Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Irina

Meaning — Irina is the Russian and Slavic form of Irene, derived from the ancient Greek "Eirene" meaning "peace." The goddess Eirene was one of the Horae (goddesses of the seasons) and a personification of peace, depicted carrying a cornucopia. Saint Irene of Rome and other early Christian martyrs spread the name across the Byzantine world and from there into Slavic culture, where it became one of the most enduring feminine names.·Russian origin·Female·ih-REE-nah

Irina Irina is one of Chekhov's three sisters — and its literary resonance is that of youthful hope slowly worn down by circumstance, the longing for Moscow that never becomes reality. In Russian culture the name suggests a woman of gentle beauty and genuine aspiration who faces the gap between her dreams and her life with characteristic Russian endurance.

Best genres for Irina

Literary FictionContemporary FictionRomanceHistorical Fiction

Famous characters named Irina

Irina Prozorova

Three Sisters Anton Chekhov

The youngest of the three sisters, whose youthful idealism and longing for meaningful work gradually give way to the quiet resignation that defines Chekhov's vision of provincial Russian life.


Variations & nicknames

IrinaIrynaIraIreneIren

Pairs well with

Irina PetrovaIrina SokolovaIrina VolkovaIrina MorozovaIrina IvanovaIrina Sidorova

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Related names

Olga

Russian · “Olga is the Russian and Slavic form of the Old Norse name Helga, derived from "heilagr" meaning "holy" or "blessed." The name was brought to Kievan Rus by Varangian settlers and became famous through Saint Olga of Kiev (c. 890–969), the first Rus ruler to convert to Christianity and the grandmother of Vladimir the Great. She is venerated as a saint in the Eastern Orthodox Church.

Tatiana

Russian · “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.

Nadezhda

Russian · “Nadezhda is a Russian and Slavic feminine name meaning "hope" — derived directly from the Old Slavic word for hope, making it one of the most semantically transparent of all Russian names. Along with Vera (faith) and Lyubov (love), it forms the famous trio of sister names representing the three theological virtues. Saint Nadezhda is venerated alongside Saints Vera and Lyubov in the Orthodox Church on September 30.

Vera

Russian · “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.


More Russian names

Vasily

Vasily is the Russian form of Basil, derived from the ancient Greek "Basileos" meaning "king" or "kingly." Saint Basil the Great (329–379), Bishop of Caesarea and one of the Three Cappadocian Fathers who shaped Eastern Christian theology, made this name foundational in the Orthodox world. Saint Basil's Cathedral in Moscow — built by Ivan the Terrible — is one of the most iconic buildings in the world, its onion domes symbolizing Russia itself.

Anastasia

Anastasia is derived from the ancient Greek "anastasis" meaning "resurrection" — one of the most theologically significant words in Christianity. Saint Anastasia, a fourth-century Roman martyr, spread the name through the Christian world. In Russia, it became famous through the tragic story of Grand Duchess Anastasia Nikolaevna (1901–1918), youngest daughter of Tsar Nicholas II, whose rumored survival spawned decades of legend and fascination.

Maxim

Maxim is the Russian and Slavic form of Maximus, a Latin name meaning "the greatest" — from "maximus," the superlative of "magnus" meaning "great." It was a popular name among Roman emperors and spread through Christian Europe via numerous saints named Maximus. In Russia, the name is closely associated with Maxim Gorky (1868–1936), the great proletarian writer whose pen name Gorky means "bitter," and whose works gave voice to Russia's disenfranchised millions.

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.

Vladimir

Vladimir is a Slavic masculine name composed of "vladeti" meaning "to rule" or "to have power" and "mir" meaning "peace," "world," or "people" — thus "ruler of the world" or "peaceful ruler." It was made famous by Vladimir the Great (c. 958–1015), the Grand Prince of Kiev who converted Kievan Rus to Orthodox Christianity in 988, one of the most consequential acts in the history of Eastern Europe. The name is also internationally associated with Vladimir Lenin and Vladimir Nabokov.

Igor

Igor is a common East Slavic masculine name derived from the Old Norse Ingvarr, brought to Kievan Rus' by Varangian settlers in the ninth century. Ingvarr is composed of Ing (a Norse god associated with fertility and peace) and varr (warrior, guard) — making Igor essentially "warrior of Ing" or "Ing's guardian." Two early princes of Kievan Rus' bore this name, cementing it in Slavic tradition.


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