Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Petr

Meaning — Petr is the Czech form of Peter, derived from the Greek Petros meaning "stone" or "rock." The name was given by Jesus to the apostle Simon — "You are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church" — making it one of the foundational names of Christian Europe. In Czech culture Petr is one of the most common masculine names, present in every generation and social stratum.·Czech origin·Male·PETR

Petr Petr — "the rock" — is the quintessential Czech everyman name, reliable and unpretentious. Characters named Petr are often the stable, grounded presences in their stories — not the most glamorous figures, but the ones whose steadfastness becomes the foundation on which more volatile characters depend.

Best genres for Petr

Contemporary FictionLiterary FictionHistorical FictionThriller

Famous characters named Petr

No verified literary characters with this exact given name were found yet. We are continuously expanding this section.


Variations & nicknames

PetrPéťaPetříkPeťaPavel

Pairs well with

Petr NovákPetr DvořákPetr ProcházkaPetr HoráčekPetr BlahaPetr Krejčí

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Related names


More Czech names

Ruzena

Růžena is a Czech and Slovak feminine name derived from the Czech word růže meaning "rose." It is the Czech equivalent of Rosa/Rose and one of the most traditionally Czech feminine names. The rose has associations with the Virgin Mary, making Růžena simultaneously a botanical and devotional name in Czech Catholic culture.

Petra

Petra is the feminine form of Peter, derived from the ancient Greek "Petros" meaning "rock" or "stone" — itself a translation of the Aramaic "Cephas," the name given by Jesus to his apostle Simon. The feminine form is used across Czech, Slovak, German, Dutch, and other European cultures. In Czech and Slovak it has been one of the most popular feminine names since the 1960s and is associated with a generation of dynamic, independent women.

Zbynek

Zbyněk is a Czech masculine given name. It is the Czech equivalent of the Polish Zbigniew, derived from the Old Slavic elements zbyti meaning "to get rid of" and gnev meaning "anger" — thus "one who has rid himself of anger" or "dispeller of wrath." The name has been in use in Bohemia since the medieval period.

Alena

Alena is a Czech, Slovak, and broader Slavic feminine name, a short form of Helena, itself derived from the ancient Greek "Helene" — possibly from "helios" meaning "sun" or from a pre-Greek source. It developed independently in Czech and Slovak as a distinct name rather than a diminutive, and has been one of the most popular feminine names in Bohemia and Moravia. It carries the luminous quality of its root without the mythological weight of Helen of Troy.

Vit

Vít is a Czech masculine given name derived from the Latin Vitus, from vita meaning "life." Saint Vitus was a Sicilian martyr of the early fourth century whose cult became enormously popular in Bohemia — Prague's great gothic cathedral, St. Vitus Cathedral, is named after him, making the name deeply embedded in Czech national identity.

Pavel

Pavel is the Czech, Slovak, Russian, and broader Slavic form of Paul, derived from the Latin "Paulus" meaning "small" or "humble." Saint Paul the Apostle — the tent-maker from Tarsus whose missionary journeys and epistles shaped Christianity — made this name universal across the Christian world. In Slavic cultures it has been a consistently popular name across all periods, bearing the austere simplicity of its Latin root alongside a deep Christian heritage.


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