Inigo
Inigo |
Gender |
Male |
Origin |
Word/Name |
English |
Other names |
Derived |
Latin ignotus, meaning "unknowing" |
Related names |
Ignatius |
Inigo is an English male name that is an adaptation of the Spanish Íñigo, in turn a rendering of the Basque name Eneko,.[1] The ultimate origins remain obscure, in part due to the lack of early records in the Basque language. The name appears in Latin, as Enneco, and Arabic, as Wannaqo (ونقه), reports of Íñigo Arista, who became the first king of Pamplona in the first half of the 9th century, and can be compared with its feminine form, Oneca. It was frequently represented in medieval documents as Ignatius, which is thought to come from the Roman name Egnatius, from the Latin ignotus, meaning "unknowing".,[2] or from the Latin word for fire, ignis. This may represent the ultimate origin of the Basque Eneko, or the familiar Ignatius may simply have served as a convenient substitution, with the two names having independent origins.
Inigo
The name Inigo may refer to:
In fiction
Íñigo
The Spanish version, Íñigo, may refer to:
Politics
Sportsmen
- Íñigo Cuesta (1969 – ), Spanish cyclist
- Iñigo Idiakez (1973 – ), Spanish footballer, retired, well known for playing at Real Sociedad
- Iñigo Monreal (1974 – ), former Spanish athlete
- Iñigo Landaluze (1977 – ), Spanish cyclist
- Iñigo Díaz de Cerio (1984 – ), Spanish footballer, currently playing for Real Sociedad
- Iñigo Vélez (1982 – ), Spanish footballer, currently playing for Real Murcia
- Iñigo Larrainzar (1971 – ), Spanish footballer, retired
Artists
Religious figures and saints
Spanish nobles
Last name
Other
- Cyclone Inigo was a cyclone during the 2002–03 Australian region cyclone season
See also
References