Taymuraz
Masculine
Ossetian
Meaning & Origin
Taymuraz is the Ossetian form of Tahmuras, a name with deep roots in Persian mythology and Zoroastrian tradition.EtymologyThe original Avestan form, Taxma Urupi, comprises two elements: taxma meaning "strong" and urupi meaning "fox". This compound name belonged to a heroic figure in ancient Iranian lore, later appearing in the 10th-century Persian epic the Shahnameh. In the epic, Tahmuras is the son of Houshang and a successor to the legendary king Keyumars. He is celebrated as a mighty ruler who subdued demons (divs) and introduced the art of writing.The name passed into Ossetian as Taymuraz, reflecting the linguistic pathways that carried Indo-Iranian names across the Caucasus. In the Ossetian heartland, a region with strong ties to ancient Scythian and Alan cultures, Taymuraz became a localized variant of the Persian original.Variants and distributionTaymuraz is a masculine given name found among speakers of both Iron and Digor dialects. Among related names, the Georgian form Teimuraz is widely used—shared with several kings of the Bagrationi dynasty in Georgia. Diminutives and pet forms, such as Temo in Georgian, also derive from the same root. The original mythological rendering Taxma Urupi is the source from which both Taymuraz and Teimuraz ultimately descend.Meaning: "strong fox" (from Avestan taxma + urupi)Origin: Ossetian (Iranian language group)Type: Given nameRegions in use: Ossetia (Caucasus), also in Georgia via cognate Teimuraz