Name: Skënder

Gender: Male

Usage: Skënder is not a popular first name. It is more often used as a boy (male) name.

People having the name Skënder are in general originating from Albania.

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Numerology of the first name Skënder: calculate the core numbers of your numerology chart to discover your numerological profile and your personality traits.

The Growth number corresponding to this first name is 8. It denotes a pattern that assists you in growth and development: ambitious, successful, realistic, powerful, authoritative, courageous, leading.

Interpretation:
Qualities: Leader, Visionary
Ruling planet: Saturn
Colors: Black, Purple
Gemstones: Ruby, Amethyst

Learn more with our free Numerology Tool

The name Skënder is ranked on the 122,815th position of the most used names. It means that this name is rarely used.

We estimate that there are at least 300 persons in the world having this name which is around 0.001% of the population. The name Skënder has seven characters. It means that it is relatively medium-length, compared to the other names in our database.

We do not have enough data to display the number of people who were given the name Skënder for each year.

We do not have a name day for Skënder.

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Skender (Albanian: Skënder) is a masculine first name, commonly found in Albania and Kosovo and among people of Bosniak ethnicity in present-day Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia and Montenegro. Greek: Alexander. Skender can also be used as a family name and there are a number of closely related family names found globally which are derived from Skender (such as Skeja, Skejić, Skejo, Skenders, Skenderi, Skenderija, Skenderović, Skenderovski, Skendžić, Schender, Skander, Skinder, Skenner and Skanderson).

The historic origins of the name Skender are unclear as the name appears to have originated independently in the several countries in which it is found. The reason for the name being found in so many different countries is that, as a word, the name Skender is a root word (Urwort) in the entire Indo-European family of languages. This is the group of languages spoken today in all countries ranging from India to Iceland. It is an especially prevalent as root word in the Celtic and ancient Germanic (Urgermanische) languages. The most compelling evidence that the name is most probably of ancient Celtic origin.

Johann Pokorny, in his 1898 Indo-Germanische Wörterbuch (Indo-Germanic [Bronze Age] Dictionary), is the source of this hypothesis. Pokorny gives two possible original meanings of the name, using the roots "skend" and "skand". On page 929 Pokorny lists the root "skend" as the separating of skin, scale or rind. "Sken-tr" is the act of cutting and "sken-to" is the part that has been cut off. In newer, but still very old Celtic one finds the word on 2,000 year old Alpine rune stones as "ysgynthr" with the same meaning. In modern German, one finds the expansion of this root as schinnen, which comes from the same Celtic origin and means to skin one's enemy, plunder and mishandle him. Thus, Pokorny notes the word "skan-do", meaning "land laying in waste" (that is, plundered or "skinned") is the Celto-Germanic root of certain family names found in Baden, Switzerland.

This rather violent name origin is also found in the old German and Saxon word Skander, which means Scandinavian or Viking raider. It may be the origin of the Gaelic word Skene and Skene-to, which is the traditional knife the Scots carry in their stockings, as well as the source of the Latvian name, Skenders, which is believed to have come to that land via the Teutonic Knights who would have had this ancient German word meaning "violent or scandalous behavior". The name is also found in Denmark in family names such as Skander, Skenner, Skinder and Skanderson. In Jutland, there is the town of Skanderborg and the former monastery at Skenderup. The name Skinder is found on street signs in the Danish cities of Helsingör and Copenhagen. Records from the town of Skanderborg, Denmark, for instance, record the name Skender and its variations as early as the year 1100. This first root seems to prevail in the northern European areas.

On page 526 of the same book, Pokorny notes the second root "skend-" as meaning "illuminated, glowing or bright," This root has more of a visual or "seeing" connotation. This root derivation is found in the middle and southern European lands originally inhabited by Celts. These lands included southern Germany, Austria and the Alpine regions of Slovenia and the Dinaric Alps along the Adriatic as far south as Albania and Macedonia. The Skender name is found historically in this form throughout this area. The word Skender is the earliest form of the name Alexander, as in Alexander the Great, whose Macedonian kingdom was part of the Illyrian Celtic region.

The section "History and Origin" of this page contains content from the copyrighted Wikipedia article "Skender"; that content is used under the GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL). You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL.

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