Certificate of Name
Iouda
Masculine
Greek Bible
Meaning & Origin
Iouda is a Greek transliteration of the Hebrew name Judah, used in the Greek Old Testament (the Septuagint). It is a direct equivalent of the Hebrew Yehuḏa and is often employed interchangeably with the form Ioudas, which likewise appears in New Testament manuscripts for the same underlying name.Etymology and Biblical BackgroundDerived from the Hebrew root yaḏa meaning “praise,” the name Judah is explained in Genesis 29:35 when Leah says, “This time I will praise the Lord,” upon naming her fourth son. The tribe of Judah became the leading tribe of ancient Israel, forming the Southern Kingdom of Judah after the division of the monarchy. Kings David and Solomon, and ultimately Jesus, are traced through this lineage.The Greek Orthodox tradition often preserves Iouda as the transliteration for Old Testament contexts, while Ioudas (Judas) is used for New Testament figures, most notably Judas Iscariot, the betrayer of Jesus. This linguistic distinction parallels the modern English convention of using “Judas” for the betrayer and “Jude” or “Judah” for more positive biblical figures.Usage in the SeptuagintIn the Septuagint, the name Iouda appears for the patriarch Judah and his descendants, including kings and heroes like Judah Maccabee, whose revolt against the Seleucid Empire is celebrated at Hanukkah. The spelling without a final sigma (Iouda vs. Ioudas) is characteristic of the Septuagint's declined forms.Related FormsAcross languages, Judah appears as Yehuda in Hebrew, Giuda in Biblical Italian, and Iudas in Latin Scripture. In modern English Bibles, the name is rendered as “Judah” for Old Testament figures and “Jude” for the New Testament epistle writer.Cultural SignificanceThe name has powerfully resonant religious and historical associations: it stands for the survival of the Jewish people through the Babylonian exile, the messianic lineage celebrated in Christianity, and the Maccabean valor recounted in the apocryphal books. The spelling Iouda specifically marks the philological bridge between Hebrew scripture and its Greek transmission, a legacy that continues to fascinate biblical scholars and theologians.Gender: MasculineOrigin: Greek Bible (Septuagint)Meaning: “Praise” (from Hebrew root yaḏa)Related to: Judah (Hebrew), Judas (Greek New Testament), Jude (English)
Back