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James

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James is a given name. It is the most popular name for a male in the United States according to the 1990 U.S. Census. [1] It is derived from the same Hebrew name as Jacob, meaning "grasps by the heel" or "supplanter," probably in a deceiving way (in the Bible Jacob was born grasping Esau's heel and later bought his birthright).

The name came into English language from the French variation of Gemmes of the Late Latin name Iacomus, a dialect variant of Iacobus, from the New Testament Greek Ἰάκωβος (Iakōbos), from Hebrew word יעקב (Yaʻaqov). Cognates include Jacob.

Famous persons with the given name James

Religious Figures

See also Saint James for a complete list

Kings of Scotland and/or England

  • James I of Scotland (1394–1437), King of Scotland from 1406 until 1437 (from 1406 to 1424 he was king in name only)
  • James II of Scotland (1430–1460) King of Scotland from 1437 to 1460
  • James III of Scotland (1451/1452–1488), King of Scotland from 1460 to 1488
  • James IV of Scotland (1473–1513) was King of Scotland from 1488 to 1513
  • James V of Scotland (1512–1542) was King of Scotland from 1513 to 1542
  • James I of England (James VI of Scotland) (1566–1625) was King of England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland and was the first sovereign to rule in the three realms simultaneously
  • James II of England (James VII of Scotland) (1633–1701) was King of England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland from 1685 to 1688 and was the last Catholic sovereign to reign over those countries

Kings of Aragon

  • James I of Aragon (1208–1276), surnamed the Conqueror, was the king of Aragon, count of Barcelona and Lord of Montpellier from 1213 to 1276
  • James II of Aragon (1267–1327), called The Just (Catalan: El Just) was the second son of Peter III of Aragon and Constance of Sicily

Presidents of the United States of America

Vice Presidents of the United States of America

Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom

Musicians, bands

  • James Blunt, British pop musician
  • James Bourne, a musician who was in the band Busted and most recently Son of Dork
  • James Dean Bradfield (1969-), vocalist and lead guitarist with Welsh rock band the Manic Street Preachers
  • James Brown (1933-2006), U.S. soul musician
  • James Darren (1936-), American television and film actor, television director, and singer
  • James Marshall Hendrix (Jimi Hendrix) (1942-1970), American guitarist, singer, and songwriter
  • James Hetfield (1963-), American co-founder, lead singer, main songwriter and rhythm guitarist for the heavy metal band Metallica
  • James Iha (1968-) Japanese/American Co-Founder, Guitarist and Songwriter for Grunge band Smashing Pumpkins
  • James LaBrie (1963-), Canadian vocalist of progressive metal band Dream Theater
  • James LoMenzo (1959-), American bassist for the heavy metal band Megadeth
  • James Paul McCartney (1942-), British vocalist, songwriter, and bass guitarist of The Beatles
  • James McMurtry (1962-), American singer, songwriter and guitarist
  • James Douglas Morrison (1943-1971), singer, songwriter and poet of rock band The Doors
  • James Patrick Page (1944-), guitarist for rock band Led Zeppelin
  • James Newell Osterberg, Jr. (1947-), better known as Iggy Pop, one of the first punk rock musicians, singer, guitarist, actor and producer
  • James Shaffer (1970), Lead guitarist of rock band KoRn
  • James Skelly - Singer, The Coral
  • James Vernon Taylor (1948-), American singer, songwriter, and guitarist
  • James "JT" Taylor (1953-), solo artist and former lead singer of the funk/R&B band Kool & The Gang
  • James "Big Jim" Wright (1966-) producer, singer, musician, and a Grammy award winning songwriter. He is a junior partner at Flyte Time Productions
  • James (band), a band from Manchester, England
  • James Marsters (1962-) musician and singer for Ghost of the Robot

Other

  • James Boswell (1740-1795), lawyer, diarist, and author born in Edinburgh, Scotland
  • James Caan (1940- ), American actor, appeared as Sonny Corleone in the film "The Godfather"
  • James Cagney (1899-1986), American film actor "Yankee Doodle Dandy"
  • James Cook (1728–1779), British explorer of the Pacific and sailing-ship navigator: "Captain Cook". Killed in Hawaii in 1779
  • James Cromwell (1940- ), American television and film actor
  • James Dean (1931–1955), American actor: "Rebel Without a Cause"
  • James Doohan (1920-2005), Irish-Canadian soldier and character & voice actor, best known for his portrayal of "Scotty" in the television and film series Star Trek
  • James Earl Jones (1932- ), American character and voice actor: "Darth Vader"
  • James Earl Ray (1928–1998), the convicted assassin of Martin Luther King, Jr.
  • James Gandolfini, actor who plays Tony Soprano on "The Sopranos"
  • James P. Hogan, British-American science-fiction writer
  • James Hamilton, American actor noted for his role as Commissioner Gordon on the Batman TV series
  • James Joyce (1882–1941), Irish writer
  • James King, model and actress, also known as Jaime King
  • James Mason (May 15 1909 – July 27 1984) English actor, star of 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea et al.
  • James Morgan (1776-1856), British architect and engineer
  • James Murray (1969-1995), Scottish boxer
  • James Peters (1918-1999), English long-distance runner
  • James Randi (1928- ), Canadian stage magician and noted skeptic, most notably an examiner of (thus far) bogus claims of the paranormal
  • James Stewart (1908-1997), American film actor: "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington"
  • James Watt (1736-1819) Scottish engineer and the inventor of the modern steam engine
  • James Whale (1889-1957) English film director. Directed over 20 Hollywood films.
  • Jimmy White James Warren "Jimmy" White MBE (born 2 May 1962) is an English professional snooker player.
  • James White Northern Irish science-fiction writer
  • James Worthy (1961- ), college and professional basketball player from North Carolina
  • James Root (1971- ), current guitar player for Slipknot and Stone Sour
  • James R. Hoffa "Jimmy Hoffa" (1913-1975), former corrupt and murdered Teamsters president
  • James P. Hoffa (1941- ) is the president of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters. He was the only son of Jimmy Hoffa.
  • James Rhine (1976- ), a "player" on the reality show "Big Brother" during seasons 6 and 7.
  • James Arnold Taylor (1969- ) voice over actor

Fictional characters

  • James, antagonist of season 4 of Nip/Tuck
  • James "Sawyer" Ford, fictional character on the hit TV show Lost
  • James Henry Trotter, orphan featured in Roald Dahl's book James and the Giant Peach
  • James the Red Engine, fictional steam engine in Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends
  • James Bond, fictional British agent featured in novels and movies, the latest film is Casino Royale
  • James P. Dirt, fictional captain parodying James T. Kirk in Codename: Kids Next Door
  • James Hacker, fictional British cabinet member and then Prime Minister in Yes, Minister and Yes, Prime Minister
  • James Hook, the pirate captain in the Peter Pan books and movies
  • James Howlett, birth name of Wolverine (comics), Marvel Superhero, and X-Men team member.
  • James Tiberius Kirk the science-fiction starship Captain Kirk in Star Trek
  • Jimmy McGarfield, a villain in Codename: Kids Next Door
  • Jamie McCrimmon, one of the Doctor's companion in the BBC TV series Doctor Who
  • James Moriarty, fictional character who was the best known antagonist of the detective Sherlock Holmes
  • James Potter, the father of Harry Potter
  • Dr. James Wilson, fictional oncologist in the FOX-TV series House
  • Jim Hawkins, fictional character from Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island
  • Jim Hawkins, fictional character from the Japanese anime Outlaw Star
  • James Sunderland, the main protagonist in Silent Hill 2
  • James Evans, Sr., the family patriarch of the main family on the 1974 situation comedy Good Times
  • James Isaac Neutron, the main protagonist in the popular cartoon "The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius"
  • James is the name of the God of Earth in the computer game Sacrifice

Variants of James

  • Jimmy Wales (1966- ), the founder and president of the Wikimedia Foundation
  • Jimmy Hoffa (1913-1975), former corrupt and murdered Teamsters Union president

Famous persons with the family name James

See James (surname)

References

Cognates in other languages

  • Afrikaans: Jakob, or Jacobus
  • Albanian: Jakup, Jakub, Jakob or Jakov
  • Amharic: ያዕቆብ (Ya`iqob)
  • Arabic: يعقوب (Yaʻqub)
  • Armenian: Հակոբ (western Hagop, eastern Hakob)
  • Azerbaijani: Yaqub
  • Basque: Jakes, Jakobe, Jakue
  • Belarusian: Jakub
  • Breton: Jagu, Jagut, Jacut, Jak, Jakes, Jakez, Jakezig, Jakou
  • Bulgarian: Яков, (Yakov)
  • Catalan: Jaim, Jaume, Xaume, Jacob
  • Cornish: Jago, Jammes, Jamma
  • Croatian: Jakov
  • Czech: Jakub, Jakoubek, Kubicek (diminutive), Kubes Kubes, Kuba (diminutive)
  • Danish: Jakob, Jeppe, Ib.
  • Dutch: Jacob(us), Jakob, Jaap (diminutive), Cobus (diminutive), Coos (diminutive), Chime (diminutive)
  • English: Jacob, Jakob (uncommon, by way of German, Yiddish, etc.), Jacoby (rare, chiefly American, and originally a surname), Jake (diminutive), Jakey (diminutive), Jackie (diminutive, chiefly British), Jack (diminutive, also taken as short for John), Coby (diminutive, uncommon, chiefly American); James, Jamie (diminutive, chiefly British), Jaime/Jaimie (diminutive, uncommon, chiefly American, and by way of Spanish), Jim (diminutive), Jimmy/Jimmi/Jimi (diminutive); Jacqueline/Jaqueline (feminized, by way of French), Jacqui/Jaqui (feminized diminutive), Jackie (feminized diminutive, chiefly American), Jacki (feminized diminutive), Jamie/Jamey (chiefly American), Jamie/Jami (feminized), Jay
  • Finnish: Jaakob, Jaakoppi, Jaakko, Jamppa (diminutive)
  • French: Jacques, Jacob, Jacquot, Jacot, Jaco, Jack (diminutive), Jacky (diminutive), Jacq (diminutive), Jacquy(diminutive), Jame, Gemmes (Normandy), Gemme (Normandy), Jacomo; Jacqueline (feminized)
  • Galician: Xaime, Iago, Diego, Xacobe
  • German: Jakob, Jeckel (diminutive), Jaeckel (diminutive)
  • Modern Greek: Ιάκωβος (Iakovos)
  • Hawaiian: Kimo
  • Hebrew: יעקב (Ya'aqov),קובי (Kobi : diminutive from Ya'akov)
  • Hungarian: Jakab
  • Icelandic: Jakob
  • Indonesian: Yakobus
  • Irish: Séamas/Séumas, Shéamais (vocative, whence anglicized Hamish), Seamus (anglicized), Shamus (anglicized), Séimí (diminutive), Séimín (diminutive)
  • Italian: Giacomo, Jacopo, Giacobbe, Lapo
  • Latin: Iacobus, Iacomus (vulgarized)
  • Malayalam: യാക്കോബ്‌ (Yacob), ചാക്കോ (Chacko)
  • Maltese:Gakbu
  • Manx: Jayms
  • Māori: Hemi
  • Norwegian: Jakob, Jeppe
  • Occitan: Jammes, James
  • Polish: Jakub, Kuba, Kubuś (diminutive)
  • Portuguese: Thiago, Tiago, Diogo, Diego, Jacó, Jaime, Iago,
  • Provençal: Jacme
  • Romanian: Iacob, Iacov
  • Russian: Яков (Yakov), Яша (Yasha) (diminutive)
  • Scottish Gaelic: Seumas, Sheumais (vocative), Hamish (anglicized)
  • Serbian (Cyrillic/Latinic): Јаков/Jakov (Yakov); Јаша/Jaša (Yasha) (diminutive)
  • Spanish: Jacobo, Iago, Yago, Santiago, Diego, Jaime
  • Swedish: Jakob
  • Swiss:Köbi, Chöbi, Jakobli (diminutive)
  • Syriac: ܝܰܥܩܽܘܒ (Yaqub)
  • Tagalog: Jaime
  • Turkish: Yakup
  • Ukrainian: Яків (Yakiv)
  • Welsh: Iago, Jâms
  • Yiddish: Yankel (diminutive of the Hebrew Ya'akov, a more religious form in the context of the Yiddishland - East European Jewish communities until WWII -), Yankele (diminutive of the precedent), Koppel (diminutive)

See also