Sławomir
Masculine
Polish
Meaning & Origin
Sławomir is a Polish male given name of Slavic origin. It is composed of two elements: slava, meaning "glory" or "fame", and mirŭ, meaning "peace" or "world". The name thus carries a meaning often interpreted as "one who brings glory to peace" or "famous peace". In early Slavic history, the identical name Slavomir was known from the 9th century, borne by rulers of the Obotrite confederation and Moravians, reflecting the significance of such compound names among Slavic warriors and chieftains.
Etymology and Historical Use
Sławomir belongs to a large group of Slavic dithematic names built on roots expressing noble concepts—such as glory, peace, love, or power—common in early medieval naming traditions. The first element, slava, is derived from Proto-Slavic slava meaning same, also found in names like Władysław and Stanisław. The second element mirŭ (also mir, mier) had the dual sense of "peace" and "community" or "world", an important concept in early Slavic societies. Historical West Slavic and South Slavic rulers often used this combination to project ideals of stability and renown. The Old Slavic form Slavomirŭ is reconstructed from written sources.
Notable Bearers
The name Sławomir is common in modern Poland; decreasing popularity since the mid-20th century gave it an older or more traditional profile. Various athletes contribute fame to the name today: For instance,
Sławomir Abramowicz (born 2004), a Polish footballer
Sławomir Adamus (born 1961), player and coach in football
Sławomir Barul (born 1964), Olympic cyclist
Sławomir Bohdziewicz (born 1990), boxer
Sławomir Borowiecki (born 1977), figure skater
Other bearers include scout-polish officer Sławomir Maciej Bittner (1923–1944) or fictional character Sławomir Borewicz in a popular Polish TV series. The name also appears among clergy members.
Variants and Forms
Feminine forms are via a suffix: Sławomira. The diminutive community-cutes Sławek (which can itself as normal nickname comparable to English "Nick"). South‐ and West Slavic equivalents—preserved or creative— include the: Slavomir (Serbian, Croatian) alongside Slavomír languages across.Common nicknames globally use derived root-cutting, headspring name.
Key Facts
Meaning: glory + peace/world;
Origin: Slavic (Polish);
Type: male given name;
Usage Regions: Poland primarily, stronger historical depth in West and South Slavic peoples;