Qaisar (Arabic: قيصر), also spelled Qaysar,[1] is the Arabic version of the name Caesar and it is used as a given name in Arabia and the Islamic world. The word 'Caesar' derives from the cognomen of the Roman dictator Julius Caesar. The Roman and later Byzantine, or Eastern Roman, emperors were called Qaisar-e-Rum (Caesar of Rome) by the Arabs and Persians. The Ottoman Sultan Fâtih Sultan Mehmed also took the title Kayser-i Rum (Caesar of Rome, meaning the Eastern Roman Empire) after conquering Constantinople, modern Istanbul, on May 29, 1453. The British monarchs also used the title Kaisar-i-Hind or Emperor of India during the late 19th and early 20th-century.
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Origin | |
Word/name | Latin, Arabic, Persian, Turkic |
Other names | |
Related names | Caesar, Kaiser, Qaiser, Kaisar, Kayser, Keiser, Keyser |
Notable people
edit- Surname
- Anum Qaisar (born 1992), Scottish politician
- Iftikhar Qaisar, British-Pakistani journalist, poet and broadcaster
- Iftikhar Qaisar (1956–2017), Pakistani actor, poet and drama writer
- Syed Mohammad Qaisar (1940–2022), Bangladeshi politician
- Given name
- Qaisar Abbas Khan Magsi (born 1965), Pakistani politician
- Qaisar Hameed (born 1950), Iraqi footballer
- Qaisar Shafi, Pakistani-American theoretical physicist
See also
edit- Qaisar Bagh, "Emperor's Garden" in Lucknow, India
References
editExternal links
edit- Captive Roman emperor before the Persian Shahanshah Shapur II.