Gustav (name)
Gustav /ˈɡʊstɑːv/, also spelled Gustaf, is a male given name of likely Old Swedish origin, used mainly in Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Estonia, Germany, Austria, Hungary, the Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland, and South Africa, possibly meaning "staff of the Geats or Goths or gods", possibly derived from the Old Norse elements Gautr ("Geats"), Gutar/Gotar ("Goths"), goð ōs ("gods") and the word stafr ("staff"). Another etymology speculates that the name may be of Medieval Slavic origin, from the name Gostislav, a compound word for "glorious guest", from the Medieval Slavic words Gosti ("guest") and slava ("glory") and was adopted by migrating groups north and west into Germany and Scandinavia. This name has been borne by eight Kings of Sweden, including the 16th-century Gustav Vasa and the current king, Carl XVI Gustaf. It is a common name for Swedish monarchs since the reign of Gustav Vasa. The name has entered other languages as well. In French it is Gustave; in Italian and in the Portuguese and Spanish language it is Gustavo. The Latinised form is Gustavus. A side form of the name in Swedish is Gösta. The name in Finnish is Kustaa. In Icelandic, it is written Gústav or Gústaf.
People
- Gustav I, Gustav Vasa, king whose reign marked the end of the Kalmar Union and the beginning of Swedish independence
- Gustav II Adolf Gustavus Adolphus Swedish king, praised military leader during the Thirty Year War, sometimes referred to as the "Father of modern warfare" or "The Lion of the North"
- Gustav III, king who highly influenced the arts of Sweden during the Neo-Classical era and who temporarily reinstated absolute monarchy
- Gustav IV Adolf of Sweden
- Gustaf V
- Gustaf VI Adolf
- Karl X Gustav, King of Sweden
- Carl XVI Gustaf, current king of Sweden
- Gustav Åbergsson, Swedish stage actor
- Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer, Spanish poet
- Gustavo Charif, writer, visual artist and film director
- Gustav Adolf Barthel, German painter
- Gustav Bartsch, German painter
- Gustav Bauerfeind (1848-1904), German painter famous for his Orientalist paintings
- Gustav Bertha, Scottish singer-songwriter
- Gustave Biéler, Swiss-born Canadian Special Operations Executive agent during World War II
- Gustave Colin (1814-1880), French politician.
- Gustave-Henri Colin (1828-1910), French painter.
- Gaspard-Gustave Coriolis, scientist for whom the Coriolis effect is named
- Gustaf Dalén, Swedish inventor and Nobel Prize laureate
- Gustave Doré, French artist, engraver, and illustrator
- Gustave Eiffel, French engineer, designer of the Eiffel Tower
- Gustav Fechner (1801-1997), German philosopher, physicist, and scientist
- Gustav A. Fischer, German explorer
- Gustave Flaubert, French writer (Madame Bovary)
- Gustave Moreau, French painter
- Gustaf Fröding, Swedish author and poet
- Gustav Fröhlich, German actor
- Gustav Hamel, pioneer aviator
- Gustav Haggren, singer/songwriter in the Swedish band Gustav and the Seasick Sailors
- Gustav A. Hedlund, US-American mathematician
- Gustav Heinse (real name Josef Klein), Bulgarian poet of Austrian origin
- Gustav A. Hemwall, US-American physician and pioneer in Prolotherapy
- Gustav Henriksen, Norwegian businessman
- Gustav Ludwig Hertz, German physicist and Nobel Prize laureate
- Gustav Heynhold (1800–1860), German botanist
- Gustav Holst, British composer
- Gustáv Husák, President of Czechoslovakia
- Gustav Karoly Igler (!842-1908), German painter
- Gustav Jäger (naturalist) (1832–1917), German naturalist and doctor
- Gustav Jaeger (painter) (1808-1871), German painter
- Gustav Jäger (physicist) (1865–1938), Austrian physicist and lecturer
- Gustav Jäger (writer) (1815–1875), Austrian alpinist and writer
- Gustav Maria Jaeger (1835–1851), Austrian painter, engraver and lithographer
- Gustav Kirchhoff, German physicist who contributed to the fundamental understanding of electrical circuits, spectroscopy, and black-body radiation
- Gustav Klimt, Austrian Symbolist painter of the Vienna Secession
- Gustav Knittel, German Waffen-SS officer and convicted war criminal
- Gustav Landauer, German anarchist philosopher
- Gustaf de Laval, Swedish engineer, inventor and entrepreneur
- Gustave Le Bon, French psychologist, sociologist, and physicist
- Gustav Leonhardt, Dutch keyboard player, conductor, musicologist, teacher and editor
- Heinrich Gustav Magnus, German chemist and physicist
- Gustav Mahler, Austrian composer and conductor
- Gustav Meyrink, Austrian author, novelist, dramatist, translator, and banker
- Gustav Nezval, Czech actor
- Gustav Nyquist, Professional hockey player
- Gustav Otto, German aircraft and aircraft-engine designer and manufacturer
- Gustav Rochlitz (1889–1972), German art dealer.
- Gustav Schäfer drummer of the German rock band Tokio Hotel
- Gustav A. Schneebeli, U.S. Representative from the state of Pennsylvania
- Gustaf Skarsgård, Swedish actor
- Gustav Spörer, German astronomer
- Gustav Stickley, American Furniture Maker, famous for inventing the Mission-Style of Craftsman furniture
- Gustav Sule, Estonian javelin thrower
- Gustavus von Tempsky, Anglo-Prussian explorer and adventurer in New Zealand Land Wars
- Gustav Vigeland, Norwegian sculptor
- Gustave Whitehead, German-American aviator
- Gustav Wood, Vocalist in British rock band Young Guns
- Gustavs Zemgals, Latvian president (1927–1930)
- Gustav Zeuner German physicist and engineer
- Gustáv Husák Slovak politician, president of Czechoslovakia
In fiction
- Gustav (Zoids), transportation mecha from the Zoids fictional universe
- Gustav Graves, villain in the James Bond series
- Gustaff, a fighting mecha that belongs to Tron Bonne from Megaman Legends series
- Monsieur Gustav H, a leading character in The Grand Budapest Hotel
- Gustave le Grand, a griffon chef from the My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic series
See also
In other languages
- Armenian: Գուստավ (Gustav)
- Catalan: Gustau
- Chinese: 古斯塔夫 (Gustav)
- Czech: Gustav
- Danish: Gustav
- Dutch: Gustaaf
- Estonian: Gustav
- Faroese: Gústaf, Gústav
- Finnish: Kustaa
- French: Gustave
- Georgian: გუსტავ (Gustav)
- German: Gustav, Gustaf
- Greek: Γουστάβος (Gustávos)
- Hebrew: גוסטב (Gustav)
- Hungarian: Gusztáv
- Italian: Gustavo
- Icelandic: Gústaf, Gústav
- Latin: Gustavus
- Latvian: Gustavs
- Lithuanian: Gustavas
- Norwegian: Gustav
- Old Swedish: Gøtstaff, Gøstaff, Gøtstaf
- Polish: Gustaw
- Portuguese: Gustavo
- Romanian: Gustav
- Russian: Густав (Gustav)
- Serbian: Густав (Gustav)
- Slovak: Gustav
- Slovene: Gustav
- Spanish: Gustavo
- Swedish: Gustav, Gustaf, Gösta