Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Dimitri

Meaning — Dimitri is a masculine name, a variant of Dmitri, the Russian form of Demetrius — derived from the Greek Demetrios, meaning "follower of Demeter" or "devoted to Demeter," the Greek goddess of the harvest and agriculture. Saint Demetrius of Thessaloniki is one of the Great Martyrs of the Orthodox Church, making the name prominent across Eastern Slavic cultures.·Russian origin·Male·dee-MEE-tree

Dimitri Through Dostoevsky's Dmitri Karamazov, the name became synonymous with passionate intensity, moral struggle, and the Russian soul's capacity for both degradation and transcendence. Characters named Dimitri are often men of extreme emotional range — capable of great tenderness and great destruction, whose redemption is always possible but never certain.

Best genres for Dimitri

Literary FictionHistorical FictionThrillerCrime Fiction

Famous characters named Dimitri

Dmitri Karamazov

The Brothers Karamazov Fyodor Dostoevsky

The eldest Karamazov brother — passionate, impulsive, sensual, and morally tortured — whose accusation for a murder he did not commit drives the novel's central trial narrative.


Variations & nicknames

DimitriDmitriDmitryMityaDima

Pairs well with

Dimitri VolkovDimitri SokolovDimitri PetrovDimitri KozlovDimitri NovikovDimitri Morozov

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Related names


More Russian names

Galina

Galina is a Russian and Slavic feminine name derived from the ancient Greek "galene" meaning "calm," "stillness," or "serenity" — specifically the calm of the sea. Galene was a sea-goddess and one of the fifty Nereids in Greek mythology. The name became popular in Russia and other Slavic countries during the Soviet era and is strongly associated with the mid-20th century. Its diminutive Galya is one of the warmest and most familiar of Russian nicknames.

Dmitri

Dmitri is the Russian form of Demetrius, derived from the ancient Greek "Demeter" — the goddess of the harvest and the earth, from "de" (possibly meaning "earth") and "meter" meaning "mother." Saint Demetrius of Thessaloniki, a third-century martyr and warrior saint of the Eastern Orthodox Church, spread the name throughout the Byzantine world and from there into Russia, where it became one of the most prominent masculine names.

Vera

Vera is a Slavic feminine name meaning "faith" — derived directly from the Slavic word for faith, making it one of the most semantically pure of all Russian names. Together with Nadezhda (Hope) and Lyubov (Love), it forms the famous trio representing the three theological virtues. Saint Vera is venerated alongside her sisters in the Eastern Orthodox Church. The name is also used in Western Europe, where it can mean "true" from the Latin verus.

Fyodor

Fyodor is the Russian form of Theodore, derived from the ancient Greek "Theodoros," composed of "theos" meaning "God" and "doron" meaning "gift" — thus "gift of God." Saint Theodore the Recruit, a third-century Christian martyr, spread the name through the Orthodox world. In Russian literary culture, the name belongs above all to Fyodor Dostoevsky (1821–1881), arguably the greatest psychological novelist who ever lived.

Tatiana

Tatiana is a Russian and Slavic feminine name derived from the Latin Tatianus, itself from the Roman family name Tatius — of uncertain Sabine origin, possibly related to the Sabine king Titus Tatius. Saint Tatiana of Rome, a third-century Christian martyr, spread the name through Eastern Orthodox Christianity. In Russia, January 25 — Saint Tatiana's Day — is celebrated as Students' Day, as Moscow State University was founded on that date.

Roza

Roza is a Slavic feminine name, a form of Rosa/Rose, derived from the Latin rosa meaning "rose." It is used in Russian, Polish, Czech, Bulgarian, and other Slavic languages. The rose has been a symbol of beauty, love, and the Virgin Mary in Catholic and Orthodox traditions, giving the name religious as well as aesthetic resonance across Slavic cultures.


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