary Greek society.

How to Use These Names

  • Create characters for contemporary Greek fiction — Athens city life, island communities, and the complexities of modern Greek society
  • Write characters from the Greek War of Independence (1821–1830) — klephts, armatoloi, naval captains, and the heroes of the struggle for freedom
  • Develop characters from Byzantine history — Orthodox monks, court officials, generals, and the merchants of Constantinople
  • Name characters for stories set during the Ottoman period — the Greek communities of Asia Minor, Thessaloniki, and Istanbul/Constantinople
  • Create characters connected to the Greek diaspora — Greek communities in Melbourne, New York, Chicago, London, and across the world
  • Write characters from the Greek Civil War (1946–1949) and the military junta period (1967–1974) — important events in 20th-century Greek history
  • Generate names for characters exploring Greek mythology in a historical fiction context — figures bearing ancient names in contemporary or Byzantine settings

The Greek Language Legacy

The Greek language has had an unparalleled influence on European and world civilisation. Ancient Greek was the language of Homer, Thucydides, Plato, Aristotle, the Greek New Testament, and the Byzantine Church — and through these works, Greek vocabulary has been borrowed into virtually every European language. Thousands of English words come from Greek: democracy, philosophy, mathematics, biology, geography, politics, economy, theatre, tragedy, comedy, catastrophe, aristocracy, monarchy, astronomy, telescope, telephone, photography. The Greek alphabet is the ancestor of the Latin, Cyrillic, Coptic, and Gothic alphabets.

Greek personal names have similarly spread across Europe and the world. Through Christianity (which spread the Greek New Testament and Greek saints' names), names like Philip, Andrew, Peter, Nikolas, Alexander, Sophia, Helena, Anastasia, and Katerina/Katherine are found in virtually every European language. Alexander — the name of the Macedonian king who conquered most of the known world — became one of the most popular names in the Islamic world (as Iskandar), in the Christian East (as Oleksandr, Aleksandr), and across Europe. The Greek naming legacy is thus a fundamental part of the cultural history of Western civilisation.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a Greek name day and why is it more important than a birthday? +
In Greek Orthodox tradition, the "name day" (ονομαστική εορτή, onomastiki eorti) is the feast day of the saint after whom a person is named. Traditionally, name days were celebrated more enthusiastically than birthdays — birthdays were considered private, family affairs, while name days were public celebrations. On your name day, friends and acquaintances call or visit without invitation ("open house"), bringing sweets or small gifts. You, as the celebrant, provide the food and drink. Name days are listed in the Greek Orthodox church calendar — Giorgios celebrates on St George's Day (April 23), Nikolaos on December 6, Maria on August 15 (the Dormition/Assumption). The system creates predictable celebration patterns: anyone with a common name like Giorgios, Nikos, Giannis, or Maria has a known public celebration date, allowing the entire community to participate. In recent decades, especially in urban areas, birthday celebrations have become more common (particularly for children), but name days retain their importance, especially in older generations and rural communities.
Why do modern Greeks use both ancient Greek and Christian Orthodox names? +
Modern Greek naming traditions reflect three historical layers. The Byzantine Orthodox layer (longest-running): when Christianity became the state religion, Greek-speaking Christians adopted saints' names from the Orthodox martyrology and calendar. Names like Giorgios, Nikos, Dimitrios, Konstantinos, Maria, Eleni, and Anastasia became dominant through medieval Greek culture. The Ottoman period layer (1453–1821): Greek communities preserved their Byzantine Orthodox names but occasionally adopted Turkish-influenced elements in surnames. The Nationalist Revival layer (19th century onward): after the creation of the Greek state in 1830, intellectuals and nationalists actively promoted the revival of ancient Greek names to symbolise the connection between modern and ancient Greeks. Names like Periklis (Pericles), Leonidas, Themistoklis, Odysseas, Achilleas, Elektra, Iphigenia, and Artemis were reintroduced. Today both traditions coexist — a Greek family might have children named Giorgios (Byzantine Orthodox) and Leonidas (ancient revival), or sisters named Maria and Artemis.
What influence did Greek names have on English and European names? +
Greek personal names have had an enormous influence on European naming traditions, primarily through Christianity. When the early Church spread Greek New Testament names across the Roman Empire and into barbarian Europe, Greek-origin names became universal. Philip (Philippos, "horse-lover"), Andrew (Andreas, "manly"), Peter (Petros, "rock"), Nicholas (Nikolaos, "people's victory"), Alexander (Alexandros, "defender of men"), Stephen/Steven (Stephanos, "crown"), Catherine/Katherine (Aikaterini, origin debated but Hellenised early), Sophia ("wisdom"), Helena/Helen (Helene), and Anastasia ("resurrection") are all Greek names now common across European languages. Alexander alone is found in virtually every language: Alessandro (Italian), Alexandre (French), Alejandro (Spanish), Aleksandr (Russian), Aleksander (Polish), Alasdair (Scottish), and Iskandar (Arabic/Persian/Turkish). The influence continues in scientific and technical naming — every new species, disease, drug, and technical term coined in the modern era uses Greek elements, meaning that understanding Greek names illuminates the structure of English scientific vocabulary.
What are the most common Greek surnames and what do the endings mean? +
Greek surnames have characteristic endings that indicate regional origin and cultural heritage. The most common ending is -opoulos/-opoula (literally "son/daughter of," originally Peloponnesian but now widespread): Papadopoulos (son of the priest), Alexandropoulos, Stavropoulos. The ending -akis (Cretan and island origin, possibly from the Turkish diminutive -ak): Venizakis, Kazantzakis — the novelist Nikos Kazantzakis is the most internationally famous bearer. The ending -idis/-idou is associated with Pontian Greeks and Asia Minor refugees (Greeks expelled from Turkey in the 1922 population exchange): Konstantinidis, Papadimitriou. The prefix Papado-/Papas- indicates priestly ancestry (papas = priest). The prefix Kara- (dark/black) comes from Turkish and was applied during the Ottoman period to indicate dark complexion or other characteristics. Common complete surnames include Papadopoulos (most common Greek surname overall), Pappas, Karamanlis, Papandreou, Kotzias, Tsipras, and Venizelos.
What is the tradition of naming children after grandparents in Greece? +
The custom of naming children after their grandparents is one of the strongest and most consistent features of Greek naming tradition. The standard pattern is: the first son is named after the paternal grandfather, the first daughter after the paternal grandmother, the second son after the maternal grandfather, and the second daughter after the maternal grandmother. This creates a powerful continuity across generations — names recycle in families with clockwork regularity. A man named Giorgios Papadopoulos might have a son named after his father (say, Nikos), and that Nikos would name his first son Giorgios — perpetuating the grandfather's name. The system also creates a practical social function: within a community, everyone knows whose child is whose, since names signal family membership. The tradition is so strong that deviating from it requires explanation and can cause family friction. Parents who want to give a child a more unusual or international name often do so as the second given name (hyphenated or separate), while still formally naming the child after the grandfather as the first name.